I am a Muslim. But Trump’s views appall me because I am an American.

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Source: The Washington Post

By Fareed Zakaria

Writes a foreign affairs column for The Post. He is also the host of CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS and a contributing editor for The Atlantic.

I think of myself first and foremost as an American. I’m proud of that identity because as an immigrant, it came to me through deep conviction and hard work, not the accident of birth. I also think of myself as a husband, father, guy from India, journalist, New Yorker and (on my good days) an intellectual. But in today’s political climate, I must embrace another identity. I am a Muslim.

I am not a practicing Muslim. The last time I was in a mosque, except as a tourist, was decades ago. My wife is Christian, and we have not raised our children as Muslims. My views on faith are complicated — somewhere between deism and agnosticism. I am completely secular in my outlook. But as I watch the way in which Republican candidates are dividing Americans, I realize that it’s important to acknowledge the religion into which I was born.

fareed_zakaria

Fareed Zakaria

And yet, that identity doesn’t fully represent me or my views. I am appalled by Donald Trump’s bigotry and demagoguery not because I am a Muslim but because I am an American.

In his diaries from the 1930s, Victor Klemperer describes how he, a secular, thoroughly assimilated German Jew, despised Hitler. But he tried to convince people that he did so as a German; that it was his German identity that made him see Nazism as a travesty. In the end, alas, he was seen solely as a Jew.

This is the real danger of Trump’s rhetoric: It forces people who want to assimilate, who see themselves as having multiple identities, into a single box. The effects of his rhetoric have already poisoned the atmosphere. Muslim Americans are more fearful and will isolate themselves more. The broader community will know them less and trust them less. A downward spiral of segregation will set in.

Condemnation came quickly to Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump’s call to ban Muslims from entering the United States. Here are some notable comments. (Gillian Brockell/The Washington Post)
The tragedy is that, unlike in Europe, Muslims in the United States are by and large well-assimilated. I remember talking to a Moroccan immigrant in Norway last year who had a brother in New York. I asked him how their experiences differed. He said, “Over here, I’ll always be a Muslim, or a Moroccan, but my brother is already an American.”

In an essay in Foreign Affairs, British writer Kenan Malik points out that in France, in the 1960s and ’70s, immigrants from North Africa were not seen as or called Muslims. They were described as North Africans or Arabs. But that changed in recent decades. He quotes a filmmaker who says, “What, in today’s France, unites the pious Algerian retired worker, the atheist French-Mauritanian director that I am, the Fulani Sufi bank employee from Mantes-la-Jolie, the social worker from Burgundy who has converted to Islam, and the agnostic male nurse who has never set foot in his grandparents’ home in Oujda?” His answer: “We live within a society which thinks of us as Muslims.”

Once you start labeling an entire people by characteristics such as race and religion, and then see the whole group as suspect, tensions will build. In a poignant article on Muslim American soldiers, The Post interviewed Marine Gunnery Sgt. Emir Hadzic, a refugee from Bosnia, who explained how the brutal civil war between religious communities began in the Balkans in the 1990s. “That’s what’s scary with [the] things that [Donald Trump is] saying,” Hadzic said. “I know how things work when you start whipping up mistrust between your neighbors and friends . . . I’ve seen them turn on each other.”

I remain an optimist. Trump has taken the country by surprise. People don’t quite know how to respond to the vague, unworkable proposals (“We have to do something!”), the phony statistics, the dark insinuations of conspiracies (“There’s something we don’t know,” he says, about President Obama) and the naked appeals to peoples’ prejudices.

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7 replies

  1. You are ‘a muslim and an American’ who is nauseated by Trump’s honest position. But you do not have the same reaction to Iran calling ‘your country’ the great satan which has to be destroyed. In fact, your views on Iran seem to support their stance not minding the consequence the Iranian action may have on ‘your country’.
    You are the perfect example of those who love what largess America doles out but not the country for what it stands for.
    With such an attitude, is Mr Trump wrong about vetting those who come into America? NOPE.

  2. Based on what they do and say. Has any of you ever condemned Iran for wanting to destroy ‘your country’? I am not American and never will be. But I get more concerned about America than those of you who leech and leach on her goodness.

  3. How would you know? The typical ostrich approach. You never heard Ahmadinejad and Khamenei pour hate and advocate the destruction of America which none of you, group, country or individual never condemned?
    When it comes to wishing death to America, you will never hear.

  4. @ Namelee, in this case, I agree with you…

    Muslim Scholars, leaders, country, Group or individual should condemn some Islamic countries that ban Christians to build Church. We should also condemn some Islamic countries that treat non Muslim unjust etc

    With love

  5. Those who claim to stand for secularism and love for America should be concerned when other countries call for the destruction of their ‘country’.
    Just as they demonstrate against ‘islamophobia’, they should do the same when any country proposes to eliminate 300 million people. Those people should condemn CAIR for not holding press conferences to express their disgust over such genocidal threats.
    For not doing any of the above, everyone of them is a hypocrite and a fifth columnist waiting for the right opportunity.

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