The electoral silly season is over and it is time for a serious discussion removed from partisan passions and manipulation. Racism, the 800-pound gorilla in the American living room, has shrunk and is now no bigger than a jackass.
In his eloquent endorsement of Barack Obama, another African-American statesman, Gen. Colin Powell, took direct aim at racism and pulled the trigger: "It is permitted to be said such things as, 'Well, you know that Mr. Obama is a Muslim.' Well, the correct answer is, he is not a Muslim, he's a Christian. He's always been a Christian. But the really right answer is, what if he is?" He went on to describe a photo of a Muslim American mother grieving at the tomb of her soldier son at Arlington Cemetery.
Racism has just been wounded and permanently disabled. But racism in other forms is still alive and kicking. Its targets, defenseless against a larger than life metaphor, are Muslim and Arab Americans. One voter famously said of the black candidate, "He is an Arab," while the white candidate reassured her that, "No, he is a decent, family man." Another voter complained, "I don't trust him. He is a Muslim." The mere association of Mr. Obama with a former colleague at the University of Chicago, Palestinian American professor Rashid Khalidi, a scholar who advocates non-violence and now heads a prestigious center at Columbia University, was cynically raised as a campaign issue.
The name Barack Hussein Obama was enunciated with added emphasis on the middle name by one national commentator after another. The implication was not subtle in the least: he is the other, not one of us, and we shouldn't trust him.
Our president-elect's race could only be raised obliquely in most quarters because the country has come a long way. Young people have different sensibilities than many of their parents. It is too embarrassing for most people to attack a candidate with overt racism or anti-Semitism, both of which come with a withering price tag.
But another brand of racism, against a vulnerable minority in this country and over a billion people across the globe, carries no price tag. In fact, it just might be the statement you want to make to sound patriotic, a true American. This recent silent consent to smearing the names of a multitude based on their ethnicity compels me to raise my voice in defense of the values of fairness and equal opportunity for which our country stands.
Four decades ago, I was fortunate to come to this great country with my wife, and the two of us have raised three children. Our household now is filled with grandchildren who claim rich and varied heritage. It is but one of millions of households in the new America that live and breathe universal values of inclusiveness and, simply by existing, serve notice of the poor prognosis for racism in this country.
The threat that terrorists pose to our country is compounded for those of us of Arab and Muslim descent because these thugs have besmirched the reputation of a whole people and their religion, and cast a dark shadow on our community. We are well aware of the damage that the "Jeremiah Wrights" of our community inflict on us and on the fabric of our nation. By setting themselves as the "damn America" crowd, they squander the moral authority that targets of racism should have, and play into the hands of zealots of all types. They diminish the standing and the opportunities for equality and empowerment of the community they profess to represent. However, the abusive and often nefarious generalizations about all things Arab and Muslim in this country that go unchecked can only be labeled as racism. This brand of racism is permissible and rarely censured, but it is shameful and must be challenged. Degrading and offensive remarks about Arabs and Muslims should be met with the derision they deserve. All members of groups who have suffered racism and fought to tame the beast of bigotry are called upon to stand up for the rights of its most recent victims.
Our country makes it possible for individuals to earn the highest of achievements on merit. However, it demands those groups surmount mighty obstacles to earn their seat at the table. Every time we make room for a new group to be seated, our union edges closer to perfection. To paraphrase Joseph Campbell, you have to change the metaphor to change reality. Well, the American metaphor has just changed, as has its reality. This election has made future Jewish, Latino, Asian, or Muslim men or women presidents not only thinkable, but just a matter of time.
Ziad Asali is President of the American Task Force on Palestine.
Does a Two-State Solution Still Exist? | September 25, 2017 |
What to do while no peace is in sight | June 22, 2017 |
Living with a sloping status quo for 50 years | June 8, 2017 |
Six-Day War: 50th Anniversary with Ziad Asali | June 7, 2017 |
Fifty Years Since 1967: What Have We Learned about Arab-Israeli Peacemaking? | June 7, 2017 |
Women in Iraq, Syria need our help | October 14, 2014 |
ISIS and Sexual Slavery | October 3, 2014 |
Confronting ISIL: The Day and Decade "After" | September 26, 2014 |
Iraq’s Kurds reach a fork in the road | September 5, 2014 |
Al-Omari calls for leveraging Gaza war toward ending Israeli-Palestinian conflict | July 31, 2014 |