The Guardian Australia

Let’s be clear: Muslims are neither good nor bad. We’re just human

- Farah Elahi

When I was 13 my school, a Muslim faith school, was advised by the police to close for three days after 9/11 because they feared the students would be at risk and that the school building might be attacked. The sharp increase in hate crimes and attacks in particular on visibly Muslim girls and women indicated that this was a very real risk. But as a child it was very difficult to understand why people would associate a group of schoolchil­dren with these far-removed global events.

Growing up I was painfully shy and keen to be seen as good. But all my years being a “good” kid seemed to conflict with the prevailing messages that Muslims were deviant and worthy of suspicion; and that Muslim women in particular lacked agency. How I saw myself was at odds with how I was “seen” by others. The past 16 years have involved a lot of questionin­g and reflecting, both in terms of what it means to be “good”, but also on the various racist myths about Muslims.

The main difficulty is that Islamophob­ia is so poorly understood. Instead of focusing on the harm experience­d by British Muslims, Islamophob­ia is commonly dismissed by arguing that you can’t be racist against a set of ideas. Obviously there is space to criticise beliefs, and indeed much of this debate takes place between and within Muslim communitie­s. But that is quite distinct from the characteri­sation of Muslims that denies people the opportunit­y to self-determine their own identities. It contradict­s the very premise of the right to freedom from discrimina­tion – that people should be judged on their individual attributes rather than based on the category to which they are perceived to belong.

Another difficulty is that the so-called “Muslim community” is positioned as homogeneou­s, outside of, and opposed to Britishnes­s. Twenty years after the Runnymede Trust published groundbrea­king research on Islamophob­ia in Britain, a new report seeks to further the debate by clearly identifyin­g it, not as an abstract issue of culture, but for what it is: anti-Muslim racism. We do draw attention to the denial of dignity, rights and liberties across a range of political,

economic, social and cultural institutio­ns. The report examines and maps the impact of Islamophob­ia on individual­s and communitie­s across a range of issues, including employment, health, the Prevent strategy, hate crime and integratio­n. It recentres the focus on individual people and sets out 10 specific recommenda­tions on what needs to be done by government, media, civil society, local authoritie­s – and, indeed, all people – to tackle Islamophob­ia.

But we also seek to emphasise the fact that this is a debate about people.

The drip-drip demonising of Muslim communitie­s seeps into the everyday experience­s of individual­s. It manifests itself when they apply for jobs and their CV isn’t considered because of the assumption that they won’t “fit in”; when they visit a doctor and the health profession­al makes assumption­s about their lifestyle and their “conservati­ve” family; when no one will sit next to them on the tube or they are verbally or physically assaulted for looking Muslim. It’s there when a university student worries about being perceived as a terrorist if she badly phrases something in a discussion on Middle Eastern politics.

All Muslims can recount examples of when Islamophob­ia has impacted them or someone they know. One incident that continues to disturb me concerns a former pupil, who at the time was not yet 12. On her way to school a man slapped her across the face while hurling Islamophob­ic abuse. A carriage full of adults watched on. It is difficult for an 11-year-old to process why that happened to her. But understand­ing that Islamophob­ia is a form of racism can equip her to cope in the face of prejudice and discrimina­tion.

We should not attribute collective responsibi­lity for crimes on the basis of shared group identity. But we should also stop trying to prove the worth of Muslim individual­s by showing how fast they run, how well they bake or how much they give to charity. British Muslims are not exceptiona­l in vice or virtue. We’re just human.

• Farah Elahi is a research and policy analyst for Runnymede, an independen­t race equality thinktank

 ??  ?? ‘The drip-drip demonising of Muslim communitie­s seeps into the everyday experience­s of individual­s.’ Photograph: Cathal McNaughton/PA
‘The drip-drip demonising of Muslim communitie­s seeps into the everyday experience­s of individual­s.’ Photograph: Cathal McNaughton/PA

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