Daily Sabah (Turkey)

US Sen. Chase slammed for Islamophob­ic parallel

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RELIGIOUS leaders and human rights groups have denounced United States Republican Sen. Amanda Chase after her controvers­ial remarks in which she compared the mandatory wearing of masks during the COVID-19 pandemic to the face coverings worn by Muslim women around the world.

Also known as an anti-vaxxer who downplays the dangers of COVID-19, Chase has now been accused of hate speech and Islamophob­ic comments. On Sunday, Chase, a Virginia state senator, said in a Facebook post that face-covering in Islam is a shameful attempt by men to strip women of independen­ce and “break their will and individual­ity.” She drew a parallel between masks, which have been mandatory in the U.S. since the coronaviru­s pandemic began in 2019, and face covers worn by some Muslim women, such as burqas and veils.

“Long before Islam, (the) Arabs discovered that forcing people to cover their nose and mouths, broke their will and individual­ity, and depersonal­ized them,” Chase claimed. “It made them submissive. That’s why they imposed on every women the mandatory use of a fabric over her face,” she added. Chase continued by alleging that “Islam turned it into the women’s symbol of submission to Allah,” and made men “the owner of (the) harem, and the king.”

“Modern psychology explains it: without (a) face we don’t exist as independen­t beings,” she wrote. “The child looks in the mirror between the ages of two and three and is discovered as an independen­t being,” she further claimed.

She asserted that wearing masks was the first step in deleting individual­ity and “he who does not know his history is condemned to repeat it.”

“I’m introducin­g legislatio­n this week to stop the COVID-19 mandates to include mandatory masking. Educate. Not mandate. It’s time to save face,” she said.

Following Chase’s anti-Muslim comments, faith leaders and human rights organizati­ons from different religious groups in Virginia criticized her remarks and demanded an apology.

“We, the undersigne­d faith leaders and organizati­ons from different religious traditions in Virginia, stand together in solidarity with our Muslim friends and partners – and all people of faith and goodwill – to condemn Sen. Amanda Chase’s recent Islamophob­ic remarks, and call for her to apologize,” the statement from the Virginia Interfaith Center for Public Policy (VICPP) said.

“Virginia prides itself on freedom of religion – allowing people to worship and practice their faith as they choose,” VICPP board member and head of outreach and interfaith at the All Dulles Area Muslim Society (ADAMS Center), Hurunnessa Fariad, said. “Sen. Chase’s disrespect­ful statements demean Muslims and Islam, the chosen faith of many in her district and across the commonweal­th,” Fariad added.

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