How Do You Spell “Free Venice” in Arabic?
By Matthew
Rothschild
This is a story about one T-shirt
that caused two rows.
The shirt has the phrase “We will not be
silent,” written both in English and in
Arabic.
This may seem innocuous enough, but
not in today’s America, where the very sight of Arabic alarms some
citizens, and Homeland Security.
On August
12, Raed Jarrar, who works for Global Exchange in Washington, DC, was wearing
that T-shirt as he was trying to board a JetBlue flight from JFK to
California.
While he was at the gate, two men
approached him and one flashed his badge, Jarrar writes on his blog
raedinthemiddle.blogspot.com. They asked for his boarding pass and
driver’s license.
“People are
feeling offended because of your T-shirt,” said one of the men, whom
Jarrar identifies as Inspector
Harris.
“He asked me if I had any other
T-shirts to put on, and I told him that I had checked in all of my bags,”
Jarrar relates on the blog. “And I asked him, ‘Why do you want me to
take off my T-shirt? Isn’t it my constitutional right to express myself in
this way?’ . . . Do you have an order against Arabic
T-shirts?”
Inspector Harris said,
according to Jarrar: “You can’t wear a T-shirt with Arabic script
and come to an airport. It is like wearing a T-shirt that reads ‘I am a
robber’ and going to a
bank.”
Harris asked Jarrar to turn his
shirt inside out, which he says he refused to do. Then an employee from JetBlue
offered to buy Jarrar a T-shirt to put over the one he had on. Not wanting to
miss his flight, Jarrar eventually
agreed.
Jarrar says he told them: “I
feel very sad that my personal freedom was taken away like this. I grew up under
authoritarian governments in the Middle East, and one of the reasons I chose to
move to the U.S. was that I don’t want an officer to make me change my
T-shirt. I will pursue this incident today through a constitutional rights
organization.”
When he boarded the
plane, Jarrar says he was not allowed to sit in seat 3A, which was on his
boarding pass. Instead, JetBlue moved him to the very back of the plane, he
says.
“It sucks to be an Arab/Muslim
living in the U.S. these days,” Jarrar says on his blog. “You are a
suspected terrorist and plane
hijacker.”
JetBlue explains its side of
this story.
“Mr. Jarrar was approached
both by TSA and JetBlue personnel because they saw that customers in the area
had noticed his T-shirt and were confused or concerned about it,” says
spokesperson Jenny Dervin. “In that situation, our crew members have the
responsibility to create a safe environment as well as safe travel. At the same
time, they have to respect the rights of the individual and make sure the
individual is treated fairly and respectfully. JetBlue personnel approached Mr.
Jarrar and explained that customers were concerned or confused, and asked if he
could ease the confusion. At no time was he ever denied boarding. He did agree
to put another T-shirt on, which we purchased for him, which we really
appreciated.”
“We have apologized
to Mr. Jarrar for any embarrassment or unnecessary attention” the incident
may have caused, Dervin says.
Jarrar spoke to
Amy Goodman of Pacifica radio's Democracy Now show on October 23. He told her he
is taking legal steps with the ACLU and the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
Committee.
By the way, Jarrar reports that he
has received death threats. On his blog, he quotes from a National Guard member
who served in Iraq: “If I run across you in my daily tasks, I will kill
you. GET THE FUCK OUT OF MY COUNTRY IF YOU DON’T LIKE IT
HERE.”
Stephanie Schwartz goes to
Hunter College in New York, and she was also wearing a “We will not be
silent” T-shirt on October 9 when she was going on the Staten Island
Ferry.
She told Amy Goodman that once she got
on the ferry, four Coast Guard officers positioned themselves in front of
her.
When she was leaving, a security officer
told her, “You better not wear that shirt on this ferry again,” she
said, adding that he asked: “You remember what happened on that JetBlue
flight?” Schwartz said she answered that it smacked of racial profiling to
her.
When Jarrar heard that the security
officer invoked his experience with JetBlue, he was taken aback. He told Amy
Goodman: “I’m very shocked to see how my incident, my oppression at
JFK, is being used as a precedent to justify oppressing more
people.”
The Coast Guard gives a
different account.
Coast Guard officers
“were approached by an employee of the ferry who had concerns about the
shirt, but their response to that employee was that they weren’t going to
take any action,” says Commander Jeff Carter, spokesperson for the Coast
Guard. “They had no intention of intervening. She had every right to wear
the shirt.”
Schwartz organized a
protest at the Staten Island ferry on October
23.
According to the Staten Island Advance:
“A group of nearly 100 anti-war activists, most wearing T-shirts with the
legend ‘We will not be silent’ boarded two evening ferryboats . . .
to exercise their right to free
speech.”
This article previously ran in
The Progressive magazine.
Posted: Mon - January 1, 2007 at 12:15 PM