Saturday, October 25, 2014


Facing Race Spotlight: Palestinian-American Activist Linda Sarsour

Linda Sarsour, the Palestinian-American executive director of the Arab American Association in New York City, has had plenty to do this past year. As Gaza burned, and the media drumbeat of ISIS grew ever louder, people in the U.S. were grieving and responding to a spate of police killings of black men, including Eric Garner and Michael Brown. Sarsour’s longstanding work on law-enforcement accountability converged with her Arab-American civil rights work.
Two weeks ago, Sarsour joined a contingent of activists who traveled to Missouri to participate in Ferguson October and to speak with Arab and South Asian business owners in Ferguson. “We were thinking about what our role is as Arab-Americans and Muslims, as the children of immigrants or immigrants ourselves. What is our role in the larger conversation about race and racism in the U.S.?” 
For the last decade Sarsour has been pushing for an end to racial profiling in law enforcement, primarily around domestic surveillance programs run by the federal government and the NYPD that target American Muslims. She says that has required Arab-American communities to “build solidarity with people and communities who have been impacted for decades by police brutality, by racial profiling, by stop-and-frisk and by broken windows policing.”
November 15, in Dallas, Sarsour will break down racial injustice in the post-September 11 era at Facing Race, the biennial conference held by Colorlines’ publisher, Race Forward. She spoke with Colorlines about how she spent her summer and the lessons and laughs she’s taken away from young people on social media.
Can you talk about what you took away from your time participating in Ferguson October?
What I took away from Ferguson was that it’s OK to be angry. That anger is not something we should be ashamed of when we are each working against injustice. Injustice is supposed to make us angry. And that anger can be productive and translated into systemic change. I was proud to be angry, which is something we’re told not to be—angry Arab women or angry black women. But in Ferguson it felt good to be angry, and we were angry alongside people around us who also showed you love. It was something I never felt before in my life.
These young people in Ferguson are not waiting for national leaders to come in and tell them how to organize, when to sit in the streets, what to occupy, how to chant, or what their demands are. These are young people who taught me that I don’t need anyone else to lead me or guide me, I’m going to do whatever feels right at that moment. Read More......

2 comments:

  1. Shalom Linda
    I am sure about your position in the long lasting Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but, as you can see I send posts and Emails, daily, to over 1400 Email addresses. Among them more than 140 Imams. About their reaction/comment I wrote and I will continue to do so, without mentioning their names as there are Imamas that do not agree with the Islam and they continue to serve there only because the good salary that they get, but they are very moderate and they teach what they want in conjunction with the children's parents. I will be more than happy to have your comment, but, please, not dirty words, as I got from some of the people that read my posts. I am very interested to learn more about thus going on conflict.
    In friendship

    Amir

    ReplyDelete
  2. Shalom Linda
    I am sure about your position in the long lasting Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but, as you can see I send posts and Emails, daily, to over 1400 Email addresses. Among them more than 140 Imams. About their reaction/comment I wrote and I will continue to do so, without mentioning their names as there are Imamas that do not agree with the Islam and they continue to serve there only because the good salary that they get, but they are very moderate and they teach what they want in conjunction with the children's parents. I will be more than happy to have your comment, but, please, not dirty words, as I got from some of the people that read my posts. I am very interested to learn more about thus going on conflict.
    In friendship

    Amir

    ReplyDelete