When I enter Ilhan Omar’s Minneapolis district office, she instinctively leans forward to shake my hand but catches herself. These days, decreasing the spread of germs is paramount. It’s only been seven months since COVID-19 took over our lives, with local governments sending out directives to stay at home, and frequently wash our hands. The congresswoman and I are both Muslim, so we’ve already received directives from God to do the latter, with instructions on prayer and abating plague: The left hand is for caring for personal hygiene, the right hand is for eating, and ablution is performed five times a day, or whenever one’s cleanliness is compromised. If we had been able to shake hands — or even performed the intimate dance of air-kissing on the cheeks, which is customary in our Somali culture — we would establish an implicit trust. Instead, we’re stuck exchanging a jumble of half-pantomimed pleasantries.
On this mild fall day, Omar’s rocking her signature turban-style hijab. She is the first person in Congress to wear a hijab, prompting an end to a 181-year-old ban on head coverings on the floor of the House of Representatives. This morning, she’s over-caffeinated, buzzing with so much buoyant energy that I almost forget that her father passed away from COVID-19-related complications a few months ago. At 38, Omar is charmingly compact, regal, and naturally photogenic; by her own admission, she sometimes doesn’t even wash her face before she goes to bed, let alone practice “self-care.”
“Isra yells at me because she’s like, ‘Mom, you have to at least wipe your face down.’ Because I just go to sleep. And I have dry skin so I don’t even use soap. I just wash with water,” Omar says. “Alex[andria Ocasio-Cortez] teases me about this. She’s like, ‘Wait, you are dehydrated, you don’t drink water…you don’t do anything to your face!” To Omar, self-care is a luxury that many of her constituents can’t afford, so she shouldn’t either. “There are people every single day who are showing up to care for the site of George Floyd’s murder. There are people showing up every single day protesting decades and centuries of brutality. And there are people burying not just one but multiple members in their family that have died because of the complications of COVID, so I don’t have the luxury to think about getting, you know, an extra hour of sleep because people are experiencing severe unrest in their lives.”
“Isra” would be Isra Hirsi, the 17-year-old eldest of Omar’s three children. She’s an outspoken critic of electoral politics and one of the cofounders of the U.S. Youth Climate Strike whose Twitter bio, until recently, read: “yes i’m 17 and i hate capitalism.” Omar and Isra have much in common: a directness, a passion for securing universal health care, a just economy, a livable planet, and a belief that the time to act is right now. Their mutual spheres of influence are visible in their public personas. Isra has talked about coming to terms with the fact that she has a platform because of her mom’s position, but she wants to use it to forge her own path, upending the political status quo that she feels has brought us to this unstable place. And Omar, a sitting member of Congress, benefits from Isra’s outspokenness, playing off her expert use of social media; she guest-stars in Isra’s TikToks and deftly fends off the relentless attacks from her right-wing Twitter critics.
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Together, Isra and Omar represent the voices the Democratic Party should be listening to, especially during a contentious election. They exemplify the growing number of hyper-engaged young people who are disillusioned with politics as usual, speaking to both those who are hitching their hopes onto party outliers like Omar, and to voices like Isra’s who are specifically looking outside of electoral politics for solutions to the nation’s ills. To that end, even their fundamental disagreements are aspirational, in a way, forcing us all to reckon with the real-time tensions of the political world. Young people can look to Isra and Omar as models for how to talk about the political divide in the U.S. — and even within families.
A former member of the Minnesota House of Representatives, Omar launched into national politics in the 2018 midterm elections, becoming one of the first two Muslim-American women ever elected to Congress. She received the largest percentage of the vote for a woman candidate running for the U.S. House of Representatives in Minnesota history. Omar was sworn in on a Quran belonging to her grandfather during a federal government shutdown that gave her an initial taste of the dysfunction of D.C. politics, hastening her sense of time in direct contrast to the forced slowdown of the pandemic.
Since then, Omar helped drum up support for President Donald Trump’s impeachment and has become one of Congress’s most vocal supporters of Medicare for All, as well as for climate change legislation like the Green New Deal. She has faced relentless attacks for her Muslim faith, criticism of Israeli leadership, colorful Twitter provocations, and opposition to Donald Trump. In 2019, Trump himself called for “The Squad,” which consists of Omar and three other freshman congresswomen of color, to “go back” to the “totally broken and crime-infested places from which they came.” In typical fashion, Omar turned the attack into a campaign line, saying she expected constituents to “send me back to Congress.” And they did. In August, Omar handily defeated her primary opponent, almost guaranteeing that she will head back to Capitol Hill for another term.
For Isra, her mother’s turn in the spotlight has pressed hyperspeed on her adulthood, opening her up to the same kind of unwanted publicity but also to honors like a spot on this year’s Fortune 40 Under 40 list. She once wore a disguise to be able to attend to Minneapolis anti-Trump rally undetected, and at a Black Lives Matter protest in Minneapolis over the summer, she was called out in front of the entire crowd: “One of the girls organizing realizes that I was there and who I am, takes the megaphone and yells, ‘Yo, we got Ilhan Omar’s daughter in the back!’ And then everyone turns around and looks at me in the middle of the march. It was so uncomfortable.”