Apostate! Kafir! Infidel! Marked for death. In the eyes of the Muslim community, I am all these things and more. My name is Aminata Khalid and I'm a young woman of Somali descent living in the City of Detroit, Michigan. For most of my life, home was the City of Montreal, Quebec. About a year ago, I had life all figured out. I had just graduated from the University of Montreal with my bachelor's degree in business administration, and I was looking for a decent MBA program. I've always been the ambitious one in the family. My older brother Amir is currently at Kingston's Penitentiary in Ontario, where he's doing five years for armed robbery. My older sister Farah is divorcing her Yemeni husband Hussein, alleging that he beat her. I hope she takes the son of a bitch to the cleaners in divorce court because he's a filthy animal. Any man who beats women is a beast. That's my opinion and I don't apologize for it.
I was trying to decide between Concordia University and McGill University, two of Canada's best schools. I was also dealing with other pressing matters. Getting pressured to marry by my parents, Mohammed and Fatouma Khalid wasn't something I enjoyed. You see, even though there are tens of thousands of Somali folk living in Canada, I wouldn't call us the most well-adjusted community of immigrants. Lots of Somali girls these days are dating Arab guys or White Muslim converts because the majority of young Somali men in the vastness of Canada are usually wasting their time doing drugs, chasing fat White girls or languishing behind bars. And some of these magical negroes manage to do all three, if you can believe that. Yeah, a lot of our brothers aren't doing anything good with their lives but they get mad when they see us with guys from other communities. As if.
Before he got the bright idea of robbing a Tim Horton's restaurant in the east end of Ottawa, my older brother Amir had twins with this chubby, blonde-haired White heifer named Madeline. He didn't even marry her. I don't know what religion she is but she is definitely not Muslim. Otherwise her parents would have killed her for having brats out of wedlock with a sorry excuse for a man like my brother Amir. Yeah, like a lot of Black males worldwide, my brother craves White meat. Hmmm. The only White meat he's getting these days probably comes from an overweight fruit motherfucker behind the walls of Kingston Penitentiary. Exactly what he deserves if you ask me. Amir never much cared for me and the feeling is definitely mutual. Honestly, the world is a safer place with him behind bars.
As for my sister Farah, she's one of those Somali girls who worships everything Arabic. Look, I know that I am not fond of Somali males, but I do love Black men. I just prefer Black men who don't treat Black women like shit, that's all. My sister Farah has been fascinated by all things Arabic ever since I could remember. Never mind that those Arab bastards dislike us Somali folks and they constantly belittle us and make fun of us. They call us "Abd" which is Arabic for slave. You can't tell that to most Somalis, though. The majority of my people love the Arabs even though these desert-dwelling mongrels with delusions of grandeur have a strong dislike for all things Black. Arab guys regularly come to Somalia and Djibouti, and they enjoy themselves with the local women. You'll never catch an Arab woman dating or marrying a Somali male, though. The Arab guys love women of other races/cultures but jealously guard their own. Muslim males from non-Arab cultures never stop and think, otherwise they'd realize that within the Islamic world, the Arabs are kings and all non-Arab Muslims are their pawns.
I have never been one of those Somalis who love these bastards. When I was in high school, a Palestinian guy named Omar grabbed my ass and was surprised when I whirled around, and smacked him hard across the face. I guess he thought that just because he's an Arab guy and I'm a Somali female, I'm just going to roll over for him. That might be how things are in Somalia but I was raised in Canada, thank you very much. Hell, I don't even remember the City of Borama, in the Awdal province of Somalia, where I was born. I am Canadian through and true. I had to fight my parents to convince them to let me play soccer when I went to Carthage High School in the south end of Montreal. I was the only hijab-wearing female player on the varsity soccer team and I had to wear long trousers instead of the shorts, and people stared at me a lot, but I didn't care. I loved the game of soccer too much to give a damn about what people thought of me. When I turned eighteen, I stopped wearing the hijab altogether, much to the chagrin of my parents, who accused me of being too westernized. I didn't care. It's my life and I wanted to live it my way.
I've always been rebellious, with a fiercely independent streak. In high school, I was best friends with this Haitian chick named Marjorie Etienne and her brother Adam. They were in the Christian Students Group at school and you wouldn't think we'd be friends but we totally clicked. From them I learned about Christianity. Now, growing up in the Somali community, I was brought up in the Muslim faith. I found myself fascinated by the Christian students at school. Theirs seemed like such an easy religion to follow. All you had to do was believe that this Jewish guy named Jesus Christ rose from the dead, after being killed by the Romans, the ancestors of today's Italians, for healing the sick and helping the poor and the downtrodden. His tale was so moving that Christianity had two point one billion followers, outnumbering us Muslims by an easy billion. I had met quite a few white men and white women who joined Islam from Christian and even Jewish backgrounds but Marjorie Etienne and her brother Adam were passionate about their faith. And they were very friendly, kind and generous with me. When my father beat me for being a sassy brat, I'd seek comfort with Marjorie, and she was always there for me. Her brother Adam fascinated me. The tall, dark-skinned young Haitian guy was quiet and unassuming, though he cut an imposing figure at six-foot-three and 240 pounds. He played football for Carthage High School. I once wanted to be a cheerleader just for him but I was too tall and too chubby for cheerleading. I was already five-foot-ten while starting school at C.H.S. and I would grow an additional couple of inches by the time I turned eighteen. In spite of my tremendous physique, I could be such a wallflower sometimes. Adam Etienne was my protector, and his sister Marjorie was my ride or die chick. We were like sisters, for real.
Yeah, I was a six-foot-tall, chubby and light-skinned young Black woman with a big ass and wide hips in a world that worshipped skinny White girls. I'm not going to say I was plagued with self-esteem issues as I began my studies at the University of Montreal but I was somewhat self-conscious. Marjorie Etienne and I would reunite at the University of Montreal. She left our sophomore year to study at Wayne State University in the City of Detroit, Michigan. I missed Marjorie terribly. She would end up staying in the States permanently, having fallen in love with a handsome Detroit City policeman named Tyson Jermaine Brown. Me? I stayed in Montreal, the town I loved. It's at U of M that I met Rashid Osman, a handsome Somali guy who temporarily restored my faith in the men of my community. Rashid was tall and handsome, and he wasn't one hundred percent Somali either. His father was Somali but his mother was Turkish, if you can believe that. Wow. That's a mix you don't see every day. Rashid Osman swept me off my feet. The guy was smart and sexy. He was a civil engineering student at the University of Montreal and he had ambition to spare. I saw in him everything I wanted in a man, and I fell in love with him.