Anti–Middle Eastern sentiment
Anti–Middle Eastern sentiment is feelings and expression of hostility, hatred, discrimination, or prejudice towards the Middle East and its culture,[1] and towards persons based on their association with the Middle East and Middle Eastern culture. This is different from Islamophobia; prejudice and hatred towards Muslims in general.
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United States
In 1993, the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee confronted The Walt Disney Company about anti-Arab racist content in its animated film Aladdin. At first, Disney denied any problems but eventually relented and changed two lines in the opening song.[2] Members of the ADC were still unhappy with the portrayal of Arabic characters and the referral to the Middle East as "barbaric".[2]
Since 9/11, anti–Middle Eastern racism has risen dramatically. A man in Houston, Texas, was shot and wounded after an assailant accused him of "blowing up the country", and four immigrants were shot and killed by a man named Larme Price, who confessed to killing them as revenge for the September 11 attacks. Price said he was motivated by a desire to kill people of Arab descent after the attacks.[3] Although Price described his victims as Arabs, only one was from an Arab country. This appears to be a trend; because of stereotypes of Arabs, several non-Arab, non-Muslim groups were subjected to attacks in the wake of 9/11, including several Sikh men attacked for wearing their religiously mandated turban. Price's mother, Leatha Price, said that her son's anger at Arabs was a matter of mental illness, not ethnic hatred.[3] The murder of Balbir Singh Sodhi is another example of a Sikh man who was targeted in an Islamophobic hate crime, despite being neither Muslim nor Middle Eastern.
The US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission brought charges against NCL America Inc., alleging that the company discriminated against seven crew members with Middle East backgrounds. The suit filed on behalf of the employees, stated that the discrimination led to the plaintiffs losing their jobs aboard the cruise ship Pride of Aloha. The 2006 lawsuit had the company deny the allegations, refusing to accept that it had acted improperly in firing the seven Middle Eastern crew members. Sources stated that the two sides reached a settlement agreement, in which NCL America Inc. has agreed to pay $485,000 to resolve allegations. Additionally, the company also agreed to revise its policies to ensure a workplace that promotes equal employment opportunities.[4]
In an interview with a conservative website, Saucedo Mercer, a Mexican immigrant who became a U.S. citizen, talked in depth about her views on immigration. She stated the issue was important because people from places other than Mexico were among those coming across the border illegally.
"That includes Chinese, Middle Easterners. If you know Middle Easterners, a lot of them, they look Mexican or they look, you know, like a lot of people in South America, dark skin, dark hair, brown eyes. And they mix. They mix in. And those people, their only goal in life is to cause harm to the United States. So why do we want them here, either legally or illegally? When they come across the border, besides the trash that they leave behind, the drug smuggling, the killings, the beheadings. I mean, you are seeing stuff. It’s a war out there."[5][6]
After the Boston Marathon bombing, before the perpetrators Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev were identified, several young men, mostly South Asian or Middle Eastern, were convicted in the court of public opinion.[7]
Australia
Attacks in Spain, London, and Bali have increasingly associated people of "Middle Eastern appearance" with terrorism.[8] A clearer picture of the impact of these events on Sydney's Muslim, Arabic, and Middle Eastern population emerged from data collected from a hotline between September 12, 2001, and November 11, 2001, by the Community Relations Commission for a Multicultural NSW, during which time 248 incidents were logged. There were seven categories of attack: physical assault; verbal assault; sexual assault; threat; racial discrimination or harassment, damage to property; and media attack. Half of all victims were female; seven out of ten were adults. The largest language groups to use the hotline were Arabic, consisting 52.4% of calls. 47.2% of the incidents occurred in public spaces.[8]
On 11 December 2005, a violent mob of about five thousand young white Australians gathered on the beach at Cronulla, New South Wales. Waving Australian flags, and singing Waltzing Matilda and Australia's national anthem, the mob verbally abused and physically assaulted anyone of Middle Eastern appearance.[9] Five thousand people reportedly gathered at the site and marched through the streets of Cronulla, attacking anyone who they identified as Middle Eastern.[10]
One victim recalled how the violence erupted when a man deemed to be "of Middle Eastern appearance" was walking along the beachfront with his girlfriend and "two girls turned around and screamed ... 'get off our f__king beaches' [and then] the whole street turned on them"[10] The riots put the spotlight on two segments of Sydney's population (the white, Anglo-Celtic majority and a Middle Eastern minority) and two parts of the city: the Sutherland Shire Local Government Area (LGA), located in Sydney's southern suburbs where Cronulla Beach is located (known as the Shire); and the Canterbury and Bankstown LGAs, located in south-western Sydney, where most of the city's Lebanese and other Middle Eastern immigrants live.[8] Middle Eastern males were tagged as criminal and un-Australian by the media brush of ethnic crime.[8]
In one incident, two young men of Middle Eastern appearance, on their way for a swim, were mobbed and beaten on a train carriage, with both responding police officers and a nearby press photographer fearing there would be a killing.[11]
The latest incident occurred in 2011, when the criminal lawyer of Middle Eastern background, Adam Houda,[12] was arrested for refusing a frisk search and resisting arrest after having been approached by police, who suspected him of involvement in a recent robbery. These charges were thrown out of court by Judge John Connell, who stated, "At the end of the day, there were three men of Middle Eastern appearance walking along a suburban street, for all the police knew, minding their own business at an unexceptional time of day, in unexceptional clothing, except two of the men had hooded jumpers.[13] The place they were in could not have raised a reasonable suspicion they were involved in the robberies."
Turkey
Negative sentiments towards Middle Eastern individuals, Middle Eastern history, and peoples are also observed in Turkey. This sentiment reached its peak during incidents such as the genocide of Anatolian Greeks, Armenians, and Lebanese populations. Furthermore, the Turkish government consistently expresses a desire to join Europe and disassociate itself from being perceived as part of the Middle East. Such rhetoric is commonly encountered in Turkish politics, as being associated with the Middle East is generally viewed unfavorably within the secular parts of Turkey.[14][15][16] Ümit Özdağ, the former deputy Chairman of the Good Party, warned that Turkey risked becoming "a Middle Eastern country" because of the influx of refugees.[17]
See also
References
- Mistele, Ashley (2009). "Middle Eastern Americans and the First Amendment". Columbia University Academic Commons. doi:10.7916/D8D224BB. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- Wingfield, Marvin; Karaman, Bushra (March 1995). "Arab Stereotypes and American Educators". American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. Archived from the original on 5 April 2007. Retrieved 16 March 2007.
- Worth, Robert F. (31 March 2003). "Police Arrest Brooklyn Man In Slayings of 4 Shopkeepers". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- "Cruise lines to pay $485,000 settlement in employment lawsuit". Lawyersandsettlements.com. 19 May 2008. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- "Arizona GOP Favorite Doesn't Want Middle Easterners In U.S. 'Legally Or Illegally'". Talking Points Memo. 28 August 2012. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- "Candidate Criticized for Anti-Middle Eastern Remarks - Arizona Public Media". Azpm.org. 29 August 2012. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- Berrett, Dan (20 April 2013). "After Boston Bombing, Fears of Backlash Against Muslim Students - Students - The Chronicle of Higher Education". Chronicle.com. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- Collins, Jock (2009). "Sydney's Cronulla riots: The context and implications". In Noble, Greg (ed.). Lines in the Sand: The Cronulla Riots, Multiculturalism and National Belonging (1st ed.). Institute of Criminology Press. p. 27-43. hdl:10453/8089. ISBN 9780975196786. Retrieved 1 June 2013.
- "New Racism and Fear: The Cronulla Riots and Racial Violence in Australia". Archived from the original on 17 September 2013. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
- Cahir1, Jayde (14 April 2013). "Balancing Trust and Anxiety in a Culture of Fear". SAGE Open. Sgo.sagepub.com. 3 (2). doi:10.1177/2158244013484733. S2CID 55882624. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- Poynting, Scott (2007). Multiculturalism at the end of the Line. ISBN 978-0-9803403-0-3. Archived from the original on 23 April 2013. Retrieved 1 June 2013.
- Everaardt, Tineka (20 March 2013). "Targeted through racial profiling - Today Tonight". Au.news.yahoo.com. Archived from the original on 23 March 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- Mercer, Neil (12 November 2011). "Suing police again, the lawyer of Middle Eastern appearance". The Border Mail. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- "Türkiye, Avrupa mı Ortadoğu ülkesi mi?".
- "Palestinians Were Spared Turkey's Rising anti-Arab Hate. Until Now". Haaretz.
- Akturk, Ahmet Serdar (2010). "Arabs in Kemalist Turkish Historiography". Middle Eastern Studies. 46 (5): 633–653. doi:10.1080/00263206.2010.504553. S2CID 145675272.
- "Syrian refugees who were welcomed in Turkey now face backlash". NBC News. Archived from the original on 9 May 2021. Retrieved 27 August 2019.
Further reading
- Maghbouleh, Neda (2017). The Limits of Whiteness: Iranian Americans and the Everyday Politics of Race. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9781503603370.