Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Another Hate Crime: 'Americans Attacking Sikhs Thinking They're Muslims'

IANS, 29 Dec, 2015 12:01 PM
    With Sikhs increasingly becoming the target of racial attacks in the US, a media report says they are frequently mistaken for terrorists and radicals as they are conflated with Muslims by many Americans.
     
    In the latest string of incidents targeting turbaned Sikh Americans, Amrik Singh Bal, 68, was assaulted in California on Saturday morning while waiting for a ride to work, the Washington Post reported on Monday.
     
    According to police, the suspects after striking the victim with their car and assaulting him while he was down, yelled: "Why are you here?"
     
    The attack is being investigated as a hate crime.
     
     
    "Sikhs have been mistaken for terrorists and radicals and continue to suffer after 9/11," the Post quoted Iqbal S. Grewal, a member of the Sikh Council of Central California, as saying in an interview to the Fresno Bee following the Saturday assault.
     
    "This is the latest episode of what Sikhs have been enduring when they are very peace-loving and hard-working citizens of this great country and not members of Al Qaeda or ISIS or any other radical group."
     
    However, xenophobic intolerance against Sikhs is not new and started soon after they began arriving in the Pacific Northwest to fill logging jobs in the early 20th century, according to Simran Jeet Singh, a senior religion fellow at the Sikh Coalition, a nonprofit advocacy group.
     
     
    "Pretty immediately after our arrival in this country, we became targets of xenophobia," Singh said. "Hate violence has ebbed and flowed throughout our history in America, but being targets of racism is nothing new. It's part of our history here," he added.
     
    After the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, attacks against Sikhs intensified when a wave of anti-Islamic sentiment washed over the country, leading some to confuse the long beards and turbans worn by many Sikh men as a representation of Islam.
     
    Others viewed it simply as an opportunity to attack individuals they perceived as being "un-American", according to the Post.
     
     
    The Sikh Coalition said there were more than 300 cases of violence and discrimination against Sikhs in the US in the first month after the 2001 attacks.
     
    "Over the last few weeks, the level of intimidation is worse than it was after September 11," Harsimran Kaur, the Sikh Coalition's legal director, told The Post. "Then, people were angry at the terrorists and now they're angry at Muslims, anyone who is seen as Muslim, or anyone who is perceived as being 'other.'
     
     
    Earlier this month, a Sikh store clerk in Grand Rapids, Michigan, was shot in the face during a robbery. The victim reported that the assailant called him a "terrorist."
     
    Following an attack by a Muslim couple at a social services centre in San Bernardino, California, a gurdwara in nearby Orange county was vandalised with hateful graffiti earlier this month, according to the Sikh Coalition
     
     
    In September this year, Inderjit Singh Mukker, a father of two on his way to the grocery store, was savagely assaulted in a Chicago suburb after being called "bin Laden."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    US Central Bank Raises Interest Rates By 0.25 Points

    US Central Bank Raises Interest Rates By 0.25 Points
    For the first time in nearly a decade, America's central bank, the US Federal Reserve raised its key interest rate on Wednesday from a range of 0 percent to 0.25 percent to a range of 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent.

    US Central Bank Raises Interest Rates By 0.25 Points

    The Cost Of Power: Presidents, Prime Ministers May Age Quicker And Die Sooner, New Study Says

    The Cost Of Power: Presidents, Prime Ministers May Age Quicker And Die Sooner, New Study Says
    Leading a country comes with extraordinary privileges but also, apparently, a price: new research suggests that heads of state age faster than normal and that the stress of the job may shave almost three years off their life expectancy.

    The Cost Of Power: Presidents, Prime Ministers May Age Quicker And Die Sooner, New Study Says

    Canadian Sentenced To Nine Months For Smuggling Immigrants Into The U.S.

    Canadian Sentenced To Nine Months For Smuggling Immigrants Into The U.S.
    The U.S. Attorney's Office in Albany says 29-year-old Christopher Square of Kahnawake (kah-nah-WAH'-kee), Que., was sentenced to nine months in prison.

    Canadian Sentenced To Nine Months For Smuggling Immigrants Into The U.S.

    Case Of Canadian Teen Charged In Florida Double Murder Put Over To February

    Case Of Canadian Teen Charged In Florida Double Murder Put Over To February
    The 15-year-old, originally from Ottawa, is the son of longtime diplomat Roxanne Dube, Canada's former consul general to Miami.

    Case Of Canadian Teen Charged In Florida Double Murder Put Over To February

    Troops On The Canadian Border: U.S. President Candidate Ben Carson Calls For Some

    Troops On The Canadian Border: U.S. President Candidate Ben Carson Calls For Some
    WASHINGTON — A U.S. presidential candidate has called for troops along the Canadian border, as the American election becomes consumed by national-security fears.

    Troops On The Canadian Border: U.S. President Candidate Ben Carson Calls For Some

    Seattle Becomes First US City To Give Uber, Lyft Drivers The Right To Unionize

    SEATTLE — The latest on the Seattle City Council's decision on whether to allow drivers of ride-hailing companies to unionize (all times local):

    Seattle Becomes First US City To Give Uber, Lyft Drivers The Right To Unionize