Minnesota Was Promised To The Somalis
Also known as: Minnesota Is the Somalian Promised Land · Somali Promised Land meme
"Minnesota Was Promised to the Somalis" is a satirical meme claiming that the state of Minnesota was promised to the Somali people 3,000 years ago, directly parodying Zionist rhetoric about Israel being the Jewish "Promised Land." The meme exploded across X/Twitter and TikTok in late November 2025 after President Donald Trump called Somali Americans "garbage" and escalated a crackdown on Minnesota's Somali community1. Through AI-generated images of Somali founding fathers, fake Bible verses, and jokes about "birthright trips" to Minneapolis, the meme turned anti-immigrant hostility into one of the most creative community-driven trolling campaigns of 20252.
TL;DR
"Minnesota Was Promised to the Somalis" is a satirical meme claiming that the state of Minnesota was promised to the Somali people 3,000 years ago, directly parodying Zionist rhetoric about Israel being the Jewish "Promised Land." The meme exploded across X/Twitter and TikTok in late November 2025 after President Donald Trump called Somali Americans "garbage" and escalated a crackdown on Minnesota's Somali community.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The meme follows a loose formula that creators typically adapt in several ways:
Historical revisionism: Create or share AI-generated images placing Somali people into key moments of American or world history. Common setups include Somali founding fathers, Somali explorers "discovering" Minnesota, or Somali Native Americans.
Biblical/scriptural citations: Fabricate religious text passages that name Somalis as God's chosen people or Minnesota as the promised land. Usually cite specific chapter-and-verse numbers for added absurdist detail.
Political parallel: Mirror specific elements of Israeli-Palestinian discourse. Reference "the right of return," propose a "two-state solution," accuse critics of "anticushitism," or organize a "Minnesota birthright trip."
Personal testimony: Film a TikTok or post on X expressing earnest-sounding excitement about returning to "the homeland" of Minnesota, often from another country or U.S. state.
Cultural Impact
Full History
Fun Facts
The term "Cushite" in "anticushitism" references the Kingdom of Kush and the Cushitic language family of the Horn of Africa, giving the joke an actual historical foundation.
One viral post fabricated a lineage connecting Abraham Lincoln to a Somali warrior-prince and former Somali President Abdiqasim Salad Hassan.
Conservative outlets that took the satirical claims literally ended up boosting the meme's visibility, a dynamic Somali creators openly celebrated.
Minnesota's Somali community has produced the first Somali-American member of Congress (Ilhan Omar, elected 2018), making the "we were here first" jokes an ironic commentary on genuine political representation.
Temporary Protected Status for Somali nationals was first granted in 1991 under Republican President George H.W. Bush and had been extended or redesignated 27 times before Trump's 2025 threat to revoke it.
Derivatives & Variations
Anticushitism:
A coined term labeling anyone who disputes Somalis' claim to Minnesota, paralleling "antisemitism." Popularized by TikToker @him.za11[5].
Minnesota Birthright Trip:
Posts showing Somalis booking flights to Minnesota as a parody of Jewish Birthright trips to Israel[2].
SAPAC (Somali American Public Affairs Committee):
A fictional lobbying group parodying AIPAC, joked about on X[2].
Somali Founding Fathers:
AI-generated images depicting Somali men signing the Declaration of Independence or posing as Abraham Lincoln's grandfather[2].
Two-State Solution posts:
Maps and proposals for dividing Minnesota between Somalis and other residents, mirroring Israeli-Palestinian peace frameworks[1].
Somali dinosaur riders:
AI images of Somalis riding the "last dinosaur" in ancient Minnesota, pushing the historical revisionism to prehistoric extremes[3].
Som-Aaliyah:
A portmanteau of "Somali" and "Aliyah" (the Jewish concept of immigration to Israel), used to describe moving to Minnesota[4].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (12)
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- 5Tim Walzencyclopedia
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