‘Black Panther’ and the anti-black racism of Egyptians

Status
Not open for further replies.
By Mona Eltahawy March 16 at 6:00 AM

I joke that one of the rare times Egyptians identify as African is when the national soccer squad is playing in the African Cup of Nations — and preferably winning it.

As an Egyptian, I was glad to see the film “Black Panther” embrace my country with its inclusion of the Ancient Egyptian goddess Bast as the deity of Wakandans. But considering the anti-black racism against the Nubian indigenous community and visitors in my country, I knew Egypt would not return the love.

TWPLogos-twp_black.svg


Audiences in Egypt might enjoy the film’s fight scenes. But Egypt’s deep-seated anti-black racism will likely mean that such a long-overdue celebration of Africa — a film that has already crossed the $1 billion mark worldwide — will be lost on Egyptians.

Egyptians say “I’m going to Africa” when they visit other countries on the continent, as if Egypt were floating in a bubble of its own. How with such a disavowal of all things African can they appreciate the celebration of all things African that powers through “Black Panther”?

An Egyptian friend, Ramy Wahed, who saw “Black Panther” in a theater in Cairo told me he overheard a man on the way out complain at the lack of white (read “beautiful”) actresses in the film.

“Egyptians are very racist,” Wahed told me. “I’ve seen it against Sudanese and Nubian friends and against darker-skinned friends who’ve been treated terribly. I’ve seen some people refuse to shake hands with them as if they have leprosy or an infectious disease or something. It really pisses me off.”

Racism is fatal in Egypt. In December 2005, Egyptian riot police killed at least 23 unarmed Sudanese refugees, including small children, who had occupied a public park in front of a United Nations office for three months.

Last year, prominent Nubian activist Gamal Sorour died in detention. Sorour was among 25 Nubians arrested for staging a peaceful protest “demanding the return of Nubians to their ancestral lands, from which they were evicted in the 1960s to make way for the lake behind the High Dam on the Nile,” as the Associated Press reported.

In pop culture and movies, black Egyptians and Sudanese are portrayed as “housekeepers and doormen,” which “has created a stereotype of black Africans as subservient,” Amir Beshay, an Egyptian now living in New York City, said. “The stereotype of African Americans comes from American movies, so the depiction of Eric Killmonger is pretty close to the stereotype Egyptians have of African Americans, as violent and thuggish.”

Another dangerous reminder of anti-black racism in Egypt today is how it affects the daily lives of the most vulnerable — refugees.“I have worked with refugees in Egypt from Sudan, Somalia, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Ivory Coast, as well as Syria and Iraq, and it indicated to me that all migrants may experience xenophobia in Egypt, but that black Africans additionally face racism, colorism and classism from locals, which serves as an obstacle when trying to access justice, obtain jobs, find accommodation and just live everyday life,” Dalia Malek, an Egyptian American who has a PhD in human rights and forced migration, told me.

Anti-black racism is not just an Egyptian problem. It exists in many parts of the Arab world. The trade that sent enslaved Africans east of the continent has yet to have a similar reckoning — incomplete as it is — as that which headed west of Africa. The word “abeed” (slave) is casually a used to refer to people who are black in the Levant and the Arabian Peninsula.

But as an Egyptian, I hold my country of birth to a higher standard — and my shame is that much sharper — because we are right there on the map as part of Africa. So many black people I meet — especially in the United States — talk of visiting the “motherland” when I tell them I’m Egyptian. I hear that black fraternities and sororities often refer to Ancient Egypt in their symbolism, as part of the pride black Americans often experience in what they consider a shared African heritage.

I want to tell them of a Sierra Leonean man who was in Cairo to study at al-Azhar University who told me of being spat at in Cairo streets. Or of the teenage South Sudanese girl taunted by an Egyptian woman on the metro who tried to grab her nose and mouth until I intervened. None of our fellow passengers said a word. I apologized to the girl for what she had experienced. “That happens every day,” she told me. Or the black American friend who told me of the disdain with which Egyptian police had treated him, assuming he was Nigerian, until he produced his American passport, and the disdain quickly became disguised with chumminess and Eddie Murphy jokes.

Much like “Black Panther” challenges us to imagine alternative futures, the 2011 uprising demanded we imagine a better future for Egypt. The fight against racism must be seen as a revolutionary one. One of the pillars of racism has been the centralized — and chauvinist — definition of “Egyptian,” which for decades was determined by Cairo-based military rulers. Egyptians are more diverse and complex than that.

Since the revolution, activists from Egypt’s Nubian community have rightfully demanded rights to their ancestral lands and a recognition of their cultural heritage. But it is not the responsibility of the victims of Egypt’s racism to end that racism. Wakanda might not exist, but every revolution aims to create a place that has yet to exist. Egypt has much to learn from it if it wants to create a nation of “dignity” and “social justice” as our revolution demanded.
 
This is well known.

But who is a Somali to complain when Madow are mocked and once enslaved in Somalia?

This is the kettle calling the pan black.

Besides only the West has egalitarian humanist values. This is for the salafists who mock the West.
 
Mona Eltahawy is a great Muslim thinker. I've been following her work for a long time. I love the way she decimates the medieval culture of the MENA region. The fake wadaads cower at the sight of her shadow.

Every culture is racist. Ain't nobody sinless when it comes to race. But good to see her expose the bogus Ummah narrative.
 

Basra

LOVE is a product of Doqoniimo mixed with lust
Let Them Eat Cake
VIP
This is well known.

But who is a Somali to complain when Madow are mocked and once enslaved in Somalia?

This is the kettle calling the pan black.

Besides only the West has egalitarian humanist values. This is for the salafists who mock the West.


Great point.
 

kaluumayste

Take the Poo to the loo
Mona Eltahawy is a great Muslim thinker. I've been following her work for a long time. I love the way she decimates the medieval culture of the MENA region. The fake wadaads cower at the sight of her shadow.

Every culture is racist. Ain't nobody sinless when it comes to race. But good to see her expose the bogus Ummah narrative.

tnozp.jpg
 

Jake from State Farm

We pro xalimo all 2019
this is really childish, but like a couple of years ago when i learned about the anti black racism stuff happening in south africa with the apartheid. i thought of an idea where a petition could be made to basically banish south africa from the rest of africa. because at that time i assumed south africa was predominatly white. So i really disliked the fact that their was white people being racist to black people in africa. White people were treating blacks like shit in north america, so i wasn't ever considering africans were being descriminated against in africa( the continent that is majority black)

this post brought back that idea. because after i joined this forum i gained an interest in learning about the anti black racism in the MENA especially the north african nations. banish the north africans from africa. stop trading and doing business with these countries, lock borders. basically sort of like shun them. North africans are basically arab people. tunisia, egypt, morroco, sudan, algeria, and libya.

stupid idea i know but seriously its disturbing learning about non blacks being racist to black africans in the continent of Africa, where it shouldn't be happening.
 
this is really childish, but like a couple of years ago when i learned about the anti black racism stuff happening in south africa with the apartheid. i thought of an idea where a petition could be made to basically banish south africa from the rest of africa. because at that time i assumed south africa was predominatly white. So i really disliked the fact that their was white people being racist to black people in africa. White people were treating blacks like shit in north america, so i wasn't ever considering africans were being descriminated against in africa( the continent that is majority black)

this post brought back that idea. because after i joined this forum i gained an interest in learning about the anti black racism in the MENA especially the north african nations. banish the north africans from africa. stop trading and doing business with these countries, lock borders. basically sort of like shun them. North africans are basically arab people. tunisia, egypt, morroco, sudan, algeria, and libya.

stupid idea i know but seriously its disturbing learning about non blacks being racist to black africans in the continent of Africa, where it shouldn't be happening.
Libya made me sad.It was sickening to hear that even they showed no preference for fellow somali muslims, some cousin of mine went missing in Morocco and everyone thought the worst. We recently found out that they kept him in jail because he looked Madow and they thought he was an AA!! when he told them he was somali they fed him and looked after him.
 

Shaolin23

Seeker of knowledge and truth
Libya made me sad.It was sickening to hear that even they showed no preference for fellow somali muslims, some cousin of mine went missing in Morocco and everyone thought the worst. We recently found out that they kept him in jail because he looked Madow and they thought he was an AA!! when he told them he was somali they fed him and looked after him.
Libyans are an exception they are animals most Arabs are not as racist towards Somalis as people make it seem they actually think were just poor dark Arabs (they all think we speak Arabic) and lump us in with the Yemenis who also get a lot hate they're more racist toward Sudanis that actually have Arab blood in them because they know they mixed with negroes and nilotics people Arabs are ignorant but not that ignorant
 

Crow

Make Hobyo Great Again
VIP
Lool I lived in Egypt and non of that shot ever happened in fact they are very friendly people. This women doesn't know her own people
Typical SJW throwing her people under the bus to gain approval from white gaalo. No thanks.:idontlike:
 

World

VIP
It really isn't that bad. I've been to a few Arab countries myself and the racism isn't as bad as portrayed. Maybe to the Sudanese people, but my seconds cousins who were born in Alexandria haven't faced any racism before.
 

Vanguard

Fino alla morte
Mona Eltahawy is a great Muslim thinker. I've been following her work for a long time. I love the way she decimates the medieval culture of the MENA region. The fake wadaads cower at the sight of her shadow.

Every culture is racist. Ain't nobody sinless when it comes to race. But good to see her expose the bogus Ummah narrative.

Mona Eltahawy is Egypt's Ayaan Hirsi :camby:
 
It really isn't that bad. I've been to a few Arab countries myself and the racism isn't as bad as portrayed. Maybe to the Sudanese people, but my seconds cousins who were born in Alexandria haven't faced any racism before.
It's only bad for South Sudanese and refugees from Darfur. Plenty of Sudanese live in Egypt with no issues.
 

Basra

LOVE is a product of Doqoniimo mixed with lust
Let Them Eat Cake
VIP
"As an Egyptian, I was glad to see the film “Black Panther” embrace my country with its inclusion of the Ancient Egyptian goddess Bast as the deity of Wakandans"

R u an atheist Aden?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Trending

Latest posts

Top