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"Who? Me? I'm not racist.."

Friday, January 19, 2007

Accusations make you want to defend yourself, but they also often make you say things you wouldn't otherwise say. Heated discussions lead to comments that are rarely uttered. Words of passion can cause an emotional and not intelligent reaction...

Fearing procrastination [battling against procrastination is one of my "unofficial" new year's resolutions], I went in to work early, so early in fact that I had nothing to do for the 30 minutes that I had to wait for my class to begin [this is my language assistant job]. i checked my e-mail [not much new, since I'd just checked it before coming to school ... e-mail maniac, that's me].

I noticed a Wednesday's copy of "Le Journal de Montréal" and what got me was the cover page. On it, two men, one of whom is smiling... In large font, a title of the size that would otherwise be saved for some world catastrophe or some hockey victory: "Selong les communautés, les Québecois sont accueillants" ("According to the [cultural/ethnic] communities, Quebecers are welcoming"). I had seen the page before but I hadn't paid as much attention to it.

The fact that le Journal de Montréal would take such an ethically low stoop on crisis prevention struck me all of a sudden. I wondered what Quebecers thought of this interesting idea. And checked I did. Still, the messages on online forums seem somehow unreal, somehow plastic. Anyone can say anything on the web nowadays, including me, but hearing people say something to you in person is more valuable. It carries more weight for me, somehow. Call me old-fashioned, if you will [some of my students sort of do...will write about that soon], but it takes guts and real emotion to say something you care about to someone else, while knowing that there is a chance they may disagree.

Seeing as Celine, a teacher who teaches across the hallway from my classroom, was the only one in the teachers' lounge, I approached her and showed her the paper. She was preparing for her class in the afternoon, but she welcomed a distraction. She looked at it once and said "well, yeah, in Montreal, we're welcoming, but go to Blainville [not far from Montreal] or the regions of Quebec and you'll see how friendly we are to them."

I mentioned how my Poli. Sci. prof had talked about the fallacy of the survey. She agreed, but at the same time, said it was prejudice that Quebecers carry most in their everyday lives and not racism. This got me thinking, since prejudice is one of the initial steps towards discrimination and then on a more focused lens, racism. I didn't, however, say anything. Her words were far too interesting to distract and I enjoyed hearing honest words from someone who is a "Québecoise de souche" [a born-and-bred in Quebec Quebecer].

She started mentioning things here and there and suddenly, we got to the question of what the reason behind the Quebec racism was, or should I say, Celine did. She said students in her classes were not racist. I mentioned that yes, children are born innocent. Unfortunately, the adults are the ones teaching them about the negative aspects of life and often, imposing their views onto their children. This is a gist of what she said:

"Well, I had a student in class who, when I mentioned how in Montreal, there is a rise in numbers of people wanting to learn arabic, said that they should all be sent home because they are taking over our culture.

Naturally, I told him that he couldn't say things like that in class, especially because I have three Muslim students in that particular section. I could just imagine his father saying something like that...He probably didn't mean it that way, but said it because he heard his father say it.


I do have reservations when it comes to them
[by "them", she implied Arabs]. I mean, they are coming in big numbers and they ARE in some ways, influencing and changing our culture negatively. You know, they want their religious needs answered and they ask us to remove our crucifixes from our schools because they say it goes against their religion. Well, I'm sorry, but we were here before them. This school was a Catholic school! Catholicism [the word she used] was here before Islam.

You know, they wanted to wash their feet at Concordia [referring to the actual McGill Muslim Students' Association complaint to the university, which refused to allow the group to have a prayer space ]. They are the kind of people who always want more and more and more. They bring their opinions here and pressure us to accept them. You know, I'm not racist and I am not being one, but I am telling the truth.

Besides, racism and prejudice are two different things. They are not one and the same.
We all pre-judge.

Oh, and they are having SOOO many children. I mean, we used to be that way ["we" is used for "Quebecers"] and tried to have as many children as we could. We were all about the family. And then, after the quiet revolution , nothing was the same anymore. Now, the women are all about advancing their careers. And their women are all about having children and taking care of the family. Very soon, Quebec won't be the same anymore...We will not have the same values that we do now. We will be taken over by them."

This was a teacher talking, someone whose likes will teach my children someday.

Somehow, I couldn't understand why this woman, who knows I am Muslim, was telling me all these derogatory things so openly.

I suppose she didn't see me as one of "them".

The crucifix over her head made me think of how threatened she felt. I could only sympathize with her, but I also felt saddened that even in an accepting and welcoming society as the one of Quebec, I witnessed an opinion based on misinformation, ignorance and simple perception of rivalry. It reeked of the ancient balkanic hatred, here in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, North America, the so-called New World.

Photo source: February 11, 2006, Danish Cartoon Protests, Montreal - David Metraux

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Little Muslim comedy on the horizon

Sunday, January 07, 2007


After a series of boring tv shows, something of interest seems to be brewing in the studios of CBC TV.

I'm excited about "Little Mosque on the Prairie",a pilot project CBC TV has come up with, in an effort to diversify its content on tv and make it more representative of its viewers in Canada...and maybe even the post 9/11 world that Muslim Canadians find themselves in. The buzz is about a new show based on the true experiences of Zarqa Nawaz, a Canadian Muslim woman who settled in Winnipeg, Manitoba ten years ago.

The show features a cast with some CBC regulars, as well as some newbies. My favourite actor in this show is Zaib Shaikh, whose innocent, religious character is a huge turn-on. He is also cute. Hmmm, yes, I would marry this guy..

It's to be seen whether the show is any good. The fact that it's generated lots of media coverage in the US, Canada and Europe must mean something.

Contrary to what some of my friends seem to think, saying it's another attempt by the CBC to change Canadians' minds about prejudice and discrimination through humour. I don't see anything wrong with that. Yes, it has CBC fingerprints all over it and yes, it looks like a typical CBC show, but having never seen a show on Muslims, I can safely say it's a first. As such, it should be given a chance to prove its humour. As one of the characters in the series says sarcastically, "Muslims are known for their sense of humour."

I kinda hope they put up the episodes on the web, since, starting Tuesday, I'll be back to my student life in Montreal, meaning there will be no TV waiting for me at the end of the day :(

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Muslims are the new Communists

Saturday, December 30, 2006

The profile I have on gay.com states that I prefer rooting for rights in countries where being gay is still an unacceptable way of living rather than rooting for pride parades to cheer for businesses and commercialized events. I say there that I would like to see the day when citizens of "free and democratic" countries stand up and demand from their governments to put pressure on countries like Iran, Pakistan and India, where being gay is the equivalent of a death sentence. here's the contents of a rather interesting chat i had with a stranger tonight...


1:13:06 AM :stranger: how come u r concerned with gays in Iran?
1:14:24 AM :me: because they are the ones ending up stoned and hanged because they are gay...i haven't seen something similar happen here...
1:14:58 AM :stranger: gays in Iran claim they have a wonderful life
1:15:13 AM :stranger: n some turn to Islam here
1:15:42 AM :me: hmmm, when you say "claim", i assume you mean your friends and acquaintances...
1:15:58 AM :stranger: I mean gay guys I talked to
1:16:19 AM :stranger: I got insulted by gay Indian guys once because I was discussing the situation there
1:16:27 AM :me: http://www.globalgayz.com/g-iran.html
1:16:29 AM :stranger: they told me I knew nothing
1:16:44 AM :me: well, it is a bit demeaning to have to criticize your own culture and society...
1:16:51 AM :me: not everyone can do it...
1:17:14 AM :stranger: above all by foreigners
1:17:22 AM :stranger: that is why it is considered none of our business sometimes
1:17:36 AM :stranger: actually only a minority can do it
1:17:38 AM :me: sometimes people are so proud of the culture they grew up in that criticizing it can be harsh..
1:17:44 AM :stranger: n they usually r ostracized
1:17:53 AM :me: what do you mean they "turn to islam here"?
1:18:01 AM :stranger: they criticize it behind doors
1:18:18 AM :stranger: I had a bf who turned back to Islam
1:18:51 AM :stranger: mostly because he felt he could provoke this way but he did not even admit to that
1:19:15 AM :me: hmmm, well, i haven't seen all canadian gays stand up and criticize canada for what it's done in the past [and at times, today] against gay people...the "only a minority can do it" applies to anywhere
1:19:27 AM :me: only the few stand up for the many...most of the time, most places
1:19:35 AM :stranger: but a minority did
1:19:40 AM :stranger: that is why we have rights
1:19:50 AM :me: of course...and in Iran, a minority does speak out...
1:19:52 AM :stranger: not because the homophobes abandonned their stance
1:20:07 AM :stranger: those who do not get hanged
1:20:30 AM :me: yes, i mean, most of the ones who don't...
1:21:04 AM :stranger: it is almost suicidal to confront the current rulers
1:21:12 AM :me: oh, really? why did he go back to Islam? you mean, rejected his sexuality?
1:21:19 AM :me: but some still do it...
1:21:26 AM :stranger: no, he still fucks guys
1:21:33 AM :stranger: he just feel more guilty
1:21:45 AM :stranger: he thinks he leads a sinful life
1:22:02 AM :stranger: n fucks even more guys because that is usually what feeling dirty makes u do
1:22:20 AM :me: interesting...but he's religious?
1:22:30 AM :stranger: do u think so?
1:22:33 AM :stranger: I do not
1:22:44 AM :stranger: I think he found a new way to provoke people
1:22:57 AM :stranger: n feel he is part of a mad crowd
1:22:57 AM :me: what do you mean?
1:23:18 AM :stranger: Muslims r what Communists were decades ago
1:23:41 AM :me: hahahaha... why do you say that?
1:23:48 AM :me: because of the situation in the middle east?
1:23:57 AM :stranger: the situation everywhere
1:24:06 AM :stranger: there is Muslim terrorism in China
1:24:15 AM :stranger: in the Philippines
1:24:46 AM :stranger: so it makes him feel good to be in the tough gang
1:24:53 AM :stranger: being a faggot
1:24:56 AM :me: terrorism? you mean, alleged terrorism China likes to advertise, to make use of its Muslim minority? :P
1:25:06 AM :stranger: I have lived in China
1:25:16 AM :stranger: u do not hear about terrorism on Chinese TV
1:25:16 AM :me: right...
1:25:25 AM :me: no, but the world does
1:25:26 AM :stranger: u hear from mouth to mouth
1:25:37 AM :stranger: n it is not true?
1:25:45 AM :stranger: u never heard about the Ouighour?
1:26:05 AM :stranger: and about Mindanao?
1:26:30 AM :me: yes, and i also heard about twelve Ouighour "alleged" terrorists who were kept in Guantanamo for four years before it was finally decided they had nothing to do with terrorism...but they couldn't be
1:26:36 AM :me: returned to china for fear of torture
1:26:41 AM :me: so they sent them to albania
1:26:42 AM :me: :P
1:27:04 AM :stranger: that is horrible compared to the vacation prisons in Irak
1:27:25 AM :me: i am not saying either is good...but you're changing the subject
1:27:29 AM :stranger: we all know that Islam is a tolerant religion
1:27:42 AM :stranger: really? I m changing the subject?
1:28:21 AM :me: guantanamo / irak / albania ...very comparable
1:28:29 AM :stranger: really? I do not think so
1:28:40 AM :me: tell me why that is
1:28:42 AM :stranger: it is too easy to all put in the same basket
1:29:08 AM :me: of course...which is why i am saying it is comparable...
1:29:15 AM :me: not identical
1:29:42 AM :stranger: it is easy to talk about a place that has been mediaticized
1:29:57 AM :stranger: when most prisons in Muslim countries have not
1:30:11 AM :stranger: u think jails in Morocco r a nice place?
1:30:16 AM :stranger: or in Egypt?
1:30:24 AM :me: oh, don't even start with that...the west sees anything Muslim as disgusting...
1:30:28 AM :me: let alone prisons
1:30:37 AM :stranger: n it is not?
1:31:01 AM :me: you think it is?
1:31:19 AM :stranger: u have never heard about genocides in India?
1:31:24 AM :stranger: or in Afghanistan?
1:31:43 AM :me: and...i am supposed to blame all Muslims for it?
1:32:05 AM :stranger: not Muslims but the ideas
1:32:13 AM :me: Muslim ideas?
1:32:18 AM :stranger: Islamic ideas
1:32:31 AM :stranger: Islam is a very aggressive religion
1:32:39 AM :stranger: it has always been
1:32:52 AM :me: interesting...it sounds like the Pope would have nodded at your comments :)
1:32:57 AM :stranger: u think north Africa has become Muslim because they were in love with Arabs
1:33:15 AM :stranger: the Pope is too coward to say anything
1:33:21 AM :stranger: close to the reality of history
1:33:27 AM :me: no, it became Muslim because Islam was the first monotheistic religion to leave race out of religion
1:33:36 AM :stranger: really?
1:33:50 AM :stranger: it became Muslim because they hard swords
1:34:01 AM :stranger: who cared about racism?
1:34:02 AM :me: are you quoting the pope now?
1:34:10 AM :stranger: they all thought they were the top race
1:34:17 AM :me: Christians did...they used blacks as slaves, going back to the romans
1:34:23 AM :stranger: I can quote many
1:34:37 AM :stranger: I do not waste my time reading inquisitors
1:34:50 AM :stranger: slaves sold by the Muslims
1:35:07 AM :me: it's funny because from your writing, it sounds so similar to Pope speeches :)
1:35:09 AM :stranger: the Romans were not Christians should I remind u
1:35:16 AM :stranger: so what?
1:35:21 AM :me: Muslims aren't allowed to be involved in slave trade...
1:35:29 AM :me: so, nothing...you have lots in common :)
1:35:37 AM :stranger: really? who sold the slaves to the English?
1:35:50 AM :me: starting in 300, roman empire was christian
1:35:51 AM :me: :)
1:36:01 AM :stranger: n Muhammad had his own slave girl to fuck
1:36:03 AM :me: 300 AD
1:36:29 AM :me: review your knowledge of history, improve on your ignorance and then pretend you know what you're talking about :))

And I blocked him off.... :))

Wow...the world is far from where it should be...

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