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COMBATING NEGATIVE STEREOTYPICAL IMAGES THAT ARE EXCHANGED BETWEEN COMPONENTS OF ISLAMIC UMMAH VIA ARTISTIC AND CULTURAL PRODUCTS AND MEDIA MESSAGES omar kalinge-nnyago ISESCO SPONSORED SEMINAR ORGANISED BY ISLAMIC UNIVERSITY IN UGANDA October 2009 INTRODUCTION The events of September 11, 2001 and what followed emphasised the need for better understanding between people in Muslim societies and those in non Muslim societies. Between Muslims and non-Muslims. Stereotypes and prejudices seem to have become more dominant in both directions. They are visible in political discourse, in the media and in education. They have become a hindrance to dialogue and cooperation all over the world, including Uganda. In order to stop these stereotypes from taking root and spreading, it is necessary to develop practical strategies and instruments that take into account the variety of geographical and historical context. This workshop is a step in this direction. It is hoped that at the end of this session, an understanding of the cultural specificities will be achieved and strategies to combat the negative consequences of stereotype shall be developed and agreed. One of the aims of this workshop is to address the current problems of stereotypes and mutual prejudices. This workshop focuses on the role of the Media and Civil Society. Definition of terms Muslim: Follower of the Islamic Faith. One who submits completely to the will of Allah. Ummah: the Nation of Islam. Muslims regard themselves as members of one nation irrespective of which geographical or political location they live. PREJUDICES AND STEREOTYPES We all use stereotypes. They help us classify and identify people based on criteria such as religion, gender, and ethnicity. It is a process of categorisation which has always existed and will always exist because it makes our lives easier. Stereotypes are common in thought. They are short cuts and real timesavers: everybody knows right away what we are talking about, and therefore stereotypes are used all the time, especially in the media. The problem with stereotypes is when we begin using them to give negative characteristics to other groups and treat individual members of these groups according to those characteristics. The lack of critical thought and the lack of knowledge favours an unconscious acceptance of the ‘truth’ employed in stereotypes. It is when we don’t know or when we have little information about another group that we accept a stereotype as a real image and start applying this half truth or indeed un truth to the whole group. Stereotypes are so powerful because they are simple, easily recognisable and enjoy the acceptance of the community in general. But they also discriminate and feed racism and xenophobia. They are essential but in a global world we have to understand how they emerge, how they function and why insufficient information favour negative stereotypes. What is amusing in one society might be offensive in another. Stereotypes are very convenient when it comes to organising our surroundings in a safe world that belongs to “us” and a disturbing outside world inhabited by “them”. For a long time, even long before September 11, mass media have produced images of Muslims and Islam as something to be justifiably afraid of. The Muslim Media, especially in the Muslim world has also perpetrated negative stereotypes bout the West. It is worth noting that it is not so much the individual westerner who is stereotyped but Western Culture and Society. In Muslim media, the discourse the West is often synonymous with moral deficiency, cultural incompatibility and religious animosity toward Islam. The Muslim media users are frequently presented with a self-image as the innocent and defenceless victims against an aggressive West. As a result of this misrepresentation of the West, both as power holders and societies in the Muslim media, the Western democracy model ends up working against the democratisation effort of the Muslim Societies. Role of the Media: There are broadly three positions on this issue. The role of the media is to report, to provide analysis and to defend the right to do so. If it either reduces or promotes prejudice, so be it. The media have a responsibility, and in fact a duty, to reflect and promote a set of core values of tolerance and mutual understanding The role of the media is not only to report what people do and say, but also to consistently question received wisdom and particularly the wisdom of those in power In 2005, the UN secretary General launched an initiative-Alliance of Civilisationsto address the widening gap between Muslim and Western societies by examining five core areas of society: Education Immigration integration Media Youth Political context In the media filed, researchers have identified how the media in both the Islamic world and West contribute to misinformation, stirred up feelings, and alienation. Although there are different structures in different places, the outcome is the same. The media cannot tell the citizens what to think. But they tell them what to think about- they set the agenda and understanding by the ideas they plant, the pictures they sketch, and the opinions they offer. The Western media like to see themselves as independent, dedicated to democracy, and socially responsible, but in reality, profit drives producers to present superficial information and repeat stereotypes. The news model in the Islamic world is more multifaceted. In some places the media are heavily censored and viewed through filters of national or Islamic identity. In other Muslim states, government control is easing and there is anew diversity in media outlets. There are extensive opportunities to overcome the media’s shortcomings in both cultures by increasing journalists’ professional skills and cultural sensitivity in avoiding stereotypes, by increasing media diversity, by instilling leadership within the media industry, and by supporting educational-entertainment media, which offer a global perspective. The emergence of new media such as the internet has made it more difficult to isolate people in the Muslim world. But it has also fostered more prejudices. The internet has created an open and uncontrolled space for information where stereotypes are being used to shape the enemy. The aim of the UN Alliance of Civilisations is not legislation but awareness and consciousness. But will this new awareness hold when war breaks out and the media come under pressure from both editors and governments? The media ought to work on a self regulation regime, so that their freedom is ensured more by their conscious actions than by articles of legislation. In the Western media, Islam is hardly ever covered as a religion, but is something which has to do with politics, fundamentalism, or terrorism. The Muslim media, on the other hand focuses on love conspiracies and see the western world as a sex fixated people with no moral, uncivilised politics and double standards. The only way out of this media misery on both sides is education in intercultural relations, an international code of ethics and dialogue on equal terms of respect. [email protected]