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Arabic student removed from Southwest flight, "why were you speaking Arabic?"

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Smellycat

Member
These cases are becoming more common, and it is just sickening!

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/17/us/student-speaking-arabic-removed-southwest-airlines-plane.html

The student, Khairuldeen Makhzoomi, a senior at the University of California, Berkeley, was taken off a flight from Los Angeles International Airport to Oakland on April 6 after he called an uncle in Baghdad to tell him about an event he attended that included a speech by United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

“I was very excited about the event so I called my uncle to tell him about it,” he said.

He told his uncle about the chicken dinner they were served and the moment when he got to stand up and ask the secretary general a question about the Islamic State, he said. But the conversation seemed troubling to a nearby passenger, who told the crew she overheard him making “potentially threatening comments,” the airline said in a statement.

Mr. Makhzoomi, 26, knew something was wrong as soon as he finished his phone call and saw that a woman sitting in front of him had turned around in her seat to stare at him, he said. She headed for the airplane door soon after he told his uncle that he would call again when he landed, and qualified it with a common phrase in Arabic, “inshallah,” meaning “god willing.”

“That is when I thought, ‘Oh, I hope she is not reporting me,’ because it was so weird,” Mr. Makhzoomi said.

That is exactly what happened. An Arabic-speaking Southwest Airlines employee of Middle Eastern or South Asian descent came to his seat and escorted him off the plane a few minutes after his call ended, he said. The man introduced himself in Arabic and then switched to English to ask, “Why were you speaking Arabic in the plane?”

Mr. Makhzoomi said he was afraid, and that the employee spoke to him “like I was an animal.”

“I said to him, ‘This is what Islamophobia got this country into,’ and that made him so angry. That is when he told me I could not go back on the plane.”

Zahra Billoo, the executive director of the San Francisco Bay Area office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said there had been at least six cases of Muslims being pulled off flights so far this year. The conduct of Southwest Airlines was of particular concern, she said, after another Muslim passenger was removed from a flight in Chicago last week.“We are concerned that Muslims are facing more and more scrutiny and baseless harassment when they are attempting to travel,” Ms. Billoo said.


Law enforcement officials arrived shortly after Mr. Makhzoomi accused the airline employee of anti-Muslim bias, he said. He was brought into the terminal and searched in front of a crowd of onlookers while half a dozen police officers, including one with a dog, stood watch.

Three agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrived and brought him into a private room where they questioned him, he said. They asked about his mother, who lives with him and his younger brother in Oakland. They also asked about his father, Khalid Makhzoomi, a former Iraqi diplomat who was jailed in Abu Ghraib prison by Saddam Hussein and later killed by the dictator’s regime, according to Mr. Makhzoomi. His family came to the United States in 2010.

Mr. Makhzoomi said an F.B.I. agent told him the Southwest Airlines employee who was upset by the allegation of anti-Muslim bias said a passenger reported hearing him talk about martyrdom in Arabic, using a phrase often associated with jihadists. He denied the charge and was allowed to return to the terminal, he said, where the same Arabic-speaking employee refunded his ticket.

A spokeswoman for the F.B.I. in Los Angeles, Ari Dekofsky, confirmed that agents responded to the airport that day but had found there to be no threat. “We determined that no further action was necessary,” she said on Saturday.

Mr. Makhzoomi was able to book a new flight on Delta Air Lines and arrived in Oakland eight hours after he originally planned. He said he has no plans to pursue legal action against Southwest Airlines but he does want the company to apologize for the way its employees treated him.

“My family and I have been through a lot and this is just another one of the experiences I have had,” he said. “Human dignity is the most valuable thing in the world, not money. If they apologized, maybe it would teach them to treat people equally.”

The fact that an Arabic speaking employee did this is even more insulting....
 

orochi91

Member
This happened to me at a restaurant; I had received a call from a friend while waiting in line. I said "Assalamualaikum!" a bit loudly and the 4 people in front of me whipped around in shock. That momentary look of alarm on their faces was amazing. I hadn't laughed that hard in years.

XD

I can see why speaking random Arabic on a plane would be a more alarming situation though.

9/11 has had lasting repercussions, unfortunately.
 

giga

Member
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Smellycat

Member
This happened to me at a restaurant; I received a call from a friend while waiting in line.

I said "Assalamualaikum!" a bit loudly and the 4 people in front of me whipped around in shock. That momentary look of alarm on their faces was amazing.

I hadn't laughed that hard in years.

XD

hahahahaha, what was their reaction after you started laughing?
 

NoRéN

Member
This happened to me at a restaurant; I had received a call from a friend while waiting in line. I said "Assalamualaikum!" a bit loudly and the 4 people in front of me whipped around in shock. That momentary look of alarm on their faces was amazing. I hadn't laughed that hard in years.

XD

I can see why speaking random Arabic on a plane would be a more alarming situation though.

9/11 has had lasting repercussions, unfortunately.
Such a pleasant greeting too. Certainly better than typical American greetings like "what's up?"
 

giga

Member
Mr. Makhzoomi said an F.B.I. agent told him the Southwest Airlines employee who was upset by the allegation of anti-Muslim bias said a passenger reported hearing him talk about martyrdom in Arabic, using a phrase often associated with jihadists. He denied the charge and was allowed to return to the terminal, he said, where the same Arabic-speaking employee refunded his ticket.
If inshallah (or allahu akbar) is associated with terrorists, then every single muslim must be a terrorist.
 

Kurdel

Banned
It goes to show how fucking ignorant people are.

Scared of their shadow after a life of living under a rock.
 

Nightbird

Member
Doesn't Allahu akbar just mean Allah is great or something like that?

That wouldn't be offensive even if I tried to be offended over that
 

hokahey

Member
Disgusting. If this is the direction this country is headed, then there isn't much of a future to look forward to.

And yet, in all likelihood, many many many more people spoke arabic on a flight today and did not get kicked off. So while that doesn't make this incident ok, which incident or lack of incidents better shows a trend?
 

Nivash

Member
If inshallah (or allahu akbar) is associated with terrorists, then every single muslim must be a terrorist.

I'd go so far as to suspect that she didn't react to the whole of "inshallah" as much as to the "Allah" part. So yes, in her mind all probable Muslims are plausible terrorists. At least on airplanes (but probably in general too)

I must admit though, that shit is infectious. I've felt a jolt at times when someone unexpectedly start to speak Arabic on public transport, and I somewhat hate myself for it. I would never dream of acting on it, but for some reason the instinctive xenophobic fear is there anyway.

Maybe I should learn some Arabic to defuse it if I get the time.

Doesn't Allahu akbar just mean Allah is great or something like that?

That wouldn't be offensive even if I tried to be offended over that

That's the literal meaning, yes. It's pretty versatile as I understand it. The problem is that the media has essentially indoctrinated us into thinking about it as something terrorists yell before they blow something and/or themselves up.
 

sensui-tomo

Member
OH MY GOD CAN WE PLEASE START KICKING THE RACISTS OFF INSTEAD

I think a plane did that once a few years back or they bumped the person who was being accused to first class... I believe it was something with an old lady feeling uncomfortable with sitting next to a dark skinned person. Airline bumped him to first class for the inconvenience caused by her.
 

striferser

Huge Nickleback Fan
Can't speak arabic on plane...
Yeah, good time for the good old suing
Edit: oh, he don't want to sue them.

Sad state of affair.
 

andthebeatgoeson

Junior Member
I wonder if they should pull off both accuser and accused. Like, if you are genuinely concerned for your safety, why would you want to stay on the plane?

It's near impossible stopping people from reporting false shit but if you pull both parties off, would it solve this shit?

I'm frustrated that any racist can make a terrible claim and force discrimination onto other passengers and still fly without consequences.
 

Condom

Member
Why would you draw attention and start speaking Arabic when you are planning a terrorist attack?

I will not deny tho that I try to be extra friendly to people in case they do look funny at me or whatever when boarding. It's sad that I feel the need to do that but w/e, I don't want to end up like the kid in the article
 

MIMIC

Banned
Flying While Arabic.

Jeez. You'd think that the employee who came to speak to him would have been more understanding instead of "GTFO the plane"

Mr. Makhzoomi was able to book a new flight on Delta Air Lines and arrived in Oakland eight hours after he originally planned. He said he has no plans to pursue legal action against Southwest Airlines but he does want the company to apologize for the way its employees treated him.

If he's not going to sue, he should at least demand some free shit. Fuck an apology.
 

Dan

No longer boycotting the Wolfenstein franchise
If inshallah (or allahu akbar) is associated with terrorists, then every single muslim must be a terrorist.
And I think it's safe to say this passenger wouldn't recognize a single other word of Arabic.
 
This is the worst part:
Zahra Billoo, the executive director of the San Francisco Bay Area office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said there had been at least six cases of Muslims being pulled off flights so far this year.

Also props to the guy for saying he's not looking for money, just respect and dignity.
 

SolVanderlyn

Thanos acquires the fully powered Infinity Gauntlet in The Avengers: Infinity War, but loses when all the superheroes team up together to stop him.
I think a plane did that once a few years back or they bumped the person who was being accused to first class... I believe it was something with an old lady feeling uncomfortable with sitting next to a dark skinned person. Airline bumped him to first class for the inconvenience caused by her.
I want to see this article for the sheer vindication it represents. I hope this is true.
 

Syriel

Member
This is the worst part:


Also props to the guy for saying he's not looking for money, just respect and dignity.

Wish he would sue though. Both the woman who made up the false allegations about threats and the racist Southwest employee should be named.

Otherwise they're both going to keep living life as tho they did the right thing.
 
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