Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn. — a Black, Muslim immigrant woman — has long been a target for the political right. After all, she’s so much of what the Republican Party despises rolled into one.
So it’s no surprise that some people on the right would fabricate claims that her recent tweet about a video of people singing a song praising Jesus to passengers on a flight was an “attack” on Christianity. It wasn’t; Omar was calling out the very real double standard of how Muslims would have been treated if they did the same.
I think my family and I should have a prayer session next time I am on a plane. How do you think it will end? pic.twitter.com/5696Erwsl5
— Ilhan Omar (@IlhanMN) April 17, 2022
The video shows people on a flight — possibly over Europe, according to TMZ, though not much context about the flight and the people on it has been confirmed — walking up and down the aisles of the plane. One played a guitar while others sang. The reaction of passengers ranged from some joining in to others looking displeased at being forced to listen to people singing inches from their faces. But that appeared to be the extent of any negative reaction.
Omar’s Saturday tweet was apparently too much for a slew of GOP congressional candidates, who in reaction accused the congresswoman of “hating” Christians, “disrespecting” Christians and being “anti-God,” and, of course, urged her to go back to “her own country” if she didn’t like it. There’s nothing like peddling bigotry in the name of Jesus to make it clear you have no idea what Jesus was about. But these Republicans get that demonizing Muslims plays well with the GOP base, especially given that former President Donald Trump had made anti-Muslim bigotry a central plank of his 2016 campaign.
The truth is Omar’s point was spot on. She didn’t criticize Christianity or even the slightly off-key singing of these young people. She merely pointed out that if a group of Muslims got up from their seats on a plane and began praying in Arabic in the aisles, the response would’ve been vastly different.
Omar knows that countless Muslims have been removed from flights for far less. In 2016, The New York Times reported that an Iraqi American college student, who was about the same age as the people in the video appear to be, was speaking to his uncle by phone on a Southwest Airlines flight that had boarded at Los Angeles International Airport. The student spoke in Arabic and finished his conversation with the word “inshallah,” which means “God willing.” This apparently alarmed the woman sitting in front of him, who hurriedly went to the flight crew, the Times reported. Next thing the young man knew, he was escorted off the flight and being questioned by the FBI, he told the Times. This all happed simply because he spoke a few words in Arabic. (He was later released and booked another flight.)
Imagine how uncomfortable that flight crew member would’ve been if she saw Muslims running up and down the aisle singing about Allah.
That is just one example of “flying while Muslim.” Muslims have been asked to leave flights for doing nothing more than being themselves; I haven’t seen any reports of Muslims suddenly singing about Islam in the aisles of a plane. Also in 2016, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported that a Muslim American couple on a flight from Paris returning to their home in Cincinnati were asked to leave the plane after a flight crew member became “uncomfortable” seeing the woman wearing a hijab and saying the word “Allah.” Imagine how uncomfortable that flight crew member would’ve been if she saw Muslims running up and down the aisle singing about Allah. Of course, the list goes on of incidents like these.








