VERMONT – A group of four American Muslim teenagers have been using poetry to discuss their Muslim American identity, dispelling any misplaced fears non-Muslims have about their faith.
“I think people like Donald Trump want Muslims banned out of fear. They are scared of the unknown and they are scared of change,” Kiran Waqar, a 16-year-old poet from Vermont, told The Huffington Post.
Waqar is a member of the slam poetry quartet, Muslim Girls Making Change, which recently participated in the international youth poetry festival Brave New Voices.
The group, which includes Balkisa Abdikadir, Hawa Adam and Lena Ginawi along with Waqar, was formed after getting involved with the Young Writers Project (YWP), a Vermont-based nonprofit that helps young artists develop their crafts and find avenues for creative expression.
“Hawa, Lena, Balkisa and Kiran are radiant, powerful young women. They each bring such unique characteristics to the table,” YWP outreach coordinator Sarah Gliech told HuffPost.
The idea followed the sharp increase in anti-Muslim attacks, reaching 200 this year, amid expectation to surge if the Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump was elected.
“September 11, 2001, wake up America the enemy is here,” the first line in their poem, “Wake Up America,” reads.
“Chameleon,” is another co-written poem in which Waqar and Adam discuss the difficulty of navigating their racial, religious, ethnic and national identities, which sometimes feel at odds.
“We will never be white, only pretend to be. We hide behind fake mirrors and lies, unsure of who we really are,” the poem reads.
“Am I African American or the other way around?” Adam says.
“Pakistani first? American?” Waqar says in the poem.
“In middle school, especially, I wanted to be an average girl so bad. I didn’t want anyone asking me questions or even acknowledging the fact that I am different from them,” Waqar told HuffPost.
“This wanting to be ‘normal’ stayed strong until the beginning of 10th grade when I put on the hijab. Now I am a little more comfortable with the stares, the questions and the disapproval prompting me to start to learn more about my culture.”
The girls say they hope their poetry will dispel any misplaced fears non-Muslims have about Islam.
“Whenever you hear the word terrorism I don’t want the first thing you think about is Islam, because Islam, to me, is a religion of peace,” Ginawi told the Associated Press.
“Anything that these terrorists do has nothing to do with Islam.”
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