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Can Gen Z Figure Out How to End Islamophobia?

Nancy Price, Multimedia Journalist

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Muslims and Christians gathered last week at Fresno Pacific University to talk about Islamophobia, its causes, and what Generation Z — the generation of Americans now of college age, who are said to be the nation’s most ethnically, racially and religiously diverse generation — can do about it.


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There’s blatant Islamophobia, which is manifested when U.S. government officials established a Muslim travel ban or advocated for registering Muslims and shutting down mosques, said Reza Nekumanesh, executive director of the Islamic Cultural Center of Fresno. And then there’s what he calls “Islamophobia Light.”
“On the other side you had Hillary Clinton, with her light Islamophobia, saying, ‘Muslims are our greatest ally in the fight against terrorism, and therefore they’re part of our community,’ ” he said. “Well, that’s problematic, because you suppose, first of all, that my only dignity or value is tied to how I can help you do what you want to do.
“And secondly, you think that I somehow know a terrorist, but I don’t. So you think my entire value boils down to something that you want it to be, which is very Islamophobic as well. It’s tokenizing, it’s dehumanizing.”

Feds Threaten University Funding

One of the most recent examples of the U.S. government’s Islamophobia was when the U.S. Department of Education, led by Secretary Betsy DeVos, threatened in August to cut off funding for a North Carolina university-based Middle Eastern studies programs because it portrayed Islam in “too positive of a light,” Nekumanesh said.
The Washington Post reported earlier this month that the Education Department would continue funding the program but also would maintain its oversight of similar programs.
Nekumanesh was joined at the panel discussion by Sukaina Hussain, Central California outreach director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) California, and Fresno Pacific professor Darren Duerksen, who specializes in interfaith issues.
It was part of a fellowship project undertaken by Fresno Pacific senior Samantha Witt. An interfaith lunch scheduled for Saturday that links Muslim students from Fresno State and Clovis Community College with Fresno Pacific students was the next step of the project, which is intended to build relationships with Muslim neighbors, Witt said.

Discrimination Hurts

“At that point it actually hurt even more, because literally the only difference between her and me was the scarf that I wear on my head.”Sukaina Hussain, Central California outreach director for CAIR California
The roundtable discussion in North Hall’s BC Lounge drew about 70 Fresno Pacific students who listened intently as Nekumanesh and Hussain, who are married, talked about how they had been personally affected by Islamophobia.
Hussain said she was hired over the telephone as a teenager to work at a preschool summer camp, but then “unhired” when the director learned that she wears a hijab, a headscarf worn by some Muslim women.
“I was devastated,” she said. “I have experience, I know how to work with kids, I know how to work with parents. And then they ended up hiring my little sister, who is about two years younger than me, to do this job.
“Everybody has dignity, just in and of itself. You’re a person who has been created by God. And yet our actions, and our words, and our narratives completely betray that.”Fresno Pacific professor Darren Duerksen
“At that point it actually hurt even more, because literally the only difference between her and me was the scarf that I wear on my head.”

The Need for Peaceful Conversations

When asked why it’s important for Christians to have peaceful conversations with their Muslim neighbors, Duerksen said he was saddened that the question even has to be asked.
“We don’t do this well, in a society as a whole, and thinking of myself as located in the Christian community, we don’t do this well. And what adds to the sadness for me, is that Christians have long held a theology that says everybody is created in the image of God. And because of that, everybody has dignity, just in and of itself. You’re a person who has been created by God.
“And yet our actions, and our words, and our narratives completely betray that.”
How to overcome Islamophobia? The speakers said it will come as relationships are built and conversations are held, individually and through groups such as Faith in the Valley that address common concerns such as homelessness and gun violence, Duerksen said.
Hussain agreed that it’s important for advocates to work with other advocates on seeking solutions to community issues. And when people work together, they get to know each other, and learn to trust — and not hate — each other, she said.

Nancy Price is a multimedia journalist for GV Wire. A longtime reporter and editor who has worked for newspapers in California, Florida, Alaska, Illinois and Kansas, Nancy joined GV Wire in July 2019. She previously worked as an assistant metro editor for 13 years at The Fresno Bee. Nancy earned her bachelor's and master's degrees in journalism at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. Her hobbies include singing with the Fresno Master Chorale and volunteering with Fresno Filmworks. You can reach Nancy at 559-492-4087 or Send an Email

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