WASHINGTON
, September 7 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – A U.S. national
Islamic civil rights and advocacy group issued a report this week,
saying that to many Muslims, 9-11 represented a turning point in how
America
is struggling to accept them as a community with a distinct religious
identity.
A
report issued by the Council
on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) said: “Not only did Muslims
die in the attacks, but they also had to cope immediately with a violent
backlash and lingering anti-Muslim agitation. Islamaphobes came out
strongly in favor of placing the guilt on the religion of Islam and the
worldwide community of Muslims.”
The
report said that despite the fear and stress that Muslims suffered in
the wake of the attacks, many things have changed for the better in the
life of Muslims as a community.
It
cited the fact that interfaith communication has now become part and
parcel of ordinary Muslim activity, even in communities where such
functions had not even been considered in the past.
“The
moment that Muslims in
America
turned on their televisions and were confronted with the horrible
reality of 9-11’s terrorist attacks, the paths they would need to take
in the following months became crystal clear. Muslims realized their
responsibilities as a community whose faith has been linked to the worst
terrorist attack in
U.S.
history.
“Some
Americans who succumbed to bigotry and intolerance tried to question
their loyalty; some even committed violence against them. At the same
time, Muslims felt the anguish of being part and parcel of a nation that
had been the target of an inhuman attack,” said CAIR’s report.
Public
opinion polls varied in their assessment, but overall they indicated
that the majority of Americans appreciated the strong stance of Muslims,
and showed tolerance and kindness toward them in the wake of anti-Muslim
hate crimes, said CAIR.
Local
and federal authorities have taken a decisive position against hate
crimes. However, anti-Muslim sentiment continues to be harbored and
tolerated even within sensitive governmental bodies, said the report
adding that the
U.S.
government has hardly found the right balance between security and civil
liberty.
“The
hysteria, and perhaps the lack of Muslim political clout, led Congress
to acquiesce to government moves sacrificing the civil rights of Arabs
and Muslims in the name of fighting terrorism,” said the report.
In
addition, the wave of anti-Muslim hate crimes after 9-11 was the worst
in the nation’s history. Although it has tapered off since the early
weeks of the crisis, anti-Muslim agitation in television and radio has
contributed to unprecedented acts of hate crimes.
The
organization said that the events of 9-11 were followed by a surge of
public interest in Islam and Muslims with ordinary people wanted to know
what Muslims thought of the attacks and others began wondering about the
intentions of Muslims in their midst.
After
the attacks, CAIR said, many Muslim leaders found themselves in demand
as sensitivity trainers for companies and institutions interested in
exercising good corporate citizenship by reducing the possibility of
bias in their workplace.
Shortly
after the attacks, almost equal percentages of Americans felt positive,
negative, and neutral about Islam as a religion. A September 15th poll
by Reuters and Zogby International found that 38 percent believed Islam
is a religion that encourages fanaticism, 42 percent believed it does
not, and 20 percent were not sure. (The survey was conducted
September 15 - 16, 2001
.)
Most
were able to distinguish between Islam as a religion and the actions of
some Muslims: 84 percent of those surveyed considered the U.S. to be at
war with a small group of terrorists who may be Muslim, compared to
eight percent who say the U.S. is at war with Islam, said CAIR.
However
many Americans came to the aid of Muslims in the wake of violent post
9-11 backlash, said CAIR, citing the case of Jennifer Schock, 31, a Web
designer from Fairfax, Virginia, who sprang into action upon learning
that some American Muslim women started leaving their head scarves at
home out of fear for their safety.
Schock
and other non-Muslim women around the U.S. began donning scarves
themselves as a sign of solidarity with their Muslim sisters and through
the Internet (Website: www.interfaithpeace.org), they established a
global network called Scarves for Solidarity to support the right of
Muslim women to choose their headwear without fearing retaliation.
Meanwhile,
post September 11 there was a rise in anti-Muslim rhetoric from renowned
people like Rev. Jerry Vines, pastor of First Baptist Church of
Jacksonville, televangelist
Pat Robertson, U.S.
Attorney General John Ashcroft, Republican Senator Gordon Smith, conservative
commentator Ann Coulter, Republican Congressmen Saxby Chambliss, Free
Congress Foundation President Paul Weyrich and evangelist Franklin
Graham.
Outside
a local church in
Idaho
a sign equated Islam with evil reading in block capital letters: “The
spirit of Islam is the spirit of the Antichrist.”
The
organization said that during the first six months after the attacks, it
received 1717 reports of harassment, violence and other discriminatory
acts.
Although
violent attacks have dropped sharply, CAIR has logged more than 325
complaints in the second six-month period after the attacks—a 30
percent increase over the same period prior to 9-11, it said.
And
most recently, on
August 30, 2002
, an anti-Muslim hate-rape took place in
California
, perhaps the first such attack on record in
U.S.
history. An 18 year-old man raped a 15-year old girl inside Palo Alto
Longs Drugs store while making anti-Muslim comments, according to the
Palo Alto Police Department.
A
dozen murders have been reported, including a handful of incidents in
which the victims were simply mistaken for Muslims and Arabs because of
their appearance.
Many
mosques were attacked or threatened and many Muslim women became fearful
of wearing head cover in public, the report said.
Workplace
discrimination complaints with the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission (EEOC) soared after 9-11, said the report. Between 9-11 and
Dec. 6, officials said the EEOC received 166 complaints of illegal
discrimination, mostly involving Muslim workers who were fired from
their jobs.
During
the same period a year ago, only 64 such claims were filed. By
early February 2002, the agency has received 260 claims from Muslims
since 9-11, an increase of 168% over the same period a year earlier. By
early March 2002, the national figure of complaints reached 300. These
do not include complaints filed with state and local agencies. The
number continued to increase, the report said.
In addition, the organization said that the first few days after the
9-11 attacks, government officials, including President Bush, made a
point to reach out to the Muslim community. However, since that initial
period of support, a number of governmental policies have singled out
American Muslim organizations and immigrants from Muslim countries.
An
example of that, said the report, was the signing of the Uniting and
Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act, better known by its acronym, the
USA PATRIOT Act. The law, signed on
October 26, 2001
, which hurriedly passed with little public debate, has been criticized
by constitutional law experts saying it eroded civil liberties Americans
take for granted.
In
particular, critics have charged that the Act gives the executive branch
the power to detain immigrant suspects for lengthy periods of time,
sometimes indefinitely.
The
law permits personal or business records to be seized for an
investigation without prior evidence of connection to terrorism or
criminal activity. The government only needs to claim that the seizure
is designed to look for such evidence.
A
year after the 9-11 attacks, a significant number of non-U.S. nationals
originally from Arab and Muslim countries still remain in detention.
Most of these people are believed to have overstayed their immigration
visas, although they have neither been linked to the attacks nor charged
with any criminal offenses. There are some 300,000 absconders in the
U.S.
In
November 2001, Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that the
government would conduct “voluntary” interviews with 5,000 legal
Muslim foreign nationals. When this was completed earlier this year, Mr.
Ashcroft announced that an additional 3,000 people of the same category
of individuals would next be sought.
Three
Muslim charities have been effectively shut down since December 2001 and
are now engaged in a legal battle against the federal government, said
the report.
On
the same issue, the New York based Lawyers
Committee for Human Rights said in a release published Thursday,
September 5, that since September 11, 2001, the U.S. government has
introduced a series of security laws and practices that contradict the
core values and principles on which the American government is founded.
"Viewed
separately, some of the changes may not seem extreme, especially when
seen as a response to the September attacks," said Michael Posner,
Executive Director of the Lawyers Committee. "But when you connect
the dots, a different picture emerges. The composite picture outlined by
this report shows that too often the
U.S.
government's mode of operations since September 11 has been at odds with
core American and international human rights principles."
In
the new report, "A Year of Loss: Reexamining Civil Liberties since
September 11," the Lawyers Committee said that the
United States
has much to mourn over the past year. In addition to the loss of life
and a sense of invulnerability, the report says, "the
United States
has lost something essential and defining: some of the cherished
principles on which the country is founded have been eroded or
disregarded."