On March 18, a student in Pine Bush High School near New York City recited the Pledge of Allegiance in Arabic. This was done as part of the school’s Foreign Language Week, which was conducted to celebrate the “many races, cultures and religions that make up [the US and the Pine Bush] School District.”
The Hill by Sufyan bin Uzayr - One would expect the multicultural and cosmopolitan American society to appreciate such gestures. However, the reactions to the recitation of the Pledge in Arabic spoke otherwise: the language in itself was described to be meant for terrorists, and associated with Islam. Such bigotry once again highlighted everything that is wrong with USA: xenophobia, racism, ignorance, violence and above all, Islamophobia. (Then why are so many Arab-speaking Muslims coming here?)
Pine Bush is a small town located roughly 85 miles from New York City. It is predominantly white, with Arab and/or Muslim-American populations being negligible.
The Foreign Language Week was an attempt by Pine Bush High School to foster cultural integration and interaction. It was an occasion to celebrate the multiple tongues, cultures and events that make up the human civilization in total. Sadly, this praiseworthy teaching exercise received nothing but overwhelming criticism. One student claimed, “The Pledge should always be said in English.”
Also, certain parents were offended because they had “family members killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.” Apparently, they overlooked two basic things:
- Arabic, as a language, did not kill any of their family members. (But people who speak it did)
- Arabic, as a language, hardly has any proper speakers in Afghanistan. (But the book they consider their ‘Bible’, which has more than 100 passages calling for the killing of non-Muslims, is written in Arabic)
On any given day, such opposition to Arabic would sound ridiculous (Only if you’re a Muslim). However, a good portion of the American media as well as political outfits described the recitation of the pledge in Arabic as a threat to the nation, thereby viewing Arabic as the language of terrorism, spoken by enemies of freedom. The clash of civilizations rhetoric was propagated once again: Arabic, much like every other Asian language, is theirs, not ours.
However, even more unfortunate was the fact that instead of ignoring such baseless talk, the principal of Pine Bush High School decided to apologize for the recital. Will not this apology convey to the students the idea that reciting the pledge in Arabic was indeed an unpatriotic and unlawful act? (One can only hope)
The Pine Bush controversy once again sparked discussions about the old question: is the U.S. truly multicultural? (It is, however, Muslims who do not fit into a multicultural society by their own choice) Have the Americans actually embraced the pluralism that exists within their country, or is xenophobia and racism the norm in their society? (Islam is not a race, and Muslims do not fit into the pluralistic mold because of their supremacist attitudes. They certainly don’t embrace it in their own countries. Many make the observance of anything but Islam a crime punishable by death)
Furthermore, this controversy did not occur in isolation. Recently, New York City decided to observe some Muslim holidays as well, and the responses were overwhelmingly negative. In Colorado, reaction to the Pledge of Allegiance in Arabic in another school was slammed by the community.
The opposition to the pledge in Arabic shows one key point: in spite of its multicultural nature, America does view garments, languages and probably even cuisines as not merely cultural symbols, but signs of religious, ethnic and racial identities. (Only when related to Muslims)
Arabic was just one side of the coin: Chinese, Japanese, Russian and even Spanish would be considered foreign but not as offensive. On the other hand, languages such as Italian or French would not have stirred such a big controversy. (This is a Judeo-Christian nation with European roots, NOT ARAB Muslim)
Why? Because no matter what you say, racism is selective and biased (Islam is not a race). Arabic and Chinese are foreign because anything related to the Orient is suspicious for the American masses. Russian is foreign because Russia in itself is suspicious for Americans. Spanish is foreign because of deep-rooted racism and xenophobia in the American society.
This is precisely why the recital of the pledge in Arabic led to hysteria and outrage. A sense of hostility is deep-rooted in the American system: Islamophobia is on the rise in the U.S. (Excellent!) and the Pine Bush incident only affirms this fact. As such, NYC’s decision to acknowledge Islamic holidays, as good horrible as it might sound, will continue to be overshadowed by such Islamophobic justifiably anti-Islamic and ignorant well-informed gestures.
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The post Muslims accuse Americans of being “Islamophobic” for not wanting the Pledge of Allegiance to be recited in Arabic in a public school appeared first on Walid Shoebat.