Why some Muslims don’t want Ahmed Mohamed’s blackness to be ignoredPosted in Africa, Articles, Media Archive, Religion, United States on 2015-09-19 02:15Z by Steven |
Why some Muslims don’t want Ahmed Mohamed’s blackness to be ignored
The Washington Post
2015-09-17
Abby Phillip, General Assignment Reporter
Ahmed Mohamed is now a 14-year-old with a national following and a long list of powerful people on his calling card.
After he was arrested for bringing a homemade clock to school to impress his teachers, the ninth-grader has become symbolic of the worst skeletons in America’s closet: growing hysteria and over-criminalization in American schools, Islamophobia and racism.
As the news of Mohamed’s plight spread, some of the earliest accounts associated the teen, who is of Sudanese descent, with the word “brown,” a fuzzy bit of racial jargon that typically refers to non-black people of South Asian or sometimes Latin American descent.
And others openly wondered how the world might have reacted to Mohamed’s story if he had been black.
But Mohamed’s racial identity is as complex as the country of his descent. The African nation of Sudan is predominantly Muslim and is comprised of some 600 ethnicities. Arabs and indigenous Africans have intermarried and mixed there for centuries and most speak Arabic…
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