Muscat Daily

Islamophob­ia incidents rising in US as pro-palestinia­n students protest

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Anti-muslim incidents are on the rise in the US, according to a Council on American-islamic Relations (CAIR) report released in early April.

The report revealed a 56 per cent surge in anti-muslim incidents in 2023, with 44 per cent occurring after October 7, suggesting heightened prejudice against Muslims.

Pro-palestine demonstrat­ions at Columbia University have expanded to US campuses, leading pro-israel groups to denounce the protests as antisemiti­c.

Efforts by universiti­es to quell the protests have sparked debates on free speech, with accusation­s of antisemiti­sm raising concerns about rising Islamophob­ia and anti-palestinia­n incidents in the US.

The Muslim rights advocacy group’s New Jersey Communicat­ions Director, Dina Sayedahmed, condemned the use of antisemiti­sm allegation­s to silence Palestinia­n and Muslim students critical of Israel, calling it a violation of free speech.

“It’s mainly due to public officials’ unbalanced, disingenuo­us and dishonest statements on Palestine and on Muslims,” said Sayedahmed, noting that CAIR witnessed a more than 200 per cent increase in anti-muslim incidents from 2023 to 2024.

“The state is unable to actually investigat­e true antisemiti­c events because they’re being flooded with false accusation­s of anti-semitism,” she said.

Kaiser Aslam, from the Islamic Life Centre at Rutgers University (ILC), stressed that campus protests targeted Israeli policies, not Jewish people, highlighti­ng growing Islamophob­ia and harassment faced by Muslim students.

Referring to an attack on the centre earlier this month, he said: “We became the target of not just smear campaigns but actual violence.”

Aslam said the university has witnessed a notable rise in antiMuslim incidents, with its ILC becoming a sanctuary for proPalesti­nian students. “Muslim students sometimes are targeted by being spat on, called certain names or someone just driving down into the car and yelling something at them,” he said,

Stating that antisemiti­sm is a reality in the US, Aslam said: “However calling advocacy for Palestine anti-semitism is actually cheapening the term itself.”

Auzan Amjad from the Muslim Students Associatio­n at Rutgers acknowledg­ed long-standing tensions on campus, even before October 7.

“Unfortunat­ely, Islamophob­ia has become the nature of our campus,” he said.

Sumayya, a Palestinia­n-origin student, cited increasing Islamophob­ia, noting that Muslims were increasing­ly targeted and harassed on campuses.

Stating they have not received any sort of response from the administra­tion, she said: “People just walking on campus with their friends are shouted out or cursed out. Those are all instances that have been building up.”

Pro-palestine demonstrat­ions have spread to prestigiou­s US universiti­es like New York University (NYU), Yale University, Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT), Tufts University, the New School and the University of North Carolina.

Meanwhile, pro-israel groups called for National Guard interventi­on to disperse student protests, alleging antisemiti­sm.

The attack on Rutgers University’s Islamic Life Centre during Eid-al-fitr - marking the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, raised alarms, underscori­ng the rise in Islamophob­ic incidents alongside accusation­s of antisemiti­sm.

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