ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 11月4日 01時26分


On a typical Friday afternoon, this small, deliberately unmarked mosque on the road out of Shelbyville, Tennessee, would be crowded with rows and rows of Somali men, praying between their shifts at the poultry plant. Last Friday, there were only around a dozen. A man at the plant had offered advice to his Somali co-workers: run your errands now. Then don’t go outside again until Sunday night. A coterie of white nationalists were headed to town for a “White Lives Matter” rally. After Friday prayers, the mosque’s imam explained how to contact the authorities in case of harassment, how to balance being a trusting neighbor with being vigilant, and how to use a smartphone camera to capture the identity of an attacker. The advertised purposes of the rally were to protest the presence of refugees, many of them Muslim, in Middle Tennessee, and to hold up as an omen for the future the shooting in September of 8 white people at a church in Nashville by a Sudanese-born man. The white nationalists considered themselves defenders of the faith. Religion was the common denominator of the whole, loud weekend. And it was perhaps through the worship services that one could best understand what happened. Visit the link in our profile to read more, and to see more photos by Johnny Milano (@grief).


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