Yesterday Zainab Akhtar announced she was shutting down her Eisner-nominated website Comics & Cola. The reason was not the usual ones — no money in it, moving on, life changes. It was something much more troubling and dangerous.
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Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Religion, Politics, Oxford Islamic Studies Online, Editor's Picks, *Featured, religious extremism, OISO, islamophobia, Online products, Oxford Islamic Studies, Syrian Refugee Crisis, Causes of Terrorism, Islamic extremism, John L. Esposito, Muslim Discrimination, Paris Attacks 2015, Politics of Middle East, San Bernardino Attacks, Add a tag
The horrific attacks in Paris and San Bernardino have captured headlines and triggered responses from journalists, politicians, and religious leaders. Some Western heads of government have once again threatened a global war against terrorism, while some political commentators have even invoked World War III.
The post Why have we normalized Islamophobia? appeared first on OUPblog.
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Religion, World, Europe, anti-Semitism, *Featured, islamophobia, Online products, International Holocaust Remembrance Day, OHO, oxford handbooks online, Mehnaz M. Afridi, Muslims and the Holocaust, Add a tag
Even in this place one can survive, and therefore one must want to survive, to tell the story, to bear witness; and that to survive we must force ourselves to save at least the skeleton, the scaffolding, the form of civilization. We are slaves, deprived of every right, exposed to every insult, condemned to certain death, but we still possess one power, and we must defend it with all our strength for it is the last — the power to refuse our consent.
― Primo Levi, Survival in Auschwitz
On the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the German Nazi concentration and death camp at Auschwitz, I hope we can keep telling the stories of survival and miracles that the victims experienced. But never shall we forget the six million Jews that were murdered. There are many stories of the Shoah (Holocaust) that are told over and over again by survivors, witnesses, and children of survivors. Today, the tenuous relationship between Jews and Muslims around the world echoes negative sentiments and feelings about these two rich traditions. Anti-Semitism has been on the rise in Europe and unfortunately some of the weight of this tide rests on the shoulders of Muslim immigrants in Europe.
As an Islamic and Holocaust scholar, I was always saddened to witness such animosity and tension between the two traditions and decided to take another turn in the field of the Holocaust: Muslims and the Holocaust. I am a Muslim woman who teaches the Holocaust, Genocide, World Religions, and Islam; many questions are raised about my work and identity. Some scholars and community members view the two areas of study, Holocaust and Islam, in contradiction; they seem puzzled and at times, accuse me of being “divided.” They ask me: “How can you teach two unrelated fields? How can a Muslim teach the Holocaust? What kind of a scholar are you?” I am amused by these questions as I think of how much esoteric knowledge rests on dusty shelves, for I believe there is an important connection between my two areas of research.
My work has steered me to confront my own Muslim community on the suffering of “others,” which I argue can become a bridge of mutual understanding and interreligious dialogue. How can we create interreligious dialogue and confront the suffering of one another at different historical moments? How can we discuss and sustain dialogue, which by its very nature also risks dehumanizing the “other”? What aspects about Islam and about the Holocaust might connect both Muslims and Jews? And in a greater sense, what does my work offer students, communities, and academia? These and other questions haunt me every day, knocking on my faith, my study of Holocaust memoirs, my study of new research on Muslims and Jews during the Holocaust and colonialism.
The lost stories of Muslim rescuers and the relationship between Jews and Muslims in Arab countries have been lost under the noise of media portrayal of these faiths being at war throughout time. Israel and Palestine seems to carve the relationship for the rest of us and I feel that we must change that for the future of Judaism and Islam. To tell the stories of positive cooperation between Jews and Muslims is crucial in my work. To reflect on the deep-rooted anti-Semitism and Islamophobia within each community is an important.
Teaching the Holocaust to young students with very little knowledge of the Holocaust or Islam has been challenging. I invite Holocaust survivors to visit our classes and they are stunned and shocked at the stories of survival and loss. The personal connection creates an intimate reaction within the classroom and that is why I embarked on the idea of interviewing survivors. Interviewing survivors as a Muslim was an uncomfortable experience because I did not know what to expect and neither did they. There is one man I will never forget for the rest of my life:
On February 27th, 2010, I looked into the sky-blue eyes of Albert Rosa, an 85-year-old Shoah survivor, for three hours as he spoke about his experience at Auschwitz-Birkenau. As I left him, he told me with tears in his eyes that he wanted someone to write his life story, since he had very little formal education and would not be able to express in writing his feelings on the Shoah. He asked me, “How can I express in words how I felt when my sister was bludgeoned to death in front of me by a Nazi woman, or when I saw my elder brother hanging from a rope when I had tried to defend him?” I looked into his eyes, which had pierced me all day, and wondered how I could tell his story in words without losing the sense of the emotional and physical strength it had taken him to survive the horror of his life in the camps. He spoke of maggots crawling on his body as he was ordered to move the dead Jewish bodies, the gold he stole from the teeth of the dead, the urine he saved to nurse the wounds inflicted by a German Shepherd, the plant roots that he dug out with his fingers for nourishment, the ashes he swallowed from the crematorium as he helped build Birkenau. How was I to give these events any life with mere words? These feelings of paralysis emerge as I write this testimony; how I can give the Shoah a life of its own without trespassing on politics, ethics, and the millions of victims? In some ways, I felt like abandoning this project because I feared that I could not do it justice. (Shoah through Muslim Eyes (Academic Studies Press, 2015))
Finally, I hope to take the testimonies of survivors, lost stories of Muslims during the Holocaust, and the memory of two traditions to a new level where one can speak up for one another.
The post The lost stories of Muslims in the Holocaust appeared first on OUPblog.
Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Racism, DVD, Homophobia, Anti-semitism, Misogyny, Bento Box, Islamophobia, Achmed Saves America, Frank Marino, Jeff Dunham, Add a tag
Ventriloquist Jeff Dunham, whose primary skill is spewing hate speech without moving his lips, has brought his shtick to animation with an hour-length animated special called "Achmed Saves America."
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Sad to hear. I wish her the best.
And to the bigots and the bullies, I hope that someday they learn empathy and become better people.
Zainab Akhtar is a wonderful writer and I’ve thoroughly enjoyed following Comics & Cola these past years. Too bad she burned out.
I’m wondering what happened though? I feel like us fans of her site deserve more of an explanation so we can all, the whole comics community that loved her, have some real closure.
Who are these bigots who consistently attacked her? Are there specific instances here? Was it just a lot of little attacks over a long period of time?
I think we can start a productive conversation(maybe, at least theoretically) if we have a clearer picture of what was going on which led to this disturbing end.
One of the best writers-about-comics I have ever read, and I can only hope there is a bidding war over her picks her up.
I’ve never heard of this site, and this is the first time I’ve seen this site mentioned here, so I’m assuming the “relevance” is out of respect, mostly.
BTW, I’m looking at her twitter, and she could be my new favorite person ever.
Vichus, I linked to her site constantly in KnB and she wrote for the site for over a year so!
Spencer said: “I’m wondering what happened though? I feel like us fans of her site deserve more of an explanation so we can all, the whole comics community that loved her, have some real closure.”
We already know what likely happened. It was probably the same stuff every non-white-guy talks about, ranging from blatant sexism to constant, wearying micro-aggressions (accelerated by the fact she is both female and Muslim). If you don’t know the problem, you haven’t been paying attention to years of complaints and discussion.
Demanding specifics is unnecessary and wallowing in wanting to know the morbid details. Fans “deserve” nothing but to learn to be better supporters of different, diverse opinions and to support those who call out this kind of horrible treatment when and where it occurs.
I almost want to install the Facebook comment system so I can “like” Johanna’s comment.
I just wanted to know if there was anyone we could hold accountable, in the comics community, for making her shut down her site. I’m sorry that came off as insensitive.