For Week of March 29, 2002
By Michael Miner
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Mentally, We're Back in Ramallah
"We're right in their faces, and they look past us like we're
ghosts," Ray Hanania was saying. "The only time people will listen to us is
if we go to the airport and yell `bomb!'"
Hanania had called to vent. The National Arab Journalists Association,
which he heads, held a weekend conference earlier this month at the
Radisson O'Hare, and it didn't get ink. By other measures it succeeded, but
the mainline dailies didn't cover it, even though their own people were on
some of the panels. This shouldn't have surprised Hanania, and probably
didn't -- journalists don't like to cover journalists, especially
themselves; and no one would accuse Hanania, once the Sun-Times's
City Hall reporter, of not understanding how things work.
"Every day there are conferences, meetings, and conventions in Chicago,
and the vast majority of them never get news coverage," says Steve Huntley,
who heads the editorial board of the Sun-Times and spoke at the
conference.
Hanania knows this is true but he was mad anyway. "I'd like to look at
society and see a reflection of us," he told me. "I feel like I'm a
vampire. If you don't see yourself in the news media, do you exist?"
I hadn't made it to the conference (and was feeling bad about that), so
I asked him to tell me what happened. He said about 125 Arab-American journalists showed up, about 30 of whom
work for mainstream media. Three local radio stations were represented --
stations "probably no one's ever heard of." And maybe 50 or 60 people from
Chicago's Arab community participated. It's a community, according to
Hanania, whose own heritage is Palestinian, that's known nothing about the
art of self-promotion. "If you ask them if they ever use the PR wire to
send a press release, 95 percent will tell you they don't even know what
that is." If they have something to say, they think they've got to say it
in the New York Times. "I said, `No, you don't. You've got to get it
in the Southtown and the Daily Herald and the
Reader.'"
One panel was composed of a delegation from the Tribune, which
has been catching serious heat from Jewish readers who believe its Middle
East coverage betrays a pro-Palestinian bias. All the more reason, Jewish
leaders believe, to maintain personal relationships with Tribune
reporters and editors. Arab readers aren't as sophisticated. If, in their
view, the Sun-Times has nothing to offer Palestinians but a nonstop
pounding, then the paper's a candidate for dismissal rather than
cultivation. "I don't think that Chicago Muslims are in contact with us
anywhere near to the extent that Jews are with the Tribune," Huntley
E-mailed me after the conference. But largely because the Sun-Times
seemed so alien and hostile, Huntley, who writes the Middle East
editorials, won points simply for showing up.
"I think the thrust of most of our editorials about the Mideast
situation depicts the problem with the Palestinians as one of failed
leadership," his E-mail went on, "not only from Arafat, but also from the
Arab nations that have left Palestinians to rot in refugee camps, to in
effect serve as cannon fodder for the Arab world's unrelenting rejectionist
campaign against Israel."
Huntley sat on a panel whose nominal topic was news coverage after
September 11. "I went to the conference prepared to talk about the paper's
editorial position, but I don't recall being asked about it," he told me.
"Several references were made to it, but no one got up and asked for an
explanation of the Sun-Times position on Israel.
"Much of the discussion centered on their complaints about bias in the
news media against Muslims, about how Muslims and the Muslim world are
treated in news stories. For instance, there were complaints about the use
of specific words such as `retaliation,' `militant,' and `terrorist.' I
told them that I had heard those same kinds of complaints about news media
bias from Jewish groups."
(The Tribune is so accustomed to being accused of biased
nomenclature that public editor Don Wycliff took up the subject in a March
21 column. "We know it when we see it," he wrote of terrorism. "Clearly we
saw it on Sept. 11." Wycliff didn't really disagree with Jewish critics --
or Arab critics -- who say the Tribune sees terrorism only when
Americans suffer. "Our perspective is inescapably American," he wrote,
"which is to say it is not identical to that of any of the contending
parties. To faithfully report and interpret the events [in the Middle East]
for our American readers, we must refrain from consistently labeling either
party as terrorists, because to do so is, in effect, to declare it
illegitimate.")
Hanania thought Huntley, whom he's known for years, handled himself
well. "When you get to know these editors a little bit better, you realize
they're not the bad people you ascribe them to be from reading their
stories," he told me. "He sits on a panel, and he defends his paper's
opinions, but he's a little more reasoned -- you could go up and talk to
him and he won't bite your head off. That's the level of animosity that
exists in our community -- you're either a monster or not a monster."
I asked if Huntley had disavowed anything his paper had published.
"Not really," said Hanania. "It was his tone. He was understanding. He
listened. You'd think going in, this guy hates you, because you read the
editorials and the editorials hate you and so you think, `Gee, the guy in
charge must hate you too.' And then you find out when you're talking to him
he's just a typical person. He's a nice person. He has a life outside
Middle East issues. These are things you don't see when you read an
editorial that calls you a murderous terrorist."
Anyway, said Hanania, "We're not going to be screaming at the
Sun-Times as much as we have been."
A point made at the conference, he said, was that Arab-Americans need to
understand where they are. "We've got to stop living like we're still
living in the West Bank -- because we have people here who are physically
living in Chicago, but they're mentally back in Ramallah. They pay taxes,
go to work, watch Everybody Loves Raymond, but when it comes to the
Middle East they revert back to the Middle East mentality where you're
under siege. They don't realize this country's a different kind of country
from the occupied West Bank or Jordan. The media's not government
controlled here.
"We have to be involved in our society as Americans. We have seven Arab
newspapers in Chicago, six of them in the Arab language. They're consumed
with politics and news from the Middle East. They don't even report on
their own events. We're not talking about Pete Dagher [who just ran for
Congress from the Fifth District and whose ancestry is Iraqi and Lebanese].
We're not talking about the fact that we don't have any Arab-American
aldermen in the City Council and school board. We can tell you exactly how
many Palestinians were killed last week, but we can't tell you how many
Arab-American students there are in the public schools system. [Hanania
thinks it might be as high as 20 percent.] We're detached. We lead two
separate lives."
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