Man Allegedly Made to Dance at Airport *By JOSEF FEDERMAN*
, *AP*
 posted: *15 HOURS 52 MINUTES AGO*
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 JERUSALEM (Sept. 9) - A performer with the famed Alvin Ailey dance troupe
on Tuesday said he was twice forced to perform steps for Israeli airport
security officers to prove his identity before he was permitted to enter the
country.
Abdur-Rahim Jackson, an eight-year veteran of the dance ensemble, said he
was singled out by Israel's renowned airport security because he has a
Muslim name. He called the experience embarrassing and said at one point,
one of the officers even suggested he change his name.
 [image: Abdur-Rahmin Jackson performs with other members of the Alvin Ailey
dance troupe] Paul Kolnik, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater / AP

Abdur-Rahmin Jackson performs Sept. 2 with fellow members of the Alvin Ailey
dance troupe. He says airport security officers in Israeli made him perform
to prove he was a dancer before they would let him into the country, where
the group was performing.
"To be greeted like this because of my name, it took me back a little bit,"
said Jackson, who is black.
Israel is the first stop on a six-nation tour celebrating the New York-based
dance company's 50th anniversary. Earlier this year, Congress passed a
resolution calling the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater a "vital American
cultural ambassador to the world."
Jackson said he was pulled aside from other members of the troupe when they
arrived at Israel's international airport on Sunday night. He said he was
taken to a holding room, where he was asked about the origins of his name.
When he explained he was part of the dance group, he was asked to perform.
 "I stood up. I asked what type of dance?" he explained. "He said, "Just do
anything.' I just moved around."
Minutes later, he said a female officer put him through a similar
interrogation and asked him to dance again.
"The only time I'm really expected to dance is when I'm performing," he
said.
Jackson said he received his name because his father was a convert to Islam.
Jackson said he was not raised a Muslim, does not consider himself religious
and is engaged to a Jewish woman in the troupe who has relatives in Israel.
Jackson said he did not plan to press the matter further, saying the
numerous apologies he has received from American dignitaries and his Israeli
hosts is "enough for me." The Israel Ports Authority said it had no comment
because it did not receive a formal complaint.
The incident was reported in Israel's largest newspaper and on an Israeli
television news and interview program. "The security guards should be sent
home or (the airport) will become a mental asylum," said Motti Kirshenbaum,
a veteran commentator and host of the Channel 10 TV program.
Israel is constantly on the alert for attack because of the
Israel-Palestinian conflict and extremist Islamic rejection of the Jewish
state's existence. Security is strict at all entry points and inside the
country.
Israel is famous for the effectiveness of its airport security. But a key
element in its security checks is ethnic profiling. The practice has been
criticized by Israeli human rights campaigners as racist because it singles
out Arabs for tougher treatment.
Such profiling is illegal in the United States, but Jackson said that the
only place he has had the similarly humiliating experience of being forced
to dance in the past was at a U.S. airport when he returned from a vacation
in the Dominican Republic. He did not say when or where that took place.
Jackson said that since the Israeli airport incident, the reception in
Israel has been "amazing."
"We're only here to bring positive light to our lives and the people here,"
he said, calling the group's multicultural appeal "an amazing bind you can't
touch, you can only experience."

-- 
"Usually when people are sad, they don't do anything. They just cry over
their condition. But when they get angry, they bring about a change."
- Malcolm X, Malcolm X Speaks, 1965

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