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issues<br />
Issues<br />
Issues<br />
Make America America Again<br />
Presidential Election causes spike in hate incidents in schools<br />
By Lily Grenis<br />
When Deynaba Farah began<br />
hearing more stories of violence<br />
against Muslims this past year,<br />
she feared for her life.<br />
Farah, who is Muslim, works with youths<br />
at the Islamic Society of CNY. The schoolchildren<br />
she mentors and her five younger<br />
siblings have recently expressed the same<br />
degree of fright to her.<br />
Hatred directed at the American Muslim<br />
community is certainly not new. However,<br />
Farah said it increased during the 2016<br />
presidential election due to President Donald<br />
Trump’s intolerant rhetoric.<br />
“Now that there’s this whole spark of<br />
Islamophobia, it’s almost as bad as it was<br />
when 9/11 just happened,” she said before the<br />
election. “Mr. Trump comes out, and he just<br />
sparks the fire that was going on and it starts<br />
all over again. … Because I wear the hijab, I<br />
am a symbol of what happened that day.”<br />
Trump built his campaign on promises<br />
to build a wall between the United States and<br />
Mexico, deport masses of illegal immigrants<br />
and ban Muslims from entering the country.<br />
Farah, a Syracuse University senior, is<br />
not alone in her assessment. In addition to<br />
the pre-election hostilities she described, hate<br />
incidents toward marginalized groups such as<br />
Muslims, immigrants and African-Americans<br />
skyrocketed after the election. In the 10 days<br />
following Election Day, the Southern Poverty<br />
Graphic by Sam Goldman<br />
Law Center, an American civil-rights organization,<br />
tallied almost 900 incidents of hateful<br />
harassment nationwide. The center counted<br />
any report of intolerance-fueled harassment<br />
against a specific group as a hate incident.<br />
Nearly 40 percent of these incidents took<br />
place in schools, from elementary schools to<br />
colleges.<br />
This alarming statistic<br />
Issu<br />
epitomizes “The<br />
Trump Effect,” a phenomenon coined by<br />
SPLC last spring. In an SPLC study published<br />
in April, more than 50 percent of 2,000 teachers<br />
interviewed reported “an increase in uncivil<br />
political discourse.” Teachers mentioned<br />
Trump five times more frequently than all of<br />
the other candidates combined.<br />
Examples respondents provided included<br />
chants of “terrorist” and “ISIS” directed at<br />
Muslim students and “dirty Mexican” at Hispanic<br />
students. At a high school basketball<br />
game in Indiana, students chanted “Build a<br />
wall” at Latino players on the opposing team.<br />
Comparatively, in SPLC’s November<br />
study, 90 percent of 10,000 educators interviewed<br />
said the election negatively impacted<br />
the school climate. More than 2,500 gave specific<br />
examples of hate with roots in Trump’s<br />
campaign rhetoric.<br />
The day after the election in a Michigan<br />
middle school, video recording captured students<br />
shouting “Build a wall” during lunch;<br />
in a New Jersey high school, a male student<br />
targeted a group of Hispanic girls and told<br />
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