Muslim Americans are scared, but they're going to fight back against Donald Trump
When Somia Elrowmeim’s 11- and 8-year-old daughters woke up this morning, she didn’t know how to break the news to them: Donald Trump was the next president of their country.
The little girls were heartbroken. At school they had proudly voted for Hillary Clinton in a mock election. As Arab and Muslim Americans, they were also terrified.
“Now, mommy, I’m going be scared in the streets,” Elrowmeim recalled her eldest crying and saying. “How am I going to go to school? If any of us are attacked, are the police going to protect us or not?”
Elrowmeim, who’s family is originally from Yemen but now lives in Bay Ridge, an Arab enclave of Brooklyn, tried to stay calm. “I told them, ‘Nothing is going to happen. We are going to get out of this.'”
It’s Day One of Trump’s America, and America’s minority but highly stigmatized Muslim and Arab American communities are trying to figure out what this means for them—and how to cope and respond to the racism and anti-Muslim bigotry that in part fueled Trump’s ascension.
“All people here felt really sad and they can’t believe what happened yesterday,” Elrowmeim said with heavy emotion. “It was really surprising,” she added, “But we need to stand together, support each other, be united, and fight for each other.”
The landscape is nonetheless frightening. Around the same time that Elrowmeim was breaking the bad news to her kids, her sister in North Carolina was walking her son to school when they happened upon a man with a dog, which the little boy tried to pet. “Stay away from them—they’re Muslim,” the man yelled to his dog, according to the account Elrowmeim got from her sister.
By not only feeding off this bigotry, but also feeding it by mainstreaming racist policies like his ban on Muslim immigration, Trump has created a hostile environment for many American Muslims and Muslim immigrants.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) reported and “unprecedented spike” in anti-Muslim crimes “attributed at least in part to statements and policy proposals made by public figures like GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump.” Echoing CAIR’s report, and the everyday stories of Arab and Muslim Americans, a Georgetown University reported attacks against Muslim in 2015 were higher than 2014.