The Risk of Racial Profiling
An essay by Robert Franklin
Listen to Franklin's essay.
Sept. 25, 2001 -- As an African-American, I know something about racial profiling. I've been
the target of racial profiling and I abhor it. But, since September 11th,
I've been guilty of practicing it. A few days ago, I took my first flight
since the hijackings and crashes. I sat in the rear section of a long and
half-full 767 jet.
Seated immediately in front of me was a gentleman who appeared to be of Arab
or South Asian descent. His head was down and he seemed quietly indifferent
to his surroundings. Walking along the aisle in our direction was an
attractive African American female flight attendant.
She seemed to be making friendly eye contact and small talk with each
passenger as a gesture of gratitude for our return to the airways. I looked
forward to my turn to visit with her. But just as she approached my row, she
looked at the guy in front of me, did a noticeable double-take, and frowned
at whatever he was holding.
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"Someone has observed that "truth is the first casualty of war." Liberty
must not become its second casualty. Permitting racial profiling and
prejudice to increase, whether in our hearts and minds or in our public
policy is not the American way."
Robert Franklin
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Abruptly, she turned around and walked back to the attendant's station where
she whispered to her colleagues, and they began to peer from around the
curtain at this gentleman. Well, this was quite enough to get me interested
and involved in the investigation. Who is this guy and what is he holding?
I discreetly sat up as far as I could and looked over the back of his seat,
over his shoulder to discover that he was reading a book. A Koran, the holy
book for Muslims. I felt embarrassed and annoyed with myself and with the
flight attendant.
But since then, I've begun to pay more attention to what friends in my south
Atlanta African-American neighborhood are saying about possible terrorist
cells that may be thriving in communities throughout America.
At the local Starbucks, I overheard two guys say that less than a mile from
where they were sipping double lattes, there were Middle-Easterners
operating a dry cleaner, a gas station and the local Baskin-Robbins ice
cream shop. What if they were bin Laden sympathizers?
Suddenly, I realized something disgusting was seeping into my community and
my own consciousness. We're all police now, and bad ones at that.
For years, African Americans have tried to convince America that some police
routinely subject innocent citizens to the humiliating ordeal of being
stopped, searched and verbally disrespected because of our color.
But, since September 11th, many Americans, including minorities, find
themselves trying to assess and predict the behavior, motives, and character
of other law-abiding people based on their physical appearance. A nation of
bad cops, training our untrained eyes upon ambiguous traits we call "Middle
Eastern."
Someone has observed that "truth is the first casualty of war." Liberty
must not become its second casualty. Permitting racial profiling and
prejudice to increase, whether in our hearts and minds or in our public
policy is not the American way. In the wake of our recent national tragedy,
this would only deepen and extend our pain. Worse, it would bring us a step
closer to the closed and controlled society our enemies cherish but our
founding fathers and mothers would abhor.
Robert Franklin is the president of the Interdenominational Center in
Atlanta, Ga.
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