Reza
Aslan Hypes 'Islamophobia'
by Cinnamon Stillwell
Jihad Watch
April 29, 2015
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At an April 13 lecture at
the University of California, Riverside, UCR creative writing professor
and self-styled
expert on
Islam and the Middle East Reza
Aslan employed biased sources, isolated statistics, and ad hominem
attacks to blame critics of radical Islam for the alleged rise in
"Islamophobia" in post-9/11 America.
"Islamophobia: The Real Enemy" was delivered before a
student-dominated audience of some three hundred who laughed heartily at
Aslan's fashionably anti-American jokes, clearly responding to his
personable, hip demeanor. Dressed casually in jeans, no tie, and an
untucked shirt, he was, effectively, one of them.
Aslan explained that, "as a Middle Easterner, as a Muslim"
Islamophobia was "a personal issue" that had been "brought
home on a personal level." The child of Iranian immigrants who came
to California in the early 1980s at the height of the hostage crisis—or,
as Aslan put it, "an era in which Iran, the Middle East, and Muslims
were being demonized"—he described how "tough" it was to
be "Iranian/Muslim." Consequently, he tried to "separate
himself from his heritage, culture, [and] religion," by
"pretending to be a Mexican," which, he joked, "tells you
how little I understood America . . . they don't like Mexicans,
either." The audience responded with knowing laughter.
Praising America as "a unique . . . country of immigrants"
united by "adherence to a set of values," Aslan claimed this
unity is tested "in times of societal stress," particularly
after 9/11, when, he alleged, there was an "unprecedented surge of
Islamophobia" and "every passing year, the numbers" got
"higher and higher." Citing alarming figures depicting a
country awash in "mosque burnings" and anti-Muslim violence, he
alluded to FBI
statistics without acknowledging that, in 2013, sixty percent of
religiously motivated hate crimes targeted Jews, while only eleven
percent were directed at Muslims.
The visual aids projected onto the large screen behind him revealed
the bias of at least one of his sources. Relying primarily upon the left-wing
Center for American Progress (CAP)'s inaccurate 2011 report,
"Fear, Inc. The Roots of the Islamophobia Network in America,"
Aslan sought to blame the supposed rise in "Islamophobia" on:
[A] well-planned, well-executed deliberate attempt to turn Muslims
into an internal enemy by a very small cabal of individuals and
organizations that have been funded to the tune of nearly 46 million
dollars.
CAP's report explained, Alsan noted, why "after 9/11, there was a
rallying around Muslims," but "the further away we got from
9/11, the higher the anti-Muslim sentiment" grew. He contended that
it was "not a naturally evolving process" based on Americans'
reaction to real world events, but the work of handful of
"misinformation experts," "pseudo-scholars," and
"hate groups." He bemoaned that their "reports are
cited" by the media, politicians, and the "average
American" as "actual studies," even as he quoted the
vacuous CAP report to a university audience.
One of the report's targets, Middle East Forum president Daniel Pipes—whom
Aslan dubbed, "the intellectual Islamophobe"—has pointed
out that, in addition to CAP's "predictable leftist-Islamist
alarmism about those of us trying to warn the world of lawful
Islamism," its financial allegations are faulty, it has "a
budget many times larger than all of the organizations it attacks,"
and "its secret Business Alliance has a host of corporate
donors." Presumably, Aslan did no research into the four-year-old
CAP report, nor into its second, equally
tendentious iteration, before largely basing his lecture on its
findings.
Rather than rigorous critique, Aslan insulted those named in the
report (Islam scholar Robert
Spencer is a "moron,"
blogger and activist Pamela Geller is the "screeching queen of
Islamophobia"), took quotes out of context, and belittled such
dissidents from the Muslim world as Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Brigitte Gabriel.
Referring to the anti-Catholicism and anti-Semitism of 1920s America,
Aslan made an asinine comparison to two anti-Semitic figures of that
period, Fr. Charles Coughlin and Henry Ford:
The Charles Coughlins of today never tire of preaching about the
Judeo-Christian values upon which this country was founded. . . . A
generation from now, they will look back at this time the same way people
look at the 20s—with disgust. They will be as disgusted with Pamela
Geller and Robert Spencer as Coughlin and Ford.
He then asked the audience:
What kind of America do you want to live in? The divisive America that
the anti-Muslim ideologues preach or the one that finds unity in
diversity and celebrates differences?
Aslan never defined "Islamophobia" beyond calling it
"bigotry towards Muslims." Avoiding reference to the
authoritarianism, sectarian conflict, misogyny, persecution of religious
minorities, and other human rights abuses emanating from the Muslim world,
he provided no context for this purported fear. As for Islamic terrorism,
he blithely declared, "None of you are going to die by a terrorist;
you have more to fear from a Lazy Boy [recliner].
To the obvious fact that it's erroneous to accuse "anyone who
criticizes Islam of being Islamophobic," Aslan responded in typical profanity-laden
style: "That's bulls**t!" Asserting that criticizing Islam is
tantamount to attacking all Muslims, he added, "If it involves an
entire group of people, you're a bigot." He eventually chalked up
such prejudice to a "problem with America . . . a crisis of
identity," concluding, "The problem isn't with Islam, it's not
with Muslims."
By peddling this view to a broad audience, Aslan inoculates radical
Islam from criticism. He claimed that, "Ninety percent of my efforts
now are in the fields of film, pop culture, [and] fiction" and that,
"the reason I teach creative writing . . . is that nothing I do will
have as much influence as a sitcom." Referencing the influence of
the television show "Will & Grace" on Americans' views of
homosexuality, Aslan observed, correctly, that popular culture has the
power to change the public's beliefs on core issues.
No doubt, Aslan will continue lecturing receptive young audiences on
the perils of "Islamophobia," and he won't be alone. The 2015
annual conference
of the Islamophobia Research & Documentation Project at the
University of California, Berkeley focused
on developing a field
of "Islamophobia studies." The subject is all
the rage in Middle East studies and throughout academe, which is
doing its utmost to distract attention from the backdrop of supremacism,
dysfunction, and bellicosity in the region. Americans should beware the
protestations of Alsan and his fellow travelers, for they intend not to
educate, but to mislead.
Cinnamon Stillwell is the West Coast Representative for Campus Watch, a project
of the Middle East Forum.
She can be reached at stillwell@meforum.org.
This
text may be reposted or forwarded so long as it is presented as an
integral whole with complete and accurate information provided about its
author, date, place of publication, and original URL.
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