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    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jul 5 12:13:13 2023
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    from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jun/17/hamtramck-michigan-muslim-council-lgbtq-pride-flags-banned

    man standing in front of a pride flag
    Darren Shelton, executive director of Planet Ant Theatre, came to work
    on his day off so that he could hang this LGBTQ+ flag in Hamtramck,
    Michigan, on Tuesday. Photograph: Robin Buckson/AP
    Michigan

    ‘A sense of betrayal’: liberal dismay as Muslim-led US city bans Pride flags
    Many liberals celebrated when Hamtramck, Michigan, elected a
    Muslim-majority council in 2015 but a vote to exclude LGBTQ+ flags from
    city property has soured relations

    Tom Perkins in Hamtramck, Michigan
    Sat 17 Jun 2023 06.00 EDT

    In 2015, many liberal residents in Hamtramck, Michigan, celebrated as
    their city attracted international attention for becoming the first in
    the United States to elect a Muslim-majority city council.

    They viewed the power shift and diversity as a symbolic but meaningful
    rebuke of the Islamophobic rhetoric that was a central theme of then
    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s campaign.

    Ramadan in Hamtramck, Michigan<br>HAMTRAMCK, MICHIGAN, USA - MAY 22:
    Muad Aimogari a teacher and US citizen from Hamtramck, Michigan talks
    about Ramadan, fasting and his sister who is still in Yemen on Tuesday,
    May 22, 2018. (Photo by Bryan Mitchell)
    'It's brought us together': at Ramadan, American Muslims on life in the
    age of Trump
    Read more

    This week many of those same residents watched in dismay as a now fully
    Muslim and socially conservative city council passed legislation banning
    Pride flags from being flown on city property that had – like many
    others being flown around the country – been intended to celebrate the
    LGBTQ+ community.

    Muslim residents packing city hall erupted in cheers after the council’s unanimous vote, and on Hamtramck’s social media pages, the taunting has
    been relentless: “Fagless City”, read one post, emphasized with emojis
    of a bicep flexing.

    In a tense monologue before the vote, Councilmember Mohammed Hassan
    shouted his justification at LGBTQ+ supporters: “I’m working for the people, what the majority of the people like.”

    While Hamtramck is still viewed as a bastion of multiculturalism, the difficulties of local governance and living among neighbors with
    different cultural values quickly set in following the 2015 election.
    Some leaders and residents are now bitter political enemies engaged in a
    series of often vicious battles over the city’s direction, and the Pride
    flag controversy represents a crescendo in tension.

    “There’s a sense of betrayal,” said the former Hamtramck mayor Karen Majewski, who is Polish American. “We supported you when you were
    threatened, and now our rights are threatened, and you’re the one doing
    the threatening.”

    For about a century, Polish and Ukrainian Catholics dominated politics
    in Hamtramck, a city of 28,000 surrounded by Detroit. By 2013, largely
    Muslim Bangladeshi and Yemeni immigrants supplanted the white eastern Europeans, though the city remains home to significant populations of
    those groups, as well as African Americans, whites and Bosnian and
    Albanian Americans. According to the 2020 census some 30% to 38% of Hamtramck’s residents are of Yemeni descent, and 24% are of Asian
    descent, largely Bangladeshi.

    After several years of diversity on the council, some see irony in an
    all-male, Muslim elected government that does not reflect the city’s makeup.

    The resolution, which also prohibits the display of flags with ethnic,
    racist and political views, comes at a time when LGBTQ+ rights are under assault worldwide, and other US cities have passed similar bans, with
    the vast majority driven by often white politically conservative Americans.

    People who could not get into the Hamtramck city council chambers try to
    listen via YouTube or on the monitor in the hallway during the city
    council meeting at City Hall in Hamtramck on Tuesday.

    While the situation in Hamtramck largely evolved on its own local
    dynamics, some outside rightwing agitators connected to national
    Republican groups have been pushing for the ban on Hamtramck’s social
    media pages and voiced support for it at Tuesday’s meeting. They are
    from nearby Dearborn where they were part of an effort last year to ban
    books with LGBTQ+ themes.

    Their talking points mirror those made elsewhere: some Hamtramck Muslims
    say they simply want to protect children, and gay people should “keep it
    in their home”.

    But that sentiment is “an erasure of the queer community and an attempt
    to shove queer people back in the closet”, said Gracie Cadieux, a queer Hamtramck resident who is part of the Anti-Transphobic Action group.

    Mayor Amer Ghalib, 43, who was elected in 2021 with 67% of the vote to
    become the nation’s first Yemeni American mayor, told the Guardian on Thursday he tries to govern fairly for everyone, but said LGBTQ+
    supporters had stoked tension by “forcing their agendas on others”.

    “There is an overreaction to the situation, and some people are not
    willing to accept the fact that they lost,” he said, referring to
    Majewski and recent elections that resulted in full control of the
    council by Muslim politicians.

    Though the city’s Muslims are not a monolith and some privately told the Guardian they were “frustrated” with council, the only leader to
    publicly question it was the former city council member Amanda
    Jaczkowski, a Polish American who converted to Islam.

    In a statement, she raised concerns about the move’s legality: “There
    are far too many questions to pass this today with any semblance of responsibility.”

    On one level, the discord that has flared between Muslim and non-Muslim populations in recent years has its root in a culture clash that is
    unique to a partly liberal small US city now under conservative Muslim leadership, residents say. Last year, the council approved an ordinance allowing backyard animal sacrifices, shocking some non-Muslim residents
    even though animal sacrifice is protected under the first amendment in
    the US as a form of religious expression.

    Protesters hold signs during demonstration against President-elect Trump
    and in support of Muslim residents in Hamtramck, Michigan on 14 November
    2016.

    When Michigan legalized marijuana, it gave municipalities a late 2020
    deadline to enact a prohibition of dispensaries. Hamtramck council
    missed the deadline and a dispensary opened, drawing outrage from
    conservative Muslims who demanded city leadership shut it down. That
    ignited counterprotests from many liberal residents, and the council
    only relented when it became clear it had no legal recourse.

    At other times, the issues are not unique to Hamtramck. In the realm of
    local politics, personal fights among neighbors, warring factions and
    dirty politics are a common part of the democratic process across the US.

    “I don’t know that we’re really all that different from other cities in most ways,” Majewski said.

    However, race and religion add more fraught layers to Hamtramck’s
    issues. Islamophobia exists here, and some Muslims say they saw bigotry
    in local voter fraud investigations, and in LGBTQ+ supporters not
    respecting their religion.

    But Majewski said the majority is now disrespecting the minority. She
    noted that a white, Christian-majority city council in 2005 created an ordinance to allow the Muslim call to prayer to be broadcast from the
    city’s mosques five times daily. It did so over objections of white city residents, and Majewski said she didn’t see the same reciprocity with
    roles reversed.

    Muslim men pray at the Baitul Mukarram Mosque in 2018.

    Ghalib disagreed, and labeled the prayer broadcast a “first amendment issue” while noting no one was asking for city hall to broadcast the calls.

    Moreover, the white majority council was not always hospitable to Muslim residents who have previously faced overt racism. And with a
    majority-Muslim council in place, more Muslims had been appointed to
    boards and commissions, and hired in city hall. So had some LGBTQ+
    residents, Ghalib added.

    Despite the political clashes, he thinks there is hope for Hamtramck to
    live up to its multicultural ideals.

    “We can get along and people are not violent here,” he said.

    Cadieux agreed peaceful coexistence was possible.

    “We aren’t in the business of excluding people from our society and I’m not going to exclude socially conservative Muslims – they have a place
    at the table just like everyone else,” she said. “However, they cannot,
    and will not, shove another community out of the way.”

    Topics
    Michigan
    US politics
    LGBTQ+ rights
    Islam
    news

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