Dallas, TX – Some Children Fearful Of What A Trump Presidency Will Mean

    10

     Melissa Walker, left, walks with her son seventh grader Habib Rahman, 12, in front of his middle school in Rockwall, Texas,  Thursday, Nov. 10, 2016. (AP Photo/LM Otero)Dallas, TX – Thirteen-year-old Sophia Davis, who is black and has friends who are Hispanic, Muslims and gay, is worried that Donald Trump’s election will lead to the acceptance of a “culture of violence and hateful speech.”

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    “It’s just being a minority in this country. That’s hard as it is. And now having a president that is not going to stand up for those minorities, that’s even worse,” the Brooklyn, New York, eighth-grader said.

    Children are processing the outcome of a presidential run that was often not kid-friendly. And for some, Trump’s campaign rhetoric made them fearful of a White House controlled by the brash Republican businessman.

    Evan Canby-Pratt was in tears after waking up Wednesday to find that Democrat Hillary Clinton had lost.

    The chance to elect the first woman president had excited the 12-year-old. Trump “really scares” her with his comments about Latinos and other groups and his treatment of women.

    “It seems like he just takes what people are afraid of and makes them even more scared of it,” said Evan, a white seventh-grader in Fayetteville, Georgia.

    When 12-year-old Habib Rahman’s mother burst into tears while driving him to school the day after the election, he put his hand on her shoulder and recited a passage from the Quran about ease following hardship.

    “I’d barely seen my mom cry. And when I do, I feel like I should try and help her as quickly as possible,” said Habib, a seventh-grader from suburban Dallas who would’ve liked to see Democratic Sen. Bernie Sanders go farther in the race.

    As the family watched the election results, his mother, Melissa Walker, grew concerned that they could become targets, thinking of comments Trump had made about Muslims, which included proposing a ban on foreign Muslims entering the U.S. She said she doesn’t think Trump would speak out against violence toward Muslims.

    “It’s upsetting,” Habib said, “because most people coming to the country are trying to find a safer place.”

    Trump also promised during his campaign to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, accused Mexico of sending rapists and other criminals here and advocated mass deportations. He’s tried to walk back some of the harshest comments.

    Osiris Ramirez said he wasn’t happy that Trump won “because of what he said about Mexicans and all that.” The 10-year-old Phoenix boy’s parents are Mexican immigrants who recently became U.S. citizens, and he’s worried that Trump will not treat immigrants fairly.

    Ethan Hedden, a seventh-grader in Fayetteville, Georgia, said he favored Trump in the election. The 13-year-old called much of the reaction over Trump’s comments “a little bit overdramatic” but said he could also see where other people were coming from.

    The election was the topic of many conversations at school, he said, but he found other students were unwilling to discuss anything negative about Clinton, who faced persistent questions about her honesty and trustworthiness. He thought many classmates were more anti-Trump than pro-Clinton. Among the things he didn’t like about Clinton were her ideas on tightening restrictions on guns.

    “Mostly, I just kept quiet and listened to them,” said Ethan, whose mother is Native American and father is of Italian descent.

    Nine-year-old Gracyn Marquez was fine with either candidate winning. “I kind of wanted Donald Trump to win because he’s a really good businessman, but I also wanted Hillary to win because she’s a strong woman,” the Dallas-area third-grader said.

    Her Hispanic father, Mateo Marquez, who teaches kids mindfulness through yoga, said he asked those in a preschool class on Election Day what they would do if they were president. He said their answers were “simple but very powerful” and included being nice to people and giving homes to the homeless.

    Lamisa Mustafa, 17-year-old Dallas-area high school senior who is Muslim, said she was sad and scared that Americans had elected Trump. She said his talk of a ban on Muslims goes against American values and religious freedom.

    But as the week went on, she took heart from Clinton’s concession speech and is looking forward. She worries that protests over Trump might hurt the goal of unity.

    “We need to keep fighting for what we believe in — make sure that none of our rights are threatened,” she said. “But we can do that with peaceful conversations with people.”


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    10 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    7 years ago

    It looks like the press has learned nothing from their utter defeat during the elections. Yes, the defeat of the press because make no mistake, it was a referendum on the dishonest, biased press as well, This and other post-election news pieces shows they have no intention of stopping their hack jobs on Pres. elect Trump. Pathetic.

    7 years ago

    1) For the gays, Trump never said a word against anti LGBT and in fact i don’t think cares. He would be totally cool with whatever you want. In fact as a republican president this is the best you will ever get.
    2) For the African Americans, you guys too Trump never critcized and pledged to make you rlives and cities better. (People like to point to his birther comments as some kind of racail thing, But thats nonsense because he did the same thing to Cruz. And so it had nothing to do with Obama skin color)
    3) Mexicans, he made it clearif you don’t do crimes you won’t be deported even if here illegal
    4) Muslims, Well get your act together. If you are scared of lashback, how about go tll your borthers and sisters to stop bombing and denouncing the west?

    adar29
    adar29
    7 years ago

    Islam goes against American values and religious freedom.

    7 years ago

    This is the same mainstream media that was biased beyond a moral level of tolerance.

    Trump is not anti-minorities, and he is not against immigration. The immigration issue is really simple. There is a process to become a citizen. Every country has one, and USA has one, too. If you do not agree with the laws, you may try to have new ones legislated. But at this time, there is a system. To become a citizen, there are specific steps to take. They are not difficult or expensive, but they do take time. Meanwhile, there is a serious problem with illegal immigrants. They are problematic in many ways. They take our jobs (mostly but not completely true), they drain our resources, and they contribute very little. No one disagrees that there is a problem. Obama’s idea was to open the borders, prevent border patrol from stopping illegal crossings, provide sanctuary cities where federal law will not be enforced, and to keep criminals here to re-offend. Hillary wanted to extend this more, with reckless irresponsibility. Good riddance. If this girl’s friends want a fair shake, apply for citizenship and go through the system. Simple.

    eli845
    eli845
    7 years ago

    If their parents put fear into them, of course they have fear….

    fat36
    fat36
    7 years ago

    And when Obama won and the African-Americans were out of control nobody fear nothing

    BogusMilsky
    BogusMilsky
    7 years ago

    Since Obama became president Yeshivas and shuls have to have armed mispallelim and guards to protect our children and families. No mention of that

    Moose
    Moose
    7 years ago

    A bunch of great comments.
    As for Noochie #6 - what’s it gonna take for u to admit it’s a slanted article.

    7 years ago

    Just wondering Who INSTILLED THE FEAR INTO THEM? Huh?