Trump social media post involving Minnesota children called 'anti-Muslim bigotry'
Published in News & Features
MINNEAPOLIS — Somali and Muslim communities in Minnesota are once again condemning a social media post by President Donald Trump, alleging it communicates “anti-Muslim bigotry” toward children.
On Monday, Trump posted a 14-second video clip showing children singing in graduation outfits, with girls also wearing hijabs. The children had sashes that read “kindergarten” on one side and “graduate” on the other. The video appears to be from a Somali TV Minnesota news clip filming a ceremony at a charter school in St. Paul.
Included in Trump’s TruthSocial post is a screenshot of a caption from an X account that first posted the video in June. The caption said, “Public school in St. Paul, Minnesota. Every girl is in a hijab ... in kindergarten.”
The post drew statements from the Council on American-Islamic Relations, the Somali American Partnership and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.
“By using his global platform to amplify anti-Muslim bigotry and target Muslim children at this elementary school, President Trump is putting lives at risk,” said a statement from the national and Minnesota chapter of CAIR.
Trump and other Republican leaders have repeatedly been accused of making xenophobic and racist attacks against Muslim Americans in recent months. Trump has specifically singled out the Somali community in Minnesota numerous times, calling them “garbage” in December.
“Somali Americans are an integral part of Minnesota’s past, present, and future,” the Somali American Partnership said in a statement. “Our children deserve to be recognized for their potential – not used to fuel fear, division, or anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant narratives.
“Those with public platforms have a responsibility to protect children, not endanger them.”
In a statement on X, Walz accused Trump of “attacking a group of kindergarteners because of the clothes they wore to school.”
The Somali American Partnership, a collection of Minnesota-based nonprofit organizations that assist the Somali community, plan to hold a news conference Wednesday to address “the growing climate of anti-Somali and anti-Muslim rhetoric.”
Members of the Muslim community in Minnesota have expressed fear for their safety numerous times in recent months, citing such rhetoric. In May, community members tied the rhetoric to a disturbance at a mosque in Lakeville, days after three people were killed at a San Diego mosque.
Last fall, Jaylani Hussein, the executive director of the Minnesota chapter of CAIR, said there had been more than 40 instances of vandalism, arson or other disturbances at mosques in the last three years, higher than any other state. Damages totaled more than $3 million, Hussein said.
He said at the time that Islamophobic comments directed at Muslim institutions in Minnesota were “completely on a new level.”
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