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Islam and the
Western Media
Stereotypes and misconceptions about
Islam in the media are rooted in prejudice, and ignorance, says Bassil Akel.
Islam is the fastest growing religion in the
West. Nevertheless, the West has many stereotypes and misconceptions about Islam
that are due to the media, prejudice, and ignorance. Islam is often looked upon
as a "extremist", "terrorist", or "fundamental"
religion. Many people hate Islam and do not want to acknowledge its true
teachings. In many cases, the media’s reports about Islam are incorrect
due to ignorance. This is one of the reasons why the West often hates Islam. In
contrast to what many Westerners think of Islam, Islam is a peaceful religion,
which does not promote any forms of uncalled for fighting or
"terrorist" actions.
Stereotypes about Islam are not new to Western
culture. Problems can be traced back 1400 years. At that time, Islam and
Christianity were involved in the Crusades in the 1100’s and in the
Ottoman and Moorish control in Europe. Islam spread quickly to the West, and
started to threaten the position of the Christian Church and the ruling class.
The Western elites, mainly the governments and the churches, then became highly
involved in seeing that negative images were presented about Islam. As a result,
not only were battles fought against Islam, but also a war of words was
initiated to make sure that Islam would not have any converts or sympathizers in
the West. These kinds of actions and feelings that the West had long ago still
seem to be the case in the West today (Hassan 1).
Today, the West, with little or no
understanding of Islamic history, has identified a new enemy, "a new demon
that has replaced the Red menace of the Cold war, i.e., radical Islam" (Agha
6). This "radical Islam", a stereotype common to Western thought,
portrays Muslims as fundamentalists or potential terrorists. Some of these ideas
that the Western people have about Islam are due to the mass media of the West.
Reporters who cover the Muslim world often know very little details about it.
The media then develops a distorted image of Islam that Western culture adopts (Agha
2).
A major factor which contributes to Islamic
stereotyping in the West is due to the media’s ignorance of selecting
their words that describe Muslims. Some common names heard or seen in the news
about Muslims are "extremist" or "terrorist". These words
are misleading and are mainly anti-Islamic. The media rarely uses more neutral
terms such as "revivalist" or "progressives" (Hassan 2).
The Western media also creates the idea that
Muslims are "returning" to Islam. This is not true in most cases,
because most Muslims have never left Islam in the first place. Islam has always
been a big part of their lives. A more accurate and just way to describe this
idea is to say that there is a revival of Islam and it is becoming more and more
influential to everyone (Hassan 2).
Adding to the fact that the media creates
inaccurate ideas about Islam, the Western media is also very influential to its
audiences in making negative Islamic stereotypes, such as the assertion that all
Muslims are fundamentalists. The term "fundamentalist" is actually a
term that is interpreted by the media. A fundamentalist, in fact, only
represents a normal Muslim who follows his or her religion. Fundamentalism means
an attitude, an effort, or a movement that an ideology, group, or religion tries
to promote in its fundamental beliefs. The "fundamental" beliefs of a
Muslim is to believe in only one God (Allah) and the Prophet Mohammed is His
messenger (PBUH), pray five times a day, fast the month of Ramadan, give alms to
the poor, and make a pilgrimage to Mecca. This means that all Muslims are
fundamentalists if they believe in their own religion’s fundamentals.
Although the media is uncomfortable with religious groups, it focuses heavily on
"Islamic fundamentalism". A majority of the media’s reports that
talk about Islamic fundamentalism usually describes most Muslims as extremists.
This shows how the media is ignorant, because Islam specifically prohibits any
forms of extremism. The Prophet Mohammed said, "Those persons who go to
extremes (in practicing their religion) were cursed (by God)". The media
most often portrays Muslim "fundamentalists" prostrating themselves
before God in prayer. For example, in the October 4 issue of Time, Muslims
soldiers were shown performing prayers with guns. The caption on the bottom of
the picture said, "Guns and prayer go together in the fundamentalist
battle". The part that the reporters omitted or failed to state was that
the Muslim soldiers were praying on a battlefield in Afghanistan. Common sense
of the situation meant that the soldiers had to remain armed at all times in
case of an ambush at any time. This is a clear example of the media’s
biased and inaccurate reporting (Martinez 1, Ba-Yunus 1).
With regard to the soldiers, another great
misconception that exists is the truth about Jihad or "holy war" in
Islam. The ideas of war and violence have become related to the Islamic religion
from the media. Jihad is so often apparent in the news because the media thinks
it is Islam’s justification for war and violence. The Quran (Muslim Holy
Book) says "Fight for the sake of Allah those that fight against you, but
do not attack them first. Allah (God) does not love aggression". A Muslim
is permitted to take up arms only as an act of self-defense. A Muslim has the
right to defend his life, and his property (Martinez 1, Hassan 4).
Jihad literally means "The struggle in the
path of God", or "holy war". However, the Western media often
abuses the meaning of jihad by referring to it as a holy war where Muslims
unreasonably kill non-believers. But the fact is, is that jihad can mean a
numbers of things that a Muslim does for the sake of God. Rarely has the Western
media used this kind of a definition in their reports. The way the media
represents jihad is wrong. The media often takes the word "jihad" out
of context to propagate negative views on Islam. A student striving for top
grades, individuals pursuing for equality and justice for all people, honoring
your parents, a mother giving birth to a child, eating, and even simply sleeping
can all be considered jihad (Martinez 1, Hassan 4).
The association of Islam and violence is a
common misconception that the general Western public has developed about Islam.
An example of this kind of misconception is that the Western media and some
historians often say that Islam was a religion spread by the sword, meaning that
Muslims went from one end of the world to the other forcing people to either
convert or die. Islam spread by people learning about it and some by holy wars,
but they did not force people to convert or die. Since a majority of the
American public only get their information about Islam through the media, they
believe this wrong idea. The media’s reports about Arab or
"Islamic" events, such as the Gulf War, are often misunderstood. The
media usually fails to give background information about these Islamic events
that it reports on. The media infrequently distinguishes between the religion
Islam and the political affairs that occur in most Islamic countries. For
instance, what Saddam Hussein, the president of Iraq, did in the Gulf War was
not Islamic and totally wrong (to attack other people for no reason, especially
Muslims). But the media still makes reports about Islam and how Islam is made of
war-crazed people. For example, to help put things into perspective, Hitler was
a person of the Christian faith. This does not mean that all of his actions were
consistent with the Christian beliefs. Likewise, Saddam Hussein is of the
Islamic faith, but all of his actions do not necessarily represent Islam. So you
can see that the media’s reports about "war-crazed Muslims" are
incorrect. The notion of associating of Islam and Muslims with the terms Arabs
and Middle East are in fact misleading. Arabs only account for 18% of the Muslim
population across the world (Hassan 1-2, Washington 1).
Aside from the fact that the media
misrepresents Islam because of ignorance, the media is also a profit-seeking
organization which often seeks to create a false image of reality. Islam is
often news of an unpleasant sort for the general public of the United States.
Islam has often been presented as a menace or a threat to the West. These
negative images do not correspond to Islam, but are the belief of certain
sectors of a particular society. These prominent sectors can propagate negative
images of Islam, which sometimes influences people’s views on Islam (Agha
3). The Western media actually poorly represents Islam. Most of these problems
of poor representations come from poor language translations, the absence of
developed news agencies with international networks and native reporters, and
biased reporting by many Western reporters (Agha 3).
Some biased reports come from negative images
that have happened in the Muslim world in the past like the hijacking of
airplanes by Palestinians, the occupation of the United States Embassy by
students in Tehran, the fact that there are no democratic governments in most
Islamic countries, and the Gulf War. For most of these events, the media has
misinterpreted and misrepresented them. The media sometimes unintentionally
blows things out of proportion, sometimes because of biased feelings toward
Muslims. However, many positive developments in the Muslims world rarely go
noticed (Agha 3). Some inaccurate representations of Islam are often due to the
media’s incorrect representations of Islamic countries, such as jihad, or
Islam women’s rights. Waseem Sajjad, former Chairman of the Senate of
Pakistan explains the situation of Islam and the media:
The Islamic world is poorly represented in
the West in terms of press and media coverage. Not only are there just
handfuls of news agencies in Muslim countries; there is the concern over the
number of inexperienced reporters. Many reporters don’t understand the
local cultures nor speak the language, leaving them with access to only those
English or French speaking Westernized elites. Thus their representation is
often a biased account of the political and social events from the point of
view of the ruling minority in Muslim countries (Hassan 2).
A negative image of Islam is becoming more
inherent in the Western culture from inaccurate media coverage. The media helps
to make an image of Islam to unsuspecting audiences. The Western public often is
misinformed about Muslims through the images on television, motion picture
screens, magazines, radios, and comic strips in newspapers, which promote strong
messages among their audiences. Western reporters often say that Muslims are
terrorists. This becomes a common image to the general person that all Muslims
are terrorists. Edward Said’s book, Covering Islam, talks about how the
media and experts determine how we see the rest of the world. He says that:
The term Islam as it is used today seems to
mean one simple thing, but in fact is part fiction, part ideological label,
part minimal designation of a religion called Islam . Today Islam is
peculiarly traumatic news in the West. During the past few years, especially
since events in Iran caught European and American attention so strongly, the
media have therefore covered Islam: they have portrayed it, characterized it,
analyzed it, given instant courses on it, and consequently they have made it
known . But this coverage is misleadingly full, and a great deal in this
energetic coverage is based on far from objective material. In many instances
Islam has licensed not only patent inaccuracy, but also expressions of
unrestrained ethnocentrism, cultural, and even racial hatred, deep yet
paradoxically free-floating hostility (Agha 2) .
As well as creating inaccurate images about
Islam, the Western media usually identifies Islam in Muslim conflicts. The media
hardly points other religions out in their conflicts. For example, the news
would say, "five Israelis may have been shot, but they were shot by five
Muslims", instead of saying "Five Israelis were shot by five
Palestinians". The media often reverses this action when a conflict is
against Muslims, for example the news would usually say "Bosnians are being
killed by Serbians", but instead rarely says, "Muslims are being
killed by Christians"(Hassan 3). In addition to the media’s
inaccurate representations about Islamic conflicts, human rights of women in
Islam, such as women veiling and women authority, are big topics that Western
media often confuses and misinterprets. The media often represents Islam as a
male dominant religion where Muslim men have complete authority over all groups
of people. The media often says that Islam discriminates against women, and that
women have no power or authority. However, it is ironic of what the media
represents, that the Prophet Mohammed was one the greatest reformers for women.
In fact, Islam probably is the only religion that formally teaches women’s
rights and finds ways to protect them. When Islam is practiced correctly, it
becomes the best example of an equal gender society (Hassan 3).
As Islam came around, traditional pre-Islamic
roles of women were replaced by new Islamic roles that women followed. Islam
allowed women to have the right to be educated and the right to participate in
political, economical, and social activities in their community. This created
upward mobility in their communities. Women were also given the right to vote,
something the U.S. did not allow until 1919. Women were given the right to
inherit property and take charge of their possessions. While most of these
rights are denied to Muslim women today as a result of cultural tradition, one
should not associate this with Islam, because they do not correlate with it (Hassan
4). Islamic women wearing veils is a another commonly misunderstood concept in
the West. Westerners often think that this is a harsh custom that Islam requires
of women. Westerners often say these women have no freedom or dignity for
wearing these veils. But in fact, these veils actuality help protect women and
help them remain in chastity. In Islamic societies there are very few rape cases
and AIDS victims as opposed to the Western societies, were there are thousands
of rape cases and AIDS infected victims a year. But in some countries, like
Saudi Arabia, women are forced to wear abbayyas (floor length veils). Such
excessive forms of these kinds of dress are not mentioned in Islam. Islam
requires women to wear a veil for their own safety, but if a woman chooses not
to wear it, it is her choice and it is between her and her God. God will do
anything He wants to her in this world and the after (Hassan 5).
Islamic women are indeed supposed to be granted
these rights, but the media often fails to inform its audiences about this fact.
The media also fails to report that most of the Islamic countries have a high
illiteracy rate. This means that it is "virtually impossible for many
Muslim women to challenge cultural male authority when the women themselves do
not know the difference between village customs and actual Islamic law".
The Western media would be able to better represent women’s issues in
Islamic countries if they identified how and why governments have limited
women’s rights that are guaranteed to them by the Quran (Muslim Holy
Book). Most so-called Islamic countries such as Syria are corrupt (according to
Islam) in their religion and should be addressed in the media’s reports.
But instead "the media falsely portrays Muslim women as victims of a harsh
and suppressive religion". While the media is so concerned about negative
and discriminatory images about Islamic women, it fails to remind their
audiences that there are three Islamic countries (Bangladesh, Pakistan, and
Turkey) that have had female heads of states. In contrast, most Westerns nations
such as the United States, "who condemn Islamic countries for their
oppression of women, have yet to see a non-white, male president, let alone a
female" (Hassan 5-6).
With regard to Islamic women’s rights,
Islam is also a hot topic of Western governments. Western powers do not usually
easily tolerate Islamic movements or governments. One main reason is that in an
Islamic government, in contrast to Western governments, there is no separation
of church and state. Judith Miller states in her book Challenge of Radical
Islam, "that anyone who believes in universal human rights, democratic
governments, political tolerance, and peace between the Arabs and the Israelis
cannot be complacent about the growing strength of Islamic militant movements in
most Middle Eastern countries". Miller says that the Western governments
should oppose these kind of Islamic movements. This statement shows one
Western’s views about how the West opposes Islamic movements (Agha 6,
Emerson 2).
Observers often say that the goal of Islamic
fundamentalism is to wage a holy war against the West. These observers believe
the idea that Islamic leaders only wanting the redress legitimate political
grievances is totally nonsense. They think that even if Israel or any other
opposing regime in the Middle East would disappear, "the appetite of the
Islamic fundamentalists would only have been whetted". These ideas are
false and also misleading. (Agha 7).
The Western media often portrays Islam as a
"militant Islam" or a "fundamental Islam" threat to the
West. Edward Said states that:
For the general public in America and Europe
today, Islam is "news" of a particularly unpleasant sort. The media,
the government, the geopolitical strategists, and although they are marginal
to the culture at large - the academic experts on Islam are all in concert:
Islam is a threat to Western civilization. Now this is by no means the same as
saying that only derogatory or racist caricatures of Islam are to be found in
the West...What I am saying is that negative images of Islam are very much
more prevalent than any others, and that such images correspond, not to what
Islam "is"...but to what prominent sectors of a particular society
take it to be: Those sectors have the power and the will to propagate that
particular image of Islam, and this image therefore becomes more prevalent,
more present, than all others (Muzaffer 1).
John L. Esposito’s book, The Islamic
Threat: Myth or Reality, states the question, is Islam a threat to the West? He
tells us that the answer lies in the West’s views. He says that if the
Western powers continue to defend the unjust status of the Middle East in the
name of an illusory or fleeting stability, Islam will be a threat. "But if
the Western powers begin to appreciate the legitimacy of grievances in the
Middle East, the West and Islamic movements will get along peacefully" (Agha
7).
With the Western media’s spotlight and
some Western governmental attitudes, the West is a place where Islam is a name
of negativity. The Western media has contributed a great deal to this negative
image of Islam. The media often misrepresents and inaccurately explains Islam
and its manifestations. Sometimes the media seems to be biased against Islam.
When the media distorts the image of Islam, the general public tend to believe
it, because the media is a major source of information that the public gets
about Islam. This ignorance that the West accumulates from the media leads them
into making stereotypes about Islam and associating all Muslims and Arabs
together. The West often times views Islam as "fundamental"
"extremist" or "discriminatory", but all of these terms have
be manipulated, purposely because of biased feelings and accidentally because of
ignorance, by the media to present a negative image about Islam. Islam is
actually a peaceful and fair religion that most often does not correspond to the
media’s reports. As Islam grows more and more in the West, Westerners will
eventually learn the truth about Islam and find out that these negative
stereotypes are incorrect. It is possible that Islam will become one of the
biggest religions in the United States. As more people follow Islam, the media
will start to learn about it, understand it, and report about it in positive
ways. As long as the Westerners are educated about Islam, they will probably
learn to accept it as well.
Bibliography
Agha, Dr. Olfat Hassan. http://bertie.la.utexas.edu/research/mena/acpss/english/ekuras/
ek25.html#Heading5. Islamic Fundamentalism and Its Image in the Western Media.
Ba-Yunus, Ilyas. http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/6453/myth.html.
The Myth of Islamic Fundamentalism.
Emerson, Steven. The Other Fundamentalist. New
Republic. June 12, 1995.
Hassan, Anser. http://psirus.sfsu.edu/IntRel/IRJournal/sp95/hassan.html
. Invitation to Islam: Islamic Stereotypes in Western Mass Media.
Martinez, Pricilia. http://chuma.cas.usf.edu/~rfayiz/media.htm.
Muslim Culture, Religion Misrepresented by Media.
Muzaffer, Dr. Chandra. http://www.peg.apc.org/~newdawn/misc2.htm#top.
Dominant Western Perception of Islam and The Muslims.
Washington, DC. http://www.twf.org/Releases/Fears.html.
Why The West Fears Islam: The Enemy Within.
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