In post-Oct 7 America, Muslim students continue to learn a harsh lesson wherein their speech is often heard through suspicion before it is heard on its own terms. For months, protests swept across major college campuses in the US as tens of thousands of students called for an end to the Israel-Gaza war, with some even turning violent.
Today, the same disturbing reality sits at the centre of a federal lawsuit filed by the Council on American-Islamic Relations against one of America’s largest public school systems. The suit alleges that four Muslim students were unlawfully disciplined over a viral Muslim Student Association skit while similar conduct by other student groups did not invite comparable punishment.
Filed in federal court in Alexandria, Virginia, the case claims that school officials violated the students’ constitutional rights and federal civil rights protections by suspending them over a social media video. The skit followed a familiar online format where students were asked whether they would attend an event, and those who said no were jokingly carried away. The plaintiffs argue that the video contained no weapons, no threats and no reference to any real-world conflict.
The case should trouble anyone who believes public schools in any part of the world must be fair before they are reactive. Even if understandable that, in the shadow of October 7, some Jewish families and organisations viewed mock abduction imagery as painful or alarming, and schools have a duty to protect Jewish students from antisemitism and intimidation, that obligation cannot become a licence to treat Muslim students as presumptive offenders.
CAIR’s central claim is not that schools lack authority to discipline inappropriate conduct. It is that the district punished Muslim and Arab students more harshly because their identity made the same teenage skit appear more sinister. If comparable videos by others were tolerated, the question is not whether administrators were anxious. The question is whether they were fair.
This is where the matter becomes larger than one video. Since Gaza, many Muslim, Arab and Palestinian students in Western schools have felt that their grief, symbols and political language are treated as threats before they are treated as expressions.
Palestinian symbols are not, by themselves, disciplinary offences. Nor should Muslim students be made to prove, again and again, that their clubs, clothing and community spaces are not coded violence. To make Muslim children carry the burden of every geopolitical event involving Muslims abroad reeks of prejudice wearing the mask of caution. *