'Everything feels like it's upside down': Donald Trump's election victory leaves American Muslims reeling and scared

  • American Muslims are reeling following Trump's shock election victory
  • There is significant fear among the 3.3million Muslims living in the US
  • One hijab-wearing student was briefly choked by men who made remarks about Trump's victory 
  • There are many who aren't leaving their homes for fear of harassment

American Muslims are reeling following the election of Donald Trump, whose presidential campaign was rife with anti-Muslim rhetoric and proposals that included banning all Muslims from entering the country. 

Now, among many of the 3.3million Muslims living in the United States, there is significant fear - along with some reports of harassment.

One hijab-wearing student at San Diego State University said she was briefly choked by suspects who made remarks about Trump's victory.

And on the morning after the election, Alia Ali said had a sickening feeling as she headed to her job as a secretary at a New York City public school, her hijab in place as usual. 

She's a Muslim who lives and works in one of the most diverse places in the nation - and yet the ascension of Trump to the White House left her wondering how other Americans really viewed her.

American Muslims are reeling over Donald Trump's victory, wondering what the next four years will bring. Above, Enas Almadhwahi, a 28-year-old Yemeni immigrant who has been in the US since 2008, but became a citizen this year and voted for the first time

'Half of America voted one way and half of America voted the other, and you're like, 'Which half am I looking at?'' she said. 

'You become almost like strangers to the people you've worked with. Is this person racist? Do they like me? Do they not like me? Because that's what this election has done.' 

'There are lots and lots of people who aren't going out of the house,' said Eboo Patel, a Muslim who heads the Interfaith Youth Core, a Chicago-based organization that works with colleges and government officials to build interreligious relationships.

At New York University late last week, hundreds of people sat shoulder-to-shoulder on a grand staircase of a student center to express solidarity after the word 'Trump!' was scrawled on the door of a Muslim prayer space at the school. 

Students spoke of friends who wore headscarves or other traditional clothing and were afraid to take public transportation home for fear of being harassed.

Sana Mayat, a 21-year-old senior who wears the hijab, said the election made her realize 'there was a large part of this country that didn't want me here'.

Rami Nashashibi, a father of three and executive director of Chicago's Inner-City Muslim Action Network, said: 'There is an intense state of anxiety about the future.' 

The Network has been inundated with calls seeking support since Election Day. 

'I grappled with the conversation I had to have with my children,' he said.

In this Wednesday, November 9, photo, Eeman Abbasi speaks during a protest on the University of Connecticut campus against the election of Trump

The outcome was especially bitter following an unprecedented voter registration drive by American Muslims, including get-out-the-vote sermons at mosques and the creation of a political action committee, Emerge USA, to mobilize Arabs and Muslims.

Enas Almadhwahi, a 28-year-old Yemeni immigrant who has been in the US since 2008, became a citizen this year and voted for the first time. 

To mark the occasion, she brought her seven-year-old daughter, along with some co-workers.

'At that moment, I was so happy,' said Almadhwahi, who lives in Brooklyn, New York, and works at an Arab-American community organization. 

The next day, when she told her daughter Trump had won, the girl cried. 

A friend had told the little girl that if Trump won, it would mean they couldn't talk anymore.

Enas Almadhwahi (pictured) said that when she told her seven-year-old daughter that Donald Trump won, the girl cried. A friend had told her if Trump won, they couldn't talk anymore

Elizabeth Bushnell, center, who identifies as Muslim, is embraced by Conner Crenshaw, left, and Jamal Edwards, right, next to a projected upside down U.S. flag during an anti-Trump protest at Lee Circle in New Orleans

'Everything feels like it's upside down,' Almadhwahi said. 'I still like to hope Trump will change his words about Muslims.'

Trump's policy plans remain a mystery, but his administration could radically reshape the Justice Department, which has been an ally under President Barack Obama in protecting Muslim civil rights. 

Trump could also repeal a key Obama program that prevents the deportation of some immigrants, including Muslims, living in the country illegally.

Muslims had far from a perfect relationship with the Obama administration. 

For years, the president kept the community largely at arms-length, sending surrogates to meet with them amid a stubborn misapprehension, fueled in part by his critics, that Obama, a Christian, was secretly Muslim. 

Many American Muslim leaders were uncomfortable with his foreign policy in Iraq and elsewhere, and objected to his program to fight extremism at home, saying the focus on Muslims ignored other threats from right-wing, anti-government extremists.

Still, Muslim leaders had built solid ties with many government officials. Now, they face not only the loss of those connections, but potentially a closed door to their concerns.

Ashfaq Taufique, president of the Birmingham Islamic Society, kneels in prayer at the group's mosque in Hoover, Alabama. Taufique said some members are worried because of Trump's campaign rhetoric concerning Muslims

'The friends we have are going to be fewer,' said Farhana Khera, president of the California-based civil rights group Muslim Advocates, which has represented clients suing over the New York Police Department's surveillance of American Muslims. 

'I think we'll be very much in a defensive posture.'

Since the election, mosques and Muslim groups have organized community meetings and conference calls focused on how to move forward. 

The Indiana-based Islamic Society of North America, the largest communal Muslim group in the US, issued a statement inviting Trump to engage with the community.

It said 'many American Muslims are traumatized by the result of the election and the fear of what is to come.' The group said there was no immediate response from Trump's office.

Sheik Omar Suleiman, resident scholar at the Valley Ranch Islamic Center in Irving, Texas, and the Council on American-Islamic Relations, an anti-defamation group, distributed suggested sermons for juma - or Friday prayers - at mosques, stressing Quranic verses about remaining strong in the face of hardships.

'Have hope in the people because Allah may turn their hearts toward you,' was among the verses they cited.

President-elect Donald Trump, left, stands with Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus in New York on Wednesday after his election

Faisal R. Khan, founder of a youth advocacy and peace organization near Chapel Hill, North Carolina, attended four Trump campaign rallies over the last year, in part to protest but also to speak with the Republican's supporters. 

Khan lived years ago in the Midwest, where he knew people who had grown resentful over losing Rust Belt jobs, and said he understands what drew so many working-class whites to the president-elect.

He has created a Facebook page called 'Talk To Me America,' hoping to start a conversation that can combat anti-Muslim bias.

'Peaceful protest is good, but at a certain point, we have to sit down and talk,' he said. 

'At the end of the day, we're all human beings. We're all Americans.' 

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