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History-Making Somali-American Legislator Reports 'Hateful' Taunts In D.C.

One month after winning a seat in Minnesota's legislature, Ilhan Omar says she was assailed in a cab ride to her hotel from the White House.
Stephen Maturen
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AFP/Getty Images
One month after winning a seat in Minnesota's legislature, Ilhan Omar says she was assailed in a cab ride to her hotel from the White House.

For the first Somali-American lawmaker in the U.S., it was meant to be a day to remember: a visit to the White House for policy meetings before she takes office in Minnesota. But as she left the seat of U.S. power, Ilhan Omar says, she was subjected to a hateful and threatening verbal attack in a cab.

"I pray for his humanity and for all those who harbor hate in their hearts," Omar, a Muslim who wears a head scarf, wrote of the cab driver who she says assailed her. In a Facebook post, she says the encounter took place on Tuesday.

Saying that she was "subjected to the most hateful, derogatory, Islamophobic, sexist taunts and threats I have ever experienced," Omar says the cab driver "called me ISIS and threatened to remove my hijab."

Omar, 34, recounted the abusive encounter in the nation's capital just one month after she made both history and headlines with her inspiring personal story of a former refugee who won a state House seat in southeast Minneapolis, years after her family fled Somalia's civil war.

"This really was a victory for that 8-year-old in that refugee camp," Omar said of her Election Day win. "This was a victory for the young woman being forced into child marriage. This was a victory for every person that's been told they have limits on their dreams."

This week, Omar has been in Washington, D.C., to attend the State Innovation Exchange conference along with hundreds of other state legislators. She also spoke at the U.S. Institute of Peace on Monday — Arab American Day. One day later, she was at the White House for a discussion about economic issues facing the middle class.

After the White House session, Omar said, she was verbally abused during the cab ride to her hotel, adding that she "wasn't really sure how this encounter would end as I attempted to rush out of his cab and retrieve my belongs."

Omar added, "I am still shaken by this incident and can't wrap my head around" the increasing boldness of people "displaying their hate towards Muslims."

Her Facebook post about the incident has drawn thousands of reactions and hundreds of comments from people who expressed their sympathy and solidarity with the mother of three who will be sworn into her new office in January.

One of the most popular responses to Omar's post came from another Minnesotan who had recently visited the nation's capital.

"I just got back from Washington too," Christopher L. Wendt wrote. "I had a cab driver originally from Somalia. When I told him I am from Minnesota and that we have a 'first' Somali woman legislator, he got very excited. 'Ilhan!' he said - very proud. Keep it up. We've got your back."

After a request for comment about the incoming legislator's report, Washington's Department of For-Hire Vehicles responded:

"Washington, D.C. is an inclusive city. As the agency charged with protecting consumers in the vehicle-for-hire industry DFHV takes any allegations of discrimination very seriously. We diligently pursue the investigation and resolution of incidents involving bad behavior by taxis and ridesharing vehicle operators. We ask that anyone that has information that will assist with our investigation to come forward."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Bill Chappell is a writer and editor on the News Desk in the heart of NPR's newsroom in Washington, D.C.
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