A disturbing video circulating online appears to show a Somali man being violently attacked by a crowd after accusations surfaced that he had allegedly been communicating inappropriately with a young girl. The footage has sparked outrage, debate, and concern across Somali communities both locally and abroad.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!But beyond the allegations themselves lies a deeper and equally troubling issue: the growing normalization of mob justice and the alarming speed with which Somali men are publicly targeted, humiliated, and assaulted before any legal process takes place.
If a crime was committed, it must be investigated by law enforcement and handled through the justice system. No accusation, no matter how serious, gives individuals or crowds the right to violently assault another person in the streets. That is not justice. It is vigilantism.
Across social media, many Somalis expressed concern not only about the violence itself, but about what they see as a broader pattern of anti-Somali hostility and dehumanization. In many incidents involving accusations against Somalis, public anger rapidly escalates into collective punishment, often fueled by rumors, emotional reactions, and online outrage before facts are fully established.
This trend should concern everyone.
Mob violence destroys due process. It creates an atmosphere where accusations alone become enough to justify public beatings, humiliation, or even death. Today it may target one individual. Tomorrow it could target someone falsely accused.
Communities cannot claim to stand for justice while simultaneously endorsing lawlessness. Real justice requires evidence, investigation, accountability, and fairness not crowds acting as judge, jury, and executioner.
The Somali community in Minnesota and beyond knows too well the dangers of public fear, stereotyping, and collective blame. At a time when anti-immigrant rhetoric and anti-Somali sentiment continue to rise in many spaces, incidents like these risk deepening divisions and normalizing violence against an already vulnerable community.
None of this means allegations involving minors should be ignored or minimized. Protecting children is essential and non-negotiable. But protecting children and upholding the rule of law are not opposing values. A society that abandons due process in moments of anger ultimately endangers everyone.
What is needed now is calm, accountability, and a rejection of mob justice in all forms.
Violence cannot become our shortcut to justice.















