The National - News

HOW AN ONLINE SERIES IS TACKLING ISLAMOPHOB­IA HEAD ON

▶ Secret Life of Muslims features followers of Islam sharing their experience­s of life in the United States

- LAURA MACKENZIE

Egyptian-American comedian Ahmed Ahmed found himself routinely typecast as a terrorist when trying to make it as an actor in Hollywood in the 1990s.

“I played a terrorist in the movie Executive Decision … I played a terrorist on the sitcom Rosanne. In a film called Steel Sharks, I played this evil Persian submarine commander,” says the 47-year-old in the first episode of the Secret Life of Muslims online video series. “All my lines are like, ‘I’ll kill you in the name of Allah!’”

The popular series is one of several projects using the power of the internet to change the narrative about Muslims amid rising Islamophob­ia in the US. Others have launched on Facebook and Instagram, such as Muslim American Faces, where the photograph­er and filmmaker Heidi Naguib posts photos of Muslim Americans from all background­s, with a caption sharing a little of their life story.

Secret Life of Muslims has clocked up millions of views since it premiered in November, a few days before the presidenti­al election. In the intervenin­g months, Donald Trump has been back and forth with the US courts over his plan to impose a travel ban on visitors from six Muslim-majority countries. Alongside this, the series has featured high-profile and ordinary American Muslims talking about what Islam means to them and sharing their personal experience­s of being Muslim in the US.

The series’ American Jewish director and executive producer, Josh Seftel, said his own childhood experience­s with anti-Semitism made him feel compelled to do something to counter Islamophob­ia.

“As a Jewish kid growing up in upstate New York … I had experience­s where I was called names, where people used to throw pennies at me sometimes and someone threw a rock through the front window of our home. So I felt a connection to the kind of discrimina­tion that Muslims are facing in the United States,” he said.

“I think that a lot of Americans don’t know, or think they don’t know, any Muslims. So my sense is that [for] a lot of people, [the experience­s of American Muslims is] not something they think about, beyond what they see on the news. And what they see on the news are stories about terrorism … and things like that.

“I felt there were other stories that needed to be told.”

Seftel, 49, first tried to get the project off the ground in 2011 but it wasn’t until the Islamophob­ic and xenophobic rhetoric of the 2016 presidenti­al campaign that he was able to secure financial backing.

“I think some good things have come out of [the campaign rhetoric], including people uniting and people speaking about things that probably weren’t being spoken about enough in the past,” he said.

Ahmed Ahmed, who said most of his friends are Republican and “leaning to the right” politicall­y, believes Islamophob­ia is a problem that is getting worse in the US.

“I was dealing with it mildly as a child … and then as I got older I moved to Hollywood and I felt true racism through casting, production,” said Mr Ahmed, who was born in Egypt but grew up in the US. “And then 9/11 happened. So then it just got worse. And then Trump comes into office ... that was the icing on the cake. He brainwashe­d America to become afraid of the Muslim religion.”

Mr Ahmed said part of the problem is that people in the US and Hollywood “are afraid of the Muslim voice because they’ve never really heard it, not from a positive place”.

Even his friends, he said, are accepting of him, but not really of the whole religion “because they don’t get a chance to see it in a positive light much”.

“So a web series like this … is a real breath of fresh air that really kind of exposes us, humanises us, makes us assimilate­d, so we’re not some weird creature from another planet,” he said, adding that the series was a “courageous and, I guess, taboo, if you will, task to take on, coming from a non-Muslim”.

Some of the videos in the 15part series are lightheart­ed and gently poke fun at ignorance about Islam, such as A Beginner’s Guide to Hijabs. It starts with women talking about the weirdest questions they’ve been asked about wearing headscarve­s, including: “Do you shower in it?”

Others are more serious, such as the profile of a Bangladesh­i immigrant who was shot in a retaliator­y attack 10 days after 9/11, and later campaigned for his attacker to be saved from a death sentence.

A recurring theme in the series is the need for better representa­tion of Muslims in popular culture.

For Mr Ahmed, art, culture, comedy, food, music, any sort of entertainm­ent can be the best way of breaking down barriers between Muslims and other Americans and countering Islamophob­ia.

It is “a great way to talk about being Muslim without having it coming across as threatenin­g”, he said. “Politician­s aren’t doing it [breaking down barriers], Muslim scholars are not doing it. Even Muslim leaders, it’s just not happening. Nobody wants to hear an old man stand on a podium and say, ‘We Muslims around the world need to educate other people about Islam’.”

In addition to the millions of views picked up by the videos, a Facebook account associated with the series has attracted more than 70,000 likes. But, perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, not all the feedback has been positive – some comments on the videos are extremely Islamophob­ic.

“We’ve definitely gotten some hate,” Seftel said.

“We’ve received a lot of very negative comments.

“But we’ve received far more positive comments, things like, ‘I have never met a Muslim before and I feel like I have now’.”

After the success of the first series, Seftel said his production company is now raising money for a second.

“We feel like there’s still more work to do, there’re still more stories to tell, and we’re striving to do that,” he said.

We feel like there’s still more work to do, there’re still more stories to tell, and we’re striving to do that

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