Stereotypes And Prejudice Against Islamophobias

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Mohamedali Gokal, a 24-year-old Muslim man from London, was at the Harrow and Wealdstone Station when it all happened. He was ready to head to an event, a friend alongside him while at the railway station. His friend was conversing on the phone with his father, saying “Assalamu Alaykum.”, which means ‘peace be upon you’ in Arabic. A man was just walking by when Gokal’s friend had just said this greeting, just so happening to hear him. Right after he hears this, Gokal hears the man say something along the lines of “Look at you and your terrorist friend, please don’t behead me.”, before throwing his ticket at the two and finally walking away. "I just said, 'Excuse me?' and sort of laughed it off. It was nothing violent but it was worrisome. …show more content…

Islamophobia is the dislike or prejudice against Islam and Muslims. Being afraid of what someone believes in isn’t exactly what someone would describe Islamophobia is, but use words such as “terrorists”, “jihadists”, “ISIS”, or “bombers”. Many Muslims are called by some of these ‘nicknames’ that most of the blighted population has given the Muslim race. Islamophobia had led to controversy, political crisis, and worse of all, hate …show more content…

According to CAIR, the largest Muslim civil rights organization in the U.S., anti-Muslim hate crime incidents dramatically rose in 2015, and then increased by 44% in 2016. The number of incidents in 2015 was 180, increasing up to 260 in 2016 (Pitter). The number difference is large and has a huge impact on society and Muslim citizens within the country. Some of these hate crimes are considered “accidents” or claim that there was no intentional target, like Nabra Hassanen, a young Muslim teen who was beaten to her death with a bat after an act of road rage, near a Virginia Mosque (Marco). These are just excuses to blind potential Islamophobes and feed the wrong information that makes them have a more negative force towards

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