yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

How "Rude" New Yorkers Treated One Muslim Woman after Trump's Election | Amani Al-Khatahtbeh


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

The day after the elections and a completely unforeseen outcome, I think for a lot of us in New York City we felt like we were walking under this pall of confusion and somberness and just trying to make sense of what had just happened. And for me as a Muslim woman, I anticipated that I would have an exceptionally hard day.

And yet I was so surprised that the entire day was spent with me receiving the warmest smiles from my people, the kindest gestures, more people than normal amongst the rudest of people in the world, New Yorkers, holding doors open for me or making a nice comment to me like complementing me on my scarf or something like that.

And to me it signified that we all have this common understanding, that there are people right now that are being targeted and that we are all responsible for one another and that we have to stand up for each other.

And to me, I took those little moments, those tiny exchanges as these signifiers to me that I'm not alone and we understand, and we have your back, and you don't have to worry. And it actually gets me emotional thinking about it, but even though they seem like very inconsequential, especially in comparison to what could potentially be happening on a much greater level right now, to me, that's what hope is.

It's in the people and it's in those interactions that we have with one another and the way that we just have that support for one another. Especially for a person like me that might feel more vulnerable or is more susceptible to a lot of hate these days, those moments really are the only thing that is keeping me going.

It's like, “I can face today; I can like get up in the morning and step out of my house, and it's going to be okay, and I'll make it back tonight.” And I don't think that people are aware of just how much those little exchanges can really mean to people or how much they can completely turn around a person's day.

And honestly, even in the midst of everything that we're facing right now and what the next few years could potentially look like for us, I'm still optimistic based off of that alone just because I know I have other people that are standing alongside me and that are going to face this with me together.

More Articles

View All
Mohenjo Daro 101 | National Geographic
[Music] The ancient city of Mohenjo-Daro is one of the first urban centers in human history. Nestled in southern Pakistan’s Indus River Valley, Mohenjo-Daro is the largest and best-preserved city of the Indus civilization, the earliest known civilization …
Surviving a Water Crisis in Detroit | Parched
We wash dishes. This is our dish thing. Is that this container work? It out our clothes. We have washing clothes. Survivor mode, you come to use the bathroom, will use it. We have a bucket going to get full. Take our school per scoop out. Whenever we have…
Bullet Time with MinutePhysics - Smarter Every Day 69
Hey, it’s me, Destin. Welcome back to Smarter Every Day! You remember a few weeks ago I did a bullet-time video in my backyard with a bonfire? Well, this week it’s a little bit different! Check it out. This is a 20-camera setup. Got a software package tha…
Summer of Soul | National Geographic
(Fast-paced drumming music) [Man] What time is it? ♪ This is the dawning of the age of Aquarius ♪ “Summer of Soul” is about the Harlem Cultural Festival in 1969. With so many greats of music in the day, Tony Lawrence and Hal Tulchin came up with an ide…
Sampling distribution of the difference in sample proportions | AP Statistics | Khan Academy
We’re told suppose that eight percent of all cars produced at plant A have a certain defect and six percent of all cars produced at plant B have this defect. Each month, a quality control manager takes separate random samples of 200 of the over 3000 cars …
Half-life | Physics | Khan Academy
This is a Neanderthal skull. Neanderthals are an extinct species of humans, and we believe they went extinct about 35 to 40,000 years ago. This is Earth, and we believe Earth to be about 4.5 billion years old. But my question was always, how do we know th…