The recent terrorist attacks in Paris will see New York on a
higher security alert than usual. There will be more armed soldiers and more
heavily armed police in some of our transit centers and crowded tourist areas.
New Yorkers this week will go to work as they normally do. The
buses will be too slow and the trains too crowded. New Yorkers will continue to
secretly and openly hate one another as is our birthright.
But what we won’t do is let savage lunatics keep us from
doing what we need to do. We’d love to stay home and watch the news while
eating cheese in solidarity with our brothers and sisters in France, but we
can’t afford the time off from work.
And, to borrow an over-used phrase, if we deviate from our
miserable daily routines, the terrorists have won. Let’s observe a moment of
silence for the victims of these horrors, but don’t dare be silenced by fear.
Don’t let the fear of terrorism affect how you live your life and don’t let the
fear of being labeled or maligned stop you from speaking your mind.
New Yorkers will be divided on what the Paris attacks sayabout Islam and the Muslim world at large. My social media news feed is
filled with people wanting to bomb all Muslims back to the stone age (some are
already there!) and people trying to shame us for caring more about Paris than
Beirut. All of this is nonsense. New Yorkers care more about Paris because
Paris is more like New York and it resonates when people more like ourselves
are harmed. That’s not xenophobia, that’s human nature.
The five boroughs are home to as many as 1 million Muslims
and most of them are peaceful people we interact with on a daily basis without
incident. It’s Muslims who are the biggest victims of Islamic fundamentalists
and Muslims who are doing the most to take the fight to these extremists.
And it’s also realistic Muslims who will admit that there’s a real problem with
Islam today. It’s the religion that has most dialed up the crazy factor
something terrible and the Islamic Uma has been home to an ideological war for
decades with too many moderates sympathizing with the other side.
New Yorkers are a generally liberal lot and the usual
suspects have expressed more angst about possible backlashes against Muslims
than about how we go about preventing another terrorist attack.
We’re a divided city just as we are a divided country, but after all the
hand-wringing and shouting, we’ll still be a buzzing metropolis. We’ve seen
terrorism at its worst and we’re still here.
New Yorkers will pause to honor the victims of terror and
then keep going to work and coming home every night. We’ve been down this road
before. There’s too much life to live here. We can’t afford the fear.
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