Muslim woman vies for US Congress seat
Amatul-Wadud is among five candidates aiming to become the first Muslim woman in Congress in November
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It’s an incongruous sight, a woman in a salmon pink hijab standing on a Massachusetts traffic median, waving at oncoming cars and asking perfect strangers to vote her into Congress.
“Hey how are you? Good to see you!” hollers Tahirah Amatul-Wadud at a male pedestrian. A few cars beep their horns, the odd driver zaps down his window to say hello. Quite a few drive past, seemingly oblivious.
Amatul-Wadud is a mother of seven, a lawyer, a community activist and a Muslim, who rises before dawn, prays five times a day and fasts during Ramadan.
Now aged 44, she faces the biggest hurdle of her life: asking a majority white constituency, where Catholics are the biggest religious group, to make her the first Muslim woman elected into Congress.
But for her it’s about policy, not religion. It’s about better representing and improving lives in western Massachusetts, an area suffering from higher than average unemployment, where many work two jobs just to make ends meet.
“I don’t always talk about religion because I don’t look to lead or serve from a religious perspective,” she tells AFP at her campaign headquarters. Indefatigable, armed with a warm smile and a lawyer’s mind, Amatul-Wadud is part of a groundswell of women and progressive Democrats running for office this year, motivated at least in part by opposition to President Donald Trump.
She’s one of five candidates ■ vying to become the first Muslim woman in Congress in the November midterm elections — 12 years after Minnesota’s Keith Ellison became the first Muslim in the US House of Representatives.
If she’s successful, she would also become her district’s first woman and first African-American in Congress.
T. Amatul-Wadud | Lawyer
‘Hope is possible’
Except it’s a long shot. Her opponent in the September 4 Democratic primary is Richard Neal, who has served in Congress since 1989. She has raised a total of $72,000 (Dh264,420) compared to his reported $3 million (Dh11 million).
When she moved to Springfield aged nine, he was the city mayor.
Now she wants his job, championing progressive causes such as Medicare for all, affordable education and eschewing donations from corporate and special interests. Dressed in a floral dress, black pants and platform heels, she powered through the sticky heat, trading pleasantries and soliciting votes at church barbecues.
Factory worker Ira Prude, 28, who worries about opioid addiction, homelessness and violent crime, says: “She seems to care a lot about her community. You know, where she grew up. So I think that’s good.”