April/May 1994, Page 66
Special Report
ABC's Episode of Anti-Semitism
Amidst the recent avalanche of condemnation for the racist remarks
by one Nation of Islam spokesperson, another anti-Semitism flourishes
basically undeterred. Despite heightened social sensitivity to prejudice
of all kinds, Arabs still are fair game for public defamation. Throughout
the American media, they have been relegated to the role of tyrant,
terrorist, fanatic or fop.
Network television has long relied for its antagonists on detestable
Arab male stereotypes. One glaring example, recently challenged
by the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), is ABC-TV's
daily soap opera "Loving."
"Loving's" villain, "Dante Partou," lives in
Kuwait, has a markedly Middle Eastern accent and speaks in the flowery
hyperbole that is negatively associated with Arabic. "The journey
of a thousand miles begins with a single step, " he says, while
attempting to abduct a woman to his homeland to be his wife.
This typecast Arab villain ritualistically abused his American
wife until her friends rescued her from Kuwait, wounding him in
the process. A woman's value lies in her beauty, Dante Partou intoned,
a wife's only duty is to please her husband.
Tess, his blonde wife, complains, "That man destroyed my pride.
He would say that all I have is my beautiful face, and that sits
like an empty nest on my neck. "
Later, seeking revenge, Partou cruelly imprisons the man who shot
him, and kidnaps and sedates the man's wife, another blonde. And,
reminiscent of horror movie monsters, he keeps reappearing even
after it appears he is down for the count.
After receiving complaints that it had created an "evil Arab
male stereotype," ABC claimed that it had initially introduced
him as a European. According to ABC's Vice President of Broadcast
Standards, Chris Hikawa, the script indicated that "the character
is from an unnamed European country but that he now calls Kuwait
his home. It was further established that he was an 'old-world'
European who lived by a turn-of-the-century code of behavior as
far as women were concerned. 'Loving' made these changes to Dante's
biography out of a sensitivity to avoid an evil Arab male character."
Ms. Hikawa admitted that "It may have been an error of judgment
on our part to have allowed the use of a real country as Dante Partou's
current place of residence. But once we had established him as a
European, we felt the issue was addressed."
This amounted only to a token disclaimer. The technical origin
of the villain was not relevant, since the only country mentioned
in connection with Dante was Kuwait. It is implausible and unrealistic
to expect viewers to remember one vague reference to an unnamed
European nationality amidst concrete and continuing references to
Kuwait. The facts belied the network's denial that it had avoided
a negative Arab stereotype.
Responding to ADC's complaint, and a deluge of mail from ADC members,
ABC now has promised to introduce a positive Arab-American police
officer, "Abboud," as part of "Loving's" script.
Ina March letter to ADC, Ms. Hikawa said that although officer Abboud
"will have a small part at first, if response is strong, his
role could grow.
Anne Marie Baylouny Media Director, ADC |