TLDR: Following a mass shooting at the Islamic Center in San Diego, spiritual activist and author Valarie Kaur contextualizes the attack not as an isolated tragedy but as the culmination of 25 years of systemic anti-Muslim, anti-Sikh, and anti-Arab-American bigotry—accelerated by state surveillance, detention, deportation policies, and foreign military campaigns. She traces the structural relationship between government-sanctioned discrimination and grassroots hate violence, then pivots to a call for practicing radical love through community vigil and neighborhood presence as a counterforce to authoritarian agendas that depend on deepening division.
Why This Shooting Is Not an Isolated Incident
When Kaur addresses the San Diego community in the immediate aftermath of the mass shooting at the Islamic Center, she refuses the comfort of treating it as anomalous. Instead, she anchors the violence in a 25-year historical timeline beginning with September 11, 2001. This framing is crucial: mass violence against Muslim, Sikh, and Arab-American communities did not emerge spontaneously. It emerged within a specific ecosystem of policy and rhetoric.
Kaur's point is not merely historical documentation but structural analysis. She identifies that Muslim, Sikh, and Arab-American communities "have been targets of hate violence and state violence" for the past quarter-century. The critical phrase here is "both"—the "two are always tethered together." This syntax matters. She is arguing that private hate crimes and government policies are not separate phenomena; they operate in tandem, reinforce each other, and are mutually dependent.
How State Violence and Hate Crimes Reinforce Each Other
Kaur enumerates the specific mechanisms of state violence that parallel and enable grassroots hate: "mass surveillance, detentions, deportations, forever wars and genocidal campaigns abroad." Each of these is a policy lever controlled by government bodies. And yet, she observes, whenever these state mechanisms are activated—when communities are placed under surveillance, when immigration detention expands, when military campaigns target Muslim-majority nations—"we see hate violence increase on our soil."
This is not coincidental. The state's permission structure—its official designation of certain populations as suspect, dangerous, or enemy—creates the ideological permission for private citizens to act on prejudice. When a government enacts mass surveillance of Muslim Americans, it signals that suspicion of Muslims is legitimate. When it sustains "forever wars" abroad, it normalizes the framing of Muslims as threats. When it carries out deportations, it reinforces the narrative that immigrant communities do not belong. The hate violence follows naturally.
Kaur's observation that she and her communities "have been to so many memorials that they are starting to blur together" is not sentimental. It is an indictment. The repetition itself—the fact that there are now so many vigils that they become difficult to distinguish from one another—is evidence of a system producing tragedy at scale.
The Profit Motive and the Authoritarian Agenda
Kaur names another layer of the system: those who "profit from that kind of hate are seated at the highest seats of government in our country." This is a direct charge that political power is being consolidated by those with material or ideological investment in division. And she articulates their agenda explicitly: "enacting an authoritarian agenda that depends on us to hate or to let hate happen."
This dependency is the mechanism of the system. Authoritarianism requires an enemy—a population against which "we" can define ourselves, a group whose subordination appears necessary for collective safety. If the dominant narrative maintains that Muslims, Sikhs, and Arabs are inherent threats, then surveillance, detention, and military action appear reasonable, even necessary. And if citizens accept that framing, they either actively hate the designated enemy or passively permit the hate to continue. Either way, the political agenda advances.
The Historical Counter-Movement: Those Who Crossed the Line
Kaur does not end in diagnosis alone. She turns to the 25-year history and identifies another pattern: "there were always those who did what the nation as a whole did not. They crossed the line to tend the vigil. They brought the flowers. They brought the letters. They came with the donations."
These are small, concrete actions. Flowers, letters, donations. But Kaur's framing suggests these gestures carry disproportionate significance. They are acts of dissent—of "crossing the line"—because they contradict the dominant narrative. In a moment when the nation has been conditioned to fear or despise a community, showing up at a vigil is an act of defiance. It says: I refuse the permission structure. I refuse to hate or let hate happen. I am present instead.
Grief as Revolutionary Practice
Kaur then introduces a principle that is central to her understanding of spiritual activism: "Anytime people who have no obvious reason to love one another grieve together like that, they give rise to new relationships, even revolutions."
This is not abstract. Grief, in this formulation, is not merely a private emotional experience. It is a social act. When a person from the dominant group joins a Muslim community in mourning, they are doing something that logic would not predict—they are forgoing the comfort of the majority to stand in solidarity with a targeted group. In doing so, they break the tribal boundaries that the authoritarian agenda depends upon. They create what Kaur calls "new relationships"—relationships that cross the lines the dominant system has drawn. And she suggests that these relationships, multiplied, accumulate into something that can shift power: revolution.
The Invitation: Practicing Love in Every Space
From this analysis, Kaur extends a direct invitation to the San Diego community: if you haven't been to the Islamic Center San Diego, "this is your invitation to do so." And more than physical presence, she asks people to interrogate their own practice: "What does it mean for us to practice that kind of love there, and in our neighborhood, and in every space that we move through?"
This is a shift from diagnosis to praxis. The "kind of love" she refers to is not sentimental or abstract. It is love as a material commitment—showing up, crossing social lines, standing with communities under attack. And she expands the scope: not only at the Islamic Center, but "in our neighborhood, and in every space that we move through." This universalizes the practice. It is not enough to perform solidarity in moments of crisis; love must become a consistent practice across all the spaces people occupy.
The implicit argument is that this practice of love is not a marginal or secondary response to hate violence. It is, in Kaur's framework, the counter-system—the practice through which new relationships and new power arrangements become possible.
Where to go from here
Kaur's talk suggests several directions for further engagement. First, understanding the history of anti-Muslim bigotry post-9/11 requires studying not only hate crimes but the policy apparatus—surveillance law, immigration enforcement, military interventions—that creates the conditions for private violence. Second, attending to the practice of grief and witness as a form of resistance means examining how communities have historically crossed divides and what conditions enable (or prevent) such crossings. Third, extending love from moments of crisis into everyday neighborhood practice requires asking how we navigate spaces of diversity and how we make choices about presence and solidarity in ordinary time. Finally, it requires examining our own complicity in the systems Kaur describes—the ways we may be passive beneficiaries of authoritarian agendas or the ways we are actively working to dismantle them.



