The Borneo Post

Katy Perry’s chilling video is against targeting Muslims

- By Kristine Guerra

THE VIDEO opens with the story of 89-year- old Naru Kuromiya, a Japanese-American who spent her childhood on a chicken farm in Riverside, California.

Sitting on a chair, with a shawl covering her small frame, Kuromiya talks about that fateful day in 1942, when government officials took her father. They were given tags and numbers to wear, she said. Then, they were placed on a train, and Kuromiya, who would have been in her teens then, found herself living in an internment camp.

“We had to leave our business, our homes and our possession­s behind, even our pets,” she said. “We were an American farm family now living in an internment camp. And our constituti­onal rights were taken away from us. It all started with fear and rumours, then it bloomed into the registrati­on of JapaneseAm­ericans.” Then, the twist. About a minute and a half into the video, Kuromiya stops talking. For a few seconds, she stares directly at the camera. She takes off her glasses and her wig. Nothing can be heard except the sound of a piano.

Then, she slowly peels off her prosthetic mask, revealing a young woman with black hair and dark eyes underneath the disguise.

“Don’t let history repeat itself,” she said.

The young woman is played by Hina Khan, a Los Angeles-based Muslim actress of Pakistani heritage, according to the Los Angeles Times.

“# DontNorma l i zeHate,” a nearly three- minute PSA produced by singer Katy Perry, draws parallels between the incarcerat­ion of 120,000 JapaneseAm­ericans during World War II and the anti-Muslim rhetoric of not only President- elect Donald Trump, but also of his advisers and picks for Cabinet members.

Perry, a Hillary Clinton supporter, is among the celebritie­s who will attend the Women’s March in Washington on Saturday, the day after Trump’s inaugurati­on. Other attendees are America Ferrera, Cher, Scarlett Johansson, Amy Schumer, Olivia Wildem Constance Wu, Zandaya and ‘Orange is the New Black’ star Uzo Aduba.

Trump had proposed a “total and complete shutdown” of Muslims entering the United States.

After it was criticised by Republican­s and Democrats, Trump’s campaign amended it, saying immigratio­n should be suspended from countries “compromise­d by terrorism.”

On Nov 19, 2015, for instance, a Yahoo News reporter asked the then- Republican front- runner about registerin­g Muslims in a database or noting their religion on IDs. Trump said, “We’re going to have to look a lot of things very closely. We’re going to have to look at the mosques. We’re going to have to look very, very carefully.”

When NBC News asked him again the following day, Trump said he “would certainly implement” a database of Muslims in the country.

Trump has created an atmosphere of fear for Muslims Americans in the United States. The accountabi­lity and responsibi­lity for what you say and do now has been lifted so people feel a little freer to be racist, or act upon racism, because there are not necessaril­y consequenc­es for it - it’s just acceptable behaviour. If laws are put in place to back that up, it will be pretty scary. Aya Tanimura, PSA’s co-director

“There should be a lot of systems, beyond databases. We should have a lot of systems,” he told NBC News.

When asked if Muslims would be required to sign into the database, he said, “They have to be - they have to be.”

Shortly after, Trump disputed reports that he had endorsed creating a database for Muslims.

In December, his campaign released a statement staying, “President- elect Trump has never advocated for any registry or system that tracks individual­s based on their religion, and to imply otherwise is completely false.”

The president- elect’s choices for attorney general, CIA director and national security adviser also raised fears from Muslim civil rights groups and current and former government officials that the appointmen­ts could reinforce perception­s that the United States is at war against Islam itself, The Washington Post’s Joby Warrick and Abigail Hauslohner wrote.

“Trump has created an atmosphere of fear for Muslims Americans in the United States,” Aya Tanimura, the PSA’s codirector, told the Los Angeles Times.

“The accountabi­lity and responsibi­lity for what you say and do now has been lifted so people feel a little freer to be racist, or act upon racism, because there are not necessaril­y consequenc­es for it - it’s just acceptable behaviour. If laws are put in place to back that up, it will be pretty scary.” — Washington Post

 ??  ?? Perry, a Hillary Clinton supporter, is among the celebritie­s who will attend the Women’s March in Washington on Saturday, the day after Trump’s inaugurati­on. Iris Law is set to make her modelling debut as she stars in Burberry’s Liquid Lip Velvet...
Perry, a Hillary Clinton supporter, is among the celebritie­s who will attend the Women’s March in Washington on Saturday, the day after Trump’s inaugurati­on. Iris Law is set to make her modelling debut as she stars in Burberry’s Liquid Lip Velvet...

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