British Muslim who entered Miss Universe contest receives death threat

When Shanna Bukhari decided she wanted to be the first Muslim to represent 
Britain in a global beauty pageant, she suspected the road ahead might not be 
smooth, but nothing could have prepared her for the abuse she received.

"I have felt in fear for my life," said the 24-year-old Miss Universe 
contestant. The attacks escalated last week when Bukhari received her first 
death threat.

The censure has come from various quarters, ranging from Muslims who claim that 
she is denigrating the name of Islam, to white supremacists who say that an 
Asian cannot represent the UK, and to women who condemn beauty pageants as an 
affront to feminism.

Bukhari, born in Blackburn, grew up in Lancashire and is no stranger to 
intolerance. When she was nine, she ended up in hospital after a man screaming 
racist abuse had thrown a brick at her, causing so much damage to her stomach 
that she suffered a blood clot and had to undergo surgery.

But even she has been surprised by the furore that her participation in the 
British heats of Miss Universe has prompted. Rather than confirming her hopes 
that society had progressed since her childhood, the controversy has made her 
question the state of multiculturalism in modern Britain. "It has highlighted 
the divisions that exist, a lack of social integration, a lack of adhesion 
between white and coloured people, and this needs to be addressed," she said. 
"I thought my participation might be something that people did not agree with, 
but I never thought I'd get abused."

The attacks on the Manchester-based English literature graduate began after a 
local newspaper ran an article 10 days ago revealing her ambition to become the 
first Muslim to represent Great Britain at the beauty contest. Since then, she 
has received around 300 messages a day on her Facebook page, a handful of which 
are abusive. Most of the negative comments have come from a minority of Muslim 
men. "I get people saying, 'you're not a Muslim' and 'you're using religion to 
get attention'. I said they were the ones bringing religion into it. I'm not 
representing Islam; I just want to represent my country, and of that I am very 
proud. They are trying to control me, using religion as a tool to attack."

Bukhari accuses her abusers of having the same sort of mindset as those who 
support "honour" killings and beat women. Many of the comments are, she says, 
from individuals who want sharia law instead of a liberal democracy. "We simply 
live in a multicultural society where there are significant numbers of Muslims. 
Islam is about peace; abusing me is itself wrong in Islam."

Away from the religious-themed criticism, Bukhari detects a broader anti-female 
resentment from men who combine sleaze with slurs. "Maybe it's because I'm a 
woman saying to other women 'stand up for yourself, don't let anyone dictate 
what you can do or can't'. Some men don't like that," she said.

But not all the abuse is from men: Bukhari has also attracted opprobium from 
feminists. "I've had a few girls saying 'shame on you' or 'rot in hell'. But 
I'd like to know what their real issues are, so we could have a constructive 
debate."

The abuse that truly shocked Bukhari arrived last Tuesday in the form of an 
online racist rant. Within hours she had shut down her Facebook fan page, but a 
friend was then sent a number of internet links to images of people murdered 
for standing up for their principles. "She rang up and said, 'Shanna, you need 
to be very careful because he's trying to make me aware that things will 
happen'. Not a direct death threat perhaps, but he was trying to say that 
something is going to happen to me."

Bukhari takes the threat of physical violence seriously. She makes sure she is 
never alone, both in her Manchester flat and on the city streets, and has 
contacted a private security firm for protection when attending charity events 
to raise money for the Joshua Foundation, a charity for terminally ill 
children. She fears that Britain's Miss Universe finals in Birmingham in May 
will also be a target: "It worries me that haters will turn up. I know what 
they are capable of."

One Facebook message calls her a "dirty Muslim" and asks why she is 
representing Britain "when you don't even fucking belong here". Bukhari said: 
"I actually replied to him in a very calm manner because I'm not one to 
retaliate, my family taught me to rationalise rather than react. Then I thought 
'why can't I represent Britain?' I was born here and am proud to be British. My 
parents are from Pakistan but I am not going to represent Pakistan as this is 
my country."

Bukhari says the abuse has been disillusioning partly because she enjoyed a 
liberal upbringing; her parents sent her to a Catholic school in Blackburn 
where she was the only Muslim but was "completely accepted". It was only when 
she moved to Manchester in 2001, she said, that she became aware of segregation 
as an issue. She does not agree with David Cameron's speech last month in which 
he asserted that state multiculturalism in Britain had failed. She believes 
that more must be done to break down mistrust.

Bukhari cites the thousands who have offered their backing. Support has come 
from Spain, the Middle East, Pakistan, India and China. Most women supporters 
say she represents not just a role model for Muslim women, but all those who 
refuse to be cowed by bullies.

During last month's semi-final for Britain's Miss Universe candidate Bukhari 
received the most public votes. Britain has never won the title. It is 
increasingly possible that its first victor might also be its first Muslim 
representative.

About this article
 It was published on guardian.co.uk at 00.04 GMT on Sunday 20 March 2011.




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