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Syrian refugees.

Preventing Syrian refugees from entering U.S. will foster terrorism

By RACHEL STERN

Published November 20, 2015 This content is archived.

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Hilary Weaver.
“I think the screening process works for the most part. ”
Hilary Weaver, professor
School of Social Work

Halting Syrian refugees from entering the United States will fuel terrorism, not curb it, a UB social work professor says.

“I understand that terrorists would be interested in infiltrating and becoming refugees — a wolf in sheep’s clothing, so to speak — but we cannot paint everybody with the same brush,” says Hilary Weaver, a professor in the School of Social Work and co-director of UB’s Immigrant and Refugee Research Institute. “The gut reaction is to say that we would be safer by excluding, but it is the other way around. We didn’t want to accept people fleeing Nazi Germany. This is not new. But we must balance our fears with our compassion.”

On Thursday, the House passed a bill to stop the admission of Syrian refugees into the U.S. until they undergo a stringent vetting process in light of the Paris terror attacks.

As it stands now, Weaver says, the screening process is extensive and effective.

“I know of cases where people weren’t terrorists, but they had taken up arms against their own government and they were excluded from being refugees and deported from the U.S.,” she says. “I think the screening process works for the most part.”

Weaver says she understands people are scared. The U.S. needs to continue to be attentive during the screening process, she adds.

But preventing refugees from entering the country would be a form of racial profiling, she says.

“The worst possible thing would be to make it nearly impossible to enter the country,” Weaver says. “That will fuel terrorism because it will undermine the idea of the U.S. as a place of compassion, as a place of safety for people fleeing terrorism. It will give terrorists an opportunity to use propaganda and say, ‘See, they are excluding Muslims, they don’t like us, they are anti-Islam and anti-Arab. That fuels hatred and the hatred is fueling terrorism.”

READER COMMENT

For the "most part" is not good enough. Ask the families of those slaughtered in Paris and Mali.

 

We are facing a vicious and fanatic enemy who is more than willing to blow himself up or shoot innocent people point blank in the name of Allah.

 

Michael RaM