cisler on Thu, 20 Sep 2001 19:10:16 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Silicon Valley Muslims |
I work from home a lot but also in other countries and parts of America. I have had two distant meetings postponed, so I have not left Silicon Valley since 9.11. I have been rather worried about the reaction against Muslims, Arab Americans, or visitors from the region. It has been reported extensively, and many public figures from President Bush on down have spoken out to prevent bigots and angry ignorant folks from targeting mosques, businesses, and individuals. As you may have read, the Sikhs have suffered quite a bit in this respect. One was dragged off a train in Rhode Island last week because he had a turban and carried a knife (which is ceremonial and part of their religion, I believe). Another was shot at his gas station in Arizona. For the ignorant beard + turban = Usama bin Laden. The area where I live is over-priced (like all of the area) but it is very diverse. The school district where my wife works has over 65 languages represented. When my son played basketball in high school, his teammates included several white and black Americans, an Egyptian, a Lebanese, a Pakistani, a fellow from Hong Kong, and another from Mexico. I think all of America will eventually be like this. Right now, it's mainly on the coasts. Last week I decided to pay a visit to the South Bay Islamic Association which is located in a big old house in downtown San Jose, but it keeps a very low profile. I found the address and a tiny sign (s.b.i.a.) and a locked door. Peering inside I could see text in Arabic, a sign in English to remove your shoes, and a large room for prayer. Later I called to talk to them but just got a recorded message that deplored the attack and tried to educate the caller a bit about Islam. I was able to leave a short message. I then went to the house where the parents of the Egyptian basketball player lived. He is away at college, but his younger sister goes to school locally. Both cars were outside, but nobody answered the door. I left a note to express support and offered them help should they need it. These are folks I really do not know. The next evening I happened to be watching a CBS news program on how little had been accomplished militarily with the cruise missile attack on Afghanistan. My dog's bark is our doorbell, and I looked outside to see two women, each wearing shawls over their heads approaching the door. They were silhouetted behind the big American flag I have on our porch. I went outside and kept the dog inside. The visitors turned out to be the mother of the Egyptian kid (she's from Damascus herself) and her daughter. They wanted to talk with me since I left the note. Nothing bad had happened to them so far. However, at the big mosque in Santa Clara, they had conducted a prayer service for the victims, and Fox TV was there. Out of all the general sympathy expressed, Fox showed only a short clip where the imam talked of the Bangladeshis who died in the WTC, as if the congregation were only concerned with Muslims who died and not everyone. We talked for about 45 minutes about Islam, the problems in Pakistan, U.S. response, the role of Israel, and they invited me to the mosque. The FBI is coming this week to talk to the congregation about how to handle threats or acts of hate. The newspaper today has a number of items about this: an Indian owned multiplex theater in Fremont (where thousands of Indians and Afghans live) has almost no business for the Bollywood movies from India, in spite of the advertisement that shows all proceeds go to the Red Cross. Not just the profits but all the money. Local restaurants that serve Lebanese, Iranian, and Afghan food report INCREASED business--after fearing the worst. People are showing their support, bringing parties and large groups, and in once case the diners ran off an anti-arab protestor who showed up at one Afghan restaurant. That is encouraging. Some groceries and filling stations are having problems. One Pakistani grocery owners was shown getting training in firearms at a gun shop because of threats. Lots of survival gear is being sold (after the non-event of Y2K made sales slump). One so-called war surplus store sold out of gas masks last weekend. the owner said he had not had that much activity since the week before the Seattle WTO mess when activists stocked up before heading north. I think that it will be hard for Muslims and Arab Americans to feel comfortable, especially with the increased profiling, checks, and security measures that may not be applied in a balanced way. How the federal, state, and local governments protect these folks will help define the way our country is transformed, as it surely will be in the years ahead. Steve Cisler _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list [email protected] http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold