Sikh man abused, harassed at US store after being mistaken as Muslim

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A Sikh student at Harvard Law School was allegedly abused and harassed at a store near his campus after he was mistaken for being a Muslim.

Harmann Singh, 22, a first-year law student said he was shopping at a store in Massachusetts and talking to his mother over the phone when a man walked inside and told the counter clerk, “Oh look, there’s a (expletive) Muslim.”

“Over the weekend, I was confronted by a man who called me a ‘(expletive) Muslim’ and followed me around a store aggressively asking where I was from, and no one in the store said a thing,” said a dismayed Singh.

“I was on the phone with my mom the entire time, and we were both concerned for my safety as this man stood inches away from me,” Singh recalled his experience.

Singh, who is from Buffalo, New York, said he tried to ignore the man and continued to talk to his worried mother. The man then chased Singh to the checkout counter.

“I told him, ‘Hey I’m actually from New York. I live here now down the street. Is there anything I can do to help you?’” Singh explained. However, the harasser did not respond, forcing him to leave the store.

Meanwhile, the owner of the store told Boston.com that he was going back and forth inside the shop when the incident occurred on November 11 and saw the man speaking to Singh.

“I don’t know where that guy came from and I hope I don’t see him again,” the owner said on the condition of anonymity.

Since the election of Donald Trump, there has been a steep rise in incidents against Muslims. The Republican candidate has been highly outspoken against Muslims, minorities and immigrants, raising concerns and fear among the said groups and ethnicities.

More than 200 incidents of hate, harassment and intimidation have been witnessed across the US ever since Trump emerged victorious in the presidential elections on November 8.

Courtesy: The Times of India

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