"There is a lot of anxiety now in a lot of communities across the country. Immigrants, minorities, people who have lived in the kind of vulnerable communities across America, the lower income, those who might be of different sexual orientation, those who worship a faith that is not a dominant faith," Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Nisha Desai Biswal told said.
"It was shocking to me that my young children seven and nine had picked up so much of the rhetoric of the campaign that themselves, a day after the elections, expressed their concerns and said, 'Does this mean that we have to leave, because we are immigrants'," Biswal told PTI.
"And I reassured them that they are Americans, they have every right to be here and they have an obligation to be here, to be part of what brings this country and moves this country forward and I reassured them that not only do they belong here, but that they are welcomed and valued members of America," she said.
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"Will this government continue to value us, respect our rights and provide opportunities for us? And that is something that the President-elect (Trump) and the incoming administration need to address and need to provide leadership and build confidence across all Americans that they would lead for all Americans," she said.
Biswal said people are anxious if the new administration would stand for those values and those principles that have defined the country for so many years and that all Americans will have their due rights and respect and will have opportunities to continue to grow and thrive and contribute to the society.
Biswal rued that this campaign laid bare a lot of the divisions that exists within the society.
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"Because I think, one has to engage people's fears from the perspective of trying to bridge the gaps, bridge the divides and try to assure them, reassure them, and build confidence and build trust, instead of trying to exasperate those fears and exploit those fears," she said.
"Those are issues that we have to work through. What I think helped tremendously is that the leadership of President (George) Bush and that of state and local leaders (who) took the initiatives in urging the country to come together and not turn on one another. One of the very early things that President Bush (did) after 9/11 was to visit a mosque," she said.
Members of the Congress passed resolutions to support the Sikh community when they were feeling the brunt of the attacks.
"Because America is strongest when we are makingcommon cause and not when we are turning one against each other or are being suspicious of one another, so that's to me feel different and deeply unfortunate is the we need to see the leadership and the rhetoric at the very top that we see back together again and allows us to rebuild that trust in each other and invest in each other," Biswal said.