---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John Ashworth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Sep 13, 2011 at 10:44 AM
Subject: [sudan-john-ashworth] Fw: The Great Taboo: Arab Racism
To: Group <[email protected]>


I circulate this article with mixed feelings. On the one hand, it is
undeniably true that there is Arab racism towards their darker-skinned
brothers and sisters on the African continent, and I agree with much
of the article. South Sudan suffered from this racism and the
north-south conflict was often described in terms of apartheid and
Arab colonialism. On the other, I have a nagging feeling that it
perpetrates the narrative of a stark "Arab-African" divide within the
Republic of Sudan, whereas in fact the mix of ethnic, cultural,
linguistic and religious identities, particularly in Darfur, is far
more complex. One might also note (as Julie Flint has done in the
past) that the "Arabs" in Darfur are not all part of the dominating
Janjawiid culture. And it is complicated by the fact that many of the
"Arabs" and "Africans" in Darfur, and the Republic of Sudan in
general, are the same (dark) colour, speak the same Arabic language,
follow the same Arab culture and profess the same Islamic religion. I
have been told by many Sudanese "Arabs" of the discrimination they
encountered in Arab countries because of their dark skin; they were
assumed to be "Africans" even though they would self-identify as
"Arabs". Whereas their ethnic origin might be apparent to a fellow
Sudanese via a variety of clues, making it easy to "shoot them from
helicopter gunships hovering over the Nuba Mountains ", it is
questionable whether a Libyan revolutionary would know whether he is
slaughtering a Darfuri "Arab" or a Darfuri "African".

John

BEGIN

The Great Taboo: Arab Racism

Huffington Post
Posted: 9/9/11 12:04 PM ET
Rebecca Tinsley - Journalist and human rights activist

With the liberation of Libya come less happy reports from Amnesty and
Physicians for Human Rights of rebels slaughtering scores of black
Africans, believing they were all pro-Gaddafi mercenaries. While the
dictator did hire some fighters from sub-Saharan Africa, the vast
majority of black Africans in Libya are entirely innocent immigrants,
one million of whom are guest workers.

According to a Cairo-based think tank, many of the Sudanese being
targeted by Libyans are refugees escaping the ethnic cleansing of
black Africans in Darfur and the South Kordofan region of Sudan. They
have escaped one form of Arab racism, only to find another.

None of this has happened in a vacuum: in 2000 there were deadly
anti-immigrant riots in Libya. Nor is there anything unusual about
Libyan attitudes: Arab racism toward black Africans is commonplace,
even if it remains a taboo subject. For the Nobel Prize winning
novelist Wole Soyinka, the unwillingness to confront Arab racism is
rooted in the role of Arabs in the slave trade. "Arabs and Islam are
guilty of the cultural and spiritual savaging of the Continent," he
writes.

The Ethiopian academic Mekuria Bulcha estimates that Arab traders sold
17 million Africans to the Middle East and Asia between the sixth and
twentieth centuries. Yet, there is an almost total reluctance on the
part of Arab intellectuals to examine their central role in slavery,
past or present.

According to Naiwu Osahon, of the Pan Africa Movement, "Africans are
treated like the scum of the earth" throughout the Arab world. He
claims that the Arab policy has been "elimination, displacement,
separation, marginalization and suppression" of black Africans since
the 7th century.

Arguably it continues to this day. Black African guest workers in
Egypt, Algeria and Libya tell of being publicly ridiculed and
physically assaulted by Arabs. Egyptian writer Mona Eltahawy tells of
watching a Sudanese girl being assaulted and tormented on the Cairo
Metro, concluding, "We are racist people in Egypt and we are in deep
denial." She makes a wider point, that the Arab world has ignored the
suffering of Darfur because the victims are black. "We only pay
attention when America and Israel behave badly."

The Arab League and the Organisation of the Islamic Conference have
repeatedly refused to censure totalitarian regimes like Sudan for
killing their own black African citizens, even when the victims are
Muslims. Their conferences are on safer ground offering routine
condemnation of Israel for its treatment of the Palestinians.

The argument goes that Arab and Muslim leaders refuse to criticize
their own while they perceive a U.S.-orchestrated crusade (to use
George Bush's ill-advised word) against them. Less acknowledged is the
syndrome whereby they embrace their own victimhood and persisting
grievance, ignoring atrocities and human rights abuses toward
minorities in their own lands.

But there is another reason for Arab indifference to the suffering in
Darfur and Somalia. The victims are "the wrong kind of Muslim"; black
African, rather than Arab.

In the early 1900s Winston Churchill was appalled to see the Arab
Sudanese armed forces using the black African Nuba people for target
practice. Nothing has changed, except that now they shoot them from
helicopter gunships hovering over the Nuba Mountains where the black
Africans citizens have fled. In modern Sudan it is standard practice
for those Sudanese who define themselves as Arab to call black African
Sudanese 'abid' or slave to their faces; the fact that there has been
intermarriage for years is ignored.

The Canadian academic Salim Mansur claims: "Blacks are viewed by Arabs
as racially inferior, and Arab violence against blacks has a long,
turbulent record."

However, any attempt to confront persistent Arab racism is shouted
down by appeals to Arab/African solidarity against the neo-colonialist
West. In the words of the U.S.-based Nigerian academic Moses Ebe
Ochonu, 'Black African leaders bend over backwards to accommodate and
protect the interests of Arab North Africans.'

But why do black African leaders remain silent about the mistreatment
of black Africans in North Africa, the Middle East and Sudan, while
obediently condemning the plight of the Palestinians? For the same
reason that the African Union (AU), meeting at the end of August,
declined to criticise Colonel Gaddafi, even after he had been ousted:
he has been paying their personal bills for decades, as well as
funding the AU.

For years the African Union, with an annual budget of $250 million,
has been paid for by Libya, Algeria, Egypt, Nigeria and South Africa.
According to Peter Pham from the Atlantic Council, Libya "habitually
pays the dues of members in arrears."

In addition, Gaddafi has "gleefully bankrolled a good number" of black
African leaders, according to the columnist Kofi Aksoh-Sarpong. In the
words of a Cameroonian official who preferred to remain anonymous, "A
hospital here, a battalion of tanks there, not to mention the Series
500 Mercedes for their personal collections -- that's how the Arabs
have manipulated African leaders." "King Faisal Hospitals turn up in
the most unlikely places," she added.

Curiously, the same people in the West who consider themselves
progressive and liberal, are often complicit in refusing to ever
mention Arab racism, as if doing so is the same as being an
anti-Palestinian Zionist.

Only the delusional would deny that Western racism persists,
contributing to the collective failure to stop decades of war crimes
against black Africans in Sudan. And only the naïve would argue that
electing Barack Obama means America is 'over' racism. But slowly
Western societies are facing up to their unpalatable past and
outlawing racism, at least in statutes if not in their hearts. Let's
hope that the Arab Spring will bring with it a new openness and the
self-confidence to shrug off the suffocating cloak of powerless
victimhood.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rebecca-tinsley/arab-racism_b_951422.html

END
______________________
John Ashworth

Sudan Advisor

[email protected]

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This is a personal e-mail address and the contents do not necessarily
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