September 11. After an 18-hour flight from Johannesburg, where I had attended
the World Conference Against Racism, I was seated in a San Francisco-bound
United Airlines jet plane at JFK International Airport in New York, when
the captain announced that a hijacked plane had been crashed into the World
Trade Center (WTC).

Our flight was canceled and as we started to disembark, too stunned to
believe what we had just been told, I overheard several white men ahead of
me and across the aisle, angrily spewing hate talk. One loudly declared: "We
should nuke the Arab bastards who did this!"
Moments later, we heard that another hijacked plane, this time a United
flight, had been crashed into the second WTC tower. Even as crew members
began to sob and console each other, some of the passengers, mostly men,
continued to spew out racist and xenophobic epithets.
We were asked to vacate the airport for security reasons. Before retrieving
my bags, I walked over to a nearby bar where customers who had been enjoying
their pre-flight drinks, were now engrossed in the television replay of the
images of the airplane crashing into the WTC tower. From the conversations
among the people present and the television commentary, I gathered that the
media was already honing the message that some freedoms might have to be
sacrificed in order to protect us from "terrorists."
In this climate of escalating intolerance, I had no confidence that I would
be able to board an airplane without harassment. So, I decided to drive home
in a rental car with a colleague who was also returning from the conference
in South Africa. We spent the next five days on the road, listening to a
variety of radio talk shows that unanimously spewed hate.
Listening to Rush Limbaugh on my cross-country drive, I actually found myself
agreeing--perhaps for the first and last time in my life--with his assertion
that the best weapon against terrorism was to expand, not sacrifice our freedoms.
Within a matter of days, I felt the anti-immigrant bias in the media had
metamorphosed to a point where commentators, news anchors, and public affairs
pundits alike had made the words "Arab" and "Muslim" synonymous
with "terrorist."
Racist anti-immigrant policies, formerly considered questionable, were now
being proposed with ease. And despite President Bush's mantra-like assertion
that the newly declared war against terrorism was not a war against Islam,
the Arabs, or the Afghanis, racist attacks in community after community kept
growing. Racism and its victims were being rendered invisible in a new way.
In Disturbing
Remains, a collection of essays that explores the transformation of
traumatic events into social memory and official history, editors Michael
S. Roth and Charles G. Salas explain that, "It is through the extreme
that the normal is revealed." Undoubtedly, September 11 represents
just such an extreme through which the "normal" attitudes towards
immigrants, especially "illegal" or undocumented immigrants,
is revealed. Arabs, Arab Americans, and people of Middle Eastern and South
Asian descent are directly or indirectly equated with terrorism and terrorists.
In other words, they are the enemy, pure and simple.
Makani Themba-Nixon, author and director of the Praxis Project, a policy
advocacy center based in Columbia, Maryland, cites a CNN broadcast on the
day after the bombing as an example of this: "Early morning anchors,
doing a segment on why America is hated by others, spoke of 'Why Muslims
hate us,' and generally disparaged Islam. An hour later, the female anchor
(who was the most rabid during the first segment) was careful to qualify
her comments [as applying] to 'some Muslims,' without any apology for her
previous statements. So now, there are guys riding around in pick-up trucks,
hurting everyone they think looks 'Arab,' and defacing mosques. They think
it's their patriotic duty."
Cal Thomas, in The Arizona Republic, takes the immigrant-bashing
a step further in his column of October 30. "A bigger threat than anthrax
is the huge number of illegal aliens in this country; the U.S. Census Bureau
estimates that there are 8 million of them.... [T]he Bush Administration
should order a massive roundup, deporting illegals to their countries of
origin.... deporting those who don't belong here will have the immediate
benefit of ridding us of some terrorists and their cells."
Barely covered in the mainstream media are the many stories about men in
turbans and women in veils who were being spat upon and cursed at in New
York City streets. A white man in Queens tried to run over a Muslim woman
with his car, screaming, "This is for America!" Another rammed
his car at eighty-miles-an-hour into a mosque. In Arizona, a Sikh man was
shot to death, in Reedley, California, a Yemeni convenience storeowner was
gunned down, and in Southern California, several white men beat up a Chicano,
thinking he was Iranian. Muslim and other immigrant women and men in New
York stayed away from work for weeks, fearing for their lives.
Middle Eastern and South Asian air travelers--whether businessmen, elders,
students, or tourists--have been pulled off airplanes even after having passed
all security checks. Congressman Darrell Issa, a grandson of Lebanese immigrants,
on his way to the Middle East as part of a Congressional commission, was
not allowed to board an Air France flight to Paris. Arab American, Sikh,
and other groups monitoring hate violence have recorded over 600 incidents
in the weeks following September 11.
According to Themba-Nixon: "CNN has been bad--incomplete stories, weak
analysis, jingoistic coverage--but Fox News is the worst. They are the most
Orwellian with their rolling stream of text that accompanies the broadcast.
Both the text and the reporting is reinforcing the worst stereotyping. They
trivialize the loss of life among people of color [both] as victims of domestic
terror [and] as casualties in the attack against Afghanistan.
"The lack of coverage of these crimes also creates a permissive atmosphere.
It's only a logical extension of the pre-bombing coverage that focused on
when [the] bombs would drop--but didn't question if it made sense ... or
why they should [bomb]."
Both conservative and liberal pundits and op-ed writers are redefining and
sanitizing racial profiling in the name of safety, patriotic duty, and national
security. While conservatives view it as a corollary to winning the "war
against terrorism," liberals, ironically, consider it an acceptable
tradeoff against the erosion of rights. For example, William Safire, conservative
op-ed columnist for the New York Times, alerts readers to the Bush
Administration's "seizing dictatorial power" with its new laws,
but believes, "An ethnic dragnet rounding up visa-skippers or questioning
foreign students, if short-term, is borderline tolerable." (November
15, 2001)
Peggy Noonan, Ronald Reagan's biographer, takes racial profiling even further
in a long-winded commentary in The Wall Street Journal of October
19. She imagines herself fitting a terrorist profile: "Everywhere I
went people would notice me and give me hard looks and watch what I was doing.
I would feel terrible about this. But you know what else I'd do? I'd suck
it up. I'd understand. I wouldn't like it, but I'd get it, and I'd accept
it.... And you know, I don't think that's asking too much."
Either you're with us, or you're with the terrorists.
"Terror-related arrests soar," proclaimed USA Today, in
its November 1 issue, reporting that almost 1,200 persons had been detained,
and that authorities were "using immigration violations to prevent possible
terrorism rather than for simply rounding up suspects in the attacks on the
World Trade Center and Pentagon." Fewer than a dozen of those detained
are considered suspects or material witnesses. The overwhelming majority
are being held on minor immigration violations and all of them are of Middle
Eastern descent. Now, some 5,000 Arab men in the 18-35 age group, who came
to the U.S. over the last two years, have been asked to "voluntarily" submit
to FBI questioning. In one sign of common sense returning to public discourse,
Portland, Oregon's police department said that they would refuse to cooperate
with the FBI because state law prohibits questioning of immigrants--or for
that matter, citizens--not suspected of wrongdoing. Some other police departments
have followed Portland's lead.
In the New York Post opinion pages of November 12, Daniel Pipes,
director of the Philadelphia-based Middle East Forum, rebuts President Bush's
various positive statements about U.S. Muslims, declaring unequivocally that, "The
Muslim population is not like any other, for it harbors a substantial body--one
many times larger than the agents of Osama bin Laden--who have worrisome
aspirations for the United States.... Although not responsible for the atrocities
in September, these people share important goals with the suicide hijackers:
Both despise the United States and ultimately wish to transform it into a
Muslim country." He ends his xenophobic diatribe with an appeal for
the defense of "the existing order--religious freedom, secularism, women's
rights..." while completely ignoring the rights of the immigrants, the
Latinos, the Asians, the Arabs, the Muslims, and the Sikhs, to religious
freedom, to freedom of association and expression, to be free from unlawful
detention, and to due process, which are daily being violated.
In "Covering Islam," Edward Said's landmark examination of the
media's treatment of Islam published in 1981, he writes: "Malicious
generalizations about Islam have become the last acceptable form of denigration
of foreign culture in the West; what is said about the Muslim mind, or character,
or religion, or culture as a whole cannot now be said in mainstream discussion
about Africans, Jews, other Orientals, or Asians."
Elizabeth "Betita" Martinez, veteran Chicana activist-writer and
journalist, says, "On one level, post-September 11 racism is clearly
linked to the pre-September 11 racism. But now there is a new level of repression,
which is fascist-like and is not just about race."
A new malaise has, indeed, infected the U.S. body politic, where the war
against terrorism and racism feed on each other. There is a renewed, invigorated
racism and racialization of politics taking place and it is both acceptable,
and patriotic: us vs. them.
In truth, this was the United States before September 11 for the majority
of people considered "immigrant," especially the undocumented.
When you go to work, you don't know if you'll return home unharmed, or at
all. You have fear of public places, especially when you are around people
who are different from you and who you feel you can't trust. You are subject
to random police stops, searches, and may even be asked to provide proof
of identity. You fear for your children's lives, and each time you leave
home, wonder if it might be the last time you'll see them. You fear for your
loved ones, especially when you know they are traveling. Since September
11, these feelings and experiences have extended beyond their usual domain.
So, now everyone should know what it feels like to be an undocumented immigrant.
Yet, we are led to believe that only Americans (read white Americans), feel
insecure. What is unchanged since September 11 is that immigrant communities
are still being left out of the picture--except when it comes to attributing
blame.
Arnoldo Garcia works for the National Network for Immigrant and Refugee
Rights, heading up its Project on the World Conference against Racism.
He is also the editor of their newsmagazine, Network News. www.nnirr.org
for more information on immigrants and post-September 11 developments. |