Monday, April 30, 2012

I've been thinking a lot about the way that Muslim women are portrayed in Western media and the prevalent need for them to not only talk about the women but also to "unveil" and rescue the women from their oppressive societies.

This article describes the things to avoid when discussing gender in the Middle East. According to the article, one of the problems that the tendency of western journalists and commentators is to generalize and fail to distinguish between the Middle East,” “the Islamic World” and the “Arab world” [which] do not refer to the same place, peoples, or histories, but the linkages between them are crucial. These generalization also tend to relate the issues of Muslim women in the West to the Middle East and conflate the two as though women in the West, by virtue of being Muslim, are now more connected and constructions of the East instead of the society that they live in.  


The recent murder of local Iraqi woman, Shaima Al Awadi, brings up these issues of the way Muslim women are portrayed in the media and in the surrounding discourse. When the case first broke, there was outrage as a woman was brutally killed in her own home and the initial evidence, a note saying "go back to your own country, you terrorist", made it seem like it was a hate crime. However, soon after news reports began to point to new "evidence" and claiming that because the family was having problems and seemed unstable, it was likely that the woman was murdered by her own family, either because her daughter did not want to have an arranged marriage or because her husband did not want to divorce her. There are two main issues surrounding the Shaima Al Awadi case and the way that it has portrayed the Muslim family. The first is the focus on the private life of the family as evidence and the furthering of Muslim stereotypes and the second is the impact on the rest of the Muslim American community and the minimization of racial tension in the surrounding community. 


Familial issues and disagreements do not constitute evidence of abuse and murder. The story that the mother had previously picked up her daughter from the police station after she had been found in a car and then her daughter tried to commit suicide by jumping out of the car can in no way be construed as evidence that her daughter would want to have her mother murdered. The daughter's sex life being seen as important to the murder case is only noteworthy is because it goes against the dominant discourse of Muslim women being sexually controlled and oppressed. That a family would be so disgraced, or so broken up, over their daughter having sex or not wanting to marry a man, that they would resort to murder plays into the stereotype of Muslims as barbaric and violent. 


I come from a practicing Muslim family with parents that raised their children to believe that their morals and their actions should be rooted in religion. I say this because when I talk about my familial experience as Muslims, many would be quick to argue that my experience as an empowered feminist and activist is despite my religion and not directly because of it, something that in inherently untrue. When I read stories that discredit the suffering of a family that lost their mother because they had problems, I have to think what would happen to my own family's reputation if some violence would befall us? Would my relationship with a white man be considered evidence that there was some great tragedy in my family? Because common discourse about Muslim Arab families presents them as obsessed with their "purity" and culture and it would be easy to assume that my parents would follow such stereotypes. That would explain why the first question people ask me when they learn about my relationship is, "do your parents know?". 


If the case does end up proving that the family was involved, the media will be quick (as they already have) to label it a "honor killing" instead of domestic abuse and continue to separate domestic abuse against Muslim women from the abuse against other women. According to the Domestic Violence Resource Center, three women are killed each day as a result of domestic violence and yet American men and families are not portrayed as inherently violent towards women. Violence against women is never acceptable and needs to be combated in a comprehensive way. This can't be done when it's divided by religion and culture since if it's an Arab problem is is also an American problem. 


On campus a few weeks ago there was a student-led vigil for the death of Trayvon Martin, Shaima Al Awadi and Kendrick McDade, all victims of racialized crimes. During the event Muslim students gave testimonials of the times that they were harassed because they were Muslim women or when they witnessed Muslim women being harassed. The very real discrimination and violence that is perpetuated towards Muslims and particularly Muslim women is one that they deal with on a daily basis. For many Muslim women, especially those in the San Diego area, the killing was scary and shocking and reminded us that we may never be safe from racial violence against us. There is also a concern that if the killing was not racially motivated and was done for other reasons, it will make actual victims of crimes against Muslim's less likely to be recognized. Minorities are already often seen as "making up" or being "overly sensitive" to racism and if someone would be sick enough to not only kill a family member but to make it seem like it was a hate crime, the entire Muslim community is negatively affected. 


The media has been clumsy with the way that it has handled the killing of Shaima Al Awadi. By relying on stereotypical racist and sexist tropes about Muslims and Arabs, they have continued to perpetuate a negative image of a marginalized community in America. 

1 comment:

  1. This is a very powerful account of a timely news incident that raises important questions about how particular narratives get attached to victims and perpetrators of crime who come from specific ethnic groups. As a German-American, I would find it totally bizarre if a family member was a involved in a crime that was attributed by the press to our supposed German cultural propensity for either fairy tale cruelty or totalitarian violence, yet American Muslims are subjected to outrageous stereotypes and generalizations all the time.

    You might want to think a little bit more about your audience and keeping the schedule of posting current. Even if you plan to do long essayistic pieces like this one, you should have a clear plan for how often they appear, much as long-form journalists who work in print do.

    Perhaps when we get to the unit on Iraq warblogs that address stereotypes about victims and perpetrators from an insider's perspective you can see some ways that blogging from the homefront could also do some of this important work in giving readers a more nuanced view of conflict stories.

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