Le Suriname a salué, jeudi à Rabat, les initiatives Royales pour les pays africains de l'Atlantique et du Sahel et a exprimé sa profonde gratitude envers Sa Majesté le Roi Mohammed VI pour Sa vision d'une coopération Sud-Sud.    L'Inspecteur Général des FAR s'entretient avec le Commandant de la Force de la mission onusienne dans les provinces Sud du Royaume    Morocco and Saudi Arabia strengthen mining cooperation at Riyadh conference    Communication par satellite : 9 projets de décrets pour le renouvellement des licences    Baitas: Environ 390.000 veuves bénéficient du programme d'aide sociale directe    Mécanisme d'ajustement carbone aux frontières : enjeux pour l'Europe et le Maroc    Finale CAN : El Aynaoui et Saïss annoncent un choc de très haut niveau    CAN 2025 : Brahim Díaz tout proche du Soulier d'Or, qui peut encore le rattraper ?    Rabat : La FNM et la Fondation du patrimoine culturel prussien signent une convention de coopération    Espagne : quelque 97 millions de visiteurs étrangers en 2025, un record    Etats-Unis : Suspension du traitement des visas d'immigrant pour 75 pays, dont le Maroc    Trump menace de déployer l'armée à Minneapolis après des heurts entre manifestants et police de l'immigration    CAN féminine Maroc 2026 / Place au calendrier : la date du derby Maroc-Algérie dévoilée    CAF Awards 2025 (F): Le Maroc à l'honneur    Palestine : Gaza entre dans la 2ème phase du plan de cessez-le-feu    Le gouvernement intègre officiellement la Fête de l'Unité dans la liste des jours fériés    Soutien social : Baitas met en avant l'élargissement des bénéficiaires et défend une réforme en phase d'exécution    OMM : 2025, l'une des trois années les plus chaudes jamais enregistrées    La Russie estime que les possibilités de l'Ukraine se "réduisent" pour négocier    Ethiopie: les exportations de café génèrent 1,35 milliard de dollars au premier semestre de l'exercice 2025/26    Agriculture au Maroc : La Banque mondiale prévoit une reprise après les pluies    CAN 2025 : le Maroc séduit les décideurs du tourisme français    Orange Maroc distingué par l'IFACI pour son audit interne    CAN 2025 : une délégation britannique s'informe du dispositif marocain de sécurité des événements sportifs    CAN 2025 : «Heureux pour les joueurs, le public mérite cette finale» (Walid Regragui)    CAF hands Samuel Eto'o heavy sanctions after Cameroon–Morocco clash    «Happy for the players, the public deserves this final», says Regragui    CAN 2025: «Contento por los jugadores, el público merece esta final» (Walid Regragui)    Drame familial à Jerada : un père tue ses deux filles adolescentes et prend la fuite    Youssoufia: Plus de 100 bénéficiaires des services d'une caravane chirurgicale multidisciplinaire    Températures prévues pour vendredi 16 janvier 2026    2025, Annus horribilis pour Alger    En quête de légitimité, le polisario cherche à siéger au CPS de l'UA    Depuis le Sahara, Madonna «ne peut pas se détacher du Maroc»    Berlinale 2026 : Assarab d'Ahmed Bouanani programmé aux Berlinale Classics    Goya 2026 : Sirât, tourné en partie au Maroc, parmi les films les plus nommés    Id Yennayer 2976 : Agadir célèbre la culture amazighe    Le patient-partenaire : Un choix judicieux dans la nouvelle réforme de la santé    Plus de 270 millions d'enfants et de jeunes dans le monde n'ont pas accès à l'éducation, selon l'ONU    Collectivités territoriales au Maroc : 28 000 fonctionnaires sur le départ, quel avenir pour les services publics ?    Khartoum : retour officiel du gouvernement soudanais    Rétro-Verso : Quand Feu Mohammed V décerna à Lumumba le Grand Cordon de l'Ordre du Trône    Gasoil et Essence : repli du chiffre d'affaires au 3ème trimestre 2025    CAN-2025 : « Heureux pour les joueurs, le public mérite cette finale » (Regragui)    Bois de chauffe : Les prix flambent et les pénuries s'installent    Les Lions de l'Atlas en finale de la Coupe d'Afrique après un match épique contre le Nigeria    Nouvel An amazigh, un héritage vivant au cœur de l'identité marocaine    Agadir célèbre Yennayer en grand    







Merci d'avoir signalé!
Cette image sera automatiquement bloquée après qu'elle soit signalée par plusieurs personnes.



Have Americans changed their way of looking at Muslims 16 years after the 9/11 attacks ?
Publié dans Yabiladi le 11 - 09 - 2017

16 years after the deadly 9/11 attacks, Muslims and Arabs are still looked at in a different way. According to the Council of American Islamic relations, Islamophobia and hate crimes have been on the rise since then. On the 11th of September 2017, two Moroccan nationals who lived in New York during the attacks spoke to Yabiladi about their experiences.
The infamous attacks carried out on the 11th of September 2001 have been a turning point in the history and policy of the United States. The attacks reportedly killed 2,996 people, injured over 6,000 others and also changed the lives of thousands of Muslim and Arab migrants living in the USA. Several incidents of harassment and hate crimes against Muslims and people of Middle Eastern descent were reported in the days following the attacks.
9/11 reported by two Moroccans
A report issued by the South Asia American advocacy group indicated that media documented 645 bias incidents against Americans of South Asian or Middle Eastern descent between September the 11th and the 17th. For the Moroccan version of the story, Yabiladi spoke to Youssef B., a Moroccan national who was in New York on the 11th of September and witnessed the attack from his apartment in Queens. «A friend of mine from Oklahoma, where I used to live and study, called asking about what was happening in New York», Youssef recalls, «I did not know what was happening as I was just home and did not go out that day. He explained to me saying that an airplane crashed into a building».
Frightened by the bad news, Youssef who had just graduated and was looking for a job in New York back then turned the TV on to get more information. «It was a local TV channel, I remember it was in Spanish and the news anchor spoke about an accident and not an attack at the beginning while showing photos of the building», explained Youssef adding that «as shocking as it sounds while I was watching TV, another airplane crashed into the other building, it was a moment of panic the news anchor started shouting "Oh My God"».
«We stayed home because we were scared. Locals attacked a number of Sikhs thinking that they were terrorists because they were bearded and they wore turbans», states Youssef to Yabiladi. However, for the young Moroccan graduate, living through the 11th of September attacks marked the end of his journey in the country. «A month after the attack, I left the USA, I believe it was one of the triggers that pushed me to leave the US».
When asked about hate crimes and the rise of Islamophobia reported by media back then, Youssef insisted that «Muslims, especially women who wore the veil, were looked at differently after 9/11».
Nationalism, hate crimes and Media
Things were seen differently by Mahjoub B., a Moroccan translator who works for the United Nations and who was living in New York at the time of the attacks. The Moroccan national believes that New York has reacted differently to the attacks. «Hate crimes were always there in marginalized and poor neighborhoods», Mahjoub told Yabiladi indicating that «media coverage gave these crimes a religious dimension» linking it to the attacks and Islamophobia.
For Mahjoub «the effects of 9/11 were encountered in other parts of the country like the Midwest and the south. New York is a dynamic city with a different lifestyle so people were too busy to pay attention to that».
When asked about his experience as a Muslim living in the USA after the deadly attacks, Mahjoub insisted that he was respected as he worked in a workplace where racism and Islamophobia are not tolerated.
On the other hand, hate crimes and prejudicial incidents have taken place in several parts of the federal country. According to a source from the Council of American Islamic Relations (CAIR), a civil rights and advocatory group headquartered in Washington D.C., the events of the 11th of September were indeed a turning point in the way Muslims and Arabs were seen by Americans. «Our data does not go that far back but in the past few years we have noted an increase in hate incidents», said the same source.
In a recent report issued by CAIR and entitled «The Empowerment of Hate», it is reported that «in 2016, CAIR recorded a 57% increase in anti-Muslim bias incidents over 2015. This was accompanied by a 44% increase in anti-Muslim hate crimes in the same period». Sixteen years after the deadly attacks, bigotry has been on the rise, the survey indicates that «from 2014 to 2016, anti-Muslim bias incidents jumped 65%».
The presidential race was one of the factors that triggered the increase of anti-Muslim hate crimes in the USA. «When Donald Trump became President of the United States on January 20th, 2017, he brought an unprecedented record of conditioning audiences to fear Muslims», CAIR reports indicating that : «Trump has stated that he believes 'Islam hates us,' and alleges that there is 'no real assimilation' by US Muslims, both of which ideas have been thoroughly disproven by independent sources».


Cliquez ici pour lire l'article depuis sa source.