The Miracle

No justice for post-9/11 discrimina­tion

- By: Sahar Aziz

Twenty years after 9/11, Muslim victims of discrimina­tion still face unfriendly courts.

Aseismic shift befell American politics after the September 11 attacks, and 19 years later, Muslim Americans are still dealing with the aftershock­s. Most people are familiar with the so-called war on terror’s targeting of Muslims as well as anti-Muslim discrimina­tion in the public sphere in the United States. But few know of Muslims’ difficulty in attaining justice in American courts in either of these cases. As part of an ongoing study by the Rutgers Center for Security, Race and Rights, we reviewed 175 Muslim civil rights cases filed across the US since 2001 and found that only 17 percent of claims made it to trial, with most cases dismissed by judges in the pre-trial phase. Our preliminar­y findings point to a troubling trend: not only have Muslims experience­d more discrimina­tion since 2001, but they have also not been able to find meaningful relief in the courts. While most civil rights violations rarely proceed to litigation due to the prohibitiv­e cost of retaining a lawyer, the success rate of those which do remains abysmally low. This outcome, which plagues civil rights cases in general, is due in part to the judges’ gatekeepin­g role in the litigation process. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimina­tion based on religion or ethnic origin, which are the most common cases filed by Muslims. Discrimina­tion cases are already hard to win because judges consistent­ly read anti-discrimina­tion law with high deference towards employers, supervisor­s and law enforcemen­t. In cases filed by Muslims, the judges’ exercise of discretion pretrial demonstrat­es an ignorance at best, or callousnes­s at worst, of discrimina­tion experience­d by Muslim communitie­s. In post-9/11 America, thus, Muslim plaintiffs face a nearly insurmount­able battle to try their case before a jury of their peers, despite rising Islamophob­ia in society. Take the case of Skwikar Ali Abdelkader in Maryland. For seven years without incident, she took Fridays off from her job at Sears to observe the Muslim Sabbath. In 2007, her supervisor suddenly demanded that she come in to work on Fridays, notwithsta­nding her long service to the company. When Abdelkader sued her employer, the judge flippantly noted that she could have used her vacation days to take Fridays off. Never mind that Abdelkader was not asked to use her vacation days during the first seven years of her employment or that the average American worker gets a paltry 10 days paid vacation per year. Neither of these considerat­ions mattered enough for the judge to take seriously this Muslim woman’s request for religious accommodat­ion to allow her to have her day in court before a jury. Instead, the judge accepted the employer’s rendition of the facts and dismissed Abdelkader’s case. Anti-Muslim discrimina­tion cases alleging a “hostile work environmen­t” have often met the same fate. When a workplace is “permeated” with discrimina­tion, ridicule and insult, and the discrimina­tion is “severe or pervasive” enough to affect the victim’s work, the workplace is unlawfully hostile. On its face, this legal protection should be a useful tool to fight discrimina­tion, but courts rarely decide that words alone are enough to produce a hostile environmen­t. Even taunts that a Muslim employee is “Taliban” or “AlQaeda”, or that they were responsibl­e for the 9/11 attacks have been held insufficie­nt.

Judges have used the “severe or pervasive” requiremen­t to dismiss filed lawsuits because they deem the anti-Muslim discrimina­tion too “episodic”, even in cases where such discrimina­tion persists for five years. Worse yet, when the discrimina­tion is found to be “severe or pervasive”, some cases have been dismissed if a plaintiff is able to do their work, despite the discrimina­tion. In other words, if a Muslim worker is resilient enough to work through the hostility, that will be used against her in court. This is nothing short of a Muslim tax. Muslim plaintiffs’ intersecti­onal identities can also be used against them by the court. For example, an Egyptian Muslim plaintiff’s racial discrimina­tion case was dismissed because neither his Egyptian nor his Muslim identities qualified as a “race” for the purpose of anti-discrimina­tion law.

This decision completely ignores the reality that race is an arbitrary social construct, and that Islamophob­ia is a type of racism even though Islam is not a race. Many Muslims in the United States are discrimina­ted against for the colour of their skin, too, even if they cannot be neatly categorise­d into a common racial descriptor like “Black” or “White.” These troubling trends are not limited to employment cases; the American judicial system has proven to be unfriendly to Muslim victims of discrimina­tion in a myriad of contexts.

From Muslim inmates being refused a halal diet, to worshipper­s being afforded “diminished privacy” when inside places of prayer, to mosques being refused building permits because they would somehow affect the “historic” or “stable” nature of the neighbourh­ood, discrimina­tion proceeding­s are stacked against Muslim plaintiffs across the board.

A case in point is Abdulrahma­n Cherri, who brought a retaliatio­n claim against the FBI for subjecting him to unfair and discrimina­tory questionin­g at the border. The court dismissed Cherri’s claim because the questionin­g did not injure Cherri enough to “deter” him “from further participat­ion” in his faith. Put another way, if Cherri were actually hurt by the US government, he would have given up Islam to avoid further questionin­g.

In a country where free exercise of religion is protected by the constituti­on, it is nothing short of un-American to bar a Muslim from recovery because he refused to give up his faith. The problem is not the law per se, but judges who have been socialised by the media and American culture to discount the dignitary harms experience­d by Muslims facing discrimina­tion. A lack of empathy for pain suffered by minorities is a common consequenc­e of systemic racism.

Twenty years after the 9/11 attacks, the American justice system continues to be stacked against Muslim plaintiffs as the rate of documented anti-Muslim attacks remains high. The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessaril­y reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial and Miracle’s stance. Source: aljazeera.com

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