The American public's reaction to the Ebola virus outbreak that's killed over 4,000 people has moved from concern to outright xenophobia exist
Call it "Ebola racism."
With the death of Liberian Thomas E.Duncan at a Dallas hospital last
week and news that two nurses who treated him have contracted the deadly
illness, increasingly paranoid Americans are treating immigrants and visitors from Ebola-ravaged countries like Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone like lepers.
In Washington, D.C., the Washington Post reports that public anxiety over Ebola has taken a toll on immigrants from Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. More than 161,000 African immigrants live in the Washington region, including around 10,000 from Sierra Leone and 6,000 from Liberia, the Census Bureau reported this month.
In Washington, D.C., the Washington Post reports that public anxiety over Ebola has taken a toll on immigrants from Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. More than 161,000 African immigrants live in the Washington region, including around 10,000 from Sierra Leone and 6,000 from Liberia, the Census Bureau reported this month.
"People, once they know you are Liberian — people assume you
have the virus in your body, which is not the case," Alphonso Toweh, a
man from Monrovia, told the Washington Post. He experienced this paranoia firsthand:
Alphonso Toweh was riding a bus when a man sitting next to him politely asked where he was from.
"Liberia," said Toweh, a writer from Monrovia who is visiting the Washington area, home to the nation's second-largest population of African immigrants.
"At that point, the man went far from me," he said. "He did not want to come close to me. People, once they know you are Liberian — people assume you have the virus in your body, which is not the case."
Toweh isn't the only person from Washington D.C.'s
burgeoning West African population who faces irrational discrimination
from Americans. Toweh said some African immigrants he knows were asked
to leave work out of fear they'd transmit the virus.
In Pennsylvania, a 16-year-old high school soccer player from West Africa, Ibrahim Toumkara, was tormented with chants of "Ebola" by opposing players during a game.
"There were tears coming down his eyes," Edward Bachert, a Lehigh County police officer and Toumkara's legal guardian, told WPVI. "He
was visibly shaken by this; that it got to that level on the field."
The taunting eventually led to a fight and the resignations of two
rival coaches six days later.
Furthermore, Navarro College in Corsicana has officially refused to accept international students from "countries with confirmed Ebola cases."
Nigerian-American academic Idris Ayodeji Bello, 33,
was alarmed when his colleague's brother-in-law was rejected on the
basis of this policy, receiving a letter Bello that was then posted to Twitter:
Of course, it's not just in the U.S.: A tasteless entry in a "car
costume" event by ENSOC, the Engineering Society of the University of
Canterbury, mocked Ebola victims by decking out a student in head-to-toe blackface.
While 65% of Americans are concerned about a possible outbreak, they're expressing that concern in questionable and tasteless ways. Africa can beat Ebola though. Nigeria and Senegal have all but eradicated the spread of the virus in their borders. But that's not necessarily what you hear due to the media's crooked portrayal
of Ebola. If the world is to overcome the Ebola crisis, it'll need less
"us versus them" and more compassion, research and understanding.
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