BOSTON (AP) —More than 60% of Muslim youths surveyed in Massachusetts releases bullying, verbally harassed or physically abused
because of their Islamic faith, the state’s chapter of Council on American-Islamic Relations said in a report released Tuesday.
The Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization said about one-third of students also altered their appearance, behavior, or names to hide the fact that they are Muslim. And about 17% reported other forms of physical harassment, including having their hijab pulled on.
Fatuma Mohamed, youth advocacy officer for CAIR-MA, said the findings were “disheartening” and hoped the report,
which also includes policy recommendations, could help prompt change.
“We want to make sure that Muslim students know that they are not alone and that they have the power to be able to report these bullying incidences,” she said.
The state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education didn’t comment directly on the report’s findings but said,
it provides resources for districts to prevent hate crimes and bullying, including recommendations it released in 2019.
According to CAIR:
CAIR said the results come from its first-ever survey of Islamophobia in Massachusetts public schools. The survey was modeled after similar ones conducted every two years by the organization’s California chapter.
Between July 2019 and January 2020, nearly 200 public school students enrolled in grades 6 through 12 were surveyed in Massachusetts.
The results were obtained either in-person or through a secure online portal,
and a number of respondents also shared their personal experiences of bullying and harassment.
One 14-year-old student living in the Boston-area said she stopped wearing her hijab after being harassed in high school.
She said students spread rumors about her being in ISIS, and when she tried to report a student that called her a terrorist,
she faced retaliation from students on the football team. Students also shouted “Allahu akbar” at her in the cafeteria.