Next month is Asian Pacific American Heritage Month and inevitably, many people wonder exactly who or which ethnic groups are included in the category of “Asian Pacific American.” Specifically, several have asked me whether Arab and Middle Eastern Americans should be included. This is a complicated question to be sure and the short answer is technically (i.e., from the Census Bureau and federal government’s definition), they are considered White, not Asian.
However, as the Los Angeles Times reports, several in the Arab and Middle Eastern American community don’t consider themselves White (and certainly aren’t always treated as if they’re White) nor Asian. Instead, they are tying to create a new racial definition that more accurately represents their history, characteristics, and experiences:
Nicole Salame, 19, was filling out an application to UCLA last year when she got to the question about race and ethnicity. She thought a mistake had been made. . . . Her Lebanese-born mother told her Arabs are considered white, but Salame didn’t believe her. Her high school counselor told her the same thing. . . . For years the federal government has classified Arab Americans and Middle Easterners as white. But confusion and disagreement have led some students to check “Asian” or “African,” depending on what part of the Middle East they came from. Some, like Salame, simply marked “Other.”
Now several UCLA student groups — including Arabs, Iranians, Afghanis and Armenians — have launched a campaign to add a Middle Eastern category, with various subgroups, to the University of California admissions application. They hope to emulate the Asian Pacific Coalition’s “Count Me In” campaign, which a few years ago successfully lobbied for the inclusion of 23 ethnic categories on the UC application, including Hmong, Pakistani, Native Hawaiian and Samoan.
The UCLA students said having their own ethnic designation goes beyond self-identity and has real implications for the larger Arab and Middle Eastern communities.
The article points out that in past decades, those of Arab and Middle Eastern descent fought to be legally and officially designated as White, which was formalized by the Census in 1970. However, in the context of recent demographic, political, and cultural trends, Arab and Middle Eastern Americans now are more inclined to identify as a separate racial/ethnic group, one that better reflects the uniqueness of their community:
UCLA junior Shawn Gabrill said he has more in common with other children of immigrants than with those whose parents were born in this country.
“I feel like when I put down ‘white’ on an application, they assume my parents finished high school, went to college and that English was my first language,” the 20-year-old English major said. “And none of these things describe me.”
Gabrill, the son of Jordanian and Egyptian parents, said he had difficulties with the college application but, because he was seen as white, he wasn’t identified as someone who needed extra help from high school counselors.
“So it’s kind of like we’re in between. We’re not white, but we’re not as disadvantaged as the other groups so we don’t get any of that aid,” he said. “So we’re kind of invisible in that way.”
Of course, the usual criticism from more “traditional” Americans is that such an effort to create a new racial category will only divide our country further and would make it harder to unite everyone under a universal “American” identity. The problem with that argument is that first, based on our country’s history and still embedded in most of our social institutions, a universal “American” identity has usually meant being White. Therefore, in denying Arab and Middle Eastern Americans their own identity amounts to another misguided “colorblind” approach that ignores the historical legacies and contemporary realities of American racial history.
The second problem with this colorblind argument is that it flies in the face of real and significant demographic changes taking place all around us, and the political and cultural shifts that result from such changes. As I’ve consistently written about, being “American” in the 21st century is more than just a sense of patriotic loyalty. That’s part of it, but it also includes making real contributions to America’s political, economic, and cultural future in the face of globalization, financial crises, and the changing political landscape around the world.
With that in mind, just like Asian Americans, Arab and Middle Eastern Americans are poised to use their transnational cultural ties to bridge the gaps that currently divide the U.S. from other religions and countries. If the U.S. is to retain its “superpower” status and level of influence around the world, trying to impose American ideals and models of government or economy will not work any longer and in fact, will only hasten our country’s decline.
Instead, as the Obama administration has recognized, we need to embrace these global trends and build more mutually-respectful connections, relationships, and networks with countries and religions around the world, particular in Asia and the Middle East. Although it’s too late to be officially implemented in the 2010 census, one step in that process is to support the efforts of Arab and Middle Eastern Americans to create their own racial category that reflects their unique history, experiences, and resources that they can contribute in helping us forge a new American identity here in the U.S. and around the world.
Comments 9
naya — April 9, 2014
this makes no sense. Even Wikipedia is misinformed. The middle east is clearly in asia. The only real "whites are those descendants from EUPORE
Mat — April 25, 2014
The US is SHOCKINGLY an apartheid Country. What a disgusting country. Majority of the people of the Middle East do NOT consider themselves White or Black or Brown or Yellow. They identify themselves with their countries and tribes and languages and religions. The US is a country obsessed with RACE and HATE. And they don't like the people of African descent which they enslaved for centuries. The reason they claim Middle Easterners as White is because of their rich culture and history.
They (Americans) seem to be suffering from identity crises and inferiority complex. The US is a nation founded on tragedy, blood bath, massacre, land theft, slavery and much more. Majority of the people born in this country today are born with parents who are NOT legally married. In other words majority of Americans are BASTARDS. The US is an immoral & illegitimate country.
KingmakersDaughter — September 12, 2014
Arabs are NOT White, neither are Africans. WTF is wrong with the US?? Why do they try to dishonor us thus?? We Whites are EUROPEAN DESCENT ONLY, meaning Anglos, Germanics, Mediterraneans (Greeks, Italians, Spanish), Francs (French), Nordics, Celtics, Slavics, and Russians. NO ONE ELSE IS WHITE!!! In fact we Whites fought against Arabs in the crusades and the Ottoman empire! They are brown with very different genetics than Whites!! Hopefully soon they will change this HEINOUS classification because it makes me sick!!!
Satine — January 29, 2015
@KingmakersDaughter Just for your information, Turkish people (descendant of Ottoman Empire) have european blood. So I don't see the purpose of your comment. They are closed to Greek, Armenian, Georgian and Balkan people than Arabs or Asian People. Just check the genetic profile of Turkish people. Cypriots, Portuguese, Southern Spanish and Italian people have a lot of semitic blood...so what, aren't they white? What about the Bosniaks, Albanians, Tchetchens, aren't they white for you?
Kuro — April 20, 2015
As an Arab I will clear this up for the logical friends of mine here. Where do Arabs ultimately originate from? Saudi Arabia. Where is Saudi Arabia? Western Asia. Who created the term Asia? Middle Easterners.
If anyone in the world is Asian, it's West Asians. We're just as Asian as any Mongolian, Chinese, Korean, or Japanese person. They only became Asians like 150 - 200 years ago, before they were simply Orientals. When did it become such that other people decided our identity for us? No. We're Asians, not Caucasians and surely not white.
To create the term Middle Eastern as a racial choice is absurd. Middle East is a eurocentric term made to group a bunch of people together not based on race but on culture. Middle East sometimes includes Afghanis and even Turks.
Mr.hater — May 16, 2016
I'm a white American that never agreed with this. They are not white. I know some people out there make this huge fuss about them technically being considered "Caucasians", but even if that were true, they're still not white. They're different enough culturally and physically to have their own category. And I don't mean this with disrespect, but more so the embarassment of the backwards American socio-politics.