flying while Muslim
pp. Searching, questioning, or denying service to an airline passenger for no other reason than the person appears to be a Muslim.
Also Seen As
Etymology
Examples
2004
On Sept. 26, 2002, Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen born in Syria, was returning to Montreal from Tunisia when he was taken into custody at New York's Kennedy Airport.

Shackled and interrogated by INS, FBI and other agencies for several days, Arar repeatedly asked for an attorney, but was refused one. …

Arar never was charged with a crime. But his real offense might have been simply FWM — flying while Muslim.
—Lawrence Swaim, “Laws need to change,” The Argus (Fremont, CA), February 04, 2004
2002
Mahdi Bray of the Muslim American Society said he used to worry about racial profiling as a driver who is black.

"Now I have to be concerned about flying while Muslim," he said.
—Stephanie Erickson, “Concerned about civil rights,” Orlando Sentinel, December 15, 2002
2001 (earliest)
I've faced both kinds of profiling: driving while black and flying while Muslim," said the 28-year-old student. "If we get to the point where we begin curbing our civil liberties and the rights of certain people, I think the terrorists have won.
—Joyce Purnick, “Last Week, Profiling Was Wrong,” The New York Times, September 15, 2001
Notes
This phrase is a play on driving while black (or DWB), "having a car pulled over (by a police officer) for no other reason than the driver is black." This in turn was a riff on driving while intoxicated (DWI), an actual offense. Some phrases similar to flying while Muslim are flying while Arab (1999) and flying while brown (2001).