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The teen tweeted on Saturday and showed both his statement and his acceptance letter to Stanford, saying, “I submitted this in my @Stanford application, & yesterday, I was admitted…#BlackLivesMatter.”

The tweet has over 2,600 likes and has been retweeted more than 800 times, including some high-level RTs by Campaign Zero co-founders Brittany Packnett and Samuel Sinyangwe, as well as Palestinian-American-Muslim activist Linda Sarsour.

Ahmed told Mic that his “unapologetic progressivism” is a central part of his identity, and he wanted that represented in his application.

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He said that his Islamic faith and his commitment to justice are intertwined, and he would not be a good Muslim if he turned a blind eye to the injustices the black community faces on a daily basis.

“To me, to be Muslim is to be a BLM ally, and I honestly can’t imagine it being any other way for me,” Ahmed said. “Furthermore, it’s critical to realize that one-fourth to one-third of the Muslim community in America are black … and to separate justice for Muslims from justices for the black community is to erase the realities of the plurality of our community.”

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Stanford will be lucky to get Ahmed, who has already built a reputation in the activist community. The 18-year-old has been invited to the White House Iftar dinner, led Martin O’Malley’s youth presidential campaign, and interned and worked for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.

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He’s also founded two youth organizations and delivered a TEDxTalk about the dangers and impact of stereotypes from his perspective as a Muslim teen.

In addition to Stanford, Ahmed was admitted to Princeton and Yale.

Something tells me this kid is going to be all right.

Read more at Mic.