Bagus sekali membantu orang berkesusahan atau yang membutuhkan bantuan, tetapi 
kelihatan sekali bantuan Indonesia berat sebelah, selain  dilupakan  masalah 
TKW/TKI di Timur Tengah, juga penguasa Indonesia tidak menaruh perhatian untuk 
membantu ratusan ribu pengungsi di Darfur akibat kekerasan Janjuweed Arab. 
Pengungsi di Darfur bukan orang kafir, tetapi beragama Islam, ada lagi masalah 
kemerdekaan Sahara Barat, bekas jajahan Spanyol yang dicaplok oleh Maroko. 
Samasekali masalah Sahara Barat tidak digubris oleh Indonesia yang dalam 
preamble konstitusinya dikatakan bahwa :kemeredekaan hak semua bangsa".  
Mengenai Darfur silahkan lihat artikel pada situs ini: 

 
Silahkan lihat juga  : http://uk.youtube.com:80/watch?v=p94t2YkoGQo


http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/12/10/opinion/edeltahawy.php

RACISM
The Arab world's dirty secret

By Mona Eltahawy Published: December 10, 2008

 

NEW YORK: I was on my way home on the Cairo Metro, lost in thought as I 
listened to music when I noticed a young Egyptian taunting a Sudanese girl. She 
reached out and tried to grab the girl's nose and laughed when the girl tried 
to brush her hand away.

The Sudanese girl looked to be Dinka, from southern Sudan and not the northern 
Sudanese who "look like us." She was obviously in distress.

I removed my headphones and asked the Egyptian woman "Why are you treating her 
like that?"

She exploded into a tornado of yelling, demanding to know why it was my 
business. I told her it was my business because as an Egyptian and as a Muslim 
who was riding the Metro, her behavior was wrong and I would not stay silent 
about it. I knew she was Muslim because she wore a scarf.

I told her that the way she was treating the Sudanese girl made the scarf on 
her head meaningless. Her mother asked me why I didn't cover my hair and I 
replied that I didn't want to be a hypocrite like her and her daughter.


As distressing as I found that young woman's behavior, I was even more 
distressed that the other women in the Metro car watched and said nothing. They 
made no attempt to defend the Sudanese girl nor to defend me when I confronted 
the Egyptian woman.

After the Egyptian woman got off at her station, I asked the other women why 
they didn't do anything. One woman said she stayed silent because the racist 
woman would've yelled at her. So what, I asked? If enough of the women had 
confronted her, she would have been outnumbered.

I apologized to the Sudanese girl for the Egyptian woman's behavior and she 
thanked me and told me "Egyptians are bad." I could only imagine other times 
she'd been abused publicly.

We are a racist people in Egypt and we are in deep denial about it. On my 
Facebook page, I blamed racism for my argument and an Egyptian man wrote to 
deny that we are racists and used as his proof a program on Egyptian Radio 
featuring Sudanese songs and poetry!

Our silence over racism not only destroys the warmth and hospitality we are 
proud of as Egyptians, it has deadly consequences.

What else but racism on Dec. 30, 2005, allowed hundreds of riot policemen to 
storm through a makeshift camp in central Cairo to clear it of 2,500 Sudanese 
refugees, trampling or beating to death 28 people, among them women and 
children?

What else but racism lies behind the bloody statistics at the Egyptian border 
with Israel where, since 2007, Egyptian guards have killed at least 33 
migrants, many from Sudan's Darfur region, including a pregnant woman and a 
7-year-old girl?

The racism I saw on the Cairo Metro has an echo in the Arab world at large, 
where the suffering in Darfur goes ignored because its victims are black and 
because those who are creating the misery in Darfur are not Americans or 
Israelis and we only pay attention when America and Israel behave badly.

We love to cry "Islamophobia" when we talk about the way Muslim minorities are 
treated in the West and yet we never stop to consider how we treat minorities 
and the most vulnerable among us.

The U.S. television network ABC recently staged a scenario in which an actor 
worked in a bakery in Texas and refused to serve an actress dressed as a Muslim 
woman in a headscarf. The scene was an experiment to see if other customers 
would help the Muslim woman.

Thirteen customers defended her by yelling at the clerk, asking for the manager 
or walking out in disgust. Six customers supported the bigoted clerk and 22 
looked away and did absolutely nothing.

I wonder now which Egyptian television channel would dare to stage such an 
experiment? And which Arab television channel would dare to stage a program 
that so boldly confronts us with the question "what would you do?"

For those of us who move between different worlds - where one day we are a 
majority as I am as a Sunni Muslim in Egypt and another we are a minority as I 
am as a Muslim in America - it is clear that to defend the rights of a Sudanese 
girl on the Cairo Metro means to defend my right on the New York Subway.

We live in a world that is connected in unprecedented ways. And that connection 
now extends to rights. If we want our rights to be respected we must do the 
right thing, everywhere.

Mona Eltahawy is a columnist for Egypt's Al Masry Al Youm and Qatar's Al Arab. 
She is based in New York.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: masdimas62 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, January 01, 2009 12:28 PM
  Subject: [ppiindia] Re: Hujan Air Mata di Masjid Damaskus


  Pepatah kekeuh ala Pitung68 :
  Orang Palestina di seberang lautan kelihatan
  Orang Jawa TKW yang teraniaya di pelupuk mata tak kelihatan 
  ha.ha.ha...

  Dimas.

  --- In [email protected], "phyllobates.terribilis"
  <phyllobates.terribi...@...> wrote:
  >
  > --- In [email protected], si pitung <sipitung68@> wrote:
  > >
  > > Hujan Air Mata di Masjid Damaskus 
  > > 
  > > 
  > > Hidayatullah.com-Tragediserangan
  > > berdarah Israel ke Jalur Gaza membuat sebagian besar masjid-masjid di
  > > Damaskus banjir air mata ...
  > 
  > *** Berapa orang musti nangis ampe timbul banjir Tung? satu orang 
  > berapa liter? Kalo sodara sodara ente di Sidoarjo jelas kebanjiran 
  > Tung, bentar lagi rumah ente di Jakarta, penuh airmata Ciliwung
  > 
  > Di luar Jawa warga udah kebanjiran Tung, itu kok ente gak tangisin, 
  > padahal mereka kebanyakan Muslim?
  >



   

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