Ahmed Mohamed from Irving, Texas, left school in handcuffs on Monday after his teacher and school principal said his homemade clock looked like a bomb.
The hashtag #IStandWithAhmed has taken social media by storm and people are tweeting to let Ahmed know he is not alone.
Read: Obama invites arrested Muslim schoolboy to White House
Facebook founder and CEO, Mark Zuckerberg was not far behind in his support for the teenager and expressed his wish to meet the boy. "Having the skill and ambition to build something cool should lead to applause, not arrest. The future belongs to people like Ahmed."
“Ahmed, if you ever want to come by Facebook, I’d love to meet you. Keep building,” he wrote in a status update on his Facebook profile.
Micro-blogging site Twitter was not one to stay behind and went one step ahead and offered an internship to Ahmed, saying they loved building things too.
https://twitter.com/twitter/status/644261776146632704
Space Camp USA also took to Twitter to inform the 14-year-old he was welcome at the camp as someone had provided a scholarship for him.
Creative minds are always welcome at Space Camp, and we appreciate donors who help them come. Someone has provided a scholarship for Ahmed.
— SpaceCampUSA (@SpaceCampUSA) September 16, 2015
Read: Muslim student arrested in US after home-built clock mistaken for bomb
And Google invited him to its science fair, but only if he promised to bring his clock.
https://twitter.com/googlescifair/status/644219471469629440?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
Celebrities and many others have also been tweeting in support of Ahmed and there is no sign of them stopping any time soon.
This the best part... we brought in an MIT physicist to invite Ahmed to come tour the school... #inners
— Chris Hayes (@chrislhayes) September 17, 2015
Do I look dangerous yet? #IstandwithAhmed #ahmeding pic.twitter.com/15cAGd8Y7s
— Ana Marie Cox (@anamariecox) September 16, 2015
https://twitter.com/shannonwoodward/status/644181586695471104
Watch out, it's a brown guy with a clock! #IStandWithAhmed @IStandWithAhmed pic.twitter.com/8lzzrEakoi
— Tariq Khokhar (@tkb) September 16, 2015
https://twitter.com/floresgump11/status/644173833713283072
https://twitter.com/LOMBARDIGNITY/status/644175309286318080
In solidarity with @IStandWithAhmed CAIR-Chicago staff brought our clocks to work too. #IStandWithAhmed pic.twitter.com/NK9CWhyfru
— CAIR-Chicago (@cairchicago) September 16, 2015
If it looks like a clock, ticks like a clock, is a clock but your name is Mohamed then its a bomb #IstandWithAhmed pic.twitter.com/DP8rrYWyVZ
— TheMuslimLawyer (@faisalkutty) September 16, 2015
Team @ReThinkRights says #IStandWithAhmed. #nerdingwhilemuslim pic.twitter.com/JebdDmzJB8
— ReThink Media (@rethink_media) September 16, 2015
https://twitter.com/BruiseAurora/status/644161725005062145
https://twitter.com/femme_esq/status/644158440932249600
Overwhelmed by all the support, Ahmed thanked everyone and appealed to them to come "together to stop this racial inequality and prevent this from happening again".
Thank you fellow supporters. We can ban together to stop this racial inequality and prevent this from happening again pic.twitter.com/fBlmckoafU
— Ahmed Mohamed (@IStandWithAhmed) September 16, 2015
Some people also used the hashtag which was trending worldwide to share photos of themselves with clocks or watches to show solidarity:
In solidarity with @IStandWithAhmed CAIR-Chicago staff brought our clocks to work too. #IStandWithAhmed pic.twitter.com/NK9CWhyfru
— CAIR-Chicago (@cairchicago) September 16, 2015
Brought my clock to work today. #IStandWithAhmed #Solidarity pic.twitter.com/h4Jr0siF1A
— Simran Jeet Singh (@simran) September 16, 2015
The 14-year-old intends to stand up for his rights and tweeted that he would be meeting his lawyer to come up with the future course of action.
Going to meet my lawyer. pic.twitter.com/YCxOOeOz3Z
— Ahmed Mohamed (@IStandWithAhmed) September 16, 2015
He has also set up a fundraiser account for anyone who would like to help him:
https://twitter.com/IStandWithAhmed/status/644319978225700864
COMMENTS (12)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ