In the few months after President Donald Trump Tok’s office, the campaign against diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) policies has expanded to an unprecedented scale. Civil and military officers have been withdrawn from their positions with the justification that they were “hiring of diversity.” Web pages dedicated to historical figures with various origins have been eliminated from government websites. Programs have been completed to improve diversity and inclusion. Federal financing for schools has been conditioned to directors signing anti-Dei certificates.
The private sector has followed its example. Company after company has announced that they are ending Dei’s objectives and abandoning the dei programs. But while these ads were made in recent months, the truth is that the process of abandoning commitments to diversity and inclusion began before Trump Toke’s office.
Last year, numerous anecdotes revealed that employers in all areas were violating their own standards from taking advertising measures against Muslim and Arab employees.
In May, Hesen Jab, a nurse who had been used to receive a prize from Nyu Langone Health, was fired and accused of “ruining the ceremony” and “putting others at risk” after talking about the effect of the Genandmida on Palestine.
In October, two Arab Muslim employees, Abdo Mohamed and Hossam Nasr, were fires to organize a vigil for the Palestinians killed in Gaza that Microsoft said violated the company’s policy, although the organizers informed Lyard.
Earlier this year, in the Council of American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) we compile the data we had compiled from the complaints presented through 2024 and confirmed which anecdotal evidence already pointed out: Islamophobia.
Cair received 1,329 complaints of labor discrimination in 2024, which was higher than complaints related to education. It became the highest category reported for the first time in organizations of 30 years of history.
The increase is clearly related to the greatest suppression of the critical views of Israel’s attacks against Gaza, which numerous entities such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and a special committee have consistent acts of genocide.
We already saw an increase in such complaints at the end of 2023, when in the last three months of that year, which overcame the beginning of the Israeli war in Gaza, we recorded 662 labor discrimination reports. In comparison, for all 2022, we recover only 563 of these reports.
More frequently, employers attacked Palestinian, Arab, Muslim and other employees for speech related to identity; In many cases, these same companies or institutions allowed this type of speech for the employees of other ethnic and religious origins.
In Google, for example, employees are encouraged to participate in the “open culture” of the company and adopt their racial identity and sexual orientation at work. Arab and Muslim employees, however, report that they receive instructions to “refrain from commenting on support from the Palestinians.”
According to reports, in a Maryland high school, instructors have expressed opinions on various issues, “from racial justice to war in Ukraine.” However, Hajur El-Haggan, an Arab Muslim employee, was disciplined when he expressed his views on Palestine.
In a medical center in California, the hospital’s badge staff wobbles with messages, such as “Black Lives Matter”; However, Yasmin Bishr, which is a visible or the Middle East and North Africa, was indicated by using a “free Palestinian” badge.
In the seemingly rare cases in which the Palestinians are encouraged, the Arabs and the Muslims to share the speech related to the identity at work, such expressions are only acceptable to the extent that they do not express criticism of the campaign and Palest has been the heritage involved.
According to the reports, the administrators affirmed that HESSE JABIN “mentions [her] Mother and [her] Grandma “Duration of her awards acceptance speech, but she” should have stopped there. “
After the Administration postponed an event related to Palestine, the employees of a Minneapolis hospital learned that they were allowed to “normalize the Palestinian culture” only to the extent that it did not qualify as Herainstor “activism”.
As with any circumstance that impacts a minority group, we know that this crisis of labor discrimination will not only affect Muslim employees, paleestinians and Arab, or ends subject to Islamophobia and racism for speaking by Speakinian.
If Muslim, Palestinian and Arab voices could be on the sidelines and entire work cultures so quickly ignored to appease a foreign state, we fear that the worst is yet to come.
What this moment demands, as it has always done in times of political division, is for people of various religions, background and experiences to find solidarity in their shared conditions and resist attempts to punish freedom of expression.
The opinions expressed in this article are typical of the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial position of Al Jazeera.