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12/7/41 and 9/11/01
It felt like a double whammy
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My son had just woken up and I had him in my arms and the phone rang and my sister-in-law was calling from Texas. She said, Turn on the TV, turn on the TV! And so I didnt even have my contacts in, so I could barely see, so I had the TV on and I was sort of squinting and looking real close at it and I see these like flaming buildings and you know just so many things went through my mind at that moment. And I really felt like a double whammy, because Im like, Im afraid that Im going to be in a building thats going to get hit at some point. And then theres just the sheer sadness that I felt for the people that were involved. And then there was this impending sort of doom for whats going to happen to the Muslim community in America.
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Aftermath
Everything changed for everybody
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Just for my own child, I just felt so sad that this was an event from the first year of his life and whenever I remember the first year of my sons life, Im going to remember that this was the time that everything changed for everybody. And I knew that things were going to be different, but you know you kind of have to, I guess put that sort of, almost, I feel like I have to put that sort of paranoia aside just to sort of deal with life on a daily basis. And, you know, although the memories of all that are still there and very raw . . . you go on.
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Fear
I didnt want to be the target
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After 9/11 there was about a week where I didnt go out. Mostly for fear of the reaction. It was natural for people to have a reaction and to be scared. And so I wasnt really faulting anybody for that, but I didnt want to be the target of any of it and I didnt want my child to have to be subject to any of that. So I thought, Ill give it a week. Build up my own confidence. Let people out there sort of settle in a bit and let the reality hit them, and then Ill see what happens.
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Identity
Its just something personal between me and God
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Although I was born Muslim, there was a certain point in my life where I had to say I really want to follow this lifestyle. Its not just something that my parents gave me as a part of my birth, but I believe in this and I want to do this. So when I was 13, I kind of made a decision towards that end and I decided that wearing the scarf would help me along, because when youre a teenager, theres so many influences out there. I didnt go to a Muslim school or anything, I just went to a regular school and I was interested in a lot of the things that the other girls and boys were interested in and I felt like having the scarf would sort of set me aside. It would in my own eyes and in everybody elses eyes. Since then, when I went to college, it became something different. You know, college was the whole spiritual journey where you become involved in student groups and that sort of thing. And then now, I just think its something personal between me and God. Something that Ive chosen to do and I continue to do because it benefits my relationship with God.
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