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Religious Identification and the Framing of Terrorism
Sunday, June 23, 2013 0:24
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(The following is a guest post from
Caitlin Carenen, Assistant Professor of History at Eastern Connecticut State University and author of the highly acclaimed, myth-busting study, The Fervent Embrace: Liberal Protestants, Evangelicals, and Israel. Caitlin is now working on a book about religious responses to terrorism.)
Walking through the West Bank town of
Bethlehem many years ago, I was struck by the immense amount of graffiti covering the security wall on the Palestinian side. Most of it was in English and clearly directed to English-speaking tourists, NGO workers, and non-Palestinians in general. Much of
it drew comparisons to the infamous Nazi death camps (“arbeit mach frei” “welcome to
Auschwitz” and the like) and was clearly intended to be provocative. What got my attention, however, was less the provocative nature of the graffiti but rather the fact that it was written in English. As historians reviewing primary sources, we always interrogate our sources in considering their intended audience and I realized, slowly and perhaps dimwittedly, that I was, in fact, the intended audience. This was confirmed every time I took a taxi ride in the West Bank and was informed by my drivers that I needed to return to the United Statesand tell Americans what I’d seen behind the wall. The Palestinians I spoke with wanted Americans to see them as the oppressed and the Israelis as the oppressors.
A few months later I watched a movie, The Devil’s Own, starring Brad Pitt as an IRA terrorist living in the U.S. and trying to raise funds for anti-British militant campaigns. The story line involved a do-gooder cop, played by Harrison Ford, who discovers what Pitt’s character is up to and tries to stop him. Yet Pitt’s Irish character was clearly intended to be sympathetic. He was handsome, likeable, and had integrated himself well into his host family and by the end of the film; the audience
couldn’t help but cheer for his attempted escape. I began to think, as the credits rolled, about how Americans view terrorism. What role do religion and ethnicity play in how we shape our popular and political responses to terrorism? We know that a large Irish-American Catholic constituency exists in the United States and has exercised considerable political clout in our approach to the conflict in Northern Irelandand we also know that a significant Jewish-American constituency works to shape American policy toward Israeland the Palestinian conflict. In the name of “Freedom Fighting” the IRA (and its many variations) and the PLO (and its branches) have committed acts of terrorism that have killed and wounded civilians, yet Americans tend to be more sympathetic to the Irish “freedom-fighting” cause. Is it a question of religious sympathies or religious hostilities, common ethnic ties, or the ethnic “other”? Later that year, back in the States, I had a conversation about this with an educated non-academic and posed the question: why do so many Americans tend to view Palestinians as terrorists, but not the Irish? The response startled me into my next research project: “Because they didn’t bomb us on 9/11.”
Taking a historical approach to this question of how religion and ethnicity shape American popular and policy responses to terrorism led me to focus on the 1970s as a decade in which the PLO and the IRA actively engaged in acts of terrorism; so much so that by 1977 the overwhelming majority of Americans (90%) considered terrorism “a very serious problem.” After some preliminary research, I presented a paper on the topic at the Rothermere American Institute at
OxfordUniversity in England. I examined public opinion polls, scholarly analysis of terrorism in the 1970s, newspaper coverage reports, and religious journals. Ultimately I argued that US policy very slowly shifted in favor of supporting a Palestinian state and recognizing the PLO from necessity, not from sympathy. Despite widespread American anti-Palestinian and anti-Muslim bias, the Oil Embargo of 1973 necessitated a moderated foreign policy in the
Middle East. Conversely, American foreign policy shifted in favor of moderating a peace in Northern Ireland out of sympathy for the plight of Irish Catholics, not out of economic or geo-political necessity (in fact, despite it).
I discovered that this occurred for two primary reasons. First, Americans in numbers and in cultural affinities identified more readily with Irish Catholics than Palestinian Muslims—the “socio-religious link”—despite the decidedly secular and socialist political goals of both Northern Irish Catholics and Palestinian leadership. Americans consistently viewed the conflict in Northern Irelandas a religious war, while the Sunday school literature for four of the largest Protestant denominations in the U.S.helped “otherize” Arabs by implying that Muslims were “the most excluded of the deity’s descendants.” In the 1970s, most Americans still identified themselves as Christian, were familiar with the idea of a “Judeo-Christian tradition,” and tended to view Muslims as “anti-Christian.” Second, Palestinian Americans had little organized lobbying power. The U.S. Census did not even track “Arab Americans” until 1980, and even then, their numbers were small compared to those who identified themselves as “Irish-American.” Moreover, the Palestinians conducted a fairly unsophisticated public relations campaign that was no match for the Jewish-American lobby efforts and a general widespread support for Israel among most Americans, or the widespread support among America’s Irish Catholics for the republican cause. I received an enthusiastic response to the paper and after the presentation a scholar suggested I might want to consider using the African National Congress as my third case study in order to incorporate the Irish-American, Palestinian/Arab-American, Jewish-American and African-American perspective into a single project.
Moving forward, I am eager to learn what our blog-readers think of the project in general and questions/sources/archives to explore. Specifically, what do you think of integrating religious identity into a study of popular and policy responses to terrorism in the 1970s? Is it possible or feasible to link these issues? As a historian who works on the relationships between religion and foreign policy, this question intrigues me the most and I hope the project can provide some answers in understanding, at least historically, how religious identification has shaped our response to terrorism.
A Group Blog on American Religious History and Culture