Minnesota Was Promised To The Somalis

2025Satirical parody / political trolling memeactive

Also known as: Minnesota Is the Somalian Promised Land · Somali Promised Land meme

Minnesota Was Promised To The Somalis is a November 2025 satirical meme using AI-generated Somali founding father imagery and fabricated Bible verses to parody Zionist "Promised Land" rhetoric applied to Minnesota.

"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

The meme takes the form of mock-serious declarations that Minnesota belongs to the Somali people by ancient divine right, mimicking the theological and political arguments used to justify Israel's claim to Palestine4. Posts typically include fabricated historical "evidence" such as AI-generated images of Somali people dressed as American historical figures, doctored Bible passages naming Somalis as God's chosen people, and satirical maps proposing a "two-state solution" that would split Minnesota between Somalis and other residents2.

The humor works on multiple levels. On the surface, it's absurdist comedy: Muslim Somalis citing the Book of Genesis to claim a frozen Midwestern state. Beneath that, it pointedly mirrors the logic of settler colonialism and religious land claims, forcing audiences to confront why one group's "promised land" narrative is treated as legitimate while another's is laughed off6. People who refuse to accept the claim are labeled practitioners of "anticushitism," a play on antisemitism that references the ancient Cushitic peoples of the Horn of Africa5.

The meme's roots lie in a decades-long relationship between Somali refugees and Minnesota. Somali immigration to the state began in the 1990s during Somalia's civil war, and the community grew to roughly 80,000 people, making it the largest Somali population in the United States1. About 95% hold U.S. citizenship3.

In late November 2025, President Trump sharply escalated attacks on this community. During a cabinet meeting, he declared that Somali immigrants "contribute nothing" and called them "garbage"8. He posted on Truth Social that "Somali gangs are terrorizing" Minnesota and announced he would end Temporary Protected Status for Somalis "effective immediately"6. The administration deployed up to 100 federal agents to Minneapolis specifically to target Somali residents8. The crackdowns were tied to several fraud investigations, most notably the Feeding Our Future scheme involving an estimated $250-300 million in stolen federal child nutrition funds9.

Rather than respond with outrage, the Somali-American community channeled their reaction into comedy. The earliest known instance of the meme appeared on November 29, 2025, when X user @RealAbyan posted a video edit promoting Minnesota with the caption "Minnesota was promised to Somali's 3000 years ago," picking up over 1,100 likes within five days5. A Truthdig essay identified "the viral video that kicked it all off" as a young Somali woman on TikTok making the same claim4.

Origin & Background

Platform
X / Twitter (first posts), TikTok (viral spread)
Key People
@RealAbyan, Somali-American community
Date
2025
Year
2025

The meme's roots lie in a decades-long relationship between Somali refugees and Minnesota. Somali immigration to the state began in the 1990s during Somalia's civil war, and the community grew to roughly 80,000 people, making it the largest Somali population in the United States. About 95% hold U.S. citizenship.

In late November 2025, President Trump sharply escalated attacks on this community. During a cabinet meeting, he declared that Somali immigrants "contribute nothing" and called them "garbage". He posted on Truth Social that "Somali gangs are terrorizing" Minnesota and announced he would end Temporary Protected Status for Somalis "effective immediately". The administration deployed up to 100 federal agents to Minneapolis specifically to target Somali residents. The crackdowns were tied to several fraud investigations, most notably the Feeding Our Future scheme involving an estimated $250-300 million in stolen federal child nutrition funds.

Rather than respond with outrage, the Somali-American community channeled their reaction into comedy. The earliest known instance of the meme appeared on November 29, 2025, when X user @RealAbyan posted a video edit promoting Minnesota with the caption "Minnesota was promised to Somali's 3000 years ago," picking up over 1,100 likes within five days. A Truthdig essay identified "the viral video that kicked it all off" as a young Somali woman on TikTok making the same claim.

How It Spread

The meme snowballed rapidly across platforms in late November and early December 2025.

On November 30, X user @aaboom16 posted "The Somali declaration indicates that Minnesota was promised to us 3000 years ago," earning over 6,500 likes in four days. The next day, December 1, @AshaariML posted a fabricated Bible excerpt from Genesis 12:3 reading "Those who bless Somalia will be blessed and those who curse Somalia will be cursed," drawing over 2,500 likes.

December 2 marked a major acceleration. Al Jazeera's AJ+ posted a video about the memes and the surrounding controversy on X, pulling over 10,000 likes in two days. On TikTok, creator @him.za11 posted a video declaring it "anticushitism" to deny Somalis their "promised land," which broke 250,000 views within 48 hours.

By December 3, the meme had branched into multiple distinct formats. X user @SonOfSomali posted an image of a Black man wearing sidelocks, traditionally associated with Orthodox Jewish men, with the caption "My cousin in Somalia is headed to Minnesota, his birthright trip to the promised lands," pulling 36,000 likes in a single day. User @Nabadwanag posted an edit of @him.za11 wearing a Native American headdress, captioning it "A native American Somali man who's ancestors and tribes dwelled the land of Minnesota for centuries". TikToker @whiteclawsocialist posted an explainer defending Somalis' "right" to Minnesota that crossed 230,000 views in a day.

AI-generated images became a major vehicle for the joke. Users created images of Somalis as Abraham Lincoln, Christopher Columbus, and the signers of the Declaration of Independence. One widely shared post claimed "In 1776, 56 Somali Americans met in Philadelphia's Independence Hall to make a first of its kind Declaration of Independence". Another featured AI art of a dinosaur with the caption "This photo was taken 3,000 years ago in what is now known as Minnesota, and they were last seen being ridden by Somalis there".

The meme also spread to the wider Somali diaspora beyond the United States. A young Somali woman in Germany posted a TikTok showing herself booking a flight to Minnesota "after finding out that Minnesota is the land to us Somalis 3,000 years ago". The concept of a "Minnesota birthright trip," modeled on Jewish Birthright visits to Israel, became a recurring joke.

How to Use This Meme

The meme follows a loose formula that creators typically adapt in several ways:

1

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.

2

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.

3

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."

4

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

The meme drew significant international media coverage. Middle East Eye, HuffPost, the Daily Dot, TIME, and Truthdig all published features analyzing the phenomenon. Multiple outlets described it as a standout example of marginalized communities weaponizing humor against state-level hostility.

The Somali diaspora beyond the United States embraced the meme enthusiastically, with Somalis in Germany, the UK, and East Africa joining in. Truthdig compared it to previous viral Somali social media moments, including the Nimco Happy meme and the 2020 Eid-ul-Fitr moon sighting controversy.

The meme also forced a broader conversation about whose "promised land" claims are taken seriously and whose are dismissed as jokes. By building a complete satirical ecosystem, including lobbying groups, historical revisionism, religious justification, and diaspora tourism, Somali creators built what amounted to a participatory political education project disguised as comedy.

Minneapolis business owner Kassim Busuri, a former St. Paul City Council member, spoke to the real-world stakes behind the humor: most of Minnesota's 80,000-strong Somali community "have gone from refugees to thriving business people through hard, honest work".

Full History

The political context that produced this meme stretches back years. Trump targeted Minnesota's Somali community during his first term, telling Rep. Ilhan Omar and other members of the progressive "Squad" to "go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which they came". At a 2019 rally, his crowd chanted "Send her back!" in reference to Omar.

The 2025 escalation was sharper. After a shooting near the White House by an Afghan asylee in late November, Trump singled out Somalis despite admitting there was "nothing" linking them to the incident. He ordered a review of green cards issued to migrants from 19 countries including Somalia and used his Thanksgiving message to blast the Somali community in Minnesota, claiming they were "completely taking over" the state.

The fraud cases gave Trump political ammunition. The Feeding Our Future scandal, described by the Justice Department as "the largest Covid-19 fraud scheme in the country," resulted in more than 70 defendants and an estimated $250-300 million stolen. Additional fraud cases emerged around autism therapy billing, housing stabilization services, and disability programs. Most defendants were of East African descent, though prosecutors never established any link between fraud proceeds and terrorist groups like al-Shabaab. Conservative activist Christopher Rufo alleged a terrorism funding connection in a report that relied on a retired Seattle detective whose similar past claims had been debunked by a state audit.

Community leaders in Minnesota pushed back on multiple fronts. At a State Capitol rally, Rep. Ilhan Omar declared "We're not going to allow anybody to erase our presence and our contribution, and we are not going to allow anyone to scapegoat us". Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey delivered a message in Somali: "We love you, we stand with you, we aren't backing down". Police Chief Brian O'Hara clarified that Minneapolis police would not collaborate with federal agencies on immigration enforcement. St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter called out the racial dynamics directly: "It seems to many of us like the darker the skin the immigrants who come to our country are, the more our posture on immigration as a country has shifted".

But it was the memes that grabbed global attention. Truthdig writer described the community's response through the lens of sabbaaxa, a Somali wrestling concept that uses an opponent's momentum against them. The metaphor was apt: Trump's attacks gave Somalis worldwide attention, and they used that spotlight to craft satire that was simultaneously hilarious and politically incisive.

The meme's genius lay in how precisely it mirrored Zionist rhetoric. By claiming biblical justification for territorial control, proposing a "two-state solution," establishing the concept of "anticushitism" as a parallel to antisemitism, and organizing "birthright trips," Somali creators built a complete satirical framework that exposed the logical structure of settler-colonial land claims. One viral post read: "Minnesota is the only state with Somalis and it's surrounded by 47 others states who hate them. We are calling on Germany to give us 10 billion dollars and some nukes". Another joked about the creation of "SAPAC," a Somali version of the pro-Israel lobbying group AIPAC.

The response from conservative commentators was predictably outraged. Right-wing outlets took the satirical claims at face value, treating them as evidence of immigrant ingratitude rather than sharp political comedy. This reaction only amplified the meme further, as Somali creators delighted in the inability of their critics to detect obvious satire.

HuffPost framed the movement as "a juicy testament to how some marginalized communities, often robbed of their dignity and agency by bigoted law enforcement," use humor to cope while "pissing off some conservatives along the way". The Daily Dot noted that while the claims obviously have no factual basis, they represent "a riff on justifications used by those who believe God promised Israel to the Jews".

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

Minnesota Was Promised To The Somalis

2025Satirical parody / political trolling memeactive

Also known as: Minnesota Is the Somalian Promised Land · Somali Promised Land meme

Minnesota Was Promised To The Somalis is a November 2025 satirical meme using AI-generated Somali founding father imagery and fabricated Bible verses to parody Zionist "Promised Land" rhetoric applied to Minnesota.

"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. 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 2025.

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

The meme takes the form of mock-serious declarations that Minnesota belongs to the Somali people by ancient divine right, mimicking the theological and political arguments used to justify Israel's claim to Palestine. Posts typically include fabricated historical "evidence" such as AI-generated images of Somali people dressed as American historical figures, doctored Bible passages naming Somalis as God's chosen people, and satirical maps proposing a "two-state solution" that would split Minnesota between Somalis and other residents.

The humor works on multiple levels. On the surface, it's absurdist comedy: Muslim Somalis citing the Book of Genesis to claim a frozen Midwestern state. Beneath that, it pointedly mirrors the logic of settler colonialism and religious land claims, forcing audiences to confront why one group's "promised land" narrative is treated as legitimate while another's is laughed off. People who refuse to accept the claim are labeled practitioners of "anticushitism," a play on antisemitism that references the ancient Cushitic peoples of the Horn of Africa.

The meme's roots lie in a decades-long relationship between Somali refugees and Minnesota. Somali immigration to the state began in the 1990s during Somalia's civil war, and the community grew to roughly 80,000 people, making it the largest Somali population in the United States. About 95% hold U.S. citizenship.

In late November 2025, President Trump sharply escalated attacks on this community. During a cabinet meeting, he declared that Somali immigrants "contribute nothing" and called them "garbage". He posted on Truth Social that "Somali gangs are terrorizing" Minnesota and announced he would end Temporary Protected Status for Somalis "effective immediately". The administration deployed up to 100 federal agents to Minneapolis specifically to target Somali residents. The crackdowns were tied to several fraud investigations, most notably the Feeding Our Future scheme involving an estimated $250-300 million in stolen federal child nutrition funds.

Rather than respond with outrage, the Somali-American community channeled their reaction into comedy. The earliest known instance of the meme appeared on November 29, 2025, when X user @RealAbyan posted a video edit promoting Minnesota with the caption "Minnesota was promised to Somali's 3000 years ago," picking up over 1,100 likes within five days. A Truthdig essay identified "the viral video that kicked it all off" as a young Somali woman on TikTok making the same claim.

Origin & Background

Platform
X / Twitter (first posts), TikTok (viral spread)
Key People
@RealAbyan, Somali-American community
Date
2025
Year
2025

The meme's roots lie in a decades-long relationship between Somali refugees and Minnesota. Somali immigration to the state began in the 1990s during Somalia's civil war, and the community grew to roughly 80,000 people, making it the largest Somali population in the United States. About 95% hold U.S. citizenship.

In late November 2025, President Trump sharply escalated attacks on this community. During a cabinet meeting, he declared that Somali immigrants "contribute nothing" and called them "garbage". He posted on Truth Social that "Somali gangs are terrorizing" Minnesota and announced he would end Temporary Protected Status for Somalis "effective immediately". The administration deployed up to 100 federal agents to Minneapolis specifically to target Somali residents. The crackdowns were tied to several fraud investigations, most notably the Feeding Our Future scheme involving an estimated $250-300 million in stolen federal child nutrition funds.

Rather than respond with outrage, the Somali-American community channeled their reaction into comedy. The earliest known instance of the meme appeared on November 29, 2025, when X user @RealAbyan posted a video edit promoting Minnesota with the caption "Minnesota was promised to Somali's 3000 years ago," picking up over 1,100 likes within five days. A Truthdig essay identified "the viral video that kicked it all off" as a young Somali woman on TikTok making the same claim.

How It Spread

The meme snowballed rapidly across platforms in late November and early December 2025.

On November 30, X user @aaboom16 posted "The Somali declaration indicates that Minnesota was promised to us 3000 years ago," earning over 6,500 likes in four days. The next day, December 1, @AshaariML posted a fabricated Bible excerpt from Genesis 12:3 reading "Those who bless Somalia will be blessed and those who curse Somalia will be cursed," drawing over 2,500 likes.

December 2 marked a major acceleration. Al Jazeera's AJ+ posted a video about the memes and the surrounding controversy on X, pulling over 10,000 likes in two days. On TikTok, creator @him.za11 posted a video declaring it "anticushitism" to deny Somalis their "promised land," which broke 250,000 views within 48 hours.

By December 3, the meme had branched into multiple distinct formats. X user @SonOfSomali posted an image of a Black man wearing sidelocks, traditionally associated with Orthodox Jewish men, with the caption "My cousin in Somalia is headed to Minnesota, his birthright trip to the promised lands," pulling 36,000 likes in a single day. User @Nabadwanag posted an edit of @him.za11 wearing a Native American headdress, captioning it "A native American Somali man who's ancestors and tribes dwelled the land of Minnesota for centuries". TikToker @whiteclawsocialist posted an explainer defending Somalis' "right" to Minnesota that crossed 230,000 views in a day.

AI-generated images became a major vehicle for the joke. Users created images of Somalis as Abraham Lincoln, Christopher Columbus, and the signers of the Declaration of Independence. One widely shared post claimed "In 1776, 56 Somali Americans met in Philadelphia's Independence Hall to make a first of its kind Declaration of Independence". Another featured AI art of a dinosaur with the caption "This photo was taken 3,000 years ago in what is now known as Minnesota, and they were last seen being ridden by Somalis there".

The meme also spread to the wider Somali diaspora beyond the United States. A young Somali woman in Germany posted a TikTok showing herself booking a flight to Minnesota "after finding out that Minnesota is the land to us Somalis 3,000 years ago". The concept of a "Minnesota birthright trip," modeled on Jewish Birthright visits to Israel, became a recurring joke.

How to Use This Meme

The meme follows a loose formula that creators typically adapt in several ways:

1

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.

2

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.

3

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."

4

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

The meme drew significant international media coverage. Middle East Eye, HuffPost, the Daily Dot, TIME, and Truthdig all published features analyzing the phenomenon. Multiple outlets described it as a standout example of marginalized communities weaponizing humor against state-level hostility.

The Somali diaspora beyond the United States embraced the meme enthusiastically, with Somalis in Germany, the UK, and East Africa joining in. Truthdig compared it to previous viral Somali social media moments, including the Nimco Happy meme and the 2020 Eid-ul-Fitr moon sighting controversy.

The meme also forced a broader conversation about whose "promised land" claims are taken seriously and whose are dismissed as jokes. By building a complete satirical ecosystem, including lobbying groups, historical revisionism, religious justification, and diaspora tourism, Somali creators built what amounted to a participatory political education project disguised as comedy.

Minneapolis business owner Kassim Busuri, a former St. Paul City Council member, spoke to the real-world stakes behind the humor: most of Minnesota's 80,000-strong Somali community "have gone from refugees to thriving business people through hard, honest work".

Full History

The political context that produced this meme stretches back years. Trump targeted Minnesota's Somali community during his first term, telling Rep. Ilhan Omar and other members of the progressive "Squad" to "go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which they came". At a 2019 rally, his crowd chanted "Send her back!" in reference to Omar.

The 2025 escalation was sharper. After a shooting near the White House by an Afghan asylee in late November, Trump singled out Somalis despite admitting there was "nothing" linking them to the incident. He ordered a review of green cards issued to migrants from 19 countries including Somalia and used his Thanksgiving message to blast the Somali community in Minnesota, claiming they were "completely taking over" the state.

The fraud cases gave Trump political ammunition. The Feeding Our Future scandal, described by the Justice Department as "the largest Covid-19 fraud scheme in the country," resulted in more than 70 defendants and an estimated $250-300 million stolen. Additional fraud cases emerged around autism therapy billing, housing stabilization services, and disability programs. Most defendants were of East African descent, though prosecutors never established any link between fraud proceeds and terrorist groups like al-Shabaab. Conservative activist Christopher Rufo alleged a terrorism funding connection in a report that relied on a retired Seattle detective whose similar past claims had been debunked by a state audit.

Community leaders in Minnesota pushed back on multiple fronts. At a State Capitol rally, Rep. Ilhan Omar declared "We're not going to allow anybody to erase our presence and our contribution, and we are not going to allow anyone to scapegoat us". Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey delivered a message in Somali: "We love you, we stand with you, we aren't backing down". Police Chief Brian O'Hara clarified that Minneapolis police would not collaborate with federal agencies on immigration enforcement. St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter called out the racial dynamics directly: "It seems to many of us like the darker the skin the immigrants who come to our country are, the more our posture on immigration as a country has shifted".

But it was the memes that grabbed global attention. Truthdig writer described the community's response through the lens of sabbaaxa, a Somali wrestling concept that uses an opponent's momentum against them. The metaphor was apt: Trump's attacks gave Somalis worldwide attention, and they used that spotlight to craft satire that was simultaneously hilarious and politically incisive.

The meme's genius lay in how precisely it mirrored Zionist rhetoric. By claiming biblical justification for territorial control, proposing a "two-state solution," establishing the concept of "anticushitism" as a parallel to antisemitism, and organizing "birthright trips," Somali creators built a complete satirical framework that exposed the logical structure of settler-colonial land claims. One viral post read: "Minnesota is the only state with Somalis and it's surrounded by 47 others states who hate them. We are calling on Germany to give us 10 billion dollars and some nukes". Another joked about the creation of "SAPAC," a Somali version of the pro-Israel lobbying group AIPAC.

The response from conservative commentators was predictably outraged. Right-wing outlets took the satirical claims at face value, treating them as evidence of immigrant ingratitude rather than sharp political comedy. This reaction only amplified the meme further, as Somali creators delighted in the inability of their critics to detect obvious satire.

HuffPost framed the movement as "a juicy testament to how some marginalized communities, often robbed of their dignity and agency by bigoted law enforcement," use humor to cope while "pissing off some conservatives along the way". The Daily Dot noted that while the claims obviously have no factual basis, they represent "a riff on justifications used by those who believe God promised Israel to the Jews".

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