First Talk: Racism, "Civilizational" Legacy of the West

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Since the humanity exists, humankind has faced oppression in all corners of the earth. The most difficult form of oppression, when a humankind finds his fellow human beings striving to humiliate, enslave him, unaware that he - like them - has a soul yearning for justice, a heart beating with emotions, and a longing for the beauty hidden within existence and the light emanating from behind veils, telling him that Allah, Almighty, hears and sees everything.

Throughout history, humanity has suffered from the issue of racism, which emperors, kings, and nations propagated it. In the present day, the West has become its leader, hiding behind it its own contradictions and moral failings, using it as a tool to oppress the weak, both among nations and individuals.

Although the West seeks to present itself as the birthplace of democracy and the leading defender of freedoms and human rights, racism remains a daily reality for millions of ethnic minorities and migrants within Western societies. Since the official abolition of slavery, through the civil rights movements, and into the postmodern era, Western societies have struggled to rid themselves of their racist legacy. Instead, they have recreated it in more complex and less obvious ways. This raises the pressing question: why is racism still deeply entrenched in Western societies despite all the slogans about equality and pluralism?

The Western discourse claims that racism is merely individual behavior, stemming from personal prejudice, and that it can be eradicated through 'tolerance,' 'education,' and 'anti-discrimination laws.' However, reality reveals that racism is part of a broader social, economic, and political system that perpetuates racial disparities through indirect laws, discriminatory institutions, and media that continue to reproduces stereotypes.


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Saturday 03 May 2025
Saturday 03 May 2025
Oumam magazine, for Human and Social studies, is a peer-reviewed quarterly scientific periodical, issued by "Baratha Center in Beirut and Bagdad. It is concerned with criticizing Western visions of humanity and society in various fields . on the other hand, rooting them from a rational standpoint, that is consistent with the requirements of human nature, and with the original metaphysical cosmic vision of human society.The magazine aims to confront the Western intellectual challenges imposed by the West on our Arab and Islamic societies, through:
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