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Life for Muslim-Americans Drastically Different After 9/11

HOUSTON

Attorney Alamdar Hamdani used to represent multimillion-dollar corporations. Now Hamdani represents cab drivers and convenience store owners who are called in for questioning by the FBI.

Nohayia Javed was a college student who never thought of herself as different from her classmates. Then she was beaten up and had hot coffee thrown in her face.

Many lives changed after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. But Muslim-Americans say that, as a group, the change for them has been dramatic, generally negative and certainly long-lasting. Overnight, they became an enemy in their own country.

The backlash has primarily been focused on those with ancestries in the Middle East and Southeast Asia.

“We feel embarrassment, frustration, anger on a daily basis,” said Farha Ahmed, general counsel for the Muslim American Republican Caucus, at a recent symposium on racial profiling at the University of Houston Law Center.

Ninety-nine percent of Islam’s adherents are nonviolent, said Ahmed, a Libyan-American, but “that doesn’t seem to be enough.”

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