Nadine Naber,
"'Look, Mohammed the Terrorist Is Coming!' Cultural Racism, Nation-Based Racism, and the Intersectionality of Oppressions after 9/11"
(page 3 of 6)
Names and Naming: "Look, Mohammed the Terrorist Is Coming!"
Repeatedly throughout my research, interlocutors' narratives on
harassment in the public sphere included stories in which particular
names operated as signifiers of an "Arab/Middle Eastern/Muslim"
identity. Teachers and youth group leaders agreed that boys with names
such as Mohammed or Osama were disproportionately harassed at school.
Consider the following stories: Nayla, a Muslim American youth group
leader, recalled an incident where school kids would frequently shout,
"Look, Mohammed the terrorist is coming!" when a young boy named
Mohammed would enter the playground. Amira, a college student, recalled
reading the words, "I hate Mohammed. All Mohammeds should die," on a
wall outside the Recreation and Sports Facilities Building at the
University of California, Berkeley. Reflecting on difficulties that he
and his wife faced in deciding whether or not to name their son
Mohammed, Saleh, a small business owner, explained: "After September 11
no one would have thought about naming their son Mohammed in this
country if they wanted him to be treated like a normal person. We
thought about what would happen to our son in school, and how he would
be discriminated against growing up. But we felt that this is our
religion and our culture, and long before September 11 we decided that
if we had a second son, we would name him Mohammed. We decided not to
change what we stood for, but imagine what happens when your neighbor
says, 'what is that cute little boy's name?' You say 'Mohammed' and they
say, 'Oh...' This is how September 11 impacted even the relationship
between you and your neighbor."
Several Christian Arabs with whom I interacted were similarly
targeted based on associations between their name and the notion of a
"potential enemy of the nation." In such cases, Christians were
perceived to be Muslim because they had Arabic names, illustrating the
ways that federal government and corporate media discourses' conflation of the
categories "Arab" and "Muslim" took on local form in the public sphere.
A youth group leader at a Roman Catholic Arab American church reported
that after their son Osama was repeatedly called "Muslim terrorist," his
parents changed his name to "Sam." Recurring throughout the period of
my research were similar stories of individuals who changed their Arabic
names to anglicized names, including an Arab American Christian who
changed his name from Fouad to Freddy after facing 9/11-related
harassment. Misidentifications of Arab Christians as Muslims reify the
absurd generalizations and misconceptions underlying hegemonic
constructions of the category "Arab" or "Muslim." They also reify that
encounters with racism are informed by fiction and comprise a wide
variety of complexities and contradictions. As Amitava Kumar put it,
"In those dark chambers, what is revealed always hides something else"[9].
In the cases of misidentified Arab Christians, the simple reality
that not all Arabs are Muslim and not all Muslims are Arabs was hidden
and erased from history.
Like federal government legislation, harassment against "potential
terrorist men" in the public sphere operated within the logic of
nation-based racism that considers discipline and punishment the "proper
mechanism to set the tide of criminality intrinsic to them"[10]. Names
signifying an "Arab/Middle Eastern/Muslim" identity rendered particular
men and boys at once foreign, or alien, to the nation, but at the same
time connected, in the most familial and instinctive terms, to "the
terrorists." In this sense, nation-based racism conflates "Arab/Middle
Eastern/Muslim" masculinities with an inherent potential for violence
and terrorism and legitimizes the discipline and punishment of
"Arab/Middle Eastern/Muslim" masculinities "over there" (in the
countries the United States is invading) and "over here" (within the
geographic borders of the U.S.). Moreover, that Saleh, in the narrative
above, reconsidered whether to name his son Mohammed indicates that he
came to understand that he was required to engage with the hegemonic
conflation of names such as Mohammed with Muslim masculinity and
terrorism. In this sense, the interpellation of subjects through
hegemonic discourses produced disciplinary effects in them. While the
conflation of the "Arab/Middle Eastern/Muslim" and "terrorism" brought
into play dualistic mechanisms of exclusion (patriot vs. enemy/with us
or against us), it simultaneously induced within individuals a state of
consciousness that I refer to as an "internment of the psyche".[11] I
coined the term "internment of the psyche" to refer to the ways in which
engagements with gendered-racialization produced a sense of internal
incarceration among my interlocutors that was emotive and manifested in
the fear that at any moment, one could be harassed, beaten up, picked
up, locked up, or disappeared.[12]
Although gender permeated nation-based racism through the conflation
of particular names with Muslim masculinity and terrorism, a mapping of
nation-based racism onto cultural racism also operated to articulate
"Arab/Middle Eastern/Muslim" masculinity as inherently violent toward
women. One cab driver told a story of his passengers' reaction to him
after they read that his name was Mohammed: "Once, a woman got in my
car. She looked at me, then read my name, then asked me if I was Muslim.
When I said 'yes' she replied, 'how many girls have you killed today?'"
In this case, a form of cultural racism that essentializes Muslimness as
if the association between violence against women and Muslim masculinity
is natural and insurmountable constitutes the articulation of Muslim
masculinity as intrinsically connected to misogynist savagery. The
woman's reaction to the cab driver reifies what Moallem refers to as
"representations of Islamic fundamentalism in the West" that are "deeply
influenced by the general racialization of Muslims in a neo-racist idiom
which has its roots in cultural essentialism and a conventional
Eurocentric notion of people without history."[13]
Here, "religion" functions "essentially," as "Mohammed," like the
Osama and Fouad references above, becomes monstrously subversive, a
metonymic source of sedition and danger within the nation, as well as to
U.S. "interests" and to "American" bodies, white and nonwhite.[14]
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