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I NEED A VERY SUBSTANTIVE RESPONSE TO TH DISCUSSION BELOW IN A MINIMUM OF 150 WORDS I chose to review a TED Talk, because I enjoy watching them in my...

I NEED A VERY SUBSTANTIVE RESPONSE TO TH DISCUSSION BELOW IN A MINIMUM OF 150 WORDS

I chose to review a TED Talk, because I enjoy watching them in my down time. I chose one that discusses a controversy within one of the humanities disciplines: religion.

The speaker is Suzanne Barakat, and the title of her talk is "Islamophobia killed my brother. Let's end the hate". She gave her speech in October of 2016. (Link: https://www.ted.com/talks/suzanne_barakat_islamophobia_killed_my_brother_let_s_end_the_hate/transcript?language=en)

Barakat talks about the death of her brother, Deah, his wife, Yusor, and her sister Razan. She describes the months prior to their deaths. Deah has just gotten accepted to dental school, as well as Yusor. They had only been married a month before they were killed. The three were eating dinner when their neighbor knocks on their door. Deah opens it up and is shot. The neighbor then proceeds to shoot the women as well, shoots Deah again, and then walks out. Barakat then describes the months after, and how when news of more crimes committed by Muslims in the area came about, it effected how her coworkers treated her.

I really enjoyed watching Suzanne Barakat speak about this topic. This must have been very hard for her talk about, but she did it to help spread a great message. I like how she noted the double standard of crimes committed by Muslims vs. crime committed by white Americans. If a Muslim commits murder, many people jump to the conclusion that all Muslims are terrorists, but there are white Americans that kill everyday. Mass homicides committed by white Americans are acts of terror as well. I also liked that she touched on the topic of neutrality. When one is neutral or doesn't speak up when micro-aggressions occur, you are enabling bigotry, and those build on top of one another. Suzanne Barakat's TED talk was powerful and I think many could unlearn their ignorance by hearing and seeing powerful things like this. (316)

chose to review a TED Talk, because I enjoy watching them in my down time. I chose one that discusses a controversy within one of the humanities disciplines: religion.

The speaker is Suzanne Barakat, and the title of her talk is "Islamophobia killed my brother. Let's end the hate". She gave her speech in October of 2016. (Link: https://www.ted.com/talks/suzanne_barakat_islamophobia_killed_my_brother_let_s_end_the_hate/transcript?language=en)

Barakat talks about the death of her brother, Deah, his wife, Yusor, and her sister Razan. She describes the months prior to their deaths. Deah has just gotten accepted to dental school, as well as Yusor. They had only been married a month before they were killed. The three were eating dinner when their neighbor knocks on their door. Deah opens it up and is shot. The neighbor then proceeds to shoot the women as well, shoots Deah again, and then walks out. Barakat then describes the months after, and how when news of more crimes committed by Muslims in the area came about, it effected how her coworkers treated her.

I really enjoyed watching Suzanne Barakat speak about this topic. This must have been very hard for her talk about, but she did it to help spread a great message. I like how she noted the double standard of crimes committed by Muslims vs. crime committed by white Americans. If a Muslim commits murder, many people jump to the conclusion that all Muslims are terrorists, but there are white Americans that kill everyday. Mass homicides committed by white Americans are acts of terror as well. I also liked that she touched on the topic of neutrality. When one is neutral or doesn't speak up when micro-aggressions occur, you are enabling bigotry, and those build on top of one another. Suzanne Barakat's TED talk was powerful and I think many could unlearn their ignorance by hearing and seeing powerful things like this. (316)

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