This article originally appeared
in the September 13 issue of In
These Times.
It has taken a genocide in Darfur,
where hundreds of thousands have been killed in a brutal campaign
of ethnic cleansing and countless more continue to die in disease-ridden
refugee camps, to force influential segments of the black activist
community to put aside their differences and acknowledge a long
history of ongoing atrocities in the Sudan.
For years, some black activists have
charged the Islamic government of Sudan with supporting Arab militias
that raid Christian and traditionalist areas of southern Sudan
and force their black African captives into slavery. Others argued
that those charges were manufactured primarily to justify Western
intervention in the region.
Initially, the disagreement was centered
in the Black Nationalist community and, to put it simply, was
divided between nationalists who were Muslim and those who were
Pan-Africanists. Many Muslim nationalists believed the charges
of slavery were fabricated for the purpose of anti-Islamic propaganda.
But Pan-African nationalists found more than a grain of truth
in the charges and pushed the issue into the public light.
The apparent sectarian character of
the militia raids eventually energized various Christian groups
and they began mobilizing in opposition to the Sudanese government.
The ardent support of these often right-wing groups further clouded
the issue for many black activists who suspected their new allies
had ulterior motives.
Thus, the effort to bring attention
to the issue of slavery in the Sudan was crippled. But a dedicated
group of pan-African nationalists continued to push the cause
and consistently condemned the Sudan’s Islamic regime; some blamed
prominent black Muslims for helping to keep the issue off the
table.
“Black Muslims were reluctant to criticize
the Islamist government in the Sudan, which is based in the north
in Khartoum, because of their religious and other ties,” says
Nate Clay, talk-show host, newspaper publisher and one of the
most vocal members of this pan-Africanist group.
Clay is gratified that so many black
activists, politicians and celebrities have been willing to get
arrested in front of the Sudanese embassy in Washington D.C. in
the last few months to protest the atrocities in Darfur. But he
also is a little disgusted.
“What really bothers me about this
sudden flash of consciousness is that they’ve only become interested
in the Sudan in the face of the white media’s interest in the
issue,” he says. “Where were they when the Sudanese government
and its Arab militia were busy killing 2 million black Africans
in the southern Sudan?”
He believes African-American leaders
were intimidated by black Muslims – in particular, Nation of Islam
leader Louis Farrakhan. “Farrakhan knows about this and I’ve heard
him condemn Arab racism. But he talks out of both sides of his
mouth. I think he has become too dependent on Arab money.”
But the latest conflict in Darfur pits
Muslim against Muslim. As Eric Reeves reported in the September
20 issue of In These Times (See “Deathly Silence,” p. 8),
members of the tribal groups most affected by the ethnic cleansing
are Muslim, as are the government and its Arab militia (the Janjaweed).
Although the government reportedly got involved to suppress political
opposition, the conflict now seems to be driven by ethnic, or
at least cultural, animosities. Many members of the Janjaweed
are dark-skinned Africans who identify with Arab culture. They
would more accurately be called Arabized militia.
Since the religious component has been
neutralized, several African-American Islamic groups have joined
the protest against the Sudanese government’s treatment of the
Muslim tribal groups that don’t identify themselves as Arabs.
In fact, one group – Project Islamic H.O.P.E. – has called for
Islamic governments and organizations to protest Khartoum’s action
in Darfur.
“These Arab and Muslim leaders seek
out our support on issues like Palestinian rights, religious racial
profiling of civil liberties violations and American treatment
of Islamic countries, but these Muslim leaders aren’t saying anything
about the genocide of the African population in the Sudan,” says
Najee Ali, founder of Islamic H.O.P.E. The issue also sparked
some heated discussions at the recent convention of the American
Society of Muslims, the largest group of indigenous Muslims in
the country.
The situation in Darfur is forcing
a focus on an issue the Muslim world has tended to avoid: race.
And although the Western media’s depiction of the current conflict
as one between Arab and African groups is too simplistic, there
is a well-documented history of anti-black Arab bias in the region
that has seldom been explored.
So, while Darfur has closed gaps between black activists, it
has opened one between Muslims. Too bad it required the tragedy
of another African genocide to provoke a conversation about Arab
racism that is long past overdue.
Salim Muwakkil is a senior editor of In
These Times, where he has worked since 1983, and an op-ed
columnist for the Chicago Tribune. He is currently a Crime and
Communities Media Fellow of the Open Society Institute, examining
the impact of ex-inmates and gang leaders in leadership positions
in the black community.