Race Relations and Prejudice by Danny Andre Dixon

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    Development of Race and Ethnic Relations 1

    Race Relations and Prejudice

    TSL 544 Teaching in a Pluralistic Society

    Hubert Clarke, Instructor

    Grand Canyon University, Phoenix, Arizona

    By

    Danny Dixon

    May 18, 2008

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    Development of Race and Ethnic Relations 2

    Development of Race and Ethnic Relations

    Introduction

    A substantial pattern of prejudice and discrimination may be identified in

    the United States primarily affecting negatively Blacks, initially brought to the

    continent involuntarily, and Hispanics, from whom a significant portion of land

    was absorbed by war as White European colonists, primarily, expanded

    westward fully motivated by a sense of Manifest Destiny. It is also appropriate

    in a study of the development of race and ethnic relations to include significant

    discussion concerning a presently ethno-cultural group, Muslims, who are

    destined to be the recipients of prejudice and discrimination by the three

    aforementioned bodies because of the change of the world since September 11,

    2008.

    Early History

    Bennett provides an excellent outline of recent events that have marked

    what she calls the prevalence of prejudice and racism in the United States

    (Bennett, 77). Bennett does not avoid acknowledgment of the horrors of African

    slaves brought to the United States in which

    over 100 million Black Africans were either killed or transported to theAmericas between 1502 when the slave trade began and its actual end inthe 1860s. [Therein] over 400,000 Africans had been forced into slaveryin North America and another 10 to 50 million were forcibly transportedto South America and the Caribbean. By 1860 the African American

    population in the United States had grown . . . to more than 4 million, withthe majority being born into slavery. (Bennett, 135).

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    This first of three phases of African American history in the United States

    continues with a fair treatment to 1992 of their status of being their masters

    personal property, emancipated freemen with the right to vote after the

    American Reconstruction Act of 1867; surviving as victims of a failure by

    legislators following the14th and 15th Amendments to the Constitution to

    develop fair land distribution reform resulting in their status, mainly, as tenant

    sharecroppers, treatment as second class and often disenfranchised citizens,

    coloreds kept separate from Whites in schools, public transportation,

    restaurants, theaters, baseball fields, public bathrooms, swimming pools, doctors

    offices, and so on ( Bennett, 139); and even after migration north to live in

    cities across the United States, experiencing a Harlem Renaissance in literature,

    art, music, and film during the 1920s; benefiting from the effects of social

    commentary by authors such as W. E. B. Bubois Souls of Black Folkand

    Richard Wright in his 12 Million Black Voices, social advances through civil

    rights consciousness initiated through civil disobedient acts led by men such as

    Martin Luther King, the Black Panther organization, and Black Muslims (The

    Nation of Islam) represented most significantly by the fiery Malcolm Little (who

    adopted the name Malcolm X) primarily in the 1950s and carried out after

    legislation in the1960s (Bennett, 135-143).

    Bennett does not purport to write a history of African Americans from

    first to last, although she does, trace the above details. She does, however pick

    up on sifnificant events beginning in 1992 to the near-present, which are

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    significant sociologically as regards Blacks in the United States including the

    following:

    The 1992 Rodney King beating by four white Los Angeles policemen.The officers were acquitted resulting in outrage and riots in south-centralLos Angeles resulting in 50 deaths and $800 million of financial and

    property losses.

    A 1995 Harvard study reporting of the dismantling of desegregation, oneof the pivotal decisions of the 1950s and meticulously carried out in the1960s.

    The O. J. Simpson murder trial and divisive discussion within families,

    communities, classrooms, workplaces after the not guilty decision in thecriminal case.

    Increases during the summer of 1994, for example, of ethno-violence.

    An increase of hate sites on the Internet increasing dramatically as lateas 1997.

    The James Byrd truck dragging, in which an African American wasdragged to his death by two white males in 1998.

    Benjamin Smith of the World Church killing African Americans andAsian Americans on a three-day spree of racially motivated violence.

    Racial violence breaking out after Cincinnati, Ohio police shot and killedan unarmed African American boy in 2001.

    In 2004 over 1500 harassment and anti-Muslim violence cases, anincrease of 50% over the previous year (Bennett, 78-79).

    Bennet mentions a number of world events in which ethnic tensions can be seen

    as cases of indigenous Brazilian Indians experiencing epidemic suicides after

    displacement from homelands; ethnic cleansing in various places in the world;

    Arab-Israli conflicts in the Middle East, genocide between tribes in Africa;

    English vs. Pakistani tensions. And Bennett mentions, briefly, that

    on September 11, 2001, an international network of terrorists attacked theWorld Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington D.C.,

    killing thousands of innocent civilians from the United States and manyother nations from around the world. (Bennett, 79).

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    While any number of groups call for a continuing investigation of the events of

    September 11 (Avery, 2007), it should not be forgotten that this Pearl Harbor

    type event, in and of itself, has cast the United States into war in two theaters,

    Afghanistan and Iraq with one more looming on the horizon (Iran).

    Ongoing Challenges

    Certainly there is much yet to be done with respect to racial

    discrimination toward American Blacks. However, the ramifications for Islamic

    people since September 11, 2001 are becoming increasingly evident. Jim Lobe

    writes to this effect:

    The yearly number of complaints of civil-rights-related incidents -- that is,discrimination, harassment, and violence that did not rise to the level ofhate crimes -- tripled between the April 1995 Oklahoma bombing and

    mid-1997 from 80 to 240. It then climbed gradually up to 366 over thefollowing four years before the Sep. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on NewYork and the Pentagon.

    Since, then, however, the number of reported incidents have risensharply -- from 602 in 2002, to 1,019 in 2003, to 1,522 in 2004, to justunder 2,000 last year, according to the report which suggested thatincreased awareness of civil rights issues within the U.S. Muslimcommunity, as well as a rise in anti-Muslim sentiment as reflected in the

    polls, may have combined to push the totals ever higher.

    But the author of the report, CAIR Legal Director Arsalan Iftikhar,insisted that media, including the Internet, is the single most importantcause of the latter.

    "We believe the biggest factor contributing to anti-Muslim feelingand the resulting acts of bias is the growth in Islamophobic rhetoric thathas flooded the Internet and talk radio in the post 9/11 era," he said. "Youcan't turn on the radio without hearing negative, bigoted comments aboutIslam." (Lobe, 2006).

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    Even Senator John McCain, front runner in the final months bid for the

    candidacy as the Republican candidate for President has hailed as a spiritual

    adviser an Ohio megachurch pastor [Rod Parsley] who has called upon

    Christians to wage a war against the false religion of Islam with the aim of

    destroying it. Parsley reportedly wrote the following in his 2005 bookSilent

    No More:

    I cannot tell you how important it is that we understand the true nature ofIslam, that we see it for what it really is. In fact, I will tell you this: I donot believe our country can truly fulfill its divine purpose until weunderstand our historical conflict with Islam. I know that this statementsounds extreme, but I do not shrink from its implications. The fact is thatAmerica was founded, in part, with the intention of seeing this falsereligion destroyed, and I believe September 11, 2001, was a generationalcall to arms that we can no longer ignore. (Corn, 2008).

    Such language does all but promote cool headedness in a social climate that is

    already fertile soil for prejudice. Nor do such attitudes promote reciprocal

    feelings from Arabs. Tawfik Hamid, a former member of Jemaah Islamiya, an

    Islamist terrorist group, a medical doctor and Muslim reformer living in the

    West writes:

    Islamic organizations regularly accuse non-Muslims of "Islamophobia," afear and disdain for everything Islamic. On May 17, this accusation

    bubbled up again as foreign ministers from the Organization of theIslamic Conference called Islamophobia "the worst form of terrorism."These ministers also warned, according to the Arab News, that this formof discrimination would cause millions of Muslims in Western countries,"many of whom were already underprivileged," to be "further alienated."(Hamid, 2007).

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    Development of Race and Ethnic Relations 7

    Vision

    Interestingly a growing number of Muslims are willing to be proactive in

    the resolution of the problem of fear of their people. The following suggestions

    have been made that would alleviate Islamophobia:

    To bring an end to Islamophobia, we must employ a holistic approach thattreats the core of the disease. It will not suffice to merely suppress thesymptoms. It is imperative to adopt new Islamic teachings that do notallow killing apostates (Redda Law). Islamic authorities must providemainstream Islamic books that forbid polygamy and beating women.Accepted Islamic doctrine should take a strong stand against slavery andthe raping of female war prisoners, as happens in Darfur under the explicitcanons of Shariah ("Ma Malakat Aimanikum"). Muslims should teach,everywhere and universally, that a woman's testimony in court counts asmuch as a man's, that women should not be punished if they marry whomthey please or dress as they wish.

    We Muslims should publicly show our strong disapproval for the growingnumber of attacks by Muslims against other faiths and against otherMuslims. (Hamid, 2007).

    Progressive Muslims seem able to see that the core issues causing prejudice

    toward their people are not those surrounding September 11. Rather basic

    human rights and demonstrable respect for human rights and womens rights go

    a long way in helping Americans dispel prejudice against Islamists.

    Conclusion

    Without question race relations regarding minorities in the United States,

    particularly with respect to Black Americans, remains a problem. As has been

    true of even the last 16 years at the least, African Americans in the news has

    hooked the attention of other Americans as well as the world. Other study will

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    reveal a similar reality with respect to Hispanic Americans. All should be

    concerned and resolution to this problem should be at the forefront of everyone.

    Even so, as research shows, still fresh on the minds of many Americans

    even Americans who show prejudicial attitudes about Muslimsthe sticking

    point is September 11 and assumptions about how Islam treats women. It is not

    only non-Arab Americans who see the problem. Arab Islamists themselves see

    that a relaxed attitude regarding womens rights would be a major advance in

    ending, or at the very least, systematically decreasing prejudice.

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    Works Cited

    Avery, Dylan, Bermas, Jason & Rowe, Corey (2007)Loose change: final cut. Alouder than

    words production. Retrieved May 18, 2008 from: lc911finalcut.com.

    Bennett, Christine I. (2007). Comprehensive multicultural education: Theoryand practice.

    Sixth edition. Boston, MA: Pearson Education, Inc.

    Corn, David (March 12, 2008). McCains spiritual guide: Destroy Islam.Washington

    Dispatch, The Foundation for National Progress. Retrieved May 19, 2008from: http://www.motherjones.com/washington_dispatch/2008/03/john-mccain-rod-parsley-spiritual-guide.html

    Hamid, Tawfik (May 25, 2007). How to end Islamaphobia: The latest surveyof American

    Muslims won't reassure their fellow citizens. The Wall Street Journal.Retrieved May 19, 2008 from:http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110010123

    Hopwood v. State of Texas (March 18, 1996).United States Court of Appeals

    for the 5th

    Circuit. Retrieved March 18, 2008 from: http://www.cir-usa.org/legal_docs/hopwood_v_texas_fifth.pdf

    Lobe, Jim (September 19, 2006).Big jump found in US anti-Muslim incidents.Inter Press

    Service, News Center.Accessed May 19, 2008 fromhttp://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0919-02.htm