Rose Hamid, a 56-year-old flight attendant from North Carolina,
stood up silently in the stands directly behind Trump during Friday
night's rally when the billionaire businessman suggested that
refugees fleeing violence in Syria were affiliated with Islamic
State militants.
"I get why he's popular: he's an entertainer, he's engaging, there
are certainly aspects that appeal to certain parts of society. He
even has valid points in some cases," Hamid said in a telephone
interview with Reuters from her home in Charlotte.
"But they have to recognize what they're supporting," Hamid said,
referring to Trump's supporters. "His ramping up of his hateful
rhetoric is just not what America is, and it's not who we are as a
country."
At the rally, Hamid was wearing a white head scarf and a blue
T-shirt made by her son emblazoned with the words, "Salam, I come in
peace."
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Hamid, who called herself a registered Democrat, said she came to
the rally because she had a day off from work and wanted Trump
supporters to meet a Muslim in real life. Hamid said she told
herself she would stand up quietly if Trump said anything hateful
about any group, not just Muslims.
As she stood, people in the crowd around her at the rally in Rock
Hill, South Carolina started yelling "Trump! Trump!" as organizers
earlier had instructed them to do. Soon afterwards, security
officers showed up at her seat and, with little explanation, told
her and a friend they had to leave the premises, she said.
"They didn't even tell us we were causing a disturbance," she said.
"They just said, 'Come with me, come with me.' I was asking, 'Why?
Why?' and they just said, 'Come with me.'"
Hamid said she was later told she was trespassing at a private
event.
APOLOGY DEMANDED
The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim advocacy
group, on Saturday called on Trump to apologize after the incident,
which ignited a firestorm on social media and prompted criticism by
at least one fellow Republican.
"The image of a Muslim woman being abused and ejected from a
political rally sends a chilling message to American Muslims and to
all those who value our nation's traditions of religious diversity
and civic participation," said Nihad Awad, executive director of the
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
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Ohio Governor John Kasich, another Republican presidential hopeful,
said the crowd's response at Trump's rally was inappropriate.
"We don't need to be shouting and booing and scaring somebody who
decided to stand up and have some sort of silent protest," Kasich
told reporters on the sidelines of a poverty summit in South
Carolina on Saturday.
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The incident was the latest controversy involving Trump regarding
Muslims. Trump last month advocated banning all foreign Muslims from
entering the United States "until our country's representatives can
figure out what is going on." In November, he said he saw thousands
of Muslims in Jersey City, New Jersey, cheering the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks on New York's World Trade Center. Fact-checkers have
debunked this assertion.
Hamid said some Trump supporters may not be looking past his showy
campaign to see the damage he is doing.
"His supporters really need to look at what it is that he's
proposing, and the type of bully mentality that he has of
disrespecting people to such a tremendous degree," Hamid said.
She said she hopes the other Republican White House hopefuls will
decide it is better to leave what she called hateful speech out of
their campaigns instead of emulating Trump.
"I think that rest of the pack is looking at what Trump is doing and
then doing whatever it is they think will get them higher in the
(poll) numbers," she said. "Hopefully, his numbers will drop, and
that will give the message to everybody else that the fear-mongering
is not the way to go."
Hamid said she was leaning toward supporting Vermont Senator Bernie
Sanders, who is seeking the Democratic presidential nomination in
November's election. That said, she said she had not made a decision
on who would get her vote.
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Hamid is president of a group called Muslim Women of the Carolinas,
but she said it is a social organization, not a political one, and
was not involved in her action on Friday.
At a rally on Saturday in Ottumwa, Iowa, Trump cited last month's
San Bernardino, California massacre and the shooting of a
Philadelphia police officer on Friday by a man who police said
pledged allegiance to Islamic State as examples of Muslim anger
toward Americans.
"The hatred is so incredible," Trump said. "And the danger, when we
have people willing to fly airplanes into the World Trade Center and
many other things, we've got to solve it."
Trump's campaign did not respond to a request for comment on the
Hamid incident.
(Reporting by Karen Brooks in Fort Worth, Texas; Additional
reporting by Emily Stephenson, Steve Holland and Emily Flitter;
Editing by Frank McGurty and Will Dunham)
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