Threats to Free Speech on College Campuses [Katie Halper Show]

Universities across the United States have been targets of censorship campaigns by external special interest groups seeking to quash debate about Palestinian human rights, U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, and international law violations by the state of Israel. Muslim, Arab and Palestinian students and faculty are most frequently targeted as political speech is mislabeled as antisemitism. Professor Sahar Aziz joined Mitchell Plitnick to discuss this troubling anti-American trend as well as their groundbreaking report “Presumptively Antisemitic: Islamophobic Tropes in the Palestine Israel Discourse” on the Katie Continue reading “Threats to Free Speech on College Campuses [Katie Halper Show]”
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Israel-Gaza: Does Islamophobia play a part in US foreign policy? [UpFront]

As the war in Gaza rages on, the death toll keeps increasing and residents face starvation. Despite the heavy civilian toll, the United States keeps voicing its strong support for Israel. Is there a double standard when it comes to Palestine? And why do some in the US seem to conflate solidarity with Palestinians with anti-Semitism, as explained in the report “Presumptively Antisemitic: Islamophobic Tropes in the Palestine Israel Discourse” published by the Rutgers Center for Security, Race and Rights. On UpFront, Marc Lamont Hill speaks… Continue reading “Israel-Gaza: Does Islamophobia play a part in US foreign policy? [UpFront]”
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Why pro-Palestinian demonstrations are popping up on college campuses [Scripps]

“We’ve seen quite a bit of sympathy for Palestinian civilians,” said Sahar Aziz, a law school professor and director of the Center for Security, Race and Rights at Rutgers University. “They recognize that Palestinians have grievances. Many of these young people don’t rely on formal educational institutions for information. And this is one of those topics where they rely heavily on things that are on the internet and that are on social media.” Aziz also wrote the book “The Racial Muslim: When Racism Quashes Religious Freedom.” Social media, combined with… Continue reading “Why pro-Palestinian demonstrations are popping up on college campuses [Scripps]”
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Muslim women in the West in the crosshairs of Zionists, white ‘feminists’ [Al Jazeera]

At the forefront of numerous grassroots, intellectual, and political movements opposing Israel’s ongoing war crimes, in the United States and elsewhere in the staunchly pro-Israel West, are Muslim women. Courageous Palestinian, Arab, South Asian, and Black women are leading mass protests, political action campaigns, teach-ins at universities, fundraisers for humanitarian aid, and writing letters to university presidents, demanding they protect their Palestinian and Muslim students from doxing, harassment, and intimidation by Zionist organizations on and off campus.These Muslim women’s civic and political engagement is almost always met with attacks on… Continue reading “Muslim women in the West in the crosshairs of Zionists, white ‘feminists’ [Al Jazeera]”
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Why Can’t We Humanize Palestinians? [#RaceClass]

The Israeli government responded to the Hamas terrorist attack on October 7, 2023 by indiscriminately bombing residential towers, denying water, food, fuel, electricity and medical supplies to over 2.3 million Palestinian civilians living under occupation in Gaza. Despite the practices constituting what many legal experts conclude are genocidal, the Israeli government has received the full support of President Biden and the U.S. Congress. Meanwhile, the American media humanizes only Israeli civilian victims while failing to report on the lives of 11,000 Palestinian civilians killed by the Israeli military and missing… Continue reading “Why Can’t We Humanize Palestinians? [#RaceClass]”
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Sure, the US cares about human rights — when it benefits us [The Hill]

President Biden’s red-carpet treatment of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi is another nail in the coffin of U.S. human rights policy. Such willful blindness to India’s poor human rights record extends to the Middle East.  Indeed, human rights advocates have long criticized the U.S. government for its selective, politicized enforcement of human rights laws and policies in furtherance of one goal: to remain the sole “Great Power” in the Middle East and North Africa.  U.S. hegemony in the region has five main goals: first, to retain control over the distribution and… Continue reading “Sure, the US cares about human rights — when it benefits us [The Hill]”
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‘Systematically erased’: Middle Eastern and North African women and LGBTQ+ Americans don’t see themselves in U.S. data [the19th]

There is no exact definition of MENA by a group like the United Nations, but it generally includes countries as far north as Turkey that border the Mediterranean Sea. While many religions and ethnicities are represented in this region, shared Arab ancestry or Islamic identity is sometimes used as a way to group countries over strict geographic boundaries.  “But these are subjective lines that are gone, and they are certainly a result of colonial preferences,” said Sahar Aziz, professor of law at Rutgers University and author of “The Racial Continue reading “‘Systematically erased’: Middle Eastern and North African women and LGBTQ+ Americans don’t see themselves in U.S. data [the19th]”
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NJ Muslim Mayor Who Was Denied White House Entry [Gothamist]

A Muslim mayor in New Jersey is calling for an end to the U.S. government’s terror watch lists after he was barred from a celebration at the White House. Mohamed Khairullah — in his fifth term as Prospect Park’s mayor, and first elected to the borough’s council in 2001 — was on his way to an Eid al-Fitr celebration at the White House on Monday when he was told the Secret Service would not allow him to attend. Khairullah, a well-known Muslim leader in New Jersey, said at a Tuesday… Continue reading “NJ Muslim Mayor Who Was Denied White House Entry [Gothamist]”
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POMEPS Podcast Features “The Racial Muslim” [George Washington University]

While the so-called “Global War on Terror” may no longer be the dominant narrative animating U.S. foreign policy, the long term effects of the past two decades continue to shape perceptions of Muslims and Islam in America. In the George Washington University Project on Middle East Politics (POMEPS) podcast, Marc Lynch hosts Sahar Aziz in a conversation about the broader implications of the racialization of religion, as set forth in her book The Racial Muslim: When Racism Quashes Religious Freedom. Click here to listen, starting at minute 34:55. POMEPS Continue reading “POMEPS Podcast Features “The Racial Muslim” [George Washington University]”
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