
Racial issues involving Somalis heightened after mall attack
MINNEAPOLIS — The day after a young Somali-American man stabbed 10 people at a central Minnesota mall, pickup trucks were spotted driving through predominantly Somali neighbourhoods, honking and waving Confederate flags — highlighting the precarious bond between the thousands of Somalis who live in St. Cloud and other city residents.
Saturday’s attack at Crossroads Center Mall is testing city and community leaders’ efforts to improve longstanding racial tensions, which flared up a few years ago when Somali-American high school students said they were being harassed and being called terrorists.
It’s also spawning backlash against Somalis and other Muslims elsewhere in in the state, including south of the Twin Cities, where the owner of a restaurant and ice cream parlour changed his sign out front after Saturday’s attack to read “Muslims Get Out,” saying he won’t be “peer pressured by the politically correct crowd.”
Somalis in St. Cloud are trying to square the bright, family-minded Dahir Adan, who went to the mall to buy the new iPhone, with the emotionless man who was killed by an off-duty officer and is the subject of a terrorism investigation. Investigators are poring through witness and victim accounts, video footage and the 20-year-old’s electronic devices to piece it together what sparked the attack.