NPR: Law faculty discuss stereotypes Buffalo Muslims face following beheading murder

Release Date: February 21, 2011 This content is archived.

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Suzanne Tomkins, director of the Women, Children and Social Justice Clinic in the UB Law School, and Remla Parthasarathy, an instructor in the Women, Children and Social Justice Clinic, were interviewed on NPR about the stereotypes Buffalo Muslims have faced in the wake of the 2009 beheading murder of Aasiya Hassan, who was killed after she filed for divorce from her husband, Muzammil Hassan. The murder, both said, was a clear-cut case of domestics abuse, and not an "honor killing" as many in the local community perceived it to be.

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