Coming To America Research Paper

1365 Words3 Pages

People from all around the world have a dream of coming to the United States for more opportunities and a better life. However, they don’t know that when they enter the United States they will be judged and discriminated against. Muslims can definitely relate with this. America views all Muslims as terrorists. “I thought that coming America would be an opportunity, not a place to be judged for something that you really can’t control.” This is how majority of the Muslims that live in the United States feel. On May 2, 2017, a survey was conducted to see how many Americans are concerned about the amount of Muslims in the United States. During the survey they were asked, “Do you American people view Islam as a part of their mainstream society?” …show more content…

She has always felt that since she has moved to the United States of America she has been judged. Before she moved to America, she had bright dreams and hopes for her new home. She thought that everything was united and everyone loved each other. However, when she came to America she was very disappointed. The first day that she was here she was stared at. She even had someone tell her that she “didn’t belong here”. Niala Mohammad’s story is one of thousands of Muslim’s that have been mistreated by Americans. How do you think that they feel being mistreated for something that they cannot control? They moved out of their country to get away from the hate and the negativity. But, they just walked right into another …show more content…

It may be hard for the afflicted to sufficiently determine or communicate the source of this fear, but it exists. In recent years, a specific phobia has gripped Western societies - Islamophobia. Researchers and policy groups define Islamophobia in differing detail, but the term's essence is essentially the same, no matter the source: An exaggerated fear, hatred, and hostility toward Islam and Muslims that is perpetuated by negative stereotypes resulting in bias, discrimination, and the marginalization and exclusion of Muslims from social, political, and civic life. Research shows that the U.S. identified more than 160 Muslim-American terrorist suspects and perpetrators in the decade since 9/11, just a percentage of the thousands of acts of violence that occur in the United States each year. It is from this overall collection of violence that "an efficient system of government prosecution and media coverage brings Muslim-American terrorism suspects to national attention, creating the impression - perhaps unintentionally - that Muslim-American terrorism is more prevalent than it really is." Never mind that since 9/11, the Muslim-American community has helped security and law enforcement officials prevent nearly two of every five al Qaeda terrorist plots threatening the United States and that tips from the

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