Professor-ing While Black

 A prosecutor is dropping a charge against prominent Harvard University professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. after Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the city’s police department recommended that the matter not be pursued.

In a joint statement, Cambridge and the police department said they made the recommendation to the Middlesex County district attorney and the district attorney’s office “has agreed to enter a nolle prosequi in this matter,” meaning that it will not be pursued.

Gates was arrested last week on a charge of disorderly conduct after a confrontation with an officer at his home, according to a Cambridge police report./p>

So much for a post-racial, America…

As a civil rights lawyer, I do not even know where to begin on this humdinger of a textbook ‘racial profiling’ case…

Notwithstanding the racial profiling adages of ‘driving while black’ or ‘flying while brown’, the recent case of Harvard Professor Henry Louis “Skip” Gates is something that should be of concern to all Americans.

First of all, Dr. Gates is the director of Harvard’s W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research — who had returned from China last Thursday to his Cambridge home and discovered his front door jammed.

And the rest is racial profiling history…

For many males of color in America today, this tragic story came as little surprise and was clearly indicative of the fact that our nation is still far from being ‘post-racial’ (even with you in the White House, Mr. President)

To highlight the tragic absurdity of Professor Gates’ case, imagine for a moment, if you will,  if the case hypothetically involved a Washington DC police officer instead:

Police Officer to Dispatcher: “African-American male…About 6′2″…Seems to be trying to enter a residence at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW…Oh wait…He lives there…”

 

Link back to original article here.

 

Arsalan Iftikhar
Contributing Editor, Islamica Magazine
Founder, TheMuslimGuy.com
arsalan@themuslimguy.com

 

Global Website: www.TheMuslimGuy.com
YouTube Channel: www.YouTube.com/ArsalanTV
A.I. on Facebook at: www.Facebook.com/TheMuslimGuy
Arsalan on Twitter at: www.Twitter.com/TheMuslimGuy

 

About arsalan.iftikhar

Arsalan Iftikhar is an international human rights lawyer and Contributing Editor for Islamica magazine; a contemporary global affairs magazine headquartered in Los Angeles and with editorial offices in London, Amman and Cambridge, Massachusetts. He is also the founder of www.TheMuslimGuy.com and a regular weekly contributor on the Barbershop segment for the National Public Radio (NPR) show ‘Tell Me More’ with Michel Martin.

His interviews, commentaries and analyses have regularly appeared in virtually every major media outlet in the world including: CNN, BBC World News, The TODAY Show, National Public Radio (NPR), FOX News Channel, MSNBC, Associated Press, C-SPAN,  Voice of America (VOA), Al-Jazeera, Agence France-Presse (AFP), USA TODAY, NBC Nightly News, The Washington Post, ABC World News Tonight, Los Angeles Times, CBS News Up to the Minute, The New York Times, Rolling Stone, TIME, The Economist and Newsweek magazines (among dozens others worldwide).

He is also a regular contributor to CNN's Anderson Cooper 360 blog at AC360.com and his opinion columns have appeared in major publications such as: USA TODAY, CNN.com, Houston Chronicle, Detroit Free Press, The Providence Journal, San Diego Union-Tribune, Charlotte Observer, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Kansas City Star, Miami Herald and many more.

In March 2008, Arsalan was one of four international debaters selected to participate in The Doha Debates on BBC World Television. The Doha Debates are broadcast to over 300 million people worldwide on BBC World Service Television and its stage has been shared with the likes of Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former United States President Bill Clinton.

In addition to The Doha Debates, some of Arsalan’s other international speaking venues have included: Harvard University, Stanford University, Georgetown University, Johns Hopkins University, University of Pennsylvania, The George Washington University Elliott School of International Affairs, University of Michigan School of Law, The Rockefeller Foundation, The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and The British Museum in London.

Additionally, Arsalan was cast as a Hollywood movie ‘featured extra’ in the Warner Brothers spy movie thriller Body of Lies (October 2008) starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe. He was also a contributing author to Keeping Out the Other (Columbia University Press) and Taking Back Islam (Rodale Press); winner of the 2003 Wilbur Communications Award for Religion Book of the Year. In 2006, the French Ambassador to the United States personally named him to the Personnalités d’Avenir (Personalities of the Future) World Leader Program in Paris sponsored by the French Foreign Ministry.

Arsalan graduated from Washington University in St. Louis in 1999 and received his law doctorate from Washington University School of Law in 2003. A native of Chicago, he specializes in international human rights law and is licensed to practice law in Washington DC.

Arsalan's Global Website: www.TheMuslimGuy.com

Arsalan on Facebook: www.Facebook.com/TheMuslimGuy

Arsalan on Twitter: www.Twitter.com/TheMuslimGuy

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3 Responses to Professor-ing While Black

  1. rann July 22, 2009 at 4:56 pm #

    It seems the whole thing was not all that "racial" as much as it was a mis-understanding on the parts of both the Police and Mr. Gates." Why, everyone is jumping the the race card about this situation is beyond me, espcially, after, hearing what went down on both their parts. The Officer was answering a call to a possible break-in, Mr Gates does not understand why Police are ording him out of his own house because he is not aware that a neighbor called in a possible home invasion. I think both parties are guilty of over-reacting and mis-understandings and not much more.

    Racial bias is alive and well but this was not a case of it as far as I can see. What is more interesting is that everyone has jumped on the "racial profiling bandwagon" in this situation just as Mr. Gates has. Mr. Gates called wolf as an angry over-reaction to Police Officers answering a call to a possible home invasion. Now, what if there really was a possible home invasion? Like, there is no possibility of that happening in Cambridge, MA,? Get a grip folks.

    There are plenty of cases of racial profiling that need attention, I suggest they be taken care of while the Police Officers and Mr Gates recognize their own over-reactions and take responsibility for them. And, I suggest, the news media check out the facts before spreading mis-information across the airwaves.

  2. dymty July 23, 2009 at 8:38 am #

    I would appreciate hearing the perspective of a police officer in this matter, and the types of judgement calls he or she must make every day regarding personal and societal safety.

    Our society is full of people who live their lives outside of safe and respectible ethics and morals, and we count on these officers of the peace to keep them in check. We owe them a debt of gratitude and respect.

    Growing up, my childhood was less than ideal, and yes, I have been in the back of a police car with handcuffs more than once. But I don't have a bent against the police. In fact I thank them for doing their job when I get the chance. A few months ago I was pulled over for having a burned out tail light. It gave the officer a chance to verify that my driver's license, registration and insurance were all up to date, and that I hadn't been drinking. I was told to have the light repaired and was sent on my way. I thanked the officer for doing his job in making my town a safer place to live.

    We all like to make assumptions about people's motives and suggest that people behave a certain way because of something that we project onto them. I did not for one second assume that I was being pulled over for no reason other than to be hassled by 'the man'. I had every intention of complying with the officer's requests, and to not get beligerent and question the officer's motives. I fully understood HE WAS DOING HIS JOB. He was doing his job so we (all of us) can live our lives in peace and freedom.

    The next time some breaking news story comes up about police being accused of beating someone, or harrassing someone, or racially profiling someone, ask yourself "For how long would I like to trade places with him, and deal with the drug-addled, emotionally unstable, ethically and morally bankrupt, and lethally-armed maniacs who have absolute and total disregard for society?" Better yet, why not spend a few hours some evening visiting your city's lock-up facility and just 'hang out' with some of the 'regulars' to get a flavor of what these police officers deal with on a daily basis. Oh yeah, now there's some good times…..

  3. KourtneyQ July 30, 2009 at 2:05 am #

    I think Rann bae is right. There is just a simple misunderstanding that led to a ntional issue. The aftermath of the arrest of Henry Louis Gates, Jr. saw some very negative fallout and accusations of racism more after President Obama remarked about the incident. Then there were repeated requests to hear the Gates 911 Call. The Gates 9/11 call has been released, and there isn't mention of the race in the call. Gates was trying to get into his own home after returning from a trip, and the door was jammed. In the process of trying to gain access, police were called thinking it was a burglary. Gates apparently became hostile to officers, and was booked for that reason, charges having later been dropped. No suits have been filed, but no one needs payday loans to get the Gates 911 Call transcripts.