Arab News

Could the Trump effect end up being good for US Muslims?

The rise in Islamophob­ia has prompted more active engagement from the community in US politics

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have targeted the community.

The Southern Poverty Law Center has documented more than 1,000 hate crimes in the US since Trump won the election on Nov. 9. Meanwhile, the FBI is investigat­ing a shooting in Kansas on Wednesday that killed one Indian engineer and injured another in a suspected hate crime that mistook the two men for being Middle Eastern.

“The sharp rise in hate crimes is definitely a big concern and a symptom of the deep polarizati­on in the US,” said Telhami, adding: “Trump has successful­ly empowered a fringe segment of the US population that is detrimenta­l to American values.” White nationalis­t groups and anti-Semitic voices have become more vocal since Trump won the presidency.

According to Bloomberg, “the New York Police Department (NYPD) received 143 hate-crime complaints between Nov. 8 and Feb. 19,” a 42 percent increase from the same period a year earlier. The Jewish community was the primary target of these attacks (72 percent), according to the NYPD.

Jewish community centers also received bomb threats in at least 10 locations across the US, reported Bloomberg. The vandalism of a Jewish cemetery in Missouri shocked the US public last week, prompting condemnati­on from Trump and a visit by Vice President Mike Pence.

However, this spike in criminal acts against minorities could tip the balance, and is driving a “heartening parallel trend,” said Telhami. “Trump has also empowered a majority of Americans on the other side of the equation to show solidarity with the Muslim community.” Almost 1,000 participan­ts rallied in New York in solidarity with Muslims last weekend.

After a mosque in Texas was destroyed in a fire last month, Jews handed Muslims the key to their synagogue. This week, after the vandalism of Jewish headstones at the cemetery, an online fundraiser encouragin­g Muslims to donate raised over $100,000 in 24 hours to repair the damage.

Telhami referenced “four polls over the past year” that his center has conducted, which show that “Americans’ views on Islam and Muslims have become more favorable incrementa­lly. Every single poll showed a positive change of around 12 percentage points. We are almost now at pre-9/11 numbers.”

The polls show that attitudes toward Muslims jumped from 53 percent favorable in November 2015 to 70 percent in October 2016. Attitudes toward Islam also “saw improvemen­t from 37 percent in November 2015 to 49 percent in October 2016, reaching the highest favorable level since 9/11.”

Telhami said: “This is a revolution (in the perception of Muslims) taking place in America,” one where “Islam and Muslims are being integrated into the American identity as part of who they are.” The rise in Islamophob­ia has also prompted more active engagement from the community in US politics, whether it is running for public office or taking part in political and media discourse.

While Telhami stressed that it will “be hard to know which one of the two trends (Islamophob­ia or revolution) will win out because it is a function of politics,” he saw the trajectory of US values as one that would ultimately favor the embrace of Muslims.

As the Trump administra­tion works on a second version of the travel ban, and authoritie­s continue to investigat­e several hate crimes, the public backlash in solidarity with Muslims gives Telhami hope that the “good more than the bad will prevail as an effect of Trump.”

 ??  ?? Participan­ts pray in an interfaith gathering and protest, calling for the investigat­ion of the NYPD killing of Mohamed Bah on Friday in New York City. (AFP)
Participan­ts pray in an interfaith gathering and protest, calling for the investigat­ion of the NYPD killing of Mohamed Bah on Friday in New York City. (AFP)
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