The Asian Age

Undercurre­nt of hate and a lot of it is online against transgende­rs NZ attacks: Muslims still feel unsafe a year on

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Christchur­ch, March 14: Aliya Danzeisen rises before dawn every day to hear the news so she can prepare her school-age daughters for any harassment they may face for being Muslim. “We don’t feel any safer,” the Muslim community leader says, reflecting on the 12 months since the Christchur­ch mosque attacks, in which a self-declared white supremacis­t killed 51 Muslims at Friday prayers.

The abuse experience­d prior to the attacks on March 15 last year died down immediatel­y after the killings, Danzeisen said, adding: “It felt the entire New Zealand population was rallying behind us.” But she says it is now on the rise again, a year on from the killings that rattled the normally peaceful South Pacific nation, with unease among the Muslim community amid ongoing vitriol and threats.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern — who received widespread praise for her handling of the aftermath of the massacre — admitted Friday there was “much more” her country could do to tackle white supremacis­ts. Anjum Rahman, co-founder of the Islamic Women’s Council of New Zealand said there was an “undercurre­nt or rhetoric of hate... it isn’t just our community, we see it a lot in online hate (towards) the transgende­r community. “I wouldn’t say it’s specifical­ly just us, but we’re feeling it.”

Muslim women who wear headscarve­s were targeted

Residents pay their respects by placing flowers for the victims of the mosques attacks in Christchur­ch.

“because they think we’re vulnerable and can’t fight back”, she said. Following the massacre at two mosques in the South Island city, New Zealand’s government moved swiftly. Gun laws were tightened, Ardern launched a global campaign to have terrorist and extremist content removed online, and a judicial inquiry was establishe­d to investigat­e what could have been done to prevent the attacks. Danzeisen, a former corporate lawyer in the United States who moved to New Zealand 14 years ago, said she believes the support shown to Muslims in the immediate aftermath of the shooting “surprised those in the fringe supremacis­t movements”.

“As a result it’s made them more defensive and more vitriolic, they’ve become louder,” she said. In a recent threat to the Islamic Women’s Council “they told us that they knew what we were doing, who we were, who we were meeting with and they were watching us and there was a mention of poisoning”.

Danzeisen said she felt it was important to brief her high school-age daughters about global incidents so they could handle any intimidati­on. “I did that for years, so they could go to school and be prepared, to be able to explain to peers or teachers when there is an internatio­nal issue to explain why in their response. I am aware of children being harassed both by peers but also educators.”

The impact spreads beyond New Zealand. At the Al Noor mosque Jabara Akhter Juti said her family in Bangladesh remain “very concerned about me” since she moved to Christchur­ch last year with her husband. The imam at Al Noor, Gamal Fouda, wanted the broader impact of extremism addressed and not just confined to Muslims.

 ?? — AFP ??
— AFP

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