Muslim Americans who were students in 2001 tell Teen Vogue that the xenophobia and Islamophobia that surfaced in response to 9/11 is still with us.
that highlighted the rise of Islamophobia and surveillance of Muslims worldwide. U.S. politicians may scratch their heads over the cause of their nation’s Islamophobia, but one significant date looms overhead: As the 20th anniversary of 9/11 approaches, Muslim Americans who were students in 2001 tellthat the xenophobia and Islamophobia that surfaced in response to those attacks is still with us.
Masood's experience is shared by organizer Aisha bint Gladys, whose parents immigrated from Haiti and Sudan, and Sharmin Hossain, co-director of Queer Crescent and founder of the, “My classmates and I witnessed videos of the towers burning, firefighters moving through rubble, and just pure chaos.” Although bint Gladys, who was only eight at the time, didn’t quite understand what was happening , she says the situation was tense.
Bint Gladys herself started wearing hijab two years after 9/11, but often took it off before going into school. “The first day I actually wore it inside," she says, “a boy pulled it off my head.” On bint Gladys's behalf, someone told a teacher and she says the boy was expelled. But instead of relief, bint Gladys “felt the school turned against [her],” and she heard “whispers of ‘terrorist’ at lunch and in the hall.
Adam Karami, a Philadelphia-based computational biologist, moved to the U.S. from Jakarta, Indonesia, in 2007. “Growing up in the world’s largest predominately Muslim country meant that I was tapped into the shared global consciousness of Muslims everywhere,” he says. Regarding 9/11, Karami, who was nine-years-old then, recalls, “It felt like a massive tragedy to me even at that age. I remember watching the news and thinking it was some sort of action movie.
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Muslim Americans confront legacy of 9/11 Islamophobia: 'Unspoken tragedy'Twenty years and 600 miles from Ground Zero in Lower Manhattan, the nation's largest Arab Muslim community is still quietly reeling from the 2001 terror attacks and a psychological blow dealt to Islamic American identity. 'This is, perhaps, the unspoken tragedy of what happened two decades ago,' said Dawud Walid, executive director of the Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. The group of terrorists who claimed to be acting in the name of Islam, taking nearly 3,000 innocent lives, set off a wave of Islamophobia in America that many peaceful and patriotic Muslims said still reverberates years later.
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Muslim Americans confront legacy of 9/11 Islamophobia: 'Unspoken tragedy'Twenty years and 600 miles from Ground Zero in Lower Manhattan, the nation's largest Arab Muslim community is still quietly reeling from the 2001 terror attacks and a psychological blow dealt to Islamic American identity.
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20 years after 9/11, an American Muslim recalls the war you didn't see on TVThe differences between how 9/11 was covered on TV overseas and in the U.S. exemplified cultural gaps between East and West. As a journalist and daughter of an immigrant, LorraineAli describes how the last two decades have arguably been the hardest.
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Muslim Americans confront legacy of 9/11 Islamophobia: 'Unspoken tragedy'Twenty years and 600 miles from Ground Zero in Lower Manhattan, the nation's largest Arab Muslim community is still quietly reeling from the 2001 terror attacks and a psychological blow dealt to Islamic American identity. 'This is, perhaps, the unspoken tragedy of what happened two decades ago,' said Dawud Walid, executive director of the Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. The group of terrorists who claimed to be acting in the name of Islam, taking nearly 3,000 innocent lives, set off a wave of Islamophobia in America that many peaceful and patriotic Muslims said still reverberates years later.
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Muslim Americans confront legacy of 9/11 Islamophobia: 'Unspoken tragedy'Twenty years and 600 miles from Ground Zero in Lower Manhattan, the nation's largest Arab Muslim community is still quietly reeling from the 2001 terror attacks and a psychological blow dealt to Islamic American identity.
Baca lebih lajut »