By
SIMRAN JEET SINGH and PRABHJOT SINGH
The horrific shooting at a Sikh temple in suburban Milwaukee on Aug. 5,
in which a white supremacist, Wade M. Page, killed six people before
fatally shooting himself, elicited an outpouring of sympathy from
American leaders and a greater understanding of the role Sikhs have
played in American life.
But there are two disturbing aspects of the response to the shooting that deserve wider public attention.
First is the notion of “mistaken identity” — the assumption that Mr.
Page, who had long-established ties to radical right-wing groups,
mistook Sikhs for Muslims, his presumed target. The second is the
government’s failure to accurately measure the extent of anti-Sikh
violence in America — a gap that must be remedied.
Whatever the roots of Mr. Page’s hatred, it is wrong to assume that
every attack against a Sikh is really meant for a Muslim. That
assumption overlooks the long history of discrimination and hatred
directed at Sikhs in America.
Indeed, the first documented race riot targeting American Sikhs occurred
in 1907 in Bellingham, Wash. Their distinct religious identity (uncut
hair, turban, beard) has historically marked Sikhs, particularly men, as
targets for discrimination, both in their homeland in South Asia and in
the various communities of the Sikh diaspora. And of course, 9/11
brought about a surge in fear and persecution directed at Sikhs, Muslims
and other minorities with ties to the Middle East and South Asia.
There is also the question of whether white supremacist groups have
specifically targeted American Sikhs. The authorities in Southern
California, where Mr. Page was active in the white-power music scene,
are investigating whether he was involved in the killings of two elderly
Sikh men in Elk Grove, Calif., in March 2011. Just after the temple
shooting, a Sikh man in Oak Creek, Wis., reported that a white man had
pulled up next to him in a pickup truck, shaped his hands like a gun,
and pretended to shoot him six times before stating, “We want to kill
all of you.”
And on Aug. 15, 10 days after the Oak Creek shooting, another member of
the Sikh community there, Dalbir Singh, 56, was killed in the armed
robbery of a local convenience store. (While the police have not
uncovered any evidence to treat the killing as a hate crime, many Sikhs
have wondered if the violence was more than random.)
White supremacist Web sites clearly demonstrate intentional, targeted
anti-Sikh sentiments. For example, the leading neo-Nazi figure Alex
Linder was quoted as saying on a right-wing Web site: “Take your dead
and go back to India and dump their ashes in the Ganges, Sikhs. You
don’t belong here in the country my ancestors fought to found, and
deeded to me and mine, their posterity. Even if you came here legally,
and even if you haven’t done anything wrong personally. Go home, Sikhs.
Go home to India where you belong. This is not your country, it belongs
to white men.”
The “mistaken identity” assumption is directly associated with a second
problem: a lack of data about the extent of anti-Sikh hatred.
The F.B.I.
currently classifies nearly all hate violence against American Sikhs as
instances of anti-Islamic or anti-Muslim hate crimes. As a result, we
do not have official statistics on the extent of hate crimes in which
Sikhs are targeted, despite a long history of such violence.
with thanks : nytimes : LINK : for detailed news.
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