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On April 4, 2021, far-right social media troll Jack Posobiec posted a tweet that asked, Why was [U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn.] wearing an Odal Rune? The so-called Odal rune was the focus of controversy in late February and early March 2021 when some on social media said the stage at the Conservative Political Action Conference, a gathering of Republican Party figures, was shaped like the symbol. An organizer of the event pushed back on that claim. The simple answer to the question posed above is that Omar wasn't wearing an Odal rune. Omar responded to the tweet stating that the piece in question was Tuareg jewelry that she got while traveling in Niger. We will explain more about what an Odal rune is below. An Odal rune is sometimes referred to as an Othala rune. The Anti-Defamation League, a prominent organization that researches and tracks extremism and hate, notes that the symbol originated as a pre-Roman alphabetical figure that acquired a new meaning after it was adopted by the Nazis: An Odal rune looks like a diamond shape with two lines extending past the bottom point. An image of one burning can be seen in this 2018 tweet from journalist Jack Smith: Omar's necklace can be clearly seen during her appearance on CNN on April 4 (screenshot below). It doesn't resemble an Odal rune: Omar's election to Congress in 2018 shattered a number of barriers. She is one of the first two Muslim women to serve in Congress, and the first naturalized U.S. citizen who is an immigrant from an African country to serve. As an immigrant, Muslim, and woman of color, she is, as we have previously reported, a frequent target of disinformation and smears, often transparently motivated by Islamophobia and racism. Posobiec is currently listed as a correspondent for the pro-Trump conspiracy outlet OANN. In the lead-up to the November 2016 election, he was a promoter of the Pizzagate conspiracy theory, which posited that prominent Democrats including Donald Trump's then-political rival Hillary Clinton were running a child sex trafficking ring out of the basement of a Washington, D.C., pizza restaurant that had no basement. Pizzagate was a precursor to the Qanon conspiracy cult.
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