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Because most well-known examples of fictional Muslim characters and settings in mainstream media tend to be from North Africa and the Middle East, there is an assumption that Muslims are all Arabs or speak Arabic as their main language. This is despite the fact that the largest Muslim population in the world is in UsefulNotes/{{Indonesia}}, which is located in Southeast Asia, and many Muslims come from all over Asia. As a matter of fact, the region with the largest number of Muslims overall is South Asia, which has more than 630 million Muslims. Meanwhile, the Middle East has less than 410 million Muslims. Millions of Muslims also live in Africa and Europe.[[note]]Before you say "they're immigrants", no, not all European Muslims are immigrants; in fact, quite a few are as ethnically European as you can get. European Muslims have existed in the Volga and [[UsefulNotes/TheCaucasus Caucasus]] since the 12th-15th century, while Balkan Muslims date back to the 17th century.[[/note]] Even within the Middle East exist a multitude of ethnic groups who practice Islam and speak a variety of different languages, such as Kurdish, Persian, and Turkish, which belong to totally different language families from Arabic.[[note]]Arabic belongs to the Afroasiatic family of languages, whereas Kurdish and Persian are Indo-European, while Turkish belongs to Turkic, an East Asian language family that got stranded in the Middle East because of medieval-era politics and migration. In other words, totally alien to the region.[[/note]] Likewise, North Africa -- another region that has been largely Arabised in terms of language and culture -- still has plenty of people who identify more with the pre-existing Amazigh/Berber languages and cultures, and the line between "Arab" and "Amazigh" can be blurry there.

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Because most well-known examples of fictional Muslim characters and settings in mainstream media tend to be from North Africa and the Middle East, there is an assumption that Muslims are all Arabs or speak Arabic as their main language. This is despite the fact that the largest Muslim population in the world is in UsefulNotes/{{Indonesia}}, which is located in Southeast Asia, and many Muslims come from all over Asia. As a matter of fact, the region with the largest number of Muslims overall is South Asia, which has more than 630 million Muslims. Meanwhile, the Middle East has less than 410 million Muslims. Millions of Muslims also live in Africa and Europe.[[note]]Before you say "they're immigrants", no, not all European Muslims are immigrants; in fact, quite a few are as ethnically European as you can get. European Muslims have existed in the Volga and [[UsefulNotes/TheCaucasus Caucasus]] since the 12th-15th century, centuries, while Balkan Muslims date back to the 17th century.[[/note]] Even within the Middle East exist a multitude of ethnic groups who practice Islam and speak a variety of different languages, such as Kurdish, Persian, and Turkish, which belong to totally different language families from Arabic.[[note]]Arabic belongs to the Afroasiatic family of languages, whereas Kurdish and Persian are Indo-European, while Turkish belongs to Turkic, an East Asian language family that got stranded in the Middle East because of medieval-era politics and migration. In other words, totally alien to the region.[[/note]] Likewise, North Africa -- another region that has been largely Arabised in terms of language and culture -- still has plenty of people who identify more with the pre-existing Amazigh/Berber languages and cultures, and the line between "Arab" and "Amazigh" can be blurry there.
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Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (at least in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraqi Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population[[note]]And for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of the Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.[[/note]] are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.

to:

Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (at least in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraqi Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population[[note]]And population[[note]]And, for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of the Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.[[/note]] are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.
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Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some Jews, or in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraqi Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population[[note]]And for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of the Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.[[/note]] are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.

to:

Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some Jews, or (at least in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraqi Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population[[note]]And for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of the Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.[[/note]] are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some Jews, or in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraqi Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population (and for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of the Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.) are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.

to:

Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some Jews, or in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraqi Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population (and population[[note]]And for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of the Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.) [[/note]] are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.

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* ''Anime/JojosBizarreAdventure'': Avdol is implied to be Muslim and is from Egypt (an Arabic country), but averts this trope since he is black.

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* ''Anime/JojosBizarreAdventure'': Avdol ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'': [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Avdol]] is implied to be Muslim and is from Egypt (an Arabic country), but averts this trope since he is black.






* ''WesternAnimation/SausageParty'': In real life, lavash is a type of flatbread eaten in and around Iran. However, Kareem-Abdul Lavash has an Arabic name, rather than a Persian one, and his conflict with Sammy Bagel Jr. is a parody of the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict.
** To make matters worse, lavash originated in Iran's Armenian communities, which aren’t even Muslim (most of them are Christian) making it very unfitting for a Muslim stereotype character.

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* ''WesternAnimation/SausageParty'': In real life, lavash is a type of flatbread eaten in and around Iran. However, Kareem-Abdul Lavash has an Arabic name, rather than a Persian one, and his conflict with Sammy Bagel Jr. is a parody of the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict.
**
UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict. To make matters worse, lavash originated in Iran's Armenian communities, which aren’t even Muslim (most of them are Christian) making it very unfitting for a Muslim stereotype character.



* The Karachi map in ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyModernWarfare2'' features all of its text in Arabic, despite the fact that Pakistan's official languages are English and Urdu.
* ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyModernWarfare2019'' features a fictional {{Qurac}} where the characters mostly have Arab names and speak Arabic, but it has the "[[{{Countrystan}} -stan]]" suffix in its name (which no Arab countries have) and is situated in the Caucasus Mountains, bordering Russia. North Caucasians are ''not'' Arabs and will be [[BerserkButton very annoyed if you mistake them for such]]. Its inhabitants have a mix of Arab, Iranian, and Turkish names. Also, despite being in the Caucasus, its terrain [[ArtisticLicenseGeography somehow]] consists mostly of flat desert à la central Syria or Iraq.

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* ''VideoGame/CallOfDuty'':
**
The Karachi map in ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyModernWarfare2'' features all of its text in Arabic, despite the fact that Pakistan's official languages are English and Urdu.
* ** ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyModernWarfare2019'' features a fictional {{Qurac}} where the characters mostly have Arab names and speak Arabic, but it has the "[[{{Countrystan}} -stan]]" suffix in its name (which no Arab countries have) and is situated in the Caucasus Mountains, bordering Russia. North Caucasians are ''not'' Arabs and will be [[BerserkButton very annoyed if you mistake them for such]]. Its inhabitants have a mix of Arab, Iranian, and Turkish names. Also, despite being in the Caucasus, its terrain [[ArtisticLicenseGeography somehow]] consists mostly of flat desert à la central Syria or Iraq.


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[[folder:Web Comics]]
* ''Webcomic/NipAndTuck'': In strip #595, when one of the workers on the action movie asks if Schlepp the Camel is offended by the movie featuring so many Arabian and Muslim characters, Schlep corrects him that he is Arabian, but he is actually an Arabian Christian who fled his homeland to escape persecution by Muslims.
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[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
*''Anime/JojosBizarreAdventure'': Avdol is implied to be Muslim and is from Egypt (an Arabic country), but averts this trope since he is black.
*''Anime/TheBushBaby'': Averted, since the most recurring Muslim characters are Kenyan and follow Kenyan customs as well as Islam.
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%% Trope was declared Administrivia/NoRealLifeExamplesPlease via crowner by the Real Life Maintenance thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/crowner.php?crowner_id=rbp2dd1s
%%https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=13350380440A15238800




Due to the way this trope uses stereotypes, '''Administrivia/NoRealLifeExamplesPlease'''




[[folder:Real Life]]
* This trope was mostly true during the first century of Islam (circa 610-755 CE). Although there were some foreign converts (most notably, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salman_the_Persian Salman the Persian]]), the Muslim community was by and large made up of the Arab tribe of Quraysh, to which [[UsefulNotes/TheProphetMuhammad Muhammad]] belonged, and their allies. Even when their territories spanned from Spain to India, Muslims did not form the majority beyond the Arabian Peninsula. This was self-inflicted; just as the settled societies, which made up a large chunk of the conquered lands, shunned the Arabs for their nomadic life, the Arabs did not have a high opinion of the settled societies, either. Although Islam preached for integration, the second Caliphate, the Umayyads, were particularly notorious for their Arab chauvinism, enforcing separation between themselves and the people they ruled. To them, all non-Arabs were beneath them, regardless of if they were Muslim or not. Therefore, there was no incentive for people to convert. It was not until they were overthrown by unsatisfied foreign Muslims and some DefectorFromDecadence Arabs, and the much more open Abbasids, who were Persianized Arabs, installed that mass conversions took place and the non-Arabic-speaking Muslims outnumbered the Arabic-speaking ones.
* In the 2009 Supreme Court case [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashcroft_v._Iqbal Ashcroft v. Iqbal]], a Muslim man sued the Bush administration and claimed, among other things, that he suffered racial profiling when he was detained and interrogated during the investigations into the September 11 attacks. The Court dismissed this claim in part because it found that investigators were reasonable to target Arab Muslim men since Arab Muslim men were indeed the perpetrators of the attacks. The problem with this argument is that the plaintiff, Javaid Iqbal, was ''Pakistani'', not Arab.
* During the manhunt for the Boston Marathon bombers, a group of [[Website/{{Reddit}} Redditors]] zeroed in on a pair of brown, apparently Muslim men in photographs from the crime scene. Barring the fact that the bombers were not Arabs, there's also the fact that Arabs, as a cultural and linguistic group, span the whole spectrum of skin color, from the lightest white to the darkest black, and presenting some random brown-skinned people as Arabs was essentially meaningless. There was no other reason for it other than good ol' racial {{profiling}}. To avoid a {{witch hunt}}, the FBI decided to inform the public that the actual prime suspects, the Tsarnaev brothers, were white (Chechens, in fact "Caucasians" literally, as they were born in the Caucasus).
* An unintentional effect of the UsefulNotes/BlackLivesMatter protests of 2020 was that black Muslims became very vocal about the discrimination they face and how this trope occurs frequently even among other Muslims. One common complaint made by black Muslims is that they are treated as [[NoTrueScotsman not being Muslim enough]] because they are not Middle Eastern or South Asian. Ironically, [[https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2021/2/10/muslims-in-america-always-there the first Muslims who arrived to what would become the United States]] were actually West and Central African slaves.
* As the language the Literature/{{Quran}} is written in, Arabic is regarded by Muslims worldwide to be an important language, so most Muslims ''do'' have some knowledge about it, and a lot of languages in Muslim-majority countries tend to borrow extensive vocabulary from Arabic. That said, while some Muslims emphasize religious unity over cultural differences, bear in mind that the community is just as diverse as any other religion (in fact, the Muslims are probably the most disorganized in the world; not only they are huge but the lack of a supranational authority like the Holy See means that regional communities often do things their own way). A lot of Muslim Arabs don't even consider themselves to be the same kind of people, let alone non-Arab Muslims.
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Spelling/grammar fix(es)


The trope most often affects Iran and Turkey, two emerging markets and regional powers who frequently make international headlines, as they happen to be (1) Middle Eastern, and (2) majority-Muslim. Even Muslims from far-off places who one might think would know better sometimes lump them both as Arab countries, because, barring their distinct languages, their cultures do overlap a fair bit with their Arab neighbors, and you have to be rather well-versed in Middle Eastern studies to be able to distinguish them. To make matters worse, Iran officially writes using the Arabic script,[[note]]Albeit one that has additional letters not found in the original, since Iranian languages have a different set of consonants compared to Arabic.[[/note]] a legacy of when it was ruled by Arabs more than a millennium ago. Turkey's situation is a bit better, but then you will run into problems of explaining exactly ''what'' Turkish culture is, especially as their language is not only alien to the West but also the Middle East itself. In the region, Turkey has a love-hate relationship with the Arab countries, because [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman_Empire it used to rule vast swathes of the Arab world for centuries]]; needless to say, some Arabs still regard Turkey as a colonizer and Turks in general as colonialists. As for Iran... well, as the page quote shows, [[BerserkButton it's best not to lump its people in with Arabs]]. Really. If you want a picture, imagine [[WhenIWasYourAge the Greeks' view of themselves]] compared to Turks (or hell, to Romans, under UsefulNotes/TheRomanRepublic and in the early days of UsefulNotes/TheRomanEmpire[[note]]Though in Rome's later years and beyond, [[UsefulNotes/ByzantineEmpire the empire's largely Greek-speaking eastern half]] was the VestigialEmpire that held up the mantle of the Roman Empire as the west, [[ArtifactTitle eventually including Rome itself]], fell to invasions[[/note]]), but magnified tenfold. Iranians will [[CulturalPosturing happily lecture you]] on how magnificent [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Iran their culture]] is and how long [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Iran their history]] dates back if you do so.

Complicating this issue is that scholars of Islam ''are'' expected to learn Classical Arabic in order to understand the Quran, since there are no official translations into other languages due to the belief that some of the meaning would be LostInTranslation; therefore Muslims who take their faith seriously often do understand Arabic in some form, even if it is not their main tongue. Cultural influences also mean that many non-Arab Muslims understand and use [[GratuitousForeignLanguage Gratuitous Arabic]] phrases in everyday life (e.g. ''Assalamualaikum'', a catch-all greeting; or ''Alhamdulillah'', the equivalent of and used in the same situation as "Hallelujah"), which might create the assumption that all Muslims speak fluent Arabic, when in fact, they do not.

Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some Jews, or in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraqi Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population (and for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.) are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.

Note that this trope is not about the simple presence of Arab Muslims in a work, but rather about the implicit or explicit assumption that all Muslims are of Arab descent (e.g. by having Muslim characters speaking Arabic in casual conversation where their background and/or time period would make this improbable), or conversely that all Arabs are Muslim. Please do not add examples along the lines of "Character X is Arab" when it is nothing remarkable. Similarly, it's not worth listing an "aversion" if a work just happens to have a Muslim who is Indonesian, Turkish etc.

to:

The trope most often affects Iran and Turkey, two emerging markets and regional powers who that frequently make international headlines, as they happen to be (1) Middle Eastern, and (2) majority-Muslim. Even Muslims from far-off places who one might think would know better sometimes lump them both as Arab countries, because, barring their distinct languages, their cultures do overlap a fair bit with their Arab neighbors, and you have to be rather well-versed in Middle Eastern studies to be able to distinguish them. To make matters worse, Iran officially writes using the Arabic script,[[note]]Albeit one that has additional letters not found in the original, since Iranian languages have a different set of consonants compared to Arabic.[[/note]] a legacy of when it was ruled by Arabs more than a millennium ago. Turkey's situation is a bit better, but then you will run into problems of explaining exactly ''what'' Turkish culture is, especially as their language is not only alien to the West but also the Middle East itself. In the region, Turkey has a love-hate relationship with the Arab countries, because [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman_Empire it used to rule vast swathes of the Arab world for centuries]]; needless to say, some Arabs still regard Turkey as a colonizer and Turks in general as colonialists. As for Iran... well, as the page quote shows, [[BerserkButton it's best not to lump its people in with Arabs]]. Really. If you want a picture, imagine [[WhenIWasYourAge the Greeks' view of themselves]] compared to Turks (or hell, to Romans, under UsefulNotes/TheRomanRepublic and in the early days of UsefulNotes/TheRomanEmpire[[note]]Though in Rome's later years and beyond, [[UsefulNotes/ByzantineEmpire the empire's largely Greek-speaking eastern half]] was the VestigialEmpire that held up the mantle of the Roman Empire as the west, [[ArtifactTitle eventually including Rome itself]], fell to invasions[[/note]]), but magnified tenfold. Iranians will [[CulturalPosturing happily lecture you]] on how magnificent [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Iran their culture]] is and how long [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Iran their history]] dates back if you do so.

Complicating this issue is that scholars of Islam ''are'' expected to learn Classical Arabic in order to understand the Quran, Quran since there are no official translations into other languages due to the belief that some of the meaning would be LostInTranslation; therefore Muslims who take their faith seriously often do understand Arabic in some form, even if it is not their main tongue. Cultural influences also mean that many non-Arab Muslims understand and use [[GratuitousForeignLanguage Gratuitous Arabic]] phrases in everyday life (e.g. ''Assalamualaikum'', a catch-all greeting; or ''Alhamdulillah'', the equivalent of and used in the same situation as "Hallelujah"), which might create the assumption that all Muslims speak fluent Arabic, when in fact, they do not.

Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some Jews, or in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraqi Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population (and for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of the Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.) are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.

Note that this trope is not about the simple presence of Arab Muslims in a work, but rather about the implicit or explicit assumption that all Muslims are of Arab descent (e.g. by having Muslim characters speaking Arabic in casual conversation where their background and/or time period would make this improbable), or conversely that all Arabs are Muslim. Please do not add examples along the lines of "Character X is Arab" when it is nothing remarkable. Similarly, it's not worth listing an "aversion" if a work just happens to have a Muslim who is Indonesian, Turkish Turkish, etc.



** To make matters worse, lavash originated in Iran's Armenian communities, who aren’t even Muslim (most of them are Christian) making it very unfitting for a Muslim stereotype character.

to:

** To make matters worse, lavash originated in Iran's Armenian communities, who which aren’t even Muslim (most of them are Christian) making it very unfitting for a Muslim stereotype character.



* In a variation, ''Film/BohemianRhapsody'' has a couple of racist characters call Music/FreddieMercury "Paki", a typical slur in the UK for South Asians, and particularly ones who are Muslims. Freddie is not only not Pakistani (one of his first lines is to state this in an annoyed tone), he's not even Muslim (his family are Parsi, i.e. Indian Zoroastrians).

to:

* In a variation, ''Film/BohemianRhapsody'' has a couple of racist characters call calling Music/FreddieMercury "Paki", a typical slur in the UK for South Asians, and particularly ones who are Muslims. Freddie is not only not Pakistani (one of his first lines is to state this in an annoyed tone), he's not even Muslim (his family are Parsi, i.e. Indian Zoroastrians).



* In the French film ''Secret Défense'', a young white French criminal converts to Islam in prison and is recruited by a North African and Lebanese radical islamic terrorist network. They want to use him to carry out a bombing attack because, as a white guy, he'll attract much less suspicion (and they actually despise white converts as well and consider him expendable as such).
* ''Film/ZeroDarkThirty'' received some controversy from Pakistani audiences for, among other things, portraying community elders speaking in Arabic instead of their native Pashtun. This also applies in the outfits and background lines of the extras, seeing as how the Pakistan scenes [[CaliforniaDoubling were actually shot]] in UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}}.

to:

* In the French film ''Secret Défense'', a young white French criminal converts to Islam in prison and is recruited by a North African and Lebanese radical islamic Islamic terrorist network. They want to use him to carry out a bombing attack because, as a white guy, he'll attract much less suspicion (and they actually despise white converts as well and consider him expendable as such).
* ''Film/ZeroDarkThirty'' received some controversy from Pakistani audiences for, among other things, portraying community elders speaking in Arabic instead of their native Pashtun. This also applies in to the outfits and background lines of the extras, seeing as how the Pakistan scenes [[CaliforniaDoubling were actually shot]] in UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}}.



* Inverted in the Chilean television series ''Corazón Pirata'', where an Arab family (possibly of Palestinian origin) constantly have to clarify that they are Arabs, not Turks. This is because the Arab immigrants who arrived in Chile at the beginning of the 20th century did so with a passport from the Ottoman Empire, when it still existed; many Chileans still think of Muslims and Turks as synonymous.

to:

* Inverted in the Chilean television series ''Corazón Pirata'', where an Arab family (possibly of Palestinian origin) constantly have has to clarify that they are Arabs, not Turks. This is because the Arab immigrants who arrived in Chile at the beginning of the 20th century did so with a passport from the Ottoman Empire, Empire when it still existed; many Chileans still think of Muslims and Turks as synonymous.



* In the 2009 Supreme Court case [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashcroft_v._Iqbal Ashcroft v. Iqbal]], a Muslim man sued the Bush administration and claimed, among other things, that he suffered racial profiling when he was detained and interrogated during the investigations into the September 11 attacks. The Court dismissed this claim in part because it found that investigators were reasonable to target Arab Muslim men, since Arab Muslim men were indeed the perpetrators of the attacks. The problem with this argument is that the plaintiff, Javaid Iqbal, was ''Pakistani'', not Arab.

to:

* In the 2009 Supreme Court case [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashcroft_v._Iqbal Ashcroft v. Iqbal]], a Muslim man sued the Bush administration and claimed, among other things, that he suffered racial profiling when he was detained and interrogated during the investigations into the September 11 attacks. The Court dismissed this claim in part because it found that investigators were reasonable to target Arab Muslim men, men since Arab Muslim men were indeed the perpetrators of the attacks. The problem with this argument is that the plaintiff, Javaid Iqbal, was ''Pakistani'', not Arab.
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Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some Jews, or in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraq Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population (and for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.) are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.

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Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some Jews, or in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraq Iraqi Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population (and for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.) are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.
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Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some--very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraq Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population (and for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.) are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.

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Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some--very (some Jews, or in times past, as very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraq Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Arab population (and for that matter, the Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.) are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.
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Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews, especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, etc.) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Levantine Arab population (and for that matter, the Levantine immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines who don't identify as Arab) is likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.

to:

Compare LatinoIsBrown, AllJewsAreAshkenazi. The inverse of "All Arabs (or All Middle Easterners) are Muslim" is also a massive BerserkButton for Middle Eastern Christians and Jews (some--very few Jews, even Mizrahim, identify or are identified as "Arabs" nowadays, although this was not always the case) especially if they are from the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, etc.) or, to a lesser degree, from Egypt or Iraq (Christians still make up sizable minorities in both of these countries, and Iraq Christian expats significantly outnumber the numbers of Christians still in Iraq) given that their ancestors were likely practicing Christianity and Judaism in the faith's homeland far longer than anyone else. In fact, in much of the Americas, the Levantine Arab population (and for that matter, the Levantine Arabic-speaking immigrant population in general and their native-born descendants, including Levantines who don't Levantines, Egyptians, and Iraqis many of whom do not identify as Arab) is Arab. Some Lebanese Christians identify as Phoenicians rather than Arabs, although others proudly identify as Arabs, as Arab Christian tribes in the Levant date back to the days of Roman Empire, centuries before the founding of Islam. Egyptian Christians typically identify as Copts and Iraqis as Assyrians, even if they largely speak Arabic today.) are likely majority Christian instead of Muslim.
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** To make matters worse, the lavash originated in Iran's Armenian communities, meaning bigoted Muslims are represented by one of the comparetively few non-Muslim populations in the country that's not even Arab.

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** To make matters worse, the lavash originated in Iran's Armenian communities, meaning bigoted Muslims are represented by one of the comparetively few non-Muslim populations in the country that's not who aren’t even Arab.Muslim (most of them are Christian) making it very unfitting for a Muslim stereotype character.
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** To make matters worse, the lavash originated in Iran's Armenian communities, meaning bigoted Muslims are represented by one of the comparetively few non-Muslim populations in the country that's not even Arab.
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* In the 2009 Supreme Court case [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashcroft_v._Iqbal Ashcroft v. Iqbal]], a Muslim man sued the Bush administration and claimed, among other things, that he suffered racial profiling when he was detained and interrogated during the investigations into the September 11 attacks. The Court dismissed this claim in part because it found that investigators were reasonable to target Arab Muslim men, since Arab Muslim men were indeed the perpetrators of the attacks. The problem with this argument is that the plaintiff, Javaid Iqbal, was ''Pakistani'', not Arab.
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* ''Series/LawAndOrderCriminalIntent'': In the episode "World's Fair" the VictimOfTheWeek is a young Pakistani-American woman who was dating an Italian American man. His racist mother keeps calling her family Arabs, he eventually gets frustrated and emphatically corrects her.
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* In a variation, ''Film/BohemianRhapsody'' has a couple of racist characters call Freddie Mercury "Paki", a typical slur in the UK for South Asians, and particularly ones who are Muslims. Freddie is not only not Pakistani (one of his first lines is to state this in an annoyed tone), he's not even Muslim (his family are Parsi, i.e. Indian Zoroastrians).

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* In a variation, ''Film/BohemianRhapsody'' has a couple of racist characters call Freddie Mercury Music/FreddieMercury "Paki", a typical slur in the UK for South Asians, and particularly ones who are Muslims. Freddie is not only not Pakistani (one of his first lines is to state this in an annoyed tone), he's not even Muslim (his family are Parsi, i.e. Indian Zoroastrians).



* ''Film/TheDictator'' has John C. Reilly's character Clayton looking forward to torturing General Aladeen because he's "an Arab", but Aladeen's nation Wadiya is located in the Horn of Africa, whose Arab population is minuscule compared to the majority ethnic groups like Amharas, Oromos, Somalis, Tigrays, and Afars. Aladeen responds "I'm not Arab." And in any case, Clayton is a horrible self-described racist who basically lumps all non-white people together as "Arabs".

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* ''Film/TheDictator'' has John C. Reilly's Creator/JohnCReilly's character Clayton looking forward to torturing General Aladeen because he's "an Arab", but Aladeen's nation Wadiya is located in the Horn of Africa, whose Arab population is minuscule compared to the majority ethnic groups like Amharas, Oromos, Somalis, Tigrays, and Afars. Aladeen responds "I'm not Arab." And in any case, Clayton is a horrible self-described racist who basically lumps all non-white people together as "Arabs".



* ''Film/ZeroDarkThirty'' received some controversy from Pakistani audiences for, among other things, portraying community elders speaking in Arabic instead of their native Pashtun. This also applies in the outfits and background lines of the extras, seeing as how the Pakistan scenes were actually shot in UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}}.

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* ''Film/ZeroDarkThirty'' received some controversy from Pakistani audiences for, among other things, portraying community elders speaking in Arabic instead of their native Pashtun. This also applies in the outfits and background lines of the extras, seeing as how the Pakistan scenes [[CaliforniaDoubling were actually shot shot]] in UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}}.



* During the manhunt for the Boston Marathon bombers, a group of [[Website/{{Reddit}} Redditors]] zeroed in on a pair of brown, apparently Muslim men in photographs from the crime scene. Barring the fact that the bombers were not Arabs. Arabs, as a cultural and linguistic group, span the whole spectrum of skin color, from the lightest white to the darkest black, and presenting some random brown-skinned people as Arabs was essentially meaningless. There was no other reason for it other than good ol' racial profiling. To avoid a witch hunt, the FBI decided to inform the public that the actual prime suspects, the Tsarnaev brothers, were white (Chechens, in fact "Caucasians" literally, as they were born in the Caucasus).

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* During the manhunt for the Boston Marathon bombers, a group of [[Website/{{Reddit}} Redditors]] zeroed in on a pair of brown, apparently Muslim men in photographs from the crime scene. Barring the fact that the bombers were not Arabs. Arabs, there's also the fact that Arabs, as a cultural and linguistic group, span the whole spectrum of skin color, from the lightest white to the darkest black, and presenting some random brown-skinned people as Arabs was essentially meaningless. There was no other reason for it other than good ol' racial profiling. {{profiling}}. To avoid a witch hunt, {{witch hunt}}, the FBI decided to inform the public that the actual prime suspects, the Tsarnaev brothers, were white (Chechens, in fact "Caucasians" literally, as they were born in the Caucasus).
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I know lavash actually originated in Armenia, a Christian country, but some claim it originated in Iran and it's commonly cooked and eaten there as well as in surrounding Muslim countries like Turkey and Azerbaijan. But it is not native to the Arabian peninsula or the Levant, as far as I'm aware.


* ''WesternAnimation/SausageParty'': In real life, lavash is a ''Persian'' dish, but in the movie, Kareem-Abdul Lavash has an Arabic name and his conflict with Sammy Bagel Jr. is a parody of the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict.

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* ''WesternAnimation/SausageParty'': In real life, lavash is a ''Persian'' dish, but type of flatbread eaten in the movie, and around Iran. However, Kareem-Abdul Lavash has an Arabic name name, rather than a Persian one, and his conflict with Sammy Bagel Jr. is a parody of the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict.
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* WesternAnimation/SausageParty: In real life, lavash is a ''Persian'' dish, but in the movie, Kareem-Abdul Lavash has an Arabic name and his conflict with Sammy Bagel Jr. is a parody of the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict.

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* WesternAnimation/SausageParty: ''WesternAnimation/SausageParty'': In real life, lavash is a ''Persian'' dish, but in the movie, Kareem-Abdul Lavash has an Arabic name and his conflict with Sammy Bagel Jr. is a parody of the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict.
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[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]

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[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]Animation]]

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