-w V V V O w w v ! 1cian' S rab etue wy w m z 0 z wU YU wU Recent turmoil in the Middle East has renewed 'Arab-bashing,' a problem students say won't go away until the Arab-Israeli conflict is settled. 'I do eellike a minority. There's no slot on an application form for Arabs-Iget to say 'Caucasian or other.' I feel like an 'other.' -Lebanese graduate student Hilary Shadroui HEY SHARE THE PROBLEMS of any other student group. But the University's approximately 300 Arab and By Rob Earle Recent turmoil in the Middle East has only made the "terrorist" label more appealing to Arab-bashers. Events like this year's hijacking of a TWA jetliner in Beirut and bombings at the Rome and Vienna airports have been blamed on an extremist group reportedly led by Abu-Nidal and backed by Libya's Colonel Muammar Ghadhafi. Sensational media and government treatment of the events aggravates negative perceptions of Arabs and put American-Arabs in increasing jeopardy, according to Terry Ahwal, Regional Coordinator of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. Ahwal said allegations made earlier this month that the Reagan administration tried to deceive Ghadhafi into thinking he was in danger from both the American military and his own ranks reinforced stereotypes of Arabs as fanatics. "I can't say if Ghadhafi was hurt by that kind of popaganda, but I can tell you Arabs in this country were hurt by it," she said. Ahwal said American-Arabs frequently come into the ADC's Detroit office complaining of harassing phone calls, public verbal abuse and even assaults. "It seems like every time there is a problem in the Middle East-like a hijacking- we have people in here," Ahwal said. "Innocent people who happen to be of Arab descent are being harassed or attacked just for being Arabs." Ahwal said that while some attacks are racially motivated or come from fear of terrorism, othersaare "political." She called the Jewish Defense League, a New York-based extremist group, one of the main perpetrators and said they were suspected in the slaying of Alex Odeh. "This is terrorism right here in the United States," she said. Odeh, the ADC's executive director, was killed by a bomb at his Los Angeles office after the killing of American Leon Klinghoffer on the Greek cruise ship Achille Lauro, hijacked by Palestinians last summer. Irv Rubin, leader of the JDL, has denied responsibility for the Odeh killing, but added that he had "no tears for Mr. Odeh." Lane Bonner, a spokesman for the FBI, said that of seven terrorist acts committed in the United States last year, Jewish extremist groups are suspected in four. But he added that other groups will often claim responsibility in the name of the JDL. All of the incidents remain under investigation; Arabs were not implicated in any of them. Students say "Arab-bashing" occurs at the University as well. "I know there are Palestinians who won't admit to being Palestinian," Shadroui said. After The Daily printed a letter she wrote equating Zionism with racism, Shadroui said she had to stay with a friend to escape harassing phone calls. "After I had the article in the paper, people would call me at two in the morning. They called me a Nazi," she said. There are also less subtle forms of attack, American-Arabs say. Ghannam said posters for Arab activities are frequently ripped down, like those advertising last week's "Policy of Oppression" conference, endorsed by the AAUG, the New Jewish Agenda and other groups. "There are people who don't want to see this conference go on," Ghannam said. Despite the problems of campus American-Arabs, they are still living near the largest concentration of Arabs in the United States. As many as 200,000 Arabs live in the greater Detroit area, with18,000 of those in Dearborn, the city with the highest Arab population in the country. Federal officials estimate that between 1.5 and three million Arabs and American-Arabs liveinsthe United States. Each year, about 10,000 more arrive, mostly from Lebanon. LSA senior Ibrahim Dawud came to the U.S. from the disputed West Bank region in 1967. Though he is now an American citizen, Ibrahim still has strong feelings about the plight of Palestinians living in the Middle East. "Palestinians need visas to get into every single country in the world," he said. "They're often stopped to be interrogated and searched." And that anti-Arab feeling followed him to the United States. "My friends couldn't get over the fact I was an Arab," he said. "My friends would always throw in an ethnic joke about me, but not about anyone else." Charges of discrimination against American-Arabs recently reached the U.S agreed to determine whe primarily at blacks shou discrimination. Majid Ghaidan Al-Kh Francis college in Loi discrimination after beir citizen born in Iraq, A-K considered his ethnic bac Islam. A federal judge threv appeals court reinstated 1 considered a protected mi even though it was enact of blacks. "When Congress refer did not intend thereby scientific conception of t The decision acknow Arabs is Caucasian. But Shadroui believes of race. "I do feel like a minori on an application form fo other' right now. I feel lik a Caucasian." Whatever the law, Ar look at me or they look are you from?' "Shadrot someone with lighter skin Ahwal said Arabs' Cat student financial aid and "An Arab can't get aid if Though the 1980s h against American-Arabs made toward a better und She said some media, lil Detroit News, are doing concerns of Arabs. The ADC is one al munication, Ahwal says public can be overcome improved. She also said groups 1 for Palestine and the A American-Arabs and g University community. Shadroui is hopeful bu "There is progress, bu she said. "It will take us 1 Arab-Americans on the na As for the Univ as opposed to rallies, are 1 "We have people comi about this perspective," present our position as rai possible. When we get Zionists, I don't think th She noted endorseme Jewish Agenda as one p think American-Arabs ca Ghannam said one st progressive groups on c difficult. "(The Free South supports the anti-aparth Israel many of the memb Ghannam and othei American-Arabs and oth University of Michiga Palestinian issue in the I Jews cannot be happy i state in Palestine is the c "When Israel falls... secular state," he said. " oppress the Jews, I woul4 American-Arab students also carry the burden of belonging to one of the most unpopular minorities in the country. Discrimination, cultural friction with mainstream America and stereotyping as terrorists are all problems facing the Arab community, both here and around the country. American- Arab University students say the negative image of Arabs is rooted in public ignorance. "I think as students we don't have a problem with that, but when we try to identify as Arabs is when we run into problems," said Hilary Shadroui, a history graduate student of Lebanese descent. Steve Ghannam, a Palestinian graduate student studying architecture, said maintaining an Arab identity is important, though it is also the source of many of the Arabs' difficulties. "Once (Arabs) identify themselves, they're different," Ghannam said. "Then people start stereotyping and treating you differently. Otherwise, I could walk down the street and nobody would know I was an Arab-I could be Greek, Italian, even a Jew." Ghannam said "Arab-bashing" is typical of attacks against other ethnic minority groups. "I suppose every culture goes through that," he said. "With Arabs it's happening more so now. The society here forces people to conform-it treats people who are different very badly." Because Palestinian Arabs don't have a national homeland, like Jordanians, Syrians or Saudis, Ghannam said they face special problems. Earle is a Daily staff reporter. "There's not as strong a threat to the other Arab nationalities like there is to the Palestinians," he said. "If I lose my identity, my people will slowly die out. I'll be damned if we're going to be like the American Indians. What happened to them could happen to us." In order to maintain their cultural and political identity, University American-Arabs have established several organizations on campus. The November 29th Committee for Palestine, a national organization with about 30 chapters nationwide, including one here, was formed to "educate Americans about the Middle East, and about the Palestinian issue in particular... to put pressure on the American government to change its policies and work for some kind of just resolution to the problems of the Palestinian-Zionist conflict," Shadroui said. The Association of Arab-American University Graduates (AAUG), which includes non-Arabs, is primarily a cultural and educational group, though they often work with the November 29th Committee for Palestine. The University also has a chapter of the Islamic Student Association, a chiefly religious group for Arab and non-Arab students. (Most Iranians, for example, are Islamic. But they're not Arabs.) Close ties to the Middle East are the source of much of the tension between American-Arabs and American Zionists, Jews who believe in a national Jewish homeland in Israel. The establishment of the state of Israel and the massive immigration of Jews there has led to the displacement of many Palestinian Arabs since the 1940s. The ensuing conflict has been the crux of the wars between Israel and the Arab states, as well as Palestinian political organizations. "Especially on the Palestinian issue, we come under a lot of attack," Shadroui said. "Not only from Zionists but maybe from people who don't really know, who just believe what they read in the American press or whatever and so they're 'intuitively' pro-Zionist. "People who are American supporters of Israel or Zionists tend to be very hard to deal with," she said. Miriam Schler of the Progressive Zionist Caucus agreed that Arabs' complaints about harassment and discrimination "have some validity." She said some people believe that "whatever Israel does is 100 percent right," but most members in her group do not. "Even people in PZC who consider themselves Zionists are critical of Israel. "You're talking about Arab nationalism and Jewish Zionism," she added. "They're two conflicting ideologies. That doesn't mean there can't be a solution." Second-year pharamcy student Suha Hamid, an Iraqi, said the influence of Zionists at the University makes it difficult for Arabs to reach the community at large. She says Arabs frequently have trouble getting their letters or editorials published in The Daily and getting money or sponsorship for events from the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) and other campus groups. Last spring's address by Palestinian scholar Edward Said, for instance, was sponsored by the Rackham Student Government (RSG) and two Arab groups. Other organizations, including MSA and the Department of Near Eastern Studies, refused to sponsor the event. MSA also refused to endorse a conference sponsored by the November 29th Committee for Palestine and the African National Congress called "Israel and South Africa-the Apartheid Connection?" "I asked them to endorse it in the name of freedom of speech," said Ghannam. "People voted against it. They voted against freedom of speech." Ghannam said some of the assembly members who voted against sponsorship were Zionists. MSA representative Bruce -Belcher said the rejection of sponsorship probably had more to do with conflicts between the assembly's Budget Priorities Committee and members of RSG than any anti-Arab feeling on the assembly. But students at a recent Diag commemoration of a 1982 Palestinian refugee massacre discovered there are openly anti- Arab sentiments at the University. One student was spit on. A woman yelled, "Fuck off!" at participants, and others called them "terrorists." wU C. wU z 0 z Q z LU LU LU 6r 'I f I lose my identity, mny people will slowly die out. I'll be damned if we're going to be like the American Indians. What happened to them could happen to us.' -Palestinian graduate student Steve Ghannam PAGE 6 WEEKEND/OCTOBER 17, 1986 WEEKEND/OCTOBER 17, 1986