Growing up in a diverse city, the culture around me has always been different. Every person that I see always has a different type of belief than me. I’m a 17 year old Muslim student who lives in Southeast Texas. My father is from the Middle East, and my mother is from Western Europe. My parents migrated as refugees from Croatia to Houston in 1995 due to the ongoing war in Yugoslavia. After they’ve migrated they’ve lived in peace here ever since, and everyone had the same beliefs. However everyone 's belief changed since 9/11, one of the biggest terrorist attacks in history to ever happen in the United States. Now everyone who originates from the Middle East has been looked at as an abomination, and how we 're judged for everything that we believe in. It just happens to be that I was born in the time of all of this monstrosity. …show more content…
All who originated from around the world, South-America, Africa, Jamaica, Europe, and Asia. Me being the only one from the Middle-East, and yet I felt as if I was different from all of them. The reason I say this is because of all of the attraction the media is focusing on to the Middle East. There are kids that grow up watching television, and they see what the media puts out there. They begin to have a mindset of the people in the Middle East. Now Middle East is far more different from any other foreign country just because of 9/11. Everybody who is from the Middle East is unfairly considered a terrorist area. Even after 14 years we still get hated by other people. I say for everyone Middle east person, that I wish that we all had the same beliefs, and we can all trust one another. Not everyone from the Middle East is a bad person, a lot of them are actually very peaceful human beings.Even the religion is being made fun of because of the terrorism that is placed over there. There 's people who say Islam is the religion of hatred, when it really means the religion of