Muslim
Woman Ejected From Donald Trump Rally After Silent
Protest
Rose Hamid, who wore a shirt that read ‘Salam, I
come in peace’, was aggressively heckled as she was
escorted from the campaign event in South Carolina
By Amanda Holpuch
January 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House" -
"The
Guardian"-
A Muslim woman
was escorted from
a Donald Trump rally on Friday night, after she
stood silently behind the Republican frontrunner
wearing a shirt that read: “Salam, I come in peace.”
Rose Hamid,
who was also wearing a hijab, said people near her
in a crowd of more than 6,000 people in Rock Hill,
South Carolina, were kind to her until she began her
protest.
“My purpose
for going there,” Hamid said, “is I have a sincere
belief that if people get to know each other one on
one then they’ll stop being afraid of each other and
we will be able to get rid of all of this hate in
the world, literally.”
She and an
unidentified man stood when Trump said Syrian
immigrants should not be allowed into the US. Both
were wearing yellow star-shaped badges that bore the
word “Muslim” and were intentionally reminiscent of
the yellow badges Jewish people were forced to wear
under Nazi rule.
They were
then escorted out of the venue.
Hamid said
that before her protest, people sitting nearby had
spoken with her and shared popcorn. Once she stood,
though, the crowd around began to chant “Trump,
Trump”. Hamid said one person accused her of having
a bomb. Reporters said they heard people making
“ugly” comments all around the rally.
Trump,
whose rally in Burlington, Vermont on Thursday was
repeatedly disrupted by protesters, has called
for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the US, a
policy he introduced in South Carolina
in December. He promoted the policy in
his first campaign ad, saying such a ban should
remain in place “until we can figure out what’s
going on”.
Hamid, 56,
said she had not been afraid to go into the crowd
because she believed people would have stopped more
serious threats. But she said the crowd’s reaction
to her protest was indicative of the power of
Trump’s rhetoric.
“It was
really quite telling and a vivid example of what
happens when you start using this hateful rhetoric
and how it can incite a crowd,” she said.
“I don’t
even think he believes in the rhetoric he is
spewing.”
On Saturday
John Kasich, the governor of Ohio who is also
running for the Republican presidential nomination,
said the crowd’s booing of Hamid and her fellow
protester was “terrible”.
“We’re not
a country that feels good about yelling or insulting
people,” he said on CNN. “Maybe it was a Friday
night, who knows.”
Kasich also
said the video of Hamid and the man being booed and
taken out of the Trump event would be shown around
the world, potentially damaging America’s standing
with Muslim countries, allies in the fight against
Islamic State.
The Council
on American-Islamic Relations (Cair), meanwhile,
called on
Trump to apologize.
“The image
of a Muslim woman being abused and ejected from a
political rally sends a chilling message to American
Muslims,” Cair’s executive director, Nihad Awad,
said in a statement.
“Donald
Trump should issue a public apology to the Muslim
woman kicked out of his rally and make a clear
statement that American Muslims are welcome as
fellow citizens and as participants in the nation’s
political process.”
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