A non-profit Muslim school in Rhode Island was vandalized
with Islamophobic graffiti on Saturday, one day after holding a vigil for the
three Muslim victims of the North Carolina shooting. The story garnered
national interest after the Providence Journal posted a photo of the graffiti
on Sunday.
The Islamic School of Rhode Island — which opened in 2003 as
the first Muslim school in the state — had never been targeted by vandalization
or serious threats before, the President of the school’s board of trustees told
the Providence Journal.
However, the orange graffiti covering the school’s doors
left little doubt about the intentions of the vandalizers. Among the slurs
scrawled on the school’s entrance — including “pigs,” and expletives referring
to “Allah” — one was quite clear: “Now this is a hate crime.”
“This apparently bias-motivated incident should be hould be
investigated as a hate crime, with the strongest possible charges brought
against the perpetrators once they are apprehended,” said Ibrahim Hooper, the
director of communications at the Council on American-Islamic Relations, in a
press release. “The recent spike in anti-Muslim hate rhetoric and
bias-motivated attacks on American Muslims and their institutions must be
addressed by our nation’s leaders.”
The vandalization occurred in the wake of a series of
incidents targeting Muslim Americans, including the recent suspected arson
attack on an Islamic community center in Houston, and a fatal shooting in
Chapel Hill, N.C., where three young Muslims — Deah Shaddy Barakat, his wife
Yusor Mohammad Abu-Salha and her sister Razan — were killed by Craig Stephen
Hicks, an avowed atheist, in what many have deemed a hate crime.
A preliminary police investigation suggested that Hicks shot
the three over an ongoing parking space dispute — a claim that has been met
with skepticism by many following the case. “Deep down everyone in this
community knows it was a hate crime,” Yusor’s best friend wrote in a commentary
for Fusion.net. “But how do you prove it?”
Some cite the shooter’s virulent atheism and antagonism for
other religions, as displayed on Facebook posts and elsewhere, as evidence that
the crime was not motivated by purely anti-Muslim sentiments.
“My answer to that is he had fights with everybody, but he
shot three Muslims in the back of the head,” Hooper told ThinkProgress.
According to the FBI’s latest hate crime statistics report,
religiously motivated offenses accounted for 17 percent of all the 5,922
single-bias hate crimes reported in 2013. Among the religiously motivated hate
crimes, 59.2 percent were anti-Jewish, 14.2 percent were anti-Muslim, 6.4
percent were anti-Catholic, 3.6 percent were anti-Protestant, and 0.6 percent
were anti-Atheism, according to FBI statistics.
While helpful, the FBI reports only capture a portion of
many of the anti-Muslim incidents occurring domestically, Hooper told
ThinkProgress. “The FBI only gets the tip of the iceberg,” he said. “People
call us with these kinds of things. In general people are reluctant to contact
the FBI or reluctant to call local police authorities because of a ‘let’s stay
under the radar, not make waves’ kind of attitude. We’ve gotten a number of
reports of Muslim women being accosted, people shouting Muslim slurs, they’re
targeted because of the headscarf. Just personally I’ve received dozens of hate
calls and hate emails, and some death threats.”
Credit to Erica Hellerstein
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