Gulf Today

Western education has a lot to answer for when it comes to the Christchur­ch attack

- Akanksha Singh

The mass shootings at two mosques in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, that killed 50 people weren’t different. They weren’t different because the atacker had a manifesto outlining his depraved beliefs, they weren’t different because they happened at the hands of a white man in New Zealand, and they certainly weren’t different because they were streamed live from his phone.

As a society, we seem to consistent­ly distinguis­h Islamic extremism from “other” extremism. Truthfully, however, there is no “other” when it comes to extremes; there is no religion, no logic, and, indeed, no compassion.so, when the atacker – a self-proclaimed “regular white man” from Australia – declared he was carrying out the atack to “directly reduce immigratio­n rates to European lands by intimidati­ng and physically removing the invaders themselves”, I didn’t just see a xenophobic, white supremacis­t ideology; I saw someone who was ignorant and poorly educated.

There’s a reason that racists and xenophobes are comfortabl­e with the idea of an “invasion” by immigrants, refugees, or people of colour – western education has, time and again, fuelled white supremacy and, consequent­ly, Islamophob­ia.

Hours ater the Christchur­ch terror atack, three white men atacked a man outside a mosque in east London. They called worshipper­s atending Friday prayers “terrorists” and assaulted one such worshipper with a hammer and a baten.

Back when I studied GCSE history, we covered a lot of ground, but what we didn’t cover in nearly enough detail was colonialis­m. It was mentioned in a paragraph, to be sure, but then we brushed it aside and focused on the wars and all the great things Britain gave the world.

I think writer and politician Shashi Tharoor perhaps said it best when he described this cultural phenomenon as “historical amnesia”. But this isn’t unique to British curricula. 60,000 years of Aboriginal history are ignored in Australia, with history textbooks still implying that Australia is white. And America and Canada, too, where Native American and First Nation history is but a small component of what is learnt.

Of course, this is changing in some parts of the world (albeit slowly), but until these curricula serve to be more than propaganda for how great the allied powers were, they’re not of much use. Along with history, though, we need to look at the language and rhetoric we use to describe ourselves before we delve into whom we confine to the “outsider” label. Several individual­s who have fanned the flames of modern-day Islamophob­ia are in denial over the extent to which commentary like theirs can lead to terrorist atacks. When two New York University students confronted Chelsea Clinton at a vigil for the victims of the Christchur­ch atack, they suggested that Clinton’s criticism of black Muslim representa­tive Ilhan Omar were part of the problem.

In a video, student Rose Asaf is heard saying, “This right here is the result of a massacre stoked by people like you and the words you put out into the world. And I want you to know that, and I want you to feel that deep inside. Fortynine people died because of the rhetoric that you put out there.”

Clinton, who replied to a tweet on antisemiti­sm in response to Omar’s tweet accusing US leaders of defending Israel for financial gain, said she “co-signed as an American”. Adding: “We should expect all elected officials, regardless of party, and all public figures to not traffic in antisemiti­sm.”

There’s enough research to suggest we aren’t born racist – we learn it. Perhaps from a racist uncle or grandparen­t, say. Perhaps from the man down the road who tells women in headscarve­s to “go home”.

Politician­s, journalist­s and public figures have hugely influentia­l plaforms. And until they can fully grasp the extent to which they control public discourse surroundin­g issues such as immigratio­n and xenophobia, and Islamophob­ia and white supremacy, as a public, we need to hold them accountabl­e wherever possible. Because words of hate or intoleranc­e – however mild – don’t just hurt those they’re intended for, they empower closet xenophobes and reiterate white supremacis­t beliefs, too.

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