I address this email to all the members who might be
interested in this issue.

The way terrorists act is to destroy the very fabric of social structure,
and to instill terror in daily lives. Is life worth living if we live in a
constant aura of fear and suspicion? If you read some of the literature
portraying the situation during the partition days (in a variety of Indian
languages), we see how communities started living in constant fear and
suspicion and even age old friends started killing each other often based on
sheer suspicion along communal lines. Do we want to go back to those days?
We should go back then and elect a monarch who would put us all in a curfew
and then we will have peace. But that is what the terrorists want, don't
they, to 'stop the heartbeat of India'? And what is that heartbeat?

Have you met and talked with thousands of ordinary people post 9/11 in US
who had to face unnecessary suspicion and surveillance based on how they
look, whether they have a beard, whether they look foreign? I have. And in
those times of xenophobia being a person of color was enough to arouse
suspicion in certain non-diverse communities. That means people like you and
me, who are Indians would have been immediately be under suspicion, our bags
checked, jobs denied, and being stared at and being under greater
surveillance based on how we look. Not more than a year back one young man
with beard (and hence Muslim looking) was shot at based under suspicion
right after the London metro bombing. Later it was found that he was late
for his job and hence was just hurrying, as I am sure most of us had done
sometime in our lives. He was killed based on how he looked. Screening
people on the basis of their ethnic identity, how they dress, whom they
worship is racism. Just another point: 1 in every 8 African American males
in the US is in jail, as they are more liable to be arrested than any other
social group. That has only lead to increased poverty, fragmentation of
community life and greater crime rate amongst the African Americans than any
structural reform based on informed dialogue would do. And the former email
seems to support that the US policing policy is right, and that India should
adopt that!

And yes, ordinary Muslims are organizing themselves against terrorism,
having community meetings, making independent films, writing books
propagating the idea that to be a Muslim is not equivalent to be a
terrorist, and that they condemn terrorism. That movement surely is growing.

And it is also the responsibility of other communities to question the
reason that has lead to this sense of disaffection and alienation amongst
the Muslim communities around the world.

I think it is easy to say that ethnic profiling is okay as long as the
person saying is not under the radar.

Regards,
Tapoja.

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