Arab American View Newspaper Online

Advisory Commission on Arab Affairs and Human Relations Commission are a disgrace

Refusing to sit in the back of Chicago's racist bus

By Ray Hanania

When Rosa Parks, a Black woman and seamstress, refused to sit in the back of the bus in Montgomery, Alabama in 1955, she was arrested.

Her arrest became the foundation of a boycott organized by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., and that boycott against the bus company, the town and the sheriff who arrested Parks became the foundation of today’s American Civil Rights movement.

I am no Rosa Parks. Let me repeat that. I am NO Rosa Parks. I am just a Palestinian Arab American who constantly stands up for the rights of Arab Americans in an unfair world.

But when I was thrown off a stage at Zanies Comedy Club in August 2002 on the orders of anti-Arab comedian Jackie Mason, Zanies and Mason became the offenders of the Arab community, I found myself in the middle of an unwanted battle over racism.

Mason and Zanies did not throw "Ray Hanania" off of the comedy stage. They threw an "Arab" off the comedy stage. In fact, Mason’s manager said it clearly. "It’s not like Ray Hanania is just an Arab. He is a Palestinian. And Jackie Mason doesn’t feel comfortable performing with a Palestinian."

When the bus driver and sheriff arrested Rosa Parks, they did not throw "Rosa Parks" off the bus. They threw the African American community off the bus.

If it wasn’t Rosa Parks, it would have been any other Black person who tried to stand up to anti-Black bigotry.

Had it not been "Ray Hanania" it would have been any other Arab or Palestinian who was thrown off that stage in the summer of 2002.

Ever since, over the past three years, Arab Americans have stood fast and firm against Zanies and Jackie Mason. They have protested Zanies on at least seven occasions. Our efforts were not publicized in the Chicago Tribune or the Chicago Sun-Times, newspapers that often ignore issues involving "Arabs."

But Mason and Zanies have come to symbolize for Arab Americans a line in the sand. We will not tolerate their actions and we have demanded an apology. An apology not to "Ray Hanania" but an apology to the entire Arab American and Palestinian community. Zanies has never apologized to anyone nor has Mason.

Yet, if it were up to the Advisory Commission on Arab Affairs and the Chicago Human Relations Commission, Rosa Parks would never have gotten their support. They lack the courage of Rev. Martin Luther King who told the people of Alabama that although Rosa Parks was just a seamstress, and a young woman, that the Black community should stand firm against ALL bigotry and racism and demand that the Bus company and the city respect African Americans. King led a boycott of the bus company for 381 days and would have continued for 381 years to achieve justice and stop racism.

In mid-October, a young Arab American activist approached the Advisory Commission on Arab Affairs asking if they would host two Arab comedians from New York at an event in Chicago. She suggested that Zanies was anxious to have Arabs appear on its stage.

The Advisory Commission told her that there was an "issue" with Zanies, but decided to not only host the event they also funded it.

The issue is not about the comics, but about the failed leadership of the Advisory Commission on Arab Affairs. The Advisory Commission has been a useless organization that has done absolutely nothing when it comes to standing up for the rights of Arab Americans in Chicago.

When I was discriminated against by Zanies in August 2002, I complained to the Advisory Commission on Arab Affairs and to the Human Relations Commission, but my complaints were ignored. They never responded. I complained again about using Zanies for the show and urged them to find a new location. They ignored that request, too.

But, I am not alone. Countless hundreds of Arab Americans have been discriminated in Chicago and the Advisory Commission, which has come under the thumb of Human Relations Commission Chairman Clarence Wood, did nothing.

Who stood up and defended the store owner two months ago who was attacked publicly by protestors organized by Ald. Ed Smith? Smith charged that the store owner was "rude" but the real racism came out when he told CLTV that the store owners should "go back to the Middle East."

It was a racist protest against an Arab American store owner who happens to be Muslim, but the Advisory Commission would never speak out against a Black Chicago Alderman. Clarence Wood would never permit that.

Although the Advisory Commission on Arab Affairs has many good members, its leadership is a disgrace and should resign immediately. Clarence Wood should either start standing up for the rights of Arab Americans or at least admit that his Human Relations Commission is a bigger joke than the material used by the comedians that Zanies has banned.

The Rev. Martin Luther King could have easily walked away from Rosa Parks. She was a nobody. Not even active in the Black community. The bus company would have continued its racist practices and Blacks would have just continued to sit in the back of the bus.

I am one Arab American who refuses to sit at the back of the Bus. I refuse to be told that I can’t perform someplace because I am "Palestinian." I refuse to remain silent when some pathetic leaders in a do-nothing Advisory Commission on Arab Affairs don’t even have the courage to stand up for the rights of their own people.

I appreciate and thank those in my community who have expressed support for me. But I say to all of you, this isn’t about me. It is about the rights and dignity of the Arab Community and when some of our own leaders refuse to respect those rights, they do not deserve to remain as leaders.

(Ray Hanania is a nationally syndicated columnist and author of the new book "Arabs of Chicagoland." He can be reached at www.hanania.com.)

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