“Presumed Guilty”, a book addressing Islamophobia after Trump became president
Todd
H. Green’s book , entitled “Presumed Guilty: Why We Shouldn't Ask Muslims to
Condemn Terrorism”, holds a message that it is time to stop asking Muslims to
condemn terrorism under the assumption they are guilty of harboring terrorist
sympathies or promoting violence until they prove otherwise.
The
250-page-book, issued on Sept. 1, 2018, provides three main reasons to why the
world should stop asking Muslims to condemn terrorism.
Renowned
expert on Islamophobia Green suggests in his book that the question wrongly
assumes Islam is the driving force behind terrorism, ignores the many ways
Muslims already condemn terrorism, and diverts attention from unjust Western
violence.
Issued
by Fortress Press, the book is identified as an invitation for self-examination
when it comes to the questions that are being asked of Muslim and the rest of
the world regarding violence. “It will open the door to asking better questions
of our Muslim neighbors, questions based not on the presumption of guilt but on
the promise of friendship,” the book presumes.
Todd
H. Green teaches religious studies at Luther College and is an internationally
recognized expert in Islamophobia. He served as a US State Department adviser
on Islamophobia during both the Obama and Trump administrations.
Green
also gives lectures on college campuses as well as to the FBI and the
Department of Homeland Security, not to mention that his work has been featured
in the Huffington Post, and his expertise has been cited by organizations such
as the Council on Foreign Relations, the Center for American Progress, the
NAACP.
The
book is an effort to do more and raise the bar even higher when it comes to how
to talk about and to Muslim neighbors. “That said, publishing books calling for
understanding and compassion toward Muslims is not for the faint of heart at
this moment in our political history.”
The
book quoted a number of experts in Islamic studies such as Omid Safi, director
of Duke Islamic Studies Center, who strongly recommended the book for members
of the media, policy makers, and anyone interested in interfaith conversations.
“Todd
Green’s Presumed Guilty moves us through treacherous terrain in a thoughtful
fashion, filled with great stories, and without unnecessary jargon. We learn
how to talk about religion and the role it does play in terrorism, how to speak
with Muslims about terrorism, and how to understand that the larger context of
terrorism has nothing to do with Muslims,” Safi said in praise for Presumed
Guilty.
Green
says that the day after the election of Donald Trump to the US presidency, he
felt overwhelmed; “The feeling had less to do with whether my candidate won or
lost than with the reality of the blatant key role Islamophobia played in
electing a politician to the most powerful position in the World. Trump’s
unlikely bid for the White House could not have succeeded without his
orchestrated effort to stir up fear and hostility toward Muslims.”
“The
connective tissue binding these reasons together is the presumption of guilt.
Muslims as a whole are presumed guilty because they have failed to reform an
inherently violent religion, to atone for the sins of their co-religionists,
and to come to terms with their religion’s unique history of horrific
violence,” Green stresses in his book.
Green
adds that the political and media establishments have taught the people to view
Muslims as objects of suspicion, not as sources of wisdom or insight. “This
means many of us harbor implicit biases against Muslims. These biases will not
disappear easily, or without effort.”
“This
presumption of guilt is an exercise in racist scapegoating. It enables us to
project our sins of commission and omission onto the Muslim “Other” so that we
need not come to terms with our own history of unjust violence or our own
complicity in a violent world order,” Green added in the book.
The
author further focused on proving a fact that terrorists and extremists make
attacks and plot schemes for their own aims, that have nothing to do with
religion.
He
also pointed out that only crimes committed by Muslims are labeled as “terror”
acts, while crimes by white Christians for example are called other things
other than being “terrorism”.