
Where EAST meets the Northwest

TEST OF FAITH. Sarah Salama, 18, right, talks with her family while her
brother Yousuf Salama, 16, sends a text to a friend as the family prepares to
break the Ramadan fast at their home in Fullerton, California. In many ways,
Yousuf Salama is a typical teenager: He lives for football, worries about acne,
and would rather dash off to see Captain America with friends than spend
one more minute with his mother. He’s aware, however, that his actions in
particular can have greater meaning: He’s one of thousands of children who
navigate every day the subtle and complex challenges that come with growing up
Muslim in a deeply traumatized post-September 11 America. Below, the Salama
family performs evening prayers. (AP Photos/Chris Carlson)
From The Asian Reporter, V21, #17 (September 5, 2011), page 8.
Growing up Muslim after September 11 a test of faith
By Gillian Flaccus
The Associated Press
FULLERTON, California — In many ways, Yousuf Salama is a typical teenager: He
lives for football, worries about acne, and would rather dash off to see
Captain America with friends than spend one more minute with his mother.
He’s aware, however, that his actions in particular can have greater meaning.
Yousuf is a Muslim, one of only two in an all-boys Catholic prep school in
Southern California. He has been asked if he’s a terrorist and routinely shrugs
off jokes about bombs and jihad.
"Sometimes I feel like I take it upon myself to be a better example," he said
on a recent evening after returning from a weeklong football camp.
Yousuf, whose father is from Egypt and mother from the U.S., is among
thousands of children who navigate every day the subtle and complex challenges
that come with growing up Muslim in a deeply traumatized post-September 11
America. Some were still in diapers and others in grade school when hijackers
crashed planes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon a decade ago, but
their childhoods have been deeply touched by the pain and anger of a nation
struggling to come to terms with a day that, for them, represents the worst
perversion of their faith.
For some, like Yousuf in California and others across the country, the
bullying, the hard stares, and endless defense of their identity has nurtured a
deeper faith and a maturity and resilience that surprises even their parents.
"I tell them that when they’re out in the world, they represent the best of
our community, they are our faith ambassadors," said Kari Ansari, who was
pregnant with her youngest child on September 11 and lives outside Washington,
D.C. with her family. She is from the U.S. and her husband was born in India.
"They will have learned to have compassion for people who maybe don’t even
deserve that kind of compassion — dealing with bigots and dealing with prejudice
— and that’s a great life lesson," she said.
For Ansari’s oldest daughter, Aneesa, that lesson colors her earliest
memories.
She started attending a private Muslim kindergarten in Denver just days
before September 11 and it shut down for two weeks after angry protesters
gathered outside. It eventually reopened, but an armed security guard stayed on
campus for almost a year.
Today, the 15-year-old is deeply invested in her religious identity and
exudes a quiet pride at being Muslim. She began wearing a headscarf in public
without prompting in the fifth grade and has never removed it despite being
cursed at while waiting in line at an Ikea furniture store, and stared at and
pressured at school, she said.
Aneesa goes to the library during the lunch hour so she can observe the holy
month of Ramadan (a month of no food or water from sunrise to sundown, which
this year began August 1 and ended August 29) and said she prefers to spend time
with other Muslim teens to avoid the pressure to drink and do drugs.
Her mother worried that her young daughter would be pitied or discriminated
against for wearing the hijab. But for Aneesa, wearing the head covering
was a rebuke to those who dwelled on her differences and minimized her faith.
Even at 11, she said, she was adamant that it was her choice and her identity.
"I have enough strength, I guess, to not be afraid of who I am," Aneesa said.
"It’s this pressure to change, people kind of hint that you don’t have to wear a
scarf at school, they ask if your parents make you.
"Combatting that makes you a stronger person," she said.
When the family moved from Denver to a new school in the western suburbs of
Chicago, her younger brother Sajid suddenly found himself the only Muslim boy in
his grade in a tiny school district.
For three years, from the fourth to the sixth grade, he was relentlessly
bullied by dozens of students who ganged up on him, called him a terrorist, and
ridiculed him for his faith.
In a sixth-grade art class, a group of boys passed him a note showing a
drawing of the twin towers, with the words "Look familiar?" written below. On
another occasion, he was walking his sister home in the snow when other students
ambushed them with icy snowballs. One hit his face, leaving a bloody gash on his
cheek.
Sajid’s grades plummeted and attempts to get adults to help led to more
abuse, so he stopped telling his parents about what was going on.
"I just kind of felt like, ‘Why was I born at a time when people didn’t
understand?’ I didn’t have any problem with being Muslim or being born that
way," said Sajid, now 13.
"Sometimes, I felt it was unfair that I was born at a time when all this was
happening," he said. "It’s hard to explain that you’re not the stereotype that’s
put out."
The Ansaris eventually moved to northern Virginia and put their children in a
bigger and more diverse school district where Sajid has thrived.
Today, Sajid is open with classmates about his faith, explaining that he
can’t eat pepperoni because Muslims don’t eat pork and talking with friends
about the terrorist characters that represent the enemy on war-themed video
games.
"When you are a person of faith you look at your life circumstances and every
situation that comes up is a trial or challenge to you in your faith," said
Ansari, who works as a freelance marketing consultant. "We believe it’s god’s
way of saying, ‘What are you going to do about this? Are you going to succumb to
it or rise above it and show what the true story is?"
In Southern California’s Orange County, Yousuf Salama, his 18-year-old sister
Sarah, and his 21-year-old brother Omar have spent years navigating the same
types of challenges at their private Catholic prep schools. Their parents sent
them there because of the top-notch education and same-sex environment.
One of Yousuf’s friends asked if he was a terrorist after watching a
television program about Islamic extremism.
His older brother, unusually tall and lanky for his age, was called "Twin
Tower" at a seventh-grade flag football camp and quietly endured an endless loop
of jokes: Do you have a bomb in your backpack? When do you leave for jihad?
These days, those memories barely raise an eyebrow in the family’s upscale
suburban home, where their parents juggle a home business, their children’s
sports practices, and part-time jobs as well nightly prayers at the mosque
during Ramadan.
On a recent night, the children, Omar’s new wife, and their grandmother
gathered to break the Ramadan fast with heaping plates of lamb and chicken
kebobs, sliced grilled eggplant, humus, and a thick chocolate cake for dessert.
"How have we been living for the past 10 years?" asked Anita Bond-Salama,
their mother.
"There’s no answer, there’s no magic formula," she continued. "My husband and
I have just dealt with things very matter-of-factly: This is what happened.
There’s good and there’s bad in the world. And unfortunately there’s bad people
who represent our religion, but our religion doesn’t say that."
Omar was 11 when the airplanes were hijacked and of the three siblings, he
has the clearest memories of that day and its aftermath. He remembers thinking
at the time that the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan would change his life, too.
Over the years, he learned to restrain himself from physically confronting
anyone who made fun of him, but he had his hardest test as a high school senior
— six years after September 11 — when a teacher asked him to read aloud in
class. A fellow student leaned in, he recalled, and whispered: "Does your
religion allow you to read?"
"I was this close to climbing over my seat and really messing him up," Omar
said.
He remembered thinking on that occasion and on many others that he should not
react violently.
"If I did that ... the whole school would be thinking in the back of their
mind, ‘Oh, there goes another Muslim. There goes Omar again, a typical Muslim —
violent and angry,"’ he said.
Omar started high school "football crazy" and every bit the athlete. He
played for his school’s powerhouse football team, fasting during Ramadan while
doing two-a-day workouts.
Over time, as the teasing got to him, he distanced himself from school
friends and spent more time at the mosque. By his senior year, he had quit
football and devoted himself to studying his faith so he could better explain
Islam.
He attended more prayers, stopped swearing, and improved his grades, which
had slipped to Cs and Ds.
"If I’m being attacked by an individual or even just a curious individual, I
have to be able to answer. I can’t just say, ‘I don’t know.’ It made me pick up
a book," he said. "In that sense, it’s changed my life."
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