This item comes from the Humanist.com. I have heard a rumor that the Southern Poverty Law Center has more money than they know what to do with. I don't remember getting a begging letter from them for years--which is a credit to them. I wish Doctors Without Borders would get the hint--they continue to send me their appeals without getting a cent from me.
Many humanists feel that the Southern Poverty
Law Center (SPLC) failed to make a critical distinction between
criticism and hate speech last week when it included Ayaan Hirsi Ali and
Maajid Nawaz, two vocal critics of extremist Islam, in its report
listing “
anti-Muslim extremists.” The SPLC has
faced backlash from humanists who are asking the group to rescind its classifications of Hirsi Ali and Nawaz. (A
Change.org petition is online
here.)
While humanists are right to demand that the SPLC reconsider its
decision, we should not dismiss the SPLC entirely, given its overall
work toward the humanistic ends of combating racism and bigotry.
The problem with the SPLC’s report,
as explained by Sarah Haider
(co-founder of Ex-Muslims of North America), is that it
“consistently…conflates criticism or dislike of the religion as ‘hate’
against its believers—effectively granting this particular religion a
privilege no other ideology maintains. In this sense, the SPLC,
considered by many to be a progressive institution, allies itself with
the right-wing theocrats of the East.” Haider specifically debunks the
Southern Poverty Law Center’s claims against Hirsi Ali and Nawaz.
The Atlantic
also observes that “what makes Nawaz’s appearance on the list so
peculiar is that he and SPLC share the goal of fighting back against
unfair targeting of Muslims. If even natural-seeming allies are
preoccupied fighting each other about tactics, what hope is there
prevailing in the fight against real bigots?”
Hemant Mehta summed up the root of the outrage when
he wrote on The Friendly Atheist
that “the SPLC is making the mistake of equating fair criticism of
Islam with unfair bigotry against Muslims. No one has to agree with what
Hirsi Ali and Nawaz say about Islam, but it’s absurd to claim that they
hate Muslims to the point of being extremists.” Humanists criticize
religion because many of us know firsthand, as Hirsi Ali and Nawaz do,
how much damage it can do. The deaths of Dutch filmmaker
Theo van Gogh,
the Charlie Hebdo editors and journalists,
Dr. George Tiller, and the
three individuals outside the Planned Parenthood in Colorado Springs, Colorado, among many others, remind us of the danger of extreme beliefs when combined with other factors. Humanists’
opposition to violence fuels these criticisms and sets us apart from those who do engage in hate speech, which often
calls for
violence against oppressed groups. Unfortunately, this is a distinction
that the SPLC failed to make, and humanists must hold it accountable.
However, we must also consider ways that we can stand with Muslims
against the racism that is increasingly directed at them. The SPLC
published its “field guide” at a time when
hate crimes against Muslims and “those perceived as Arab”
have risen sharply in the United States. Emboldened by the media
attention this presidential election cycle has given to bigots
scapegoating Muslims for our nation’s problems, more racists feel
justified in acting on their hate. The Southern Poverty Law Center
explains, “This misinformation and hateful rhetoric have consequences.
When huge numbers of Americans believe that a majority of Muslims are
terrorists or terrorist sympathizers, it can hardly be a surprise that
some percentage of them engage in hate crime attacks.” While humanists
claim that our criticisms of Islam focus on ideas and not on people, as
Samreena Farooqui has explained, a Muslim identity is inherently racialized in the United States in a way that other religious identities are not.
For this reason, humanists’ criticisms of Islam require a certain
amount of nuance that is unnecessary for criticisms of Christianity, the
dominant, white religious narrative in the United States. Humanists
also need to understand that our criticisms of Islam can be read by
others as criticisms of Muslims and those perceived as Muslim, and we
need to be sensitive to the ways in which they can be interpreted. We
also need to face the hard truth that within our community, these
criticisms of ideas within Islam can and are sometimes used to mask
racism. As humanists, we must remember that our values go beyond
criticisms of religious ideology and also require action to uphold human
rights and dignity for all, including Muslims.
One way humanists can differentiate our critiques of extremist
Islamic ideologies from the racism directed at Muslims and those
perceived as Muslim is to recognize that extremist religious ideologies
do not exist in a vacuum. Blaming religion for the problems faced by
Muslims ignores the historical, social, and economic factors that
contribute to the current state of affairs in the Middle East today.
Focusing solely on extremist religion also conveniently lets the United
States off the hook for fueling unrest in the Middle East while failing
to acknowledge the many justified reasons Middle Easterners have for
distrusting the US. For instance, some humanists point to Iran as an
example of the horrors of theocracy but ignore
the US role
in bringing about that theocracy when in the 1950s the CIA backed
efforts to overthrow the democratically elected prime minister. More
recently, our invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, air strikes in Syria,
and
a whole host of other unsuccessful US actions in the Middle East
have impoverished the region. Rather than bringing peace, US
“interventions” have spread violence and unrest and contributed to the
growth of extremist religious ideologies.
Locally, humanists can stand in solidarity with Muslims by opposing
white supremacist groups that scapegoat Muslims for our country’s
problems. We can protest white supremacists when they host
demonstrations in our local communities, and we can call out racist
language and rhetoric when we hear it. (You can learn more about ways to
be an ally to Muslim Americans
here.)
The Southern Poverty Law Center has long documented the activities of
these groups, and while humanists might disagree with the SPLC’s
classification of Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Maajid Nawaz,
the majority of the hate groups on its website
do deserve that label. The Ku Klux Klan, Neo-Nazis, Neo-Confederates,
white nationalists, and the growing alternative right (aka alt-right)
are dedicated to rolling back what small gains our society has made
toward racial equality. Unfortunately, recent events such as
the acquittal of the armed, antigovernment Bundy brothers may embolden similar racist, right-wing, antigovernment groups to take action without fear of consequences.
The hateful rhetoric that has been bandied about in this presidential election cycle will likely last us several generations,
as it’s being picked up by children. White nationalism is not just rising in the United States but
globally, and it can only be stopped if all of us do what we can to oppose it within our own communities.
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