The Influence Of 9/11 On Islam

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Pages: 7

The terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 had a major impact on Islam and American Muslims, that sparked false ideals, speculation, and prejudice. I have analyzed and researched public sentiment about Muslim Americans and Islam in the aftermath of 9/11, researching available public opinion data. My analysis suggests that Americans do indeed hold latent resentment and skepticism about Islam and Muslim Americans. This spotlighting of Islam and Muslim Americans I have found in my research to be greatly attributed to a mass lacking of awareness and knowledge of the fundamental elements of Islam. I believe people more often than not have a fear of what is no know or the unknown. As well, I also find the unknown to be easily manipulatable and …show more content…
With the worst of what soon became a bitter nation in fear of the unknown, that being “Islam”. The events of 9/11 would bring birth to mass discrimination and profiling within America. The weeks and months following September 11, 2001, to no surprise was the worst for Muslim Americans and Islam. Data gathered by the (FBI) reporting an astonishing 1,700 percent increase in hate crimes towards Muslim Americans from 2000 to 2001 (Anderson, 2002). In the stages of adjusting to 9/11, Islam and Muslim Americans met with not only the lenses of the all too often biased and misinformed media but also a wave of negative stereotypes, that washed its way across the country. The terrorist attacks that took place on September 11, 2001 in which 19 men hijacked four US commercial airplanes that killed, a total of 2,977 people and injuring thousands more. New York City two flights collapse the World Trade Center, another crashes into the Pentagon in Washington, and the last hijacked flight crashing into a field outside of Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Fresh in the minds of Americans and with 9/11s presumed associations with Islam, Muslim Americans made for …show more content…
These are not the ideas upon which this great country was founded, in the idea that we are the melting pot of the world. This idea of the U.S.A being melting pot of the world is one that has been ingrained into me, all throughout my schooling in California. It is an idea I believe Americans pride themselves upon but no longer believe in or act upon, finding things to be good enough as is. Seemingly it has become a scenario of not practicing what you