Five years after being falsely accused of terrorism by members of the Republican Party, a former congressional candidate — in what he calls a "redeeming moment" — has been sworn in as a U.S. naval officer. Adding to the achievement, his swearing-in took place at the same site where he was once called a national threat.
It was 2018 when Ammar Campa-Najjar, then a Democratic candidate running for a seat in the House of Representatives, became a target of racially charged attacks — many of them stemming from his Republican opponent, then-incumbent Duncan D. Hunter, and Hunter's politician father.
Hunter weaponized Campa-Najjar's heritage throughout the campaign, referring to him at times an “Islamist” trying to “infiltrate Congress," despite that Campa-Najjar is a Christian.
At one point in the campaign, Hunter's father, former Rep. Duncan Hunter Sr., even held a so-called “security briefing" about Campa-Najjar near the USS Midway Museum in San Diego, going so far as to call him a security risk.
The moment, says Campa-Najjar, was "surreal." Particularly, he adds, because it was based around his "heritage and ethnicity," not his actions.
Campa-Najjar, a 34-year-old Latino Arab American, was born in San Diego to a Palestinian father and Mexican American mother, and lived in the Gaza Strip as a child. His grandfather — who was assassinated long before he was born — was accused of playing a role in the 1972 "Munich massacre," a terrorist attack that Campa-Najjar has strongly condemned.
Campa-Najjar ultimately lost the 2018 election to Hunter, and would go on to lose another congressional bid in 2020 and a run for mayor of Chula Vista, California, in 2022. But looking back, he says that being wrongfully accused of threatening the United States during his first campaign paved a path for his swearing-in to be "the most redeeming moment of my life."
That's because, on Thursday, Campa-Najjar returned to the scene of that original "security briefing" by Hunter Sr. — the USS Midway — this time to be sworn in as a United States naval officer.
"I am reminded of the quote from Winston Churchill, 'The reservist is twice the citizen,'" Campa-Najjar, who previously worked in the Department of Labor under Obama, tells PEOPLE in an exclusive interview. "Today, in front of my family, friends, my grandmother in heaven and God, I stood aboard the USS Midway and swore an oath to preserve, protect and defend our nation as a commissioned United States Navy Officer. Twice the citizen."
Campa-Najarr tells PEOPLE his dreams of joining the military began when he was 17 years old, when he went into a San Diego recruiter's office during Fleet Week and filled out the necessary paperwork to join the Navy.
His mother refused to sign off on the decision, due to his father being away at the time. "My younger brother and mom needed me. Instead, I worked as a janitor and handyman at my church to help support our family," he says.
Seventeen years later, he'd get his chance "to fulfill a dream I’ve had for half my life," he says.
Campa-Najarr stops short of calling the moment poetic justice, though he's aware that there's a certain poetry to his path.
"Only in America can the son of a Mexican woman from the barrio and an Arab man from a conflict zone have the freedom to chart his own course, serve his country, and become a Navy Officer for the greatest military the world has ever known," he says.
Those who know him agree, with democratic strategist and former Biden official Adrian Eng-Gastelum telling PEOPLE: "Ammar’s story encapsulates what it's like to run for office in America as a young, first-generation person of color."
The journey "from Gaza and the barrio to a congressional candidate smeared by disinformation to a Navy Officer," Eng-Gastelum adds, is one "about resilience in the face of racism and xenophobia that reinforces our shared hope that we can live up to the American Dream."