Chattanooga Times Free Press

Attack on Muslim woman was a hate crime, groups say

- BY ASHLEY LUTHERN MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL (TNS)

MILWAUKEE — National and local Muslim civil rights and advocacy groups are calling for Milwaukee police to investigat­e as a hate crime an attack on a Muslim woman who says a man demanded she remove her hijab and beat her.

“You can’t get a clearer hate crime than this,” said Janan Najeeb, president of the Milwaukee Muslim Women’s Coalition.

“This was not a robbery,” Najeeb said Wednesday. “There was an individual telling her to take her scarf off, ripped it off and started beating her up. This is clearly a hate crime.”

The woman, who has not been publicly identified, was walking home from her morning prayers at the Islamic Society of Milwaukee about 6 a.m. Monday.

A car pulled up alongside her on South 13th Street near West Layton Avenue and a man got out, demanding she take off her hijab, or head scarf, said Munjed Ahmad, a member of the society’s executive committee who has met with the woman several times since the attack.

The woman tried to pull the scarf tight to keep it on and “he threw me on the floor, then he beat me like an animal,” the woman told Milwaukee station WITI-TV as she showed her bloodstain­ed head scarf.

The man pulled her to the ground where he stomped on her head before he drew a knife and slashed at her clothing, Ahmad said.

The woman has a history of seizures and suffered one later that day, Ahmad said.

She was taken to a hospital for treatment and released Tuesday.

“She’s of course very shaken and also tired,” Najeeb said.

Milwaukee police did not say they were investigat­ing this as a hate crime. In a statement, the department said officers responded to a battery in the 4800 block of South 13th Street about 11:30 a.m. Monday. A woman told police she was “struck by an unknown suspect” several hours earlier near 13th Street and Layton Avenue and police continue to search for the male suspect, according to police.

On Wednesday, the national Council on American-Islamic Relations said the attack should be investigat­ed as a hate crime. The statement came less than a week after the organizati­on called for a hate crime investigat­ion of Muslim prayer space vandalism at Marquette University.

“There were no valuables taken, none requested,” Ahmad said. “He immediatel­y lunged at her head scarf. Given the totality of the circumstan­ces, it does look like this is a hate crime and that’s how we’re approachin­g it.”

He urged anyone with informatio­n to come forward and talk to police.

“An act of this nature, as brutal as it was, it has to be addressed and this individual needs to be brought to justice to serve not only as a punishment but also as a deterrent,” Ahmad said.

The Islamic Society of Milwaukee has a good relationsh­ip with the surroundin­g neighborho­od and as news of the attack has spread, many people have come forward offering to escort worshipers and provide other support, he said.

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