This 9/11, Let’s All Take Responsibility for Ending a Summer of Hateby Rinku Sen and Fekkak Mamdouh
Published on Friday, September 10, 2010 by ColorLines Magazine
Between the two us, we’ve spent a combined 59 years living, working and learning in the United States. In all that time, including the period immediately following September 11, 2001, this summer marks the worst anti-Muslim backlash we’ve ever seen here.
As the nine years since 9/11 have passed, Americans have forgotten an essential fact: Extremists can use any religion to justify murder, and the stereotyping of Muslims as terrorists sacrifices both American values and community safety. While we welcome national leaders condemning not just Quran burning, but all the less obvious forms of Islamaphobia along the way, the daily interruption of hatred is a job for all of us.
There’s no question that attacks on Muslim people have escalated. Opponents of the Cordoba House keep saying that 9/11 was the worst attack ever on American soil, therefore Ground Zero is “sacred” and nothing as profane as a mosque should be built there. The logic is profoundly twisted and most un-American. It presumes that it is impossible that American Muslims, like Mamdouh himself, who worked at Windows on the World, could have been in the World Trade Center, could have lost friends, colleagues or relatives there, could have grieved afterwards.
Attacks on mosques across the country indicate that many people don’t need the hook of Ground Zero on which to hang their hatred. In one of the never ending streams of “regular” Americans interviewed on TV news about the project, one man who opposed the Cordoba House was asked where a mosque could be built. “Nowhere” was his response.
It’s becoming increasingly clear that some Americans—too many—do not consider Muslims part of the country. A recent TIME/CNN poll found that 55 percent thought Muslims could not be patriots. Nearly a third of those polled thought Muslims should not be allowed to run for president or serve on the Supreme Court. Although we won’t have hard numbers on hate crimes for several years, the number of anecdotes is rising steadily.