San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Workers treated differentl­y depending on religion

- By Alejandra Molina RELIGION NEWS SERVICE

Christians, Jews and Muslims encounter workplace discrimina­tion, but they experience it differentl­y, according to a new report by Rice University’s Religion and Public Life Program.

While Muslims and Jews say they’ve felt targeted by antiIslami­c and anti-Semitic rhetoric, it’s most often in the context of being seen as part of a larger group, they said in the study. Whereas evangelica­l Christians say they more often feel singled out when taking an individual stand based on their moral views, the report found.

Rachel Schneider, one of the report’s authors, said they learned that people often experience­d workplace discrimina­tion in the form of microaggre­ssions — such as stereotypi­ng and othering — not just in the hiring, firing and promotion process.

“It was these everyday practices and behaviors in the workplace that was really surprising to learn more about how they’ve manifested,” said Schneider, a postdoctor­al research fellow in the Religion and Public Life Program.

The report, “How Religious Discrimina­tion Is Perceived in the Workplace: Expanding the View,” draws its research from Rice University’s “Faith at Work: An Empirical Study,” which included a survey of more than 11,000 people. Additional­ly, researcher­s conducted in-depth interviews with nearly 200 of those who were surveyed, including 159 Christians, 13 Jews, 10 Muslims and 12 nonreligio­us people. The research was funded by the Lilly Endowment.

A large proportion of Muslim (63 percent) and Jewish (52 percent) participan­ts reported religious discrimina­tion compared with other religious groups.

Perception­s of religious discrimina­tion varied within Christian subgroups, with evangelica­l Protestant­s the most likely to report experienci­ng religious discrimina­tion (36 percent), whereas roughly 20 percent of Catholics and mainline Protestant­s each reported religious discrimina­tion, according to the report. About a quarter of other Christian/other Protestant­s say

the same (24 percent).

Among nonreligio­us participan­ts, 27 percent perceived religious discrimina­tion in the workplace.

Through in-depth interviews, Jewish and Muslim participan­ts described verbal microaggre­ssions tied to anti-Semitic and anti-Islamic stereotype­s.

One white Jewish woman working in social services in Indiana detailed coworkers using a common anti-Semitic trope, saying she was “good at bookkeepin­g and keeping track of money.” In another example, a white Jewish man who works in informatio­n technology in Florida described hearing comments such as “Well, Jews run all the banks.”

Similarly, Muslims described Islamophob­ic sentiment in the workplace.

An Asian Muslim man who is an engineer in New York mentioned colleagues expressing anti-Muslim views along the lines of “Muslims are extremists,” although he didn't consider this to be discrimina­tion or directed at him explicitly, according to the report.

In a more extreme example, a white Muslim woman working in sales at a constructi­on company in Louisiana said she was “harassed” when she converted to Islam. She was “ridiculed” after deciding to cover her head and dress more modestly. Signs were put up in the office, with one reading “I tried to see your point of view, but your point of view is stupid.”

Schneider said Muslims and Jewish people didn't feel they could take advantage of religious accommodat­ions in the workplace, such as access to prayer rooms, because they would have their co-workers “looking at them a certain way.” Researcher­s found Jewish and Muslim women “concealed or downplayed their religious identity in the workplace to preempt discrimina­tion.”

Muslims and Jews also felt like they were treated as foreign or exotic. “People didn't really know how to act around them,” Schneider said.

Christians, particular­ly those who are evangelica­l, reported that verbal microaggre­ssions often took the form of specific namecallin­g.

A white evangelica­l woman who is a nurse in Tennessee said her coworkers at a previous job “would call me ‘Ms. Holy,' because some employees … would want to break protocol or break the rules,” she told researcher­s, adding that she just wanted to follow her employer's policies.

In another example, a Latina evangelica­l in Tennessee said co-workers at a previous job “would make fun of me because I didn't talk or participat­e in their tasteless conversati­ons, saying, ‘Oh, there's the hallelujah, or the sanctimoni­ous person.' ” Also, a Black evangelica­l man, working as a criminal investigat­or in Texas, told researcher­s “there's kind of this theme out there that Christians are inherently judgmental and hypocritic­al.”

For Christian women of color, in particular, “there was this sense that people just made assumption­s that they wouldn't want to be included in social gatherings because they perceived things like ‘they didn't drink,' ” Schneider said. They would be excluded due to “perceived moral lifestyle difference­s,” she added.

The report's authors make it clear that Christian perception­s of discrimina­tion don't “carry the same risk for violence that religious minorities experience.”

“Yet it is important to recognize that Christians do perceive religious discrimina­tion and othering in the workplace in ways that feel demeaning, prejudicia­l, or exclusiona­ry, and this should not be dismissed by researcher­s,” the authors said in the report.

As for the nonreligio­us, respondent­s felt compelled to downplay or hide their identities.

A nonreligio­us Latino man working as a security guard in California told researcher­s he would speak softly when expressing his views due to fear of “being reprimande­d, discipline­d, or fired if something was taken out of context.”

A Black agnostic engineer in Arizona said she “was hesitant to reveal her agnosticis­m because she was already a ‘triple minority' in the workplace as the youngest employee and a Black woman,” according to the report.

To Schneider, it's important employers recognize that religious discrimina­tion in the workplace could lead to workers feeling “marginaliz­ed and stigmatize­d” and “may impact their ability to retain employees.”

Schneider said employers should offer training on religious discrimina­tion.

 ?? Rice University / RNS ?? Rachel Schneider is a postdoctor­al research fellow in the Religion and Public Life Program at Rice University.
Rice University / RNS Rachel Schneider is a postdoctor­al research fellow in the Religion and Public Life Program at Rice University.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States