I
was brought up with the attitude that the best way to fight prejudice
is to become better informed.
This
article seems to be saying the opposite – that the more I follow
the news (which cannot even acknowledge extremist terrorism or that
huge numbers of uncontrolled immigrants are perhaps not a good idea)
the more prejudiced I am likely to become.
I
would like to ask the folks down at the local mosque just what their
attitudes towards the Takfiris are – and are they as tolerant of
Shiites as they want us to be.
Perhaps
someone needs to go underground (as in the video below) to ascertain
just what their real attitudes are?
Islamophobia
more likely in heavy media consumers - study
New
Zealanders who consume more news are more likely to be prejudiced
against Muslims, a study has found
RNZ,
1
April, 2017
The study,
published in the international PLOS ONE journal, is part of the
ongoing 20-year New Zealand Attitudes and Value study of more than
16,000 New Zealanders.
It
asked how often they read or watched the news and how much warmth and
anger they felt towards different groups including Muslims, Arabs and
Asians, and found those who followed the news more reported greater
anger and less warmth towards Muslims.
Federation
of Islamic Associations New Zealand president Hazim Arafeh said the
report was not a surprise.
"We
do, as a community, have more acts of harassment when overseas news
around violence hits our shores.
"New
Zealand media does give the local community a chance to be heard and
we really appreciate that. We are also trying our best to be open and
welcoming to our fellow New Zealanders [for example] through Islam
Awareness Week.
"We
are all part of New Zealand".
The
study's lead author John Shaver, a University of Otago religion
lecturer, said researchers had long suspected news media fuelled
Islamophobia, but it had never been tested.
"What
was interesting was this finding seems to hold across the political
spectrum," he said.
"So
although Conservatives tend to start out more prejudice towards
Muslims, even Liberals, even the people at the most liberal end of
the spectrum, the more they attended the news, the more they are
prejudiced towards Muslims."
He
said while the majority of Muslims both in New Zealand and across the
world were Asian and peaceful, people were often only exposed to
depictions of Muslims as misogynistic Arab terrorists.
"I
was just at the Ponsonby mosque this afternoon - I was just meeting a
friend, I'm not a Muslim - and I was struck by the incredible
diversity in the mosque.
"There
were white Kiwis there, there were Indo-Fijians, people that were
Indonesian, other forms of Asian, it was an incredibly diverse
community - but if you didn't have access to that community, if you
didn't go to the mosque, if you didn't have frequent interactions you
would be left to make your judgments based on what you'd known from
the sources that you have available to you which tends to be the
news."
Dr
Shaver hoped the study would challenge media organisations to
represent Muslims more fairly, and said people needed to be shown how
diverse the Islamic community is.
"I
think it would be more easily achieved outside the traditional media
in things like blogs but if people were able to describe the muslim
community here in New Zealand in a way that illustrates the
incredible diversity of the community then I think people would then
start to discount the incessant representations of muslims as Arab
terrorists."
He
said New Zealand's tolerance of Muslims was good but that did not
mean there was not work to be done.
"[New
Zealand] society as a whole is very very tolerant, but attitudes
towards Asians for instance is slightly better than attitudes towards
Muslims, so that gap has to be addressed."
Are Muslims in this country as inclusive and tolerant as what we see here?
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