Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Ilhan Omar, quintessen­tially American

- Dana Milbank Columnist Dana Milbank is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group.

Ilhan Omar, the congresswo­man President Trump’s chanting mob would deport to Africa, sat onstage Tuesday with fellow Muslims, before an audience of Muslims, taking questions from Muslims.

And what she said was quintessen­tially American.

The head of a group called Muslims for Progressiv­e Values rose to say that “it would be really powerful if the two Muslim congresswo­men” — Omar, D-Minn., and Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich. — spoke out against the practice of female genital mutilation.

Omar silenced the room by calling the question “appalling.” Noting that she already “put out statements upon statements” on the topic, she said she’s “quite disgusted, to be honest, that as Muslim legislator­s we are constantly being asked to waste our time speaking to issues that other people are not asked to speak to.” She mockingly asked whether she needs “to be on repeat every five minutes. So, today, I forgot to condemn al-Qaida, so here’s the al-Qaida one. Today, I forgot to condemn FGM [female genital mutilation], so here it goes. Today, I forgot to condemn Hamas, so here it goes.” She said the questions imply that, because she’s Muslim, she might support things “so abhorrent, so offensive, so evil, so vile.”

Her all-American outrage vented, Omar concluded: “I would like, not just for you, but for everyone to know that if you want us to speak as politician­s, American politician­s, then you treat us as such.”

The audience broke into cheers and applause. I felt like joining in.

Omar remains ill-defined beyond the monstrous caricature the president has made of her with his racist slander. She’s one of the four nonwhite congresswo­men (“The Squad”) who Trump proposes should “go back” to the countries from which they came, even though three were born in the United States. Omar, who emigrated from Somalia as a child, was the target of the “send her back” chant at Trump’s rally last week, and of Trump’s unsubstant­iated suggestion that she once married her own brother.

Minutes before Omar took the stage Tuesday at the Muslim Caucus Education Collective conference in Washington, Trump tweeted about “America-hating anti-Semite Rep. Omar,” who with the others in The Squad is a “Nightmare for America.”

For Trump’s racist base, Omar has it all: black, female, Muslim, immigrant. Omar previously hurt her own cause when her criticism of Israel crossed into anti-Semitism, displaying the same sort of prejudice that is often directed at Muslims.

She may revert again, but the woman I saw Tuesday represente­d American values far better than the bigoted demagogue who has made her his bête noire. She spoke of Muslims as part of America’s expanding democracy, united not by race or religion but love of country and reverence for its Constituti­on. Her message — that we rise or fall together — is the only answer to a president who daily tears us apart.

Sharing the stage with Omar was Khizr Khan, the Gold Star father who incurred Trump’s wrath in 2016. Reciting a verse in Arabic, he said the Koran teaches that “everyone is included and everyone has equal dignity. That is why the time has come for Muslims, with that basic foundation, to lead the charge, support our Constituti­on, our basic human dignities.” Omar applauded. And Omar concurred when Sam Rasoul, a Virginia state representa­tive, said: “I don’t want people to defend Muslims. I want people to defend our Constituti­on.”

Omar portrayed Trump’s recent attacks as part of “the inherent racism that has always been part of him,” going back to the Central Park Five. And her solution to Trump’s racism? Right out of Alexis de Tocquevill­e: “It’s to build community,” she said.

Could there be a more American creed?

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