In January 2018, I attended a seminar entitled Stand! Speak! Act! A Community Bystander
Intervention Training. The subheading suggested I would learn how to
nonviolently support someone who was being harassed. The event was presented by
the local chapter of CAIR (Council on American-Islamic Relations), the Muslim
Solidarity Group, and the local rapid response team. The idea of becoming a
nonviolent ally in directly ameliorating the harm from harassment greatly appealed
to me. I found the seminar enlightening, although not always in ways I
expected.
To begin with, although two of the event’s three sponsors
were specifically Muslim solidarity groups, the techniques and strategies apply
whenever a person is being targeted. Although hate crimes against Muslims have
increased drastically (first after 9/11 and then ongoing since Trump's election), racism (anti-black, anti-Hispanic, anti-Asian) still accounts
for the majority of incidents, and anti-LGBTQ violence continues. Most of my
friends and relatives who have been harassed have been targeted because of race,
sexual orientation, or gender identification, but by far the greatest number
have been because of race. The principles of intervention remain the same, and
if in the future some other group becomes a target for extremism and violence,
allies will step forward.
The workshop drew its guidance and inspiration from the
principles set out by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.:
- Nonviolence is a way of life for courageous people
- Nonviolence seeks to win friendship and understanding
- Nonviolence seeks to defeat injustice, not people
- Nonviolence holds that suffering can educate and transform
- Nonviolence chooses love instead of hate
- Nonviolence believes that the universe is on the side of justice.
It’s tempting to lash out when you or someone you observe is
a target of violence, whether physical or verbal. We’ve all seen enough
superhero movies to want to jump in, swirling our capes, and single-handedly take
on the offender. Outrage at what we perceive to be hateful and wrong fuels our
adrenaline. It’s hard to remain calm, to think clearly, and to act from
principle instead of reactive emotion. That’s why practice is so important.
Harassment can escalate very quickly, and unless we have some experience in how
we are vulnerable to engagement, we can become swept up in the confrontation.
Bystander intervention
isn’t about confronting the person spewing hatred, it’s about supporting the
person being targeted.