While I supported and campaigned for Mohamud Noor in the recent DFL primary election in Minnesota House District 60B, I wholeheartedly welcome Ilhan Omar's victory. It truly is a historic moment for the Somali diaspora and all Minnesotans.
For Minnesota's Somali community to have the first Somali legislator in the country is amazing. And it is even better that that person is a woman.
Almost three years ago, my election to the Minneapolis City Council was heralded around our city, our country and even throughout the Somali world. At every moment since, I have felt a special responsibility to act as the voice of a people who have become refugees and severely dispossessed. I'm sure Omar is already receiving the same and perhaps even greater attention.
This is wonderful news for a community in great need. I soon will have a partner from the community in the Legislature and I look forward to the day when that voice will be heard in St. Paul.
As the Sixth Ward council member, my first obligation is to my ward. And the Sixth Ward is home to many people, most of whom are not East Africans. In my two and half years on the City Council, I have been able to see the streets in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood rebuilt and those same streets renamed to honor the East African community. For thousands, Cedar-Riverside is the East African equivalent of Ellis Island.
We also formed a sister-city relationship with Bosaso, Somalia. And although some would consider this a mere symbol, it is anything but. Just this week Mayor Betsy Hodges welcomed Bosaso's mayor to Minneapolis, an event that promises friendship, hope and opportunity to a part of the world that desperately needs all three.
The job of a council member required that I work to improve our parks, adding a new pool at Phillips Community Center and helping to adopt the 20-year park plan that will bring dramatic improvements to Sixth Ward parks like Currie, Matthews, Phillips and Eliot — and do so through a requirement that racial equity be a central aspect of the plan.
There also have been issues of citywide importance: developing the sick-leave ordinance, banning plastic bags, establishing better affordable-housing programs and working on a new minimum-wage ordinance.