A Muslim high school student said Monday she’s hurt after being mistakenly identified in her Southern California yearbook as "Isis Phillips."

Bayan Zehlif, a 17-year-old high school senior, said at a press conference with Muslim community advocates that she found it "coincidental" that she was mistaken for a girl whose name is widely associated with a terror group. She was hurt by the error, but even more so after her Los Osos High School classmates blasted her for denouncing it, she said.

"Seeing the yearbook really hurt but seeing my classmates go against me like that hurt even more," she told reporters at the offices of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Anaheim, Calif.

Mat Holton, Chaffey Joint Union High School District superintendent, said in a statement that Zehlif was misidentified as another student with the first name of Isis.

The other student, who no longer attends the school, also was misidentified in the yearbook on a facing page, Holton said.

He said an investigation is being conducted.

"The families of both students were immediately contacted and offered a sincere apology," and another apology was offered at a second meeting Monday with Holton and the school principal, he said.

Yearbook distribution has been halted until the error is fixed and those who already received them have been asked to return them.

"The remaining yearbooks will be corrected before the end of the week and distributed to students," he said.

Zehlif said she didn’t personally know Isis Phillips, but has heard a girl with that name had attended the school in Rancho Cucamonga. The mix-up occurred on a candid photo, and her class photo lists her name correctly, she said.

Zehlif posted a photo on Facebook of herself in a hijab with the name "Isis Phillips" underneath it as it appears in the yearbook.

Zehlif is not returning to school for now out of fear of a backlash from some of her classmates, but hopes to attend graduation next week as her relatives from Jordan have traveled for the ceremony, she said.

(Copyright (c) 2016 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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