"get them before they get us"

This is so sad.

Stupid ignorants should at least learn to differentiate between India and Iraq. It’s highly doubtful that harassment against Muslims, or those perceived to “look like” Muslims will decrease…particularly not if the current administration continues to pander to the likes of Bill Graham.

Anti-Muslim Rage in U.S. Hurts Others Too, Greg Frost

NEW BEDFORD, Mass. (Reuters) - “Go back to Iraq!” the young men shouted as they beat and kicked the pizza delivery man in the face, breaking his jaw in three places.

They bound his thin body with rope, stuffed a sock in his mouth to muffle his screams for help and used the back of his neck as an ashtray. They stuffed him into the trunk of a car, where he managed to set himself free - only to be stabbed.

But the victim of this Massachusetts attack was neither a Muslim nor an Iraqi but a Hindu from the central Indian city of Indore. He tried to make this clear to his assailants but his entreaties fell on ignorant ears.

Weeks after the attack left him with a pierced lung and liver and sipping his meals through a straw, 24-year-old Saurabh Bhalerao showed little emotion as he recounted the grisly details of what he called “an isolated incident.”

But the attack may be part of a wider trend. A new report by the Council on American-Islamic Relations revealed hostility, discrimination and violence have risen in America against Muslims and people simply presumed to be Muslims.

“They didn’t even know the difference between India and Iraq,” Bhalerao told Reuters in an interview, his jaw wired shut. Bhalerao took a job in June at a pizzeria to support his studies at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth. On his second day on the job, he was ambushed delivering a $10 pizza to a home in New Bedford, Massachusetts.

“I told them to take my money,” he recalled. “One of them may have noticed my accent because they immediately started beating me harder. They kept on screaming: 'Go Back to Iraq!”’

When the beating intensified, Bhalerao began to wonder if he would make it through alive.

“They had probably planned to rob me at first. But the way they started treating me because they thought I was from the Middle East - I could see the hate in their behavior,” the graduate student said.

Police believe the attack began as a robbery but escalated into something more brutal. Hate crime charges have been filed against four men, along with charges of attempted murder, kidnapping, robbery and other crimes. Bhalerao said the attack has not changed his feelings about the United States, although he is concerned by what he sees as a wave of ignorance in America about the rest of the world.

The attack against Bhalerao marked the second time in seven months that non-Muslim Indians have been victims of anti-Muslim hate crimes in Massachusetts alone. Similar attacks or acts of discrimination have hit Indians elsewhere in the country. In May, a Sikh in Arizona was shot twice by assailants who reportedly yelled “Go back to where you belong.” Last year in New York, three young men warned another Sikh “not to bomb another building.”

The incidents have the Indian-American community worried. “A segment of our community is at high risk,” said Ravi Sakhuja, a leader of an Indian-American political group in New England. “Some people are looking at all of us and saying 'Oh, they’re all Muslims.”’

Mohamed Nimer, director of research at the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said ignorance is “rampant” in America and is among the reasons for a 15 percent increase in anti-Muslim violence, discrimination and harassment in 2002. In a report issued this month, Nimer said anger about the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and “discriminatory” government policies like the USA Patriot Act have combined to make America a risky place for Muslims and those perceived to be Muslim.

“It’s more dangerous than ever,” said Nimer, noting that anti-Muslim violence has hit Sikhs, Hindus, and even non-Muslim Hispanics. “It doesn’t matter if you’re Muslim or not.”

Stoking the flames of hate, he says, is anti-Islamic rhetoric from Christian preachers like Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson and Franklin Graham, son of the Rev. Billy Graham. Falwell prompted deadly Hindu-Muslim clashes in India last year when he called the prophet Mohammed a “terrorist” and Robertson made headlines in December when he called Muslims “worse than Nazis.”

Graham, who gave the sermon at President Bush’s 2001 inauguration, angered Muslims after the Sept. 11 attacks when he called Islam a “very evil and wicked religion.”

“When you have leaders who talk this way … it’s no wonder you get some people who are willing to go and attack,” Nimer said. “Some people really believe the Islamic mosque next door is the place where bombing attacks are being hatched and they say: 'Let’s get them before they get us.”’

we are responsible to let these ignorant understand the truth.

True, we are responsible. :k:

Simultaneously IMHO - knowledge is also a two-way street. “Others” have to be willing to open up their minds and approach issues from an unbiased perspective. It does not matter what their core beliefs are - but in order for anyone to grasp the complexities of anything, we first have to be willing to listen. i can take examples right from this Forum where certain individuals, regardless of however many quotes are posted from the Quran, however many explanations are given regarding religions/cultures, contexts of particular Surahs’ revelations - it does not matter. At the end of the day, that individual will always repeat - yes but Islam is a violent religion, period.

There are none so deaf as they that will not hear. My point is that, a person can only explain so much; beyond this boundary, reciprocation must form a core aspect of any debate. As they say - it takes two to tango.

well, ALLAH gives guidance to only those who want to be guided and misguides those who do not want to get guidance. It’s a free will :).. we are only responsible to let others know. When Rasoolulah :saw: could not make Abu Taalib enter into the fold of Islam and ayah came down that his:saw: duty is to just convey the message then we should understand our role too:)

Good analogy. That's what i meant, we can only do so much and beyond that conveying, there's really not much else that an individual can do.

As you stated, guidance is only given to those who want to be guided.

exactly! when we are told that in the life of Rasoolulah:saw: definitely we have the best example to follow then look at makki era of his:saw: prophethood. 13 years and how many muslims? How much sab’r?

People always need to blame someone for their problems, inhte past it has been communists, Jews and now it's our turn. :-(

I'm sorry that racism and narrow-mindedness still exists in a country of free belief (almost). Please resolve to blame President Bush, not the people.

First of all, this Indian student is posing a serious risk to himself by working off campus in a pizza chain, as its against the rules of the immigration to work off campus. He should only work on campus, and that would make sure that he doesnt run into more 'jahil amreekans' that think anyone with darker skin has to be from Iraq... Remember, there are always bad apples everywhere, be it Pakistan, America, India etc, you just gotta watch out for yourself.