Thursday, June 11, 2015
USA: Thirteen-year-old Cambridge Muslim girl takes on Islamophobia
“Writing about this boosted my self-esteem because it gave me a way to tackle the stereotypes that I face. When I started talking about it, I realized I wasn’t alone and that other kids go through the same thing.”
Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | US Desk
Source/Credit: Metro News
By Nate Homan | June 9, 2015
She was in third grade the first time a boy in her class called her a terrorist. People won’t sit next to her on the bus when she wears her hijab. Without it, people sit in the open seat without a second thought. Even living in a city as diverse and progressive as Cambridge, Sumaiya Mahee, 13, encounters some form of prejudice on a daily basis for her faith and heritage.
But her self-awareness and cultural knowledge is far beyond her middle school years. She is the author of an essay, “You’re Not Who You Say You Are: Beyond the Single Story,” an assignment for her combined social studies and English classes at Kennedy-Longfellow School that went viral and was published in Public Radio International’s Global Nation Education section.
“I face these stereotypes everyday because I am a Muslim girl. It's what I experience,” Mahee said. “Writing about this boosted my self-esteem because it gave me a way to tackle the stereotypes that I face. When I started talking about it, I realized I wasn’t alone and that other kids go through the same thing.”
However shortsighted it may be, people are reacting to a growing tension and suspicion towards Muslims on a local, national and international level. Here in the Boston area, residents have seen numerous terrorism-related trials and two brutal displays of jihadi-fueled violence.
Between the violent saga of Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, Usaama Rahim’s fatal standoff with authorities in Roslindale, Tarek Mehanna translating Al Qaeda propaganda, Rezwan Ferdaus’s plan to fly explosives into the Pentagon and US Capitol building and Ahmad Abousarma joining ISIS, local Muslims are under a microscope even in places as forward-thinking as the Bay State.
“It’s hard to take in because I am viewed as a terrorist by people” Mahee said. “It’s hard to take in because I am not the kind of person who would hurt someone.” She writes in her essay, “according to society and everything else going on in the world, I am not who I say I am,” an external identity that has been forced upon a child because of extremists.
“My goal is to keep working to correct the stereotypes,” Mahee said. “I don’t want other Muslim kids to grow up and have to face those and not be able to do anything.”
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