Trump Calls Him A ‘Communist Lunatic’ – But Zohran Mamdani’s Roots Trace Back To Ethnic Cleansing In Uganda | World News

New Delhi: US President Donald Trump hit Zohran Mamdani’s democratic primary victory in New York with a scary mission. “100% communist crazy. Democrats finally crossed the line,” he wrote.
Mamdani has not shook the old guard for the first time. But this time it is different. A city like New York has a long liberal history, now closer to a hard mayor candidate. And Trump’s anger reflects more than political anger. He’s afraid of what is ahead of us.
Mamdani, a 32 -year -old New York State Assembly, threw a brave platform. Housing for everyone, free public transport and reserve taxes. I am sorry. No filter. His message – the system is broken and rebuilt.
But another story behind the headlines is to draw attention. A distant past. A common trauma.
Mamdani and Kash Patel, who had a reliable election for Trump’s FBI director, were born in Uganda. In the 1970s, both families were dismantled from the root during the brutal liquidation of Indian origin citizens under the dictator Idi Amin. It wasn’t just exile. It was fear. Thousands of people were killed. Features were looted. Lives were destroyed. One generation was deleted from the map from Indo-udan. Some fled to London. Some to Canada. Some of them, like Mamdani and Patel’s families, went to America.
Earlier this year, Patel remembered what his father was experiencing. “Three Lakh killed people… For how they looked,” he said, he added that he was running for his life.
Mahmood, the father of Mamdani, was among those who were deported to a young academician. He continued to be a leading scholar in Africa about colonialism.
Two men. Two parties. A legacy.
Trump’s wrath may be directed towards Mamdani’s politics. But he also reminds the country that he shaped leaders behind the scenes. Family traces. Forgotten massacres. Silent Dates.
Mamdani did not answer Trump’s last words. The campaign continued to focus on housing, transit and inequality – issues.
However, as November approaches and its name spreads beyond the districts of New York, something is clear. This race is no longer about the mayor’s seat. It is about what America is ready to accept and still refuses to forget.