By
Rowaida Abdelaziz
03/07/2020
The murder
of George Floyd at the hands of a white police officer forced many communities
to reckon with their role in anti-Black racism.
CHANDAN
KHANNA VIA GETTY IMAGES
Muslim
women offer evening prayers at a makeshift memorial in honor of George Floyd in
Minneapolis on June 4.
-----
The
conversation became more real for members of the Arab and non-Black Muslim
communities in the U.S. when they learned that it was an employee at Cup Foods
— a convenience store owned by a Palestinian American Muslim man — who called
Minneapolis police on Floyd over a suspected counterfeit $20 bill.
NES
BEL AIBA VIA GETTY IMAGES
Muslim
protesters join a Black Lives Matter demonstration in Washington on June 6.
------
American
Muslims have no majority race, making them one the most diverse faith groups in
the country. Nearly 3 million Muslims reside in the U.S., and more than a fifth
of them are Black Muslims, a group that includes Black people born in the U.S.
who converted from another religion or were raised Muslim, as well as
immigrants from countries such as Somalia and Ethiopia. The African diaspora?
both from the slave trade and from voluntary immigration ? created African Arab
populations in countries such as Sudan, Egypt and Yemen. And people from
countries such as Mauritania often identify as all three: Arab, Black and
African.
Black
Muslims were among the first Muslims in the U.S., particularly those who were
captured and enslaved in the 17th century. But they are often ignored in
mainstream conversations about Islam. Now, the protests that have rocked the
world in the weeks since Floyd’s death are also forcing non-Black,
predominantly Arab and South Asian Muslims to evaluate their role in systemic
injustice.
“This
biggest issue for us as Muslims is not just Islamophobia; it’s systemic racism
and white supremacy,” said Margari Aziza Hill, the co-founder and executive
director of the Muslim Anti-Racism Collaborative, an organization that provides
racial justice education and training within Muslim communities. “If we are
committed to the project of decolonization, anti-racism, anti-Islamophobia,
anti-oppression, we’ll be successful.”
Hill, who
is a Black Muslim, added: “But if we’re only focused on Islamophobia, then
we’re going to leave people behind. They’re going to leave me behind because
I’ll still be subjected to racial violence.”
White
Supremacy, Colonization and Aspiring Whiteness
Africans in
Arab and South Asian countries can be traced back to the East African slave
trade, through which millions of Africans were enslaved and sent to countries
such as Pakistan and Oman, creating populations of African descent there. White
colonial powers that invaded the Middle East and South Asia promoted whiteness
as the dominant culture and installed systemic anti-Blackness.
Arab
communities are still fighting remnants of anti-Blackness. Last month, a number
of Arab celebrities in the Middle East donned blackface in a failed and
grotesque attempt to support George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter movement.
Blackface originated in the U.S., but it is still used as a caricature in Arab
film and television. In countries such as Lebanon, an employment framework
known as the “kafala” system ties the livelihoods of African, Afro-Arab, Asian
and other migrant domestic workers to an Arab sponsor — a system that critics
call modern-day slavery. In everyday life, some people still use violent
language to label Black people as slaves, and beauty businesses still promote skin-bleaching
products.
As Arab
immigrants move to the U.S, some of these problematic attitudes come with them.
“People
come to this country with some preconceived notions of what it means to be
Black that might be really local to their context, whether it’s Lebanon or
India,” said Su’ad Abdul Khabeer, the senior editor at Sapelo Square, an online
publication that amplifies Black Muslims. “And then they’ve also received
images of anti-Blackness through white supremacy. So when they come to this
country, this is all in the mix.”
Immigrant
communities in the U.S. have struggled with aspirational whiteness that Muslims
have only recently begun to critique. For decades, millions of U.S. residents
who are of Southwest Asian, Middle Eastern or North African descent have been
categorized as “white” by the U.S. Census Bureau. Advocates have been working
to change that, pointing out the erasure and loss of resources that result from
being lumped in with the white population. But as of the 2020 decennial census,
“white” is still their only option.
Black
Muslims are often overlooked in conversations about Islam, and Afro-Arabs are
rendered invisible in even the academic discourse about Arab politics and
culture. The majority of contemporary research on Arabs is focused on countries
such as Syria, Palestine, Jordan and Lebanon, neglecting Black Arab populations
from those same countries and other countries in North Africa.
“Solidarity
is not a zero-sum reciprocity game. We have to acknowledge that as we’re
standing up for Palestine and speaking out against injustice, that it feels
hollow if there is not a commitment to speaking out against injustice here,”
said Maytha Alhassen, a historian of U.S. race, migration and gender who wrote
her dissertation on Arab-Black solidarity.
“There are
various ways that non-Black Arabs contribute to the injustice that Black people
experience in the U.S. If we don’t acknowledge that, then there is no
substantial solidarity that can be made,” she added.
Confronting
the Immigrant Store Owner Dynamic
Shortly
after Floyd’s death, Mahmoud Abumayyaleh, the owner of Cup Foods, announced
that his business will stop calling the police. That “almost always does more
harm than good, even for something as harmless as a fake bill,” he wrote in a
Facebook post.
The George
Floyd incident has forced other immigrant and Arab store owners to reflect on
their own relationships with the police, particularly in low-income,
Black-majority neighbourhoods.
Arab and
immigrant store owners are going through an awakening and want to be better
allies, said Ahmad Jitan, a community organizer for the Inner-City Muslim
Action Network, a community organization and clinic with facilities on the
South Side of Chicago. The network focuses on addressing structural, systematic
and social injustice, and Jitan hopes his organization can help diffuse racial
tension and model a healthier relationship for shop owners in majority-Black
neighbourhoods.
Jitan’s
group has partnered with MuslimARC to create “Corner Store Witness,” an online
curriculum for non-Black Muslim business owners about how to navigate their
relationship with Black customers in an equitable and moral way.
The curriculum
includes focusing on the need for store owners to go beyond transactional
relationships to build personal connections in their neighbourhoods. The
program also encourages store owners to be more critical of the products they
sell, such as liquor, nicotine and junk food, and to consider providing
healthier options, such as fresh produce.
The program
also asks owners to consider the physical makeup of their stores, such as
ubiquitous glass barriers. Meant to protect those behind a counter from
violence, they can also serve as a metaphor for the psychological barrier
between owners and customers, Jitan said.
“Our work
involves challenging those that are in a place that is rooted in anti-Blackness
and challenging them and holding them accountable, as well as trying to support
those store owners who are trying to do better and how they can create an
alternative business model in these neighbourhoods,” Jitan said.
But
transformative change doesn’t end with store owners’ practices, Jitan added.
Allies must also advocate to their broader community about the need for
systemic change.
“Somebody
who isn’t in these stores but is in a mosque somewhere in the suburbs still is
benefiting from the wealth that has come from these stores in these
neighbourhoods,” Jitan said. “The solution lies in investment from the larger
Arab communities to reinvest in the neighbourhoods, reinvest in these stores,
to be able to create a different model, and that requires material and other
kinds of support.”
Centring
Black Muslim Voices
Hill’s
organization has been inundated with requests from non-Black Muslim
organizations in the weeks since Floyd’s death, she said. Thousands of people
have watched online programming about addressing anti-racism in their community
and are looking for resources for their own programs. She has also received a
record-high number of requests to provide racial justice training for American
Muslim organizations and to consult on statements and curricula.
Hill
believes that the Muslim community is finally prioritizing anti-racist
education. “As the most racially diverse religious community in America, we
have a deep self-interest to stay together in these conversations,” Hill said.
Hill’s work
connects the dots between white supremacy, anti-Black racism and Islamophobia,
topics many mosques and Muslim conferences deemed too uncomfortable just a few
years ago.
She urged
non-Black Muslims to continue to hold one another accountable and to center the
voices of their Black peers in faith.
“What we
have to do is really think about how we help institutions do that
transformational work that brings about racial equity,” Hill said. “If we want
society to be better, then we have to think about all sectors being
anti-racist.”
In June,
two Arab American community organizers in New York and Boston posted a
six-point guide in both Arabic and English outlining ways to resist
anti-Blackness and to self-educate on Arab-Black solidarity.
The Arabs
for Black Lives Collective, a new initiative spearheaded by a group of
non-Black Arabs, also issued a letter calling on peers to “eradicate
anti-Blackness and racism” within the community and to “confront our
households, neighborhoods and places of worship.”
Nearly
2,000people signed the letter, including U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and
Golden Globe-winning actor Ramy Youssef.
“We have to
have the deep and often uncomfortable conversations with those that are around
us to make sure that we’re stomping [anti-Black racism] out from our circles,”
said Ahmad Abuznaid, the co-founder of Dream Defenders and a member of the
group that wrote the letter.
For Black
Muslims, the intersection between anti-racism and Islamophobia is a lived
experience that they can’t set aside as easily as non-Black Muslims. But what
connects them is the shared experience of faith as a means to uphold justice
and equality.
“The Quran
is really clear about this. There is no ambiguity,” Abdul Khabeer said. “As
Muslims, we should pray, and we should look for those prayers as something that
binds us and fortifies us as we fight.”
Original
Headline: Arab and Muslim Communities Need To Talk About Anti-Blackness
Source: The Huffington Post
URL: https://newageislam.com/islamic-society/black-muslims-often-overlooked-conversations/d/122295
New
Age Islam, Islam Online, Islamic Website, African
Muslim News, Arab
World News, South
Asia News, Indian
Muslim News, World
Muslim News, Women
in Islam, Islamic
Feminism, Arab
Women, Women
In Arab, Islamophobia
in America, Muslim
Women in West, Islam
Women and Feminism