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Hamilton College Muslim America Poll
ANALYSIS
By Dennis Gilbert Professor of Sociology, Hamilton College
The Hamilton College Muslim America Poll is one of the few recent
surveys of the Muslim population in the United States. Over 500
Muslims, most of them U.S. citizens, were contacted by telephone in
late April 2002 and polled regarding the war on terrorism, related
foreign policy issues, and their own experiences of discrimination and
harassment since September 11. The poll was designed and analyzed by
the Hamilton researchers. It was funded by Hamilton?s Arthur
Levitt Public Affairs Center and administered by the polling firm Zogby
International. The survey had a margin of sampling error of plus or
minus 5 percent.
MUSLIM AMERICAThe Hamilton poll
found an American Muslim population that is largely foreign born,
culturally diverse, relatively young, highly educated, prosperous,
family oriented, religiously observant, and inclined toward the
Democratic Party.
Seventy percent of respondents were born abroad, though ninety
percent are American citizens. (In this report "American Muslims"
refers to the entire national sample, citizen and non-citizen.) Only 38
percent of Muslims in the U.S. are over 45 years old, compared to 52
percent of American adults. Nearly 70 percent of American Muslims over
25 have completed a college education, an achievement they share with
just 26 percent their American peers. Three quarters of Muslim
adults, but only half of all U.S. adults are married.
Asked to rate the importance of Islam in their lives, 70 percent
chose the top end of a 10-point scale, "extremely important."
Eighty percent say they pray daily. Half observe the five daily prayers
required of Muslims. Thirty-eight percent of women
wear the hair-covering hijab daily or almost daily. With regard
to party politics, 36 percent consider themselves Democrats, 18 percent
Republicans.
American Muslims reflect the variety of Islamic cultures across the
world. One in three respondents to the Hamilton poll was born in
an Arabic-speaking country; one in six in Pakistan. Many are
African-Americans. Some are black Africans. Six percent are
American-born and white. But this impressive cultural diversity appears
to have little effect on the opinions of American Muslims. On the
issues explored by the poll, differences by ethnicity, citizenship, or
for that matter, age and gender, were modest.
DISCRIMINATION AND HARASSMENTThe
Hamilton Muslim America Poll found high levels of anti-Muslim
discrimination and harassment, especially since September 11.
However, the poll also revealed that Muslims have encountered
widespread expressions of support from non-Muslim Americans.
The poll asked American Muslims about incidents of "anti-Muslim
discrimination, harassment, verbal abuse, or physical attack" directed
against "Muslims, Muslim-owned businesses or Islamic institutions" in
their communities.
- Sixty percent report anti-Muslim incidents in their communities since 9-11. Only 21 percent recall earlier incidents.
- About half personally know someone who has been victimized since 9-11.
- One in four respondents have themselves been victims since 9-11.
The incidents reported typically involve "dirty looks," petty
harassment, or verbal abuse (sometimes with a menacing edge) in public
places. (Airport incidents are surprisingly rare.) A man cuts in front
of a Muslim college student, her head covered with a hijab, in a
grocery checkout line. He says, "Let Osama's clan wait." A
mother and her son are shoved by a woman as they emerge from a bank.
"Can't you see [us]?" she asks. "I see animals" is the reply. Strangers
pull up in front of a Muslim home and scream abuse. A Muslim girl
is suspended from school; legal action is required to reinstate
her. Another is told she will be blown up.
Although the majority of American Muslims or people they know have
had such experiences, they do not generally perceive other Americans as
hostile. Seventy percent of respondents to the Hamilton poll
describe Americans as "friendly" or at least "neutral" toward Muslims
in the United States. One reason may be the support they have received
from Americans who do not share the attitudes of a bigoted minority.
Many respondents say that non-Muslim religious leaders and other
prominent people in their communities have publicly condemned
anti-Muslim abuses. Seventy percent of American Muslims report
that non-Muslims have "personally conveyed support" to them since
9-11.
REACTIONS TO 9-11 AND U.S. FOREIGN POLICY American
Muslims appear divided and conflicted in their reactions to the
September attacks and their aftermath. Asked if Osama Bin Laden's
Al Qaeda network was responsible for the attacks, 44 percent offer no
opinion; only a third blamed Al Qaeda. Forty percent describe the
U.S. worldwide response to 9-11 as a "war on terrorism," but a third
see it as a "war on Islam." Half believe that U.S. military action in
Afghanistan was justified, 43 percent disagree.
American Muslims are more unified in their reactions to the
widespread questioning and detentions of Muslims in the U.S. by Federal
authorities since 9-11: Nearly two-thirds describe these actions
as "an unwarranted abuse of civil liberties." Only 20 percent say
they are "necessary to protect the country from a terrorist
threat."
American Muslims share a similar consensus with regard to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- probably reinforced, during the polling
period, by the Israeli invasion of Palestinian territories and the Bush
administration's wavering efforts to mediate. Seventy-five
percent "strongly agree" with the statement "the U.S. has always sided
with the Israelis against the Palestinians." Sixty percent
reject the idea that the Bush administration "is trying to bring about
a fair peace between Palestinians and Israelis."
With regard to another preoccupation of American foreign policy, the
Iraqi regime, American Muslims are generally sympathetic to the Iraqis
but not their leader. Almost 70 percent believe that U.S. policy
"is causing undue suffering for the Iraqi people." Nonetheless,
by a modest margin (47 to 40 percent), they agree that "the U.S. should
try to remove Iraqi President Saddam Hussein from power."
COMPARISONS WITH OTHER AMERICANS AND MUSLIMS ABROADThe
Hamilton poll reveals a pattern of opinion that distinguishes American
Muslims from other Americans, but also separates them from Muslims
abroad.
With regard to responsibility for the September 11 attacks, for
example, American Muslims appear both more divided and more likely to
blame Al Qaeda than are Muslims elsewhere. Thirty four percent of
American Muslims blame Al Qaeda; a larger group has no opinion. In
contrast, only 18 percent of respondents to a CNN/Gallup survey of nine
Muslim countries thought that Arabs (a category which presumably would
include Al Qaeda operatives) carried out the attacks. On the
other hand, the major U.S. polling organizations have not even bothered
to question the general population about this issue. Within days of the
September attacks, American pollsters began to ask questions regarding
U.S. policy that assumed, probably correctly, that the few Americans
doubted the official assignment of blame to Bin Laden and his
organization.
American Muslims, the Hamilton poll confirms, see the U.S. policy in
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as one-sided. Most Americans
reject this characterization of current U.S. policy, according to a
Newsweek poll released last month. At the same time, recent
national polls have repeatedly shown that Americans are, by wide
margins, more sympathetic to the Israelis than the Palestinians -- an
attitude that U.S policy makers find hard to ignore.
American Muslims are closer to general American opinion and further
from worldwide Muslim opinion on U.S. action in Afghanistan.
Fifty-one percent of the American Muslims polled by Hamilton, close to
90 percent of Americans in recent U.S. polls, but only 9 percent of
Muslims in the CNN international survey regard U.S. military action in
Afghanistan as justified.
Reports from the Middle East suggest that U.S. threats against
Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq are highly unpopular. In
contrast, Americans in recent U.S. polls support his removal from
power, as do American Muslims, but by a much smaller margin.
With the exception of the Palestinian question, American Muslims
appear much more divided and ambivalent about foreign policy issues
than are other Americans or Muslims abroad. Often their mixed opinions
and sympathies suggest a population pulled between two worlds.
CONDUCTING THE MUSLIM AMERICA POLLThe
Hamilton College Muslim America Poll is one in a series of national
surveys conducted by Hamilton students and faculty in collaboration
with the polling firm Zogby International. Previous polls have
covered issues including the racial attitudes of young adults (1999),
youth and guns (2000), and gay issues (2001). Like most of the
previous Hamilton surveys, the Muslim America poll was wholly funded by
Hamilton's Levitt Public Affairs Center.
The poll was designed and analyzed by Hamilton Sociology Professor
Dennis Gilbert and Hamilton College students. The Hamilton research
team wrote the questionnaire. A combined total of 550 calls were
completed for a small pilot poll and the final poll of 521 American
Muslims over the age of 18. All the pilot calls and 117 of the final
calls were made by the Hamilton students at Zogby International
facilities, under the supervision of Zogby personnel. Calls
for the final survey were made between April 11 and 30.
The 521-call final survey had a margin of sampling error of
approximately plus or minus 5 percent. Zogby International employed a
sampling technique that has been used successfully in several previous
surveys. A call list was compiled by software that identifies common
Muslim names in telephone listings. This approach probably undersamples
African-American Muslims and converts, who are less likely to have
typically Muslim names. For cultural reasons, females are less likely
to participate in surveys of Muslim populations. The original sample
was reweighted to correct for a 60/40 split between men and women. The
reweighting had little affect on the final results (under 2 percent on
opinion questions).
The Hamilton researchers are grateful for advice on the Muslim
America questionnaire from Zahid Bukhari (Georgetown University),
Mohamed Nimer (Council on American-Islamic Relations), Myra Hamid
(Hamilton '02), and Shahzada Ahmad (Hamilton '01).
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Hamilton College Muslim America Poll
Developed
by: Dennis Gilbert, Professor of Sociology Kim Aber '04
Leann Atkinson '02
Timothy Berbenich '02
Elaine Brooks '04
Ciere Cornelius '05
Keith Foster '03
Rachel Geringer-Dunn '04
Paul Jones '03
Dan Kaufmann '03
Conducted
in collaboration with: Zogby International
Supported
by: The Arthur Levitt Public Affairs Center at Hamilton College
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