San Diego Union-Tribune

LOCAL ARAB AMERICANS FORGED TIES

- BY DORIS BITTAR is an artist, educator and writer, and San Diego chapter president of the American Arab Anti-Discrimina­tion Committee. She lives in North Park.

Before May, I was marginally White. When George Floyd died, I became Brown.

Tens of thousands of American police receive militarize­d training, including the knee to neck hold that killed George Floyd. It is especially familiar to Palestinia­n Americans, because it is used against Palestinia­ns under Israel occupation. However, before May, we did not connect it to the pointed suffering of Black Americans.

Arab Americans hesitated before approachin­g Black Americans because we did not want to appropriat­e their suffering to cast a light on ours. Could our take on Floyd’s death dilute our Black brothers’ and sisters’ goals? After a few days and some phone discussion­s, we met virtually with the Racial Justice Coalition of San Diego. Our conversati­on resulted in embracing overlappin­g goals including peace and justice in the United States and abroad. Last July, we cemented our ties by co-writing an op-ed about the militarize­d training of San Diego County law enforcemen­t agencies by Israel.

It has been a year of intersecti­ng synapses and bridging chasms as we defined our particular brand of discrimina­tion. Arab Americans are racially profiled like Black, Latinx and Asian Americans. Many of us also pass for

White. Islamophob­ia plagues our Arab multirelig­ious identities even though some of us are not

Muslim. Arabs are Semites and we relate to anti

Semitism. Many of the stereotype­s that affect Jewish

Americans are familiar, such as controllin­g the oil industry, real estate moguls and the label of greed. Historical­ly, Arabs are depicted like the European etchings of miserly Jews in cartoons and unf lattering photograph­s. When Jews were “cleansed” from Spain in 1492, Arabs joined them on merchant marine vessels headed to Muslim lands. We also extend our hands to Latin and Mesoameric­ans who offer another facet of commonalit­y.

Over a year ago, we forged ties with the Japanese American Citizens League of San Diego. The word “citizens” in their title clued Arab Americans in on how to think about our identity. Are we full citizens in this country? Are we treated equally? The unfortunat­e answer is no. However, we are finally connecting the dots with others, which gives us the collective strength to be acknowledg­ed one day soon, inshallah.

Significan­t coalition partners for at least two decades include San Diego Jews, mainly from Jewish Voice for Peace. Our continuous conversati­ons include pre-pandemic picnics and endorsing the San Diego Arab Film festival that Karama of San Diego organizes. San Diegans and all Americans may find tremendous hope to know how we work toward peace.

Arabs here and abroad are little-known. Coalitions strengthen our collective goals and check on our echo chambers. Together we focus on the media, government, cultural and educationa­l institutio­ns, and the judiciary to acknowledg­e our voices and ask why we are repeatedly cheated of justice. George Floyd’s terrifying death is a clarion trumpet instructin­g us to connect dots and connect to one another with love and an open heart.

Coalitions strengthen our collective goals and check on our echo chambers.

Bittar

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States