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Tuesday, December 30, 2025

As Zohran Mamdani prepares to be inaugurated as the city's next mayor, Muslim New Yorkers say his victory represents more than a historic first.

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As Zohran Mamdani prepares to be inaugurated as the city's next mayor, Muslim New Yorkers say his victory represents more than a historic first.

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-- NBC News (@nbcnews.com) Dec 29, 2025 at 7:41 AM

Mamdani has AOC-level powers to make bigoted middle aged white dudes lose their damned minds.

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-- Radley Balko (@radleybalko.bsky.social) Dec 29, 2025 at 6:41 PM

Mamdani has AOC-level powers to make bigoted middle aged white dudes lose their damned minds.

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-- Radley Balko (@radleybalko.bsky.social) Dec 29, 2025 at 6:41 PM

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More from the article ...

... Zohran Mamdani's election as New York City's next mayor has become something larger than a historic first for many Muslim New Yorkers " it marks a rare moment of visibility and unity across the city's Muslim community, and a particularly meaningful one for Shia Muslims, who have often felt sidelined, even within their own faith, they told NBC News.

That sense of possibility crystallized for Fizza Jaffari the night Mamdani won.

She recalled watching the election returns from a cafe in Astoria, a diverse Queens neighborhood with a large Muslim population, when cheers erupted and car horns blared as Mamdani made history, not just as the city's first Muslim mayor, but as the first Shia Muslim to hold the office.

"It was a once-in-a-lifetime type of moment," Jaffri, 33, told NBC News. "I haven't really experienced that, especially because we're not always in these high-power offices."

As Mamdani prepares to take office on Jan. 1, Shia Muslim New Yorkers say his election is already reshaping conversations about faith, identity and belonging. ...


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-12-29 07:00 PM | Reply

More from the article ...

... For Mamdani, the moment is rooted in lessons passed down by his paternal grandparents on justice, dignity and standing against oppression through his Shia identity.

"They didn't just teach me what it meant to be Shia. They didn't just teach me what it meant to be a Muslim," Mamdani told NBC News in an interview at his office.

"They also used those lessons to teach me what it meant to be a good person." ...




#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-12-29 08:18 PM | Reply

scontent-dfw5-1.xx.fbcdn.net

#3 | Posted by MSgt at 2025-12-30 09:14 PM | Reply

"They also used those lessons to teach me what it meant to be a good person."

Thoughts like this is what makes Mamdani an Outsider.

It's contrary to the fascist belief system that Outsiders are good people.

#4 | Posted by snoofy at 2025-12-30 09:41 PM | Reply

The Democratic Party needs to listen and learn, and understand that it must return to being a "big tent" party, honor those who have like views on Constitutional freedoms and demands. That means losing some votes of those who see America as a haven for white nationalists, christian supremacists...and gaining a lot of votes of people who will take the trouble to turn out at election time to support politicians who care about them and their needs and kids.
I am an atheist, but would cheerfully vote for the Christian politician/preacher James Talarico...personal faith helps a person unite with others, and who cares just what rituals that faith includes? We have been divided for far too long by those fundamentalists who love the power and wealth that making everyone bend a knee to them brings to them.

#5 | Posted by Hughmass at 2025-12-31 06:56 AM | Reply | Funny: 1

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