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Author Archives: Arab America

This Iranian Comedian is Tired of Playing Terrorists

When Iranian comic and actor Maz Jobrani snagged an audition for “24” in the show’s 2002 season, he was mostly glad about one thing: It wasn’t for the part of a terrorist.

“It was a big role, and he was a regular guy,” says Jobrani, 42, who was tired of being cast as a cartoonish Middle Eastern baddie in movies and shows. “But later, they called and said, ‘[We] want to offer you the part of the terrorist instead.’ I said, ‘No!!’ They said, ‘But listen — he changes his mind halfway through the mission.’
Modal Trigger

“‘Ah, the ambivalent terrorist,’” he said wryly.
Jobrani took the part, but it started him on a path toward pushing back on Hollywood stereotypes of Middle Easterners; a few years later, he would turn down the chance to audition to play a terrorist in the Oscar-nominated movie “United 93.”Instead, the comedian founded the “Axis of Evil” comedy tour, which he headlined and toured the world with from 2005 to 2007. Now he’s written a book, out Tuesday, about his career: “I’m Not a Terrorist, But I’ve Played One on TV: Memoirs of a Middle Eastern Funny Man.”

Source: nypost.com

Egyptian Court Puts Ousted President Morsi On Trial Over Qatar Link

An Egyptian court put ousted Islamist president Mohammad Morsi on trial Sunday on charges of endangering national security by leaking state secrets and sensitive documents to Qatar, furthering a state crackdown on his outlawed Muslim Brotherhood.

Morsi, who was toppled by the army in 2013 after mass protests against his rule, remained defiant, insisting he was Egypt’s legitimate president despite facing several court cases.

“This court does not represent anything to me,” said Morsi, who was on trial with 10 other people. The maximum penalty if convicted is death.

Source: www.dailystar.com.lb

NBA Star Honors Chapel Hill Victim Deah Barakat

“Even though we never met, I think it will hopefully mean a lot to his family and friends that knew what kind of a basketball fan he was to have some kind of peace knowing that people are thinking about him and they’re not alone,” the NBA star said, according to the Inside Bay Area news website.

Source: english.alarabiya.net

More Than 1,000 in Qatar March to Show Support for Murdered US Students

At least 1,000 people, including US Ambassador to Qatar Dana Shell Smith, gathered in Education City this afternoon to march in solidarity with three Muslim American students who were killed near a college campus in the US last week.

The walk, which was organized by Qatar Foundation, marked a rare moment of political activism in a country where protests and demonstrations are largely discouraged, if not prohibited.

Source: dohanews.co

Tunisia’s Andalusian Heritage

Tunisia’s Andalusian Heritage By: Habeeb Salloum IT was back in the mid-1980s that I drove to Qal at el-Andles in search of the remains of the Spanish Muslims who had been forcefully evicted from the Iberian peninsula. Stopping our auto, I asked a passerby, `I want to speak to someone who knows the history of … Continued

Over 100 U.K. Artists Announce Cultural Boycott of Israel

Over 100 British artists announced on Friday that they are launching a cultural boycott of Israel, along with hundreds of others who have also signed up to the initiative. 

“Along with more than 600 other fellow artists, we are announcing today that we will not engage in business-as-usual cultural relations with Israel,” the group wrote in a letter published by Britain’s Guardian newspaper. 

According to the letter, this includes accepting professional invitations to Israel or funding from any institutions linked to the Israeli government.

“Since the summer war on Gaza, Palestinians have enjoyed no respite from Israel’s unrelenting attack on their land, their livelihood, their right to political existence,” read the letter, noting that the Israeli human rights organisation B’Tselem has called 2014 “one of the cruellest and deadliest in the history of the occupation.”

Notable signatories of the letter include film directors Ken Loach and Mike Leigh, legendary musician Brian Eno and art theorist John Berger. Roger Waters, well known for his criticism of Israel, also signed on. The full list of over 700 supporters appears on the Artists for Palestine U.K. website.  

Source: www.haaretz.com

What Chapel Hill Means for Muslim-Americans

What Chapel Hill means for Muslim-Americans

Muslim Americans are now the Other Americans just as Italians, Irish and Japanese before them.

Their deaths have been shrugged off as a mere ‘parking dispute’, writes Marashi [Getty]

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ibrahim Al-Marashi
Ibrahim al-Marashi is an assistant professor at the Department of History, California State University, San Marcos. He is the co-author of “Iraq’s Armed Forces: An Analytical History.”@ialmarashi

This week Craig Stephen Hicks murdered, execution-style, three American Muslims in North Carolina. 

When terrorist groups like ISIL conduct brutal executions it makes headline news around the world. When an American killed three fellow Americans, the story was practically buried in the US, ironically in a 24-hour news cycle that is often desperate for news. Deah Barakat, his wife Yusor Abu-Salha, and her sister Razan Abu-Salha were murdered before any of them had reached the age of 25. America did not just lose three Muslims this week. It lost three ambassadors of a new generation of Muslim-Americans trying to make a difference in their communities.

My family knew the young victims of this attack in North Carolina. We shared friends among the northern California Muslim-American community I grew up in. Deah, Yusor and Razan represented a new generation in the Muslim-American community that took decades in the making. We constitute a generation, who for the most part, are the children of Muslims who formed the brain drain trend, when American visas were given out eagerly to professionals from the Muslim world in the 1960s and 1970s, or other Muslims who came over with nothing and made a life for themselves and their families. Our parents told us to pursue the professions or careers that carried prestige back in the Middle East and Islamic world: medicine, engineering, or law.
Trajectory set by sacrifice

Working with computers in Silicon Valley was fine since it generated a hefty paycheck. Our parents told our generation any work in the humanities, arts, social or public policy was a waste of time and a distraction. Our trajectory was set by their sacrifices. They worked to raise us in the United States so we could have the opportunity to pursue professional degrees, earn money, marry, and buy a home in suburbia. The American dream.

Was it a hate crime?

What characterised my generation of Muslim Americans coming of age right before or after 9/11 was that we diversified our pursuits. Some, like myself went into academia, others became writers, or comedians, while others, like Deah and Yusor sought to pursue time-intensive medical degrees, and yet still devoted their skills and free time to social work and community engagement, such as feeding the homeless in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Razan, Yusor’s sister, was about to begin her university career studying architecture combined with environmental design. Deah, Razan, and Yusor were denied an opportunity to continue this saga of post-9/11 generation of Muslim Americans who were committed to civic commitment. And the news media in the US would have neglected their desires had it not been for hashtag activism asking why these victims were not getting any media attention.
And still their deaths have been shrugged off as a mere “parking dispute”, suggesting that the murders were part of a road rage incident gone out of control (which this New Yorker article reminds us has equally chilling implications of how the US has become numb to murder).

Don’t fit into America

Unfortunately, Muslim Americans tend to be newsworthy when implicated in acts of terrorism. Muslim Americans such as Nidal Hasan, the perpetrator of the Ft Hood massacre, Anwar al-Awlaki, of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, Faisal Shazad, the “Times Square bomber”, and the Boston Marathon bombers not only garnered significant media coverage during the 24-hour news cycle, but channels like Fox News and its invited pundits repeatedly invoke them years after their terrorist plots as examples to remind Muslim Americans that we do not fit into an America based on a Judeo-Christian legacy.

We constitute a generation, who for the most part, are the children of Muslims who formed the brain drain trend, when American visas were given out eagerly to professionals from the Muslim world in the 1960s and 1970s, or other Muslims who came over with nothing and made a life for themselves and their families.
 
American converts to Islam, when linked to terrorism, also fit this media narrative of Muslim “home-grown terrorists”, such as John Walker Lindh, who volunteered to fight for the Afghan Taliban, or Adam al-Amriki, who emerged as the English spokesperson for al-Qaeda. Zachary Adam Chesser, a Muslim convert responsible for a death threat to the creators of South Park if they depicted the Prophet Muhammad in their cartoon series, received more media attention than the three innocent Muslims murdered in North Carolina.

Even Jon Stewart, an American of Jewish heritage who has become the most prominent defender of Muslim Americans during his career at the Daily Show, covered Chesser’s threats in 2010, but let me down twice this week, announcing he will no longer host the show, and failing to criticise on his February 11 show how the mainstream neglected the murder of these young Muslims.

Deah, Yusor and Razan’s deaths serve as a tragic reminder of a decade-long legacy of anti-Muslim sentiment in the US with no end in sight. In my lifetime as an Iraqi American Muslim, I would like to have experienced a period, just an interval, where the Middle East or the Islamic world was not in the news, generating negative stereotypes among Americans.

In the 1980s, when Iran was the public enemy, I faced discrimination because for the ignorant the difference between Iran and Iraq was one letter. They never learned to differentiate between the two countries. Unfortunately, the ignorant could discriminate “legitimately” against me as Iraq became public enemy from 1990 to 2003.

Collateral damage

On some level I can empathise with how German Americans or Japanese Americans felt during World War II. However, in the case of Muslim Americans, there is no Berlin or Tokyo to surrender and declare that war is over, allowing for a “rehabilitation” of those Americans who were demonized just because of the nation that preceded their hyphen. During that conflict their ancestral homes were nation-states.
During the “war on terror”, any Muslim, from Morocco to Indonesia is subject to discrimination in the US as long as this war continues which is open-ended in nature.

For that matter, even Arab Christians (technically among the first Christians in the world) suffer discrimination in the US for just being associated with the Middle East. Even with the death of Osama bin Laden, anti-Muslim discrimination persisted in this country, and the rise of ISIL and that ongoing war seems to indicate that Muslim Americanswill be collateral damage for years to come.  
If I can presume to speak on behalf of myself, the three victims Deah, Yusor and Razan, and all of America’s Muslims, all we seek is to achieve some level of banality in American society. Just as Italian and Irish Catholics, Chinese and Japanese Americans, Jewish, and Latino Americans were perceived as “foreign” in the fabric of American society over time, it is our turn to be the Other American.
Granted like Deah, Yusor and Razan, we want to make a difference in our communities, but our desires as Muslim Americans are banal, just as the preceding generations of immigrants to the US. We hope to pursue our passions. We want to make a living. Hopefully change some ingrained stereotypes along the way.Unfortunately all these opportunities were denied to three young Americans this week.

Ibrahim al-Marashi is an assistant professor at the Department of History, California State University, San Marcos. 

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.

Source: Al Jazeera

Source: www.aljazeera.com

Supporters Gather At Wayne State To Mourn, Remember Victims Of Chapel Hill Shooting

On Tuesday, University of North Carolina student Deah Shaddy Barakat, 23, his wife Yusor Mohammad, 21, and her sister, Razan Abu-Salha, 19 were all killed in their home near the university’s campus.
Suspect Craig Stephen Hicks, 46, has been charged with three counts of first-degree murder in the incident which some are calling a hate crime against the three young Muslims.
Meantime, in Detroit on the campus of Wayne State University, a vigil was held for the three Chapel Hill students on Friday evening.

Source: detroit.cbslocal.com

Warren supporters can’t talk about Palestine

“Run Liz Run,” by Reeves Wiedeman in The New Yorker, reports on a New York party with a lot of celebrities pushing Elizabeth Warren to get in. Presumably a lot of these folks oppose Hillary Clinton’s hawkish foreign policy. But.

A hundred and fifty people mingled in [Julie] Pacino’s loft, listening to speeches from Warren supporters. After one audience member posed a question about Warren’s stance on Palestine, the organizers decided that there had been enough dialogue, turned on the music, and told everyone to dance.

You may remember that Elizabeth Warren herself ran away from the Gaza question last summer. Good luck maintaining this policy. US progressives are reaching consensus.

Source: mondoweiss.net

Half a year after devastating war, life in Gaza seems worse than ever.

n almost every way, the Gaza Strip is much worse off now than before last summer’s war between Israel and Hamas. Scenes of misery are one of the few things in abundance in the battered coastal enclave.

Reconstruction of the tens of thousands homes damaged and destroyed in the hostilities has barely begun, almost six months after the cease-fire. At current rates, it will take decades to rebuild what was destroyed.

Above: Zahar Khafanah tries to blow life into a tiny fire to use to cook for her children in her destroyed home in the Gaza Strip. Despite the damage, the family says they have no other option but to stay.
The economy is in deep recession; pledges of billions in aid have not been honored; and the Islamist movement Hamas, which controls the enclave, refuses to loosen its grip and is preparing again for war.

Diplomats, aid workers and residents warn of a looming humanitarian crisis and escalation of violence.

“After every war, we say it cannot get worse, but I will say this time is the worst ever,” said Omar Shaban, a respected Gaza economist. “There is no sign of life. Trade. Import. Export. Reconstruction. Aid? Dead. I’m not exaggerating when I tell my friends abroad: Gaza could collapse, maybe soon.”

Source: www.washingtonpost.com

Obama’s tepid, belated condemnation of Chapel Hill murders does little to ease fears

US President Barack Obama finally issued a condemnation and condolences regarding the brutal execution-stye murders of three young American Muslims in their home in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, on Tuesday that caused shock around the world.

Obama’s statement came after days of mounting anger at his silence, an appeal from the father of two of the victims and a stinging rebuke from Turkey’s president.

“Yesterday, the FBI opened an inquiry into the brutal and outrageous murders of Yusor Mohammad Abu-Salha, Deah Shaddy Barakat and Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha” Obama’s statement reads. “In addition to the ongoing investigation by local authorities, the FBI is taking steps to determine whether federal laws were violated.”

Source: electronicintifada.net

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