![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||
![]() |
||||
![]() ![]() |
Monday, Feb 8, 2010 | |||
The Media & Muslims: A MinefieldDate Posted: Wednesday, August 06, 2003 by Stasia DeMarco TomPaine.com Historically, Arab and Muslim culture has not been a major focus of the But Sobia Ahmab doesn’t think it’s working. The 22-year-old Muslim American, who majored in media studies in college, no longer watches TV news or reads the paper because she is so frustrated by the coverage. She says she believes the reporters and editors purposely try to make Muslim Americans look bad. "I mean, there are so many cases, at first I wouldn’t believe them, but I have seen it with my own eyes." Ahmab said. "They will be interviewing a person and they will cut off half of the thing. They will be saying something positive and it will end up looking totally like something negative. I mean over and over again, it's like the media wants to just brainwash people that as soon as you see a Muslim person, that's what should come to your mind and it just gets really frustrating." The portrayal of Arabs and Muslims by American news outlets and in films is also frustrating for Jack Shaheen. The Arab-American media critic and retired college professor is the author of several books on the issue. He says he is saddened by what he sees as a dangerous stereotype presented by the "Not only have we said that 1.2 billion Muslims equal the lunatic fringe, are the same as the 19 terrorists that attacked our country on 9/11." Shaheen said. "We are equating the acts of those 19 people with 1.2 billion people overseas. We are also attributing those acts, unfairly so, to six million American Muslims and three million American Arabs and there is a problem there." There’s a problem, he says, not just with the idea that all Muslims and Arabs are alike, but with the words and phrases used to describe the image -- words like jihad. "Traditionally, jihad has always been misused by every network and many reporters throughout the country, not every but many." Shaheen said. "Jihad is the struggle within oneself. Everyone knows that. Everyone with a modicum of intelligence knows that. It is the struggle within oneself to be the best person that you can be. Now these extremist groups use it, they misuse it and then we misuse it thinking that it means something totally different." Dismayed by what they regard as a misrepresentation of their religion, many Muslim academics, journalists, politicians and historians began working to craft a more accurate picture. "September 11th was a watershed for us in that we realized many people in this country don't know about our faith and they are scared and that includes journalists," said Raeed Tayeh. He says it is the responsibility of American Muslims to make sure the news media get the true information about Islam. As public affairs director for the Muslim American Society, he leads workshops to educate journalists. "If I tell a journalist, if I explain to them the tenets of Islam from A to Z and I explain these terms then, now the burden is on that journalist," Tayeh asserted. "The journalist can either heed the guidance that I sort of gave them, in terms of these semantical footnotes, or they can continue to use the terms that they are comfortable or used to." On this topic, as perhaps no other, words are a minefield. Jeffrey Dvorkin knows that well. As ombudsman for National Public Radio in Mr. Dvorkin says NPR has offended both sides. In 2000, it was lambasted for being pro-Israeli and now there is intense pressure from groups that feel NPR’s coverage is pro-Palestinian. "This is an enormously complicated story that requires a lot of context and a lot of subtlety," Dvorkin said. "The problem is that when it comes to the Jeffrey Dvorkin says the only way Americans can begin to understand these complex issues is to go beyond journalism. He says learning at least the basics of "I think people have to realize that a full service news operation is not the same as the Department of History at the For his part, Raeed Tayeh is hopeful that Americans -- Muslims and non-Muslims -- will find ways to communicate more clearly with one another, and that this better understanding will be reflected in the media coverage of Arab and Muslim communities. "Well, you know, I think journalists, responsible journalists are patient people," Tayeh said. "You seek out the information, and that fosters understanding. And when you understand people and you understand an issue, then you are more informed." While all sides continue a passionate debate over the way American Muslims and Arabs are portrayed, everyone involved in that debate agrees that the public must be wary of stereotypes in the news. I’m Stasia DeMarco for TomPaine.com. http://www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/8484 Fair Use Notice |
||||
View/Sign the Guestbook |
||||