SHOOTING
AT THE GURDWARA
The
Sense of White Supremacy
Vijay
Prashad
YESTERDAY
morning the orgies of the lone gunman took hold in Oak Creek, Wisconsin,
a town in the
dragnet of Milwaukee in United States.
He targeted a Gurdwara, the religious home of the
local Sikh community.
The gunman entered the Gurdwara, and as if in
mimicry of the school
shootings, stalked the worshippers in the halls of the
17,000 square foot “Sikh
Temple of Wisconsin.” Police engaged the gunman, who
wounded at least one
officer. The gunman killed at least seven Sikhs, wounding
many more. He was
then killed. A few hours after the shooting, Ven Boba Ri,
a committee member of
the Gurdwara told the Milwaukee
Journal-Sentinel,
“It’s pretty much a hate crime. It’s not an insider.”
The
local police smartly said that this is an act of domestic
terrorism. The FBI
concurred.
This
is the not the first act of violence against Sikhs in the
United
States.
That
story begins in the 19th century, when Sikhs migrated to
the US,
fleeing
British colonialism for far-flung pastures. Many landed
along the western coast
of the United States,
working alongside Japanese, Mexican and Filipino workers
to make California into
a fruit-producer and Oregon
and Washington
into major lumber producers. But they were not welcomed.
Riots in Bellingham, Washington
(1907) and Live Oak, California
(1908) targeted the “rag heads,” the turban-wearing Sikhs.
The mob “stormed
makeshift Indian residences, stoned Indian workers and
successfully
orchestrated the non-involvement of local police.” The Bellingham
Morning
Reveille ran a drawing of a “Sikh” man with the
caption, “This is the
type of man driven from this city as the result of last
night’s demonstration
by a mob of 500 men and boys.” It was a mark of pride to
have cleansed the city
of the Sikhs.
The
Sikhs didn’t take this lying down. A decade later, one
Sikh man bragged, “I
used to go to Maryville
every Saturday. One day a gora [white man]
came out of a bar and
motioned to me, saying, ‘Come here, slave!’ I said I was
no slave man. He told
me that his race ruled India
and I hit him and got away fast.”
Anti-Sikh
violence does not reside only in the early part of the
20th century. It
returned a century later, when, after 9/11, Sikh men and
women were targeted
once more for their turban and head-scarf. Since Osama Bin
Laden wore a turban,
it was the turban that attracted the racist to the Sikhs.
As I note in my
book Uncle Swami: South Asians in America
Today [New Press],
within the first week after 9/11, a disproportionately
large number of the 645
bias attacks took place against Sikhs. The statement on
the Oak Creek shootings
that came from the activist group South Asian Americans
Leading Together
(SAALT) drew a straight line between the post-9/11
violence and this attack, “While
the facts are still emerging, this event serves as a
tragic reminder of
violence in the form of hate crimes that Sikhs and many
members of the South
Asian community have endured since September 11, 2001.”
Two
quick reactions to the Oak Creek
violence raised the hackles of some of the sharp
organisers in the South Asian
American community:
* This
was an act of senseless violence.
“No,” said Rinku Sen, publisher of Colorlines magazine.
This
is not “senseless,” she noted, but “racist.” This is the
57th mass
shooting in the past 30 years in the United States.
Each one is treated as the work of a freak. Patterns are
shunned. Structural
factors such as the prevalence of guns and the lack of
social care for mentally
disturbed people should of course be in the frame. But so
too should the
preponderance of socially acceptable hatred against those
seen as outsiders.
Intellectually respectable opinions about who is an
American (produced, for
example, by Sam Huntington, Who Are We? The
Challenge to National
Identity) comes alongside the politician’s casual
racism (Romney’s recent
suggestion that the US
and
the UK
are “part of an
Anglo-Saxon heritage,” erased in a whip lash the diversity
of the United States
and Britain).
Racist attacks are
authorised by a political culture that allows us to think
in nativist terms, to
bemoan the “browning” of America.
By 2034, the Census department estimates, the non-white
population of the US is going
to
be in the majority. With the political class unwilling to
reverse the tide of
jobless growth and corporate power, the politicians
stigmatise the outsider as
the problem of poverty and exploitation. This
stigmatisation, as Moishe Postone
argues, obscures “the role played by capitalism in the
reproduction of grief.”
Far easier to let the Sikhs and the Latinos, the Muslims
and the Africans bear
the social cost for economic hopelessness and political
powerlessness than to
target the real problem: the structures that benefit the 1
per cent and allow
them to luxuriate in Richistan.
*
Sikhs are not Muslims. The
second argument, now clichéd, is to make the case that
this is violence at the
wrong address. Sikhs did nothing wrong, they are
peace-loving and so on. It
assumes that there are people who did do
something wrong, are
war-mongering and therefore deserve to be targeted. The
liberal gesture of
innocence has within it the sharp edge of Islamaphobia. It
seems to suggest
that Muslims are the ones who should bear this violence,
since their ilk did
the attacks on 9/11 and they are all two billion of them,
at war with the United States.
The
attack on Sikhs is not a mistaken attack. Sikhs are not
mistaken for
Muslims, but seen as part of the community of outsiders who
are,
as Patrick Buchanan puts it in States of
Emergency: The Third
World Invasion and Conquest of America, “a fifth
column inside the belly of
the beast…Should America lose her ethnic-cultural core and
become a nation of
nations, America will not survive.” Wisconsin’s
Governor
Scott Walker is not far from all this, being a fan of the
Arizona
anti-human
legislation. The Sikh Coalition, an anti-bias group, is
fully aware that this
is not simply a situation of mistaken identity. Its 2008
report, Making
Our Voices Heard, notes that although it is not the
case that Sikhs are
members of the Taliban or clones of Bin Laden, it is this
recurrent
identification that has by now “created an environment in
which Sikhs are
regularly singled out for abuse and mistreatment by both
private and, at times,
public actors.” Strikingly, 41 per cent of Sikhs in New York City reported being called
derogatory names, half of the Sikh
children reported being teased or harassed because of
their Sikh identity and
one hundred per cent of Sikhs report having to endure
secondary screenings at
some US
airports.
Sapreet
Kaur of the Sikh Coalition offered her take of the
situation, “There have been
multiple hate crime shootings within the Sikh community in
recent years and the
natural impulse of our community is to unfortunately
assume the same in this
case.”
(August
06, 2012)