MARYLAND – A young American Muslim woman has won primary election in the US state of Maryland, the victory seen significant amid increasing anti-Muslim rhetoric in the US.
“If Trump’s views were a true reflection of Americans beliefs, I would not have won this election decisively. My district has around 56,000 voters and Muslims are less than one per cent of that,” Raheela Ahmed, 22-year-old Indian-American Muslim, told Press Trust of India on Friday, April 29.
“Trump can make outrageous and offensive statements for political reasons, but I am a strong believer that America’s diversity is our strength,” Raheela said, who attributed her win to America’s diversity.
In Tuesday’s election, Ahmed received 9,624 votes against incumbent Jeana Jacob (6,004 votes) in the Board of Education District 5 primary elections.
She along with her runner up Cheryl Landis who got 8,072 now advance to the November general elections.
If elected in November general elections, she would be the youngest Indian-American to be elected to this top education post in Maryland.
“The plan of action is to win the general election, which I lost by 3 per cent in 2012. I will be engaging all sorts of stakeholders over the next several months. I love grassroots campaigning…It’s the core of my candidacy,” she told PTI.
Raheela’s father, a technology entrepreneur immigrated from Hyderabad at the age 25, while her mother moved to the US when she was five years old from Pakistan.
“By attacking aspects of people’s identity like gender, ethnicity and faith, Trump is dividing the masses. Strength comes from unity, collaboration, trust and understanding. If he really wants to make America great again, he needs to stop dividing and start uniting!” she added.
The veiled young Muslim added that Islam, like all religions, does not condone violence.
“The majority of Muslims are peaceful people. The word ‘Islam’ itself means peace. Terrorists that act under the name of Islam are twisted in their understanding of the faith,” she said.
“I’m representing individuals that largely do not identify with my faith, ethnicity, youth and gender, in a time where Islamophobia, racism and discrimination are around every news corner. However, this election win shows that people see what they want to see,” she said.
“I won because more people connected with my shared values and aspirations than those turned off by my differences,” said Raheela , who is currently an Advisory Associate with the Global Public Sector at Grant Thornton LLP.