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    Op-Ed
    Saturday, May 11, 2024

    Some Republicans saw his Muslim faith as diaqualifier for party leadership

    When I first decided to run for office as a Republican, I knew I was joining a party that stood for limited government, low taxes, free enterprise, individual responsibility and religious freedom. Little did I know that my own story would eventually become a public symbol for some of these freedoms.

    Last summer, the Republican Party of Tarrant County, Texas, appointed me as a party vice chair in a nearly unanimous vote. As a longtime party member who has served in other roles, I considered the appointment a true honor. Yet, soon after, a handful of members from the party launched a public effort to remove me from the position simply because I am Muslim.

    For months, my family and I endured a difficult period as the campaign to remove me gained statewide and national attention. On Jan. 10, the motion to oust me failed by 139 votes to 49 votes. The result was heartening, but the effort to oust me was a profoundly disappointing rebuke of religious freedom, a founding principle of our nation.

    I came of age in Pakistan under a brutal military dictatorship that used religion as an excuse to kidnap, torture and kill its own citizens. The government censored the media and used the police as an instrument of oppression.

    So when I came to the United States in 1990, I was overjoyed to experience the freedoms my forefathers were denied. I took the oath of citizenship in 2009 and looked for opportunities to serve the public because I wanted to give back to the country that had given me so much.

    In 2011, I decided to run for city council in Southlake, Texas. At the time, many people did not believe that a Muslim American had a chance of winning an election after 9/11. I disagreed with them because I believed that in our country, it doesn't matter where you come from, only where you are going. Voters affirmed my faith in the United States twice, once by electing me in 2014 and again by reelecting me in 2017 (when I ran unopposed).

    The reaction to my appointment as party vice chair surprised me, given the support that my colleagues and community invested in me. Fortunately, despite this campaign against my faith, I received overwhelming and heartwarming support from Republicans at all levels of the party.

    Looking forward, our party can grow only by embracing Americans of all types.

    The same is true of our country. We need to build trust by breaking bread with people who may not look like us or who speak with an accent. We need to integrate new Americans into our communities through education, employment and participation in our democratic process — opportunities that I benefited from and am immensely grateful for.

    Regardless of when we arrived in this country, we are all Americans with equal rights and responsibilities. We are all guardians of this nation. And as part of this sacred responsibility, we must overcome our fears and learn to trust each other. We must strive to create a more perfect union.

    Shahid Shafi is a surgeon, a city councilman in Southlake, Texas, and vice chair of the Tarrant County Republican Party.

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