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Fear and Anxiety Permeate
Arab Enclave Near Detroit
Muslim Americans Feel They Are Targets in War on Terror
Robert E. Pierre - Washington
Post Staff Writer
August 4, 2002; Page A3
DEARBORN, Mich. -- To the outside world, the Arab Americans in this community
are adjusting well to the heightened scrutiny they receive from law enforcement,
cooperating with interviews and proudly displaying their American flags.
But inside, said Don Unis, a U.S. citizen of Lebanese descent, people
are upset, anxious and increasingly angry at what they perceive as a war
-- domestically and abroad -- on Arabs and Muslims.
Their relatives have been called
in for random interviews. Their brethren are being held in U.S. jails
on suspicion of terrorism, some without a hint from the government about
their alleged crimes. And there is a widespread perception that few Americans
understand -- or care -- what they're going through.
Particularly chilling for them
were the comments July 19 from a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil
Rights -- since rejected by the full panel -- that raised the specter
of internment camps for Arab Americans if there is another terrorist attack
on U.S. soil.
"They're scared to death,"
said Unis, 63, who was born in the United States and whose father fought
for this country in World War I after emigrating from Lebanon in 1917.
"They're singing the song that authorities want to hear, but they're eating
their guts out. . . . We still don't have very much of a voice in America."
The Detroit region is home
to the largest concentration of people of Arab descent in the United States,
with Dearborn the center of that community. Restaurants, schools and mosques
cater to families such as the Unises, who have four generations of roots
in this country.
But since last September, this
place has felt less like a haven for Arab Americans. There has been periodic
harassment, the constant fear of bodily harm and the frightening possibility
of being incarcerated in connection with the war on terror -- fears that
Arabs and Muslims around the country have echoed.
"The Arab American community
is always on pins and needles when there is a crisis," said Fred Pearson,
a Wayne State University political scientist who directs the university's
Center for Peace and Conflict Studies. "Like African Americans, they are
an identifiable minority that is likely to be singled out. There are all
kinds of daily encounters that remind you of your minority status."
President Bush and Attorney
General John D. Ashcroft have maintained that the terror dragnet is necessary
to protect the United States at a time when the threat of additional attacks
is very real. Secret hearings and other restrictions on normally public
information are designed to keep information from terrorists and protect
the privacy of detainees, Ashcroft has said.
The Justice Department says
that it is not engaged in racial or ethnic profiling and that its war
is aimed at terrorists, not Muslims.
But those arguments have not
won over many Arab Americans. In Los Angeles and Chicago, Arab Americans
continue to criticize programs -- such as the FBI's interview of 5,000
men -- that focus solely on people from Arab countries. In Seattle, Arab
Americans complain
of being regularly reported to the police for taking
pictures of Boeing Field from a tour boat, or for entering a 7-Eleven
and then deciding not to buy something, said Rita Zawaideh, founder of
the Arab American Community Coalition there.
"Some people will not go to
court [even on traffic violations] because they feel they will automatically
be guilty," said Zawaideh, a U.S. citizen who is originally from Jordan
and owns a travel agency here. "They are choosing to pay a fine instead.
. . .
"Women are being followed in
their cars for wearing a hijab. One woman had her health insurance dropped
by a company that told her, 'We don't sell to immigrants.' We don't know
what rules, what rights we have as U.S. citizens."
The Arab community in America
has been forced to respond politically. Over the past two decades it has
evolved to the point where it can mobilize quickly and team up with other,
more established rights groups, said Ron Stockton, who directs the Center
for Arab-American Studies at the University of Michigan at Dearborn.
"The community is much more
organized than it once was," Stockton said.
Arab Americans -- with an estimated
population of 3 million nationally -- are beginning to become influential
politically, especially in local and state elections. The community stood
solidly with then-Texas Gov. George W. Bush in 2000, after he spoke out
against a 1996 law permitting secret evidence to be used in deportation
proceedings. Some wish they had their vote back.
Now "we regret supporting George
Bush," said Osama Siblani, president of the Arab American Political Action
Committee, which endorsed Bush in 2000 and delivered many predominantly
Arab American precincts here by a 3 to 1 margin over Democrat Al Gore.
"He said it was going to be
a compassionate administration," said Siblani, a Republican, who met with
Bush three times during the campaign. "We see an absolutely arrogant administration
whose lopsided foreign policy is hurting our original homelands, and we
have seen nothing but secret information used against our people here."
The comments by a Bush appointee
to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights only inflamed the situation. At
the hearing, held in downtown Detroit, Commissioner Peter Kirsanow said
that "if there's another terrorist attack and if it's from a certain ethnic
community or certain ethnicities that the terrorists are from, you can
forget about civil rights in this country."
A Cleveland lawyer, Kirsanow
later added that another attack could lead to internment camps such as
those built to hold Japanese Americans in World War II. "Not too many
people will be crying in their beer if there are more detentions, more
stops, more profiling. There will be a groundswell of public opinion to
banish civil rights," Kirsanow said.
Civil rights groups and Sen.
Deborah Ann Stabenow (D-Mich.) have demanded that Kirsanow be removed
from the panel. Kirsanow has since said he was not voicing his own views
but those of others who fear for their personal safety. The Bush administration
said there has been no consideration of internment camps.
But the damage locally was
already done, said Imad Hamad, regional director of the American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee.
"It makes people more scared
and less cooperative," said Hamad, who described himself as an intermediary
between residents and law enforcement. "People are scared and intimidated,
so they don't come forward."
For a century, Middle Easterners
have migrated to this southwest suburb of Detroit, drawn initially by
jobs in the auto industry and later to escape conflicts in their home
countries. There are Lebanese, Yemenis, Syrians, Palestinians, Egyptians
and a growing number of Iraqis.
Mayor Michael Guido said that
he has an open line of communication with Arab leaders but that the government
must do its primary job of protecting citizens.
"There is a fine line between
safety and political correctness," said Guido, who is in his 17th year
in office. "Sometimes there's an over-sensitivity in terms of profiling.
We're all learning what is the right way to do things."
But many contend that current
anti-terror policies are wrong. Last month, a coalition of 60 civil liberties
and civil rights organizations called on the government to end policies
that cast "suspicion on entire religious and ethnic communities."
"An Arab gets into a car accident
and they link it to terrorism. A minor immigration violation and you're
linked to al Qaeda," said Abed Hammoud, who came to the United States
in 1990 from Lebanon. "We want our government to fight terrorism, not
Arab Americans. The government is in a panic stage and they are taking
the easy way out."
A candidate last fall for Dearborn
mayor, Hammoud is a Wayne County assistant prosecutor who spends his days
trying to convict drug dealers and killers. He wants to see charges spelled
out against everyone arrested for a crime.
"It scares even me," said Hammoud,
who said he will drive to the District this summer for vacation so that
his family will not be hassled on a plane flight. "When I charge a murderer,
I have to tell them what I have against him. The heart of the problem
is secrecy."
But tension is palpable on
the streets. Paul Kasper, who has lived in the 4800 block of Chovin Street
for all but two of his 47 years, watched recently as law enforcement agents
and reporters swarmed his neighborhood after the arrest of Omar Shishani,
a Jordanian-born man accused of bringing $12 million in counterfeit cashier's
checks into the United States. A local anti-terror task force is reviewing
his case for terrorist ties.
Kasper doesn't know Shishani,
but he knows his community has changed.
"You really don't know your
neighbors anymore," Kasper said, as children rode their Big Wheels next
door. If you don't know people, he said, you don't know what they will
do. "I don't hate my neighbors because they are Arab. I don't love them
if they're trying to kill me."
Unis, an Army veteran, said
no one wants to befriend those who would seek to do them harm. But he
said it's wrong to assign collective guilt for the crimes of a few.
"Arabs who live in this country
are Americans too," he said. "Haven't we learned anything since World
War II? Sometimes I don't think so."
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