Islamophobia has become a topic of increasing sociological and political importance. According to Benn and Jawad, Islamophobia has increased since
Ayatollah Khomeini's
1989 fatwa inciting Muslims to attempt to murder
Salman Rushdie, the author of
The Satanic Verses, and since the
September 11 attacks in 2001.
Anthropologist Steven Vertovec writes that the purported growth in Islamophobia may be associated with increased Muslim presence in society and successes. He suggests a
circular model, where increased hostility towards Islam and Muslims results in governmental countermeasures such as institutional guidelines and changes to legislation, which itself may fuel further Islamophobia due to increased accommodation for Muslims in public life. Vertovec concludes: "As the public sphere shifts to provide a more prominent place for Muslims, Islamophobic tendencies may amplify." However, Vertovec states that some have observed that Islamophobia has not necessarily escalated in the past decades, but that there has been increased public scrutiny of it. In 2005
Ziauddin Sardar, an
Islamic scholar, wrote in the
New Statesman that Islamophobia is a widespread European phenomenon. He noted that each country has anti-Muslim political figures, citing
Jean-Marie Le Pen in France;
Pim Fortuyn in the Netherlands; and Philippe van der Sande of
Vlaams Blok, a
Flemish nationalist party in Belgium. Sardar argued that Europe is "post-colonial, but ambivalent". Minorities are regarded as acceptable as an underclass of menial workers, but if they want to be upwardly mobile anti-Muslim prejudice rises to the surface. Wolfram Richter, professor of economics at
Technical University of Dortmund, told Sardar: "I am afraid we have not learned from our history. My main fear is that
what we did to Jews we may now do to Muslims. The next holocaust would be against Muslims." Malik, a senior visiting fellow in the Department of Political, International and Policy Studies at the
University of Surrey, has described these claims of a brewing holocaust as "hysterical to the point of delusion"; whereas Jews in Hitler's Germany were given the official designation of
Untermenschen, and were subject to escalating legislation which diminished and ultimately removed their rights as citizens, Malik noted that in cases where "Muslims are singled out in Britain, it is often for privileged treatment" such as the 2005 legislation banning "incitement to religious hatred", the special funding Muslim organisations and bodies receive from local and national government, the special provisions made by workplaces, school and leisure centres for Muslims, and even suggestions by the Archbishop of Canterbury
Rowan Williams and the former Lord Chief Justice,
Lord Phillips, that
sharia law should be introduced into Britain. The fact is, wrote Malik, that such well-respected public figures as Akhtar, Shadjareh and Yaqoob need "a history lesson about the real Holocaust reveals how warped the Muslim grievance culture has become." project carries an anti-sharia sign. politician
Arun Pathak organised a celebration in Varanasi to commemorate the
1992 demolition of the Babri Masjid mosque. In 2006
ABC News reported that "public views of Islam are one casualty of the post-September 11, 2001 conflict: Nearly six in 10 Americans think the religion is prone to
violent extremism, nearly half regard it unfavourably, and a remarkable one in four admits to prejudicial feelings against Muslims and Arabs alike." They also report that 27 percent of Americans admit feelings of prejudice against Muslims. Gallup polls in 2006 found that 40 percent of Americans admit to prejudice against Muslims, and 39 percent believe Muslims should carry special identification. These trends have only worsened with the use of Islamophobia as a campaign tactic during the 2008 American presidential election (with several Republican politicians and pundits, including Donald Trump, asserting that Democratic candidate Barack Obama is secretly a Muslim), during the 2010 mid-term elections (during which a proposed Islamic community center was dubbed the "Ground Zero Mosque"), and the 2016 presidential election, during which Republican nominee Donald Trump proposed banning the entrance into the country of all Muslims. Associate Professor
Deepa Kumar writes that "Islamophobia is about politics rather than religion per se" and that modern-day demonisation of Arabs and Muslims by US politicians and others is racist and Islamophobic, and employed in support of what she describes as an unjust war. About the public impact of this rhetoric, she says that "One of the consequences of the relentless attacks on Islam and Muslims by politicians and the media is that Islamophobic sentiment is on the rise." She also chides some "people on the left" for using the same "Islamophobic logic as the Bush regime". In this regard, Kumar confirms the assertions of
Stephen Sheehi, who "conceptualises Islamophobia as an ideological formation within the context of the American empire. Doing so "allows us to remove it from the hands of 'culture' or from the myth of a single creator or progenitor, whether it be a person, organisation or community." An ideological formation, in this telling, is a constellation of networks that produce, proliferate, benefit from, and traffic in Islamophobic discourses." The writer and scholar on religion
Reza Aslan has said that "Islamophobia has become so mainstream in this country that Americans have been trained to expect violence against Muslims – not excuse it, but expect it". A January 2010
British Social Attitudes Survey found that the British public "is far more likely to hold negative views of Muslims than of any other religious group," with "just one in four" feeling "positively about Islam", and a "majority of the country would be concerned if a mosque was built in their area, while only 15 per cent expressed similar qualms about the opening of a church." A 2016 report by
CAIR and
University of California, Berkeley's Center for Race and Gender said that groups promoting islamophobia in the US had access to US$206 million between 2008 and 2013. The author of the report said that "The hate that these groups are funding and inciting is having real consequences like attacks on mosques all over the country and new laws discriminating against Muslims in America." In the United States, religious discrimination against Muslims has become a significant issue of concern. In 2018, The Institute for Social Policy and Understanding found that out of the groups studied, Muslims are the most likely faith community to experience religious discrimination, the data having been that way since 2015. Despite 61% of Muslims reporting experiencing religious discrimination at some level and 62% reporting that most Americans held negative stereotypes about their community, 23% reported that their faith made them feel "out of place in the world".
Anti-Islamic hate crimes data in the United States , strapped to a "Made in the USA" bomb display at a protest of
Park51 in
New York City in
Tehran, Iran, 10 February 2017 Data on types of hate crimes have been collected by the U.S.
FBI since 1992, to carry out the dictates of the 1990
Hate Crime Statistics Act. Hate crime offences include crimes against persons (such as assaults) and against property (such as
arson), and are classified by various race-based, religion-based, and other motivations. The data show that recorded anti-Islamic hate crimes in the United States jumped dramatically in 2001. Anti-Islamic hate crimes then subsided, but continued at a significantly higher pace than in pre-2001 years. The step up is in contrast to decreases in total hate crimes and to the
decline in overall crime in the U.S. since the 1990s. Specifically, the FBI's annual hate crimes statistics reports from 1996 to 2013 document average numbers of anti-Islamic offenses at 31 per year before 2001, then a leap to 546 in 2001 (the year of
9-11 attacks), and averaging 159 per since. Among those offenses are anti-Islamic arson incidents which have a similar pattern: arson incidents averaged 0.4 per year pre-2001, jumped to 18 in 2001, and averaged 1.5 annually since. Year-by-year anti-Islamic hate crimes, all hate crimes, and arson subtotals are as follows: In contrast, the overall numbers of arson and total offenses declined from pre-2001 to post-2001.
Anti-Islamic hate crimes in Europe There have also been reports of hate crimes targeting Muslims across Europe. These incidents have increased after terrorist attacks by extremist groups such as ISIL.
Far-right and
right-wing populist political parties and organisations have also been accused of fuelling fear and hatred towards Muslims. Hate crimes such as arson and physical violence have been attempted or have occurred in Norway, Poland, Sweden, France, Spain, Denmark, Germany and Great Britain. Politicians have also made anti-Muslim comments when discussing the
European migrant crisis. According to
Yvonne Haddad: The Islamophobia Industry in America is "driven by neocon stars: Daniel Pipes, Robert Spencer, David Yerushalmi, Glenn Beck, Pamela Gellner, Paul Wolfowitz, David Horowitz, and Frank Gaffney as well as native informers Walid Shoebat, Walid Phares, Wafa Sultan, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Ibn Warraq, Brigitte Gabriel, Tawfik Hamid, and Zuhdi Jasser. They have been prolific, producing and re-circulating false or exaggerated information about Islam and Muslims in order to gain lucrative speaking engagements and increase their influence among neocons in government."
Research on Islamophobia and its correlates elaborated by VoxEurop, in European Union countries the negative attitude towards Muslims is inversely proportional to actual presence. Various studies have been conducted to investigate Islamophobia and its correlates among majority populations and among
Muslim minorities themselves. To start with, an experimental study showed that anti-Muslim attitudes may be stronger than more general
xenophobic attitudes. Moreover, studies indicate that anti-Muslim prejudice among majority populations is primarily explained by the perception of Muslims as a cultural threat, rather than as a threat towards the respective nation's economy. Studies focusing on the experience of Islamophobia among Muslims have shown that the experience of
religious discrimination is associated with lower national identification and higher religious identification. In other words, religious discrimination seems to lead Muslims to increase their identification with their religion and to decrease their identification with their nation of residence. Some studies further indicate that societal Islamophobia negatively influences Muslim minorities' health. One of the studies showed that the perception of an Islamophobic society is associated with more
psychological problems, such as
depression and
nervousness, regardless whether the respective individual had personally experienced religious
discrimination. The European Islamophobie Report aims to enable policymakers as well as the public to discuss the issue of Islamophobia with the help of qualitative data. It is the first report to cover a wide range of Eastern European countries like Serbia, Croatia, Hungary, Lithuania, and Latvia. Farid Hafez is also editor of the German-English
Islamophobia Studies Yearbook.
Regional trends Anti-Muslim sentiment in Europe Muslim immigration into Europe has led some critics to label Islam incompatible with secular Western society. This criticism has been partly influenced by a stance against
multiculturalism advocated by recent philosophers, closely linked to the heritage of
New Philosophers, including the likes of
Pascal Bruckner. Jocelyne Cesari, in her study of discrimination against Muslims in Europe, finds that anti-Islamic sentiment may be difficult to separate from other drivers of discrimination. Because Muslims are mainly from immigrant backgrounds and the largest group of immigrants in many Western European countries,
xenophobia overlaps with Islamophobia, and a person may have one, the other, or both. So, for example, some people who have a negative perception of and attitude toward Muslims may also show this toward non-Muslim immigrants, either as a whole or certain group (such as, for example, Eastern Europeans, sub-Saharan Africans, or Roma), whereas others would not. The
European Network Against Racism (ENAR) reports that Islamophobic crimes are on the increase in France, England and Wales. In Sweden crimes with an Islamophobic motive increased by 69% from 2009 to 2013. An increase of Islamophobia in Russia follows the growing influence of the strongly conservative sect of
Wahhabism, according to Nikolai Sintsov of the National Anti-Terrorist Committee. Various translations of the Qur'an have been banned by the Russian government for promoting extremism and
Muslim supremacy. Akhmed Yarlikapov, an expert on Islam, said the Bible too could be banned just as easily for identical motives. In Greece, Islamophobia accompanies anti-immigrant sentiment, as immigrants are now 15% of the country's population and 90% of the EU's illegal entries are through Greece. In France Islamophobia is tied, in part, to the nation's long-standing tradition of secularism. With the popularisation of the Bulgarian nationalist party
ATAKA, Islamophobia in Bulgaria also showed an increase. The party itself participated in the 2011
Banya Bashi Mosque clashes.
Anti-Muslim sentiment elsewhere refugees fleeing violence in Buddhist-majority
Myanmar in October 2017 A report from Australia has found that "except for Anglicans, all Christian groups have Islamophobia scores higher than the national average" and that "among the followers of non-Christian religious affiliations,
Buddhists and
Hindus [also] have significantly higher Islamophobia scores." Following the
San Bernardino attack in 2015,
Donald Trump, then a candidate for President, proposed "a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States, until we can figure out what the hell is going on". Throughout the campaign, Trump repeatedly described Islam and Muslim immigrants and refugees as a threat to the
West, and condemned then-current President
Barack Obama for not referring to
Islamic State militants as "Islamic terrorists" or "radical Muslims", accusing Obama of cowardice in the face of radical Islam and claiming that Obama had "founded ISIS" through his foreign policy. Trump's rhetoric was condemned by his opponent,
Hillary Clinton, as well as numerous Muslim advocacy groups and activists, and became a focal issue in the
2016 United States presidential election. In 2016, the
South Thailand Insurgency, having caused more than 6,500 deaths and purportedly fuelled in part by the Thai military's harsh tactics, was reported to be increasing Islamophobia in the country. The
Mindanao conflict in the Philippines has also fuelled discrimination against Muslims by some Christian Filipinos. The
2018 anti-Muslim riots in Sri Lanka was suggested to have been a possible trigger for the
2019 Easter bombings. Muslims in the country have reportedly faced increased harassment after the bombings, with some
Sinhala Buddhist groups calling for boycotts of Muslim businesses and trade. In July 2019, the UN ambassadors from 22 nations, including Canada, Germany and France, signed a joint letter to the
UNHRC condemning China's mistreatment of the
Uyghurs as well as its mistreatment of other
Muslim minority groups, urging the Chinese government to close the
Xinjiang internment camps, though ambassadors from 53 others, not including China, rejected said allegations. According to a 2020 report by the
Australian Strategic Policy Institute, since 2017, Chinese authorities have destroyed or damaged 16,000 mosques in Xinjiang – 65% of the region's total. Emigrants from nearly every predominantly Muslim country have immigrated to Canada. According to a 2013 poll, 54% of Canadians had an unfavourable view of Islam, which was higher than for any other religion (Hinduism, Sikhism etc.). The
2020 Delhi riots, which left more than 50 dead and hundreds injured, were triggered by protests against a
citizenship law seen by many critics as anti-Muslim and part of Prime Minister
Narendra Modi's
Hindu nationalist agenda. In
Myanmar the
969 Movement has been accused of events such as the
2012 Rakhine State riots. In 2020, there was an anti-muslim protest in
Daegu, Korea, where all the neighbourhood residents of the "
Dar-ul-Emaan Kyungpook Islamic Center" killed
pigs in front of the mosque which was under construction. The severed heads of the pigs were hung outside the mosque's construction site with sign-boards saying "
Islam is the religion of
terrorists". This incident created a lot of controversy as pigs are considered evil amongst Muslims. ==Countering Islamophobia==