
ELKRIDGE, Md.āA group called āMuslims for Trumpā? It almost sounds like a joke.
But Sajid Tarar, a Pakistani immigrant who started the organization to convince his fellow Baltimore-area Muslims to support Donald Trump, is very serious. He argues that the presidential candidate who has proposed banning Muslim immigrants and surveilling or closing U.S. mosques is actually the best choice for his community.
āAs Muslims, we have a hope that Trump can guide America toward the right direction,ā Tarar, 56, told me earlier this month. āHeās rewriting history.ā
While itās definitely an unconventional opinion among Muslims, he isnāt alone. In a poll of Muslim voters conducted by the Council of American-Islamic Relations last month, 11% of respondents said they supported Trump. Tarar is one colorful example of this baffling and largely ignored voting bloc.
In an interview in his nondescript office park, Tararāwhoās tall and bald and wore a full suit and yellow bow tieāsaid he saw no contradiction in Muslims backing Trump. āThe Quran says you need to be loyal to the country where you live,ā he said. āWe have to do every possible thing to make our country safe.ā
Tarar grew up in Islamabad, Pakistan, and went to school in Lahore, where he studied political science and devoured books about American history and culture. He came to the U.S. in 1986, studying first at American University in D.C. and then getting his law degree at the University of Baltimore. He became a naturalized citizen and had fourĀ kids here. Now heās the CEO of the Center for Social Change, a nonprofit that provides care for elderly and developmentally disabled people in the Baltimore region.
In the past, Tarar has voted for both Republicans and Democrats, and heās been cozy with the political establishment: On the wall of his office is a photo of him shaking hands with Dick Cheney. Heās even considered running for office himself. But Tarar said he became so fed up with President Obama and the federal government that Trumpās message started making sense to him.
In a lot of ways, he sounds exactly like your typical Trump supporter:Ā He calls Obama a socialist, thinks building a border wall is ācrucial,ā and bemoans political correctness and the Black Lives Matter movement. He likes that Trump is funding his own campaign, is an entrepreneur, and is sticking it to the political insiders.
What about Trumpās anti-Muslim positions, I asked.
Banning Muslims? There should be a āban or stop for some period of time,ā he said. (He has no family left in Pakistan, but claims he wouldnāt change his mind even if he did.)
Surveilling mosques? āIf a tip comes from a Muslim American that something is going on, they should be monitored.ā
Isnāt Trumpās language encouraging Islamophobia? āWhen Donald Trump has said something about Muslims and Islam, he doesnāt mean American Muslims, heās talking about terrorists.ā
According to Tarar, thereās a substantial group of Muslims who agree with him. Dozens of people came to a pro-Trump event he helped organize in Baltimore last month (which was co-hosted with a separate āSikhs for Trumpā group.) A representative of the campaign gave a speech.
Going forward, Tarar wants to take his group national, starting Muslims for Trump chapters around the country. Heās also hoping to host a big campaign rally in Baltimore that Trump attends in personāthe Maryland primary is April 26, so Trump will be coming to the area in the next few weeks.
To convince me that there were, in fact, other āMuslims for Trump,ā Tarar drove me to visit Friday prayers at his local mosque. The Raza e Mustafa Islamic Center, which is attended mostly by Pakistanis in the area, is a low-hanging building tucked into a wooded pocket of the Baltimore-D.C. sprawl, with a bubbling stream flowing nearby. About 100 people, mostly men, kneeled on the carpeted floor inside, while 200 shoes were scattered outside on a patio. Tarar shook hands and chatted in Punjabi with fellow worshippers as the sound of Arabic prayer songs filtered out the door.
Keith Lane/FUSION
After Tarar gave what may have been the only campaign pitch Trump has ever received in Punjabi, he cajoled a few of his friends to talk on camera about the Donald. While they didnāt seem as enthusiastic about the campaign as Tararānone said specifically that they would vote for Trumpāthey agreed that the Republican frontrunner wasnāt anti-Muslim.
āThe people who are doing wrong things like terrorism activities, heās talking about that. Not about Muslims,ā said Mehmud Saleem, who wore a long yellow tunic. āBeing Muslim, we condemn terrorism as well.ā
Mohammad Seyal, who had a curly beard, a white turban, and a Baltimore accent, agreed: āI donāt think that Donald Trump is a bad person⦠A lot of the things that he says, theyāre not connected to the people here.ā
And when I asked him about Trumpās suggestion of surveilling mosques, he spread his arms wide. āItās all open,ā Seyal said. āCome check us out. You see something, tell us anything⦠If Donald Trump wants to come visit our mosque, heās welcome.ā
Keith Lane/FUSION
Not everyone is so supportive. Tarar said heās received criticism from some in the Muslim community who accuse him of backing a bigot. When I asked one younger man walking out of the mosque what he thought of the reality TV star, he replied, āF Trump.ā
Itās certainly hard to look past some of the cognitive dissonance in the āMuslims for Trumpā argument. Tarar said he studied constitutional rights and bemoaned the Pakistani governmentās violations of its own constitution. But he freely admitted that limiting immigration by religion would be a violation of the First Amendment, not to mention condoning torture. And he seemed to not understand the idea that Trumpās rhetoric could be fanning the flames of Islamophobia.
The notionĀ that Trump hasnāt badmouthed the Muslim community is objectively false. In addition to his policies that specifically target Muslims, the bombastic candidate has suggested that 27% of the 1.6 billion Muslims around the world are āvery militant.ā
Itās not that Tarar doesnāt believe in his religion. āIslam is a beautiful religion, a religion of peace,ā heĀ said. Muslims in the U.S., he added proudly, are āpart of the main American fabric, and we are not going anywhere.ā
So why is heĀ so eager to apologize for Trumpās rhetoric?
In American politics, we like to use identity as shorthand: itās easy to conceptualize the āMuslim voteā as a monolithic bloc. But as Tarar makes clear, voters are far more complicated than any single identity. Heās Muslim, but heās also conservative and pissed off at the establishment and worried about terrorism.
āThis is my country and this is my kidsā country. That is my number one priority, the safety of America,ā TararĀ said. āDonald Trump agrees with that.ā
Then heĀ put on his navy blue āMAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAINā hat and flashed a smile for the camera.
Casey Tolan is a National News Reporter for Fusion based in New York City.
