DEARBORN, Mich. (Michigan News Source) – A battle over the Islamization of the city of Dearborn has erupted on social media, sparked by the comments of the city’s Muslim mayor who told a Christian resident in September during a city council meeting that the man wasn’t welcome in the city.

Now, dozens of people on TikTok are posting their views on whether the city is open to non-Muslims.

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One woman who goes by the handle @magamama5 on TikTok announced a week ago she was travelling to Dearborn to report on what she sees happening in the city. Since arriving, she has posted videos in Dearborn while the call to prayer goes on behind her. One video during the call to prayer received more than 54,000 likes.

“We’re in Dearborn. This is the call of prayer that goes off five times a day here in the United States. Would you like to hear this blasting through your neighborhood?” she asks in one video as the call to prayer plays in the background.

The TikTok handle TheRodofMoses posted a video of a 5:30 a.m. call to prayer in Dearborn. It received more than 106,000 views.

“How is this legal?” one commenter asked.

MagaMama5 posted a video of herself standing before the newly named Osama Siblani Street. The street naming was controversial because Siblani, a prominent Dearborn resident, has expressed support of Hamas in the past.

She said some of her videos on TikTok on the culture of Dearborn have received more than a million views.

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Dozens of other TikTok profiles, including social media influencers, have posted videos of the calls to prayer, with one video calling it “a citywide flashpoint.”

Dearborn mosques have been broadcasting the call to prayer since 1979. The practice is being questioned again after Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud made national headlines during a September city council meeting when he told a Christian resident he’s not welcome in the city. Hammoud has not retracted or apologized for his comments.

Some residents have posted videos sharing their love for the city and attacking non-residents for criticizing the city.

In one video, a woman from Sterling Heights with the handle @ari_dza videoed herself walking with ripped jeans a tight T-shirt with tattoos and says she is not being harassed and does not feel unsafe. She tagged magamama5 in her post.

“Please tell me where I am being harassed? Please tell me where I’m being hated? Don’t believe everything you hear on the internet!!! Dearborn is an amazing place,” the Sterling Heights woman posted.

She then expressed support for Mayor Hammoud saying that Christian Ted Barham was not welcome in the city. The Sterling Heights woman suggested Hammoud was justified because Barham was “a racist bigot.”