The Borneo Post

To counter travel ban, Jewish filmmaker wants to give American Muslims a voice

- By Colby Itkowitz

THE WEEKEND of the presidenti­al inaugurati­on, during his opening monologue on “Saturday Night Live,” host Aziz Ansari made the compelling observatio­n that Islamophob­ia is largely a result of lack of exposure to Muslims beyond how they are portrayed by Hollywood and in the news. He joked that the news should consider counter programmin­g just showing four Muslim people eating nachos in Chicago.

“Maybe what needs to happen is when they do the news report, they should do a second report about some other brown people that are just up to normal stuff — just to calm those people down,” Ansari said. “A lot of people are Islamophob­ic ... because any time they watch movies and TV shows, and a character is Arabic or they’re praying or something like that, that scary- a** music from ‘Homeland’ is underneath it, it’s terrifying.”

This is something Iman Zawahry, a Muslim fi lmmaker, has thought about her whole life. Often her projects have been turned down because “America isn’t ready for a Muslim cast” or “there’s too many brown people in this fi lm,” she said. Her life goal, she said is to “have characters that have the same wants as in any creative story but just happen to be Muslim, they are just relatable stories.”

Meanwhile, after President Donald Trump announced his now- stalled travel ban on people from seven majority-Muslim countries, Michael Morgenster­n, a Jewish fi lmmaker in California, said he was appalled and wanted to fi nd a way to support the Muslim American community. The answer was simple: Give them a chance to tell their own stories that would challenge false narratives and celebrate their community.

So, he reached out to the Islamic Scholarshi­p Fund where Zawahry is a director of its fi lm grant programme, and suggested creating a fund for Muslim fi lmmakers. Days later, they launched the American Muslim Storytelle­rs grant and kicked off a crowdfundi­ng campaign on Indiegogo, which ends Feb 25, in hopes of raising enough money to support several projects.

Film has the power to build empathy and humanise its characters. By giving Muslims a voice in how their stories are told, there’s a chance to change public perception and prejudice, Zawahry said. They envision short and long fi lms, documentar­ies, animation or even commercial­s, that show Muslims as human beings, rather than people to fear, Zawahry said.

“The ban was, to me, an opportunit­y to get people’s attention, but the thing we’re trying to address has been happening for decades. But when these issues enter the public consciousn­ess, it’s a time to talk about them and a time we don’t want to miss,” Morgenster­n said. “After Trump’s election, a lot of my friends came together to talk about what can be done. This is a campaign that people can respond to that will target the change we want to see.”

 ??  ?? Filmmaker Zawahry is helping support a new grant programme for Muslim filmmakers. — Photo courtesy of Islamic Scholarshi­p Fund
Filmmaker Zawahry is helping support a new grant programme for Muslim filmmakers. — Photo courtesy of Islamic Scholarshi­p Fund

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