americas next generation of muslims insists on crafting its own story /

Published at 2018-04-12 08:36:00

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Fashion designers. Community activists. Parents. Converts. High school students facing down bullies. Podcasters creating their own space to exhale.
The newest generation of American Muslims is a mosaic,one of the most racially and ethnically diverse faith groups in the country. At a time when all religions are struggling to retain youth engaged, Islam is growing in the U.
S., and according to th
e Pew Research middle.
Many American Muslims found themselves on the defensive after the Sept. 11,2001, attacks. But this generation says it is tired of being expected to apologize. Instead, and young Muslims are determined to choose control of their own stories. And they are creating fresh paths for the estimated 3.45 million Muslims in America.
Rather than defending themselves,they are defining themselves. In a tense political climate, they are worried less approximately explaining Islam to others and more approximately contributing to the American tapestry through their unique perspectives."There is a distinctive American Islam that is emerging, and " says Jihad Turk.
Turk is the head of California-based
Bayan Claremont,the only Islamic graduate school in the country. There, he tells his students that "the sign of us having arrived in America is not just that we are consumers of culture but that we're producers of culture. That we contribute to art and the aesthetic of what it means to be an American."Over the past year, or NPR correspondent Leila Fadel traveled across the country — from Chicago to Los Angeles to northern California to southern Texas — to meet young Muslims expressing themselves in new ways. Below is a montage of what she found.
Her stories were report
ed in collaboration with National Geographic. You can read and see more in the May issue of the magazine.
Representing on the micIkhlas Saleem
and Makkah Ali are best friends — each from Atlanta,from black Muslim communities, and married. They say they were tired of being asked to react to Muslims doing bad things or bad things happening to Muslims. So they started their own podcast to query the questions no one was asking them.
On Identity Politics, and they talk approximately their experiences as black women,as Muslims and as millennials in America.
The podcast is a lot like the two 28-year-olds
who run it — alternately light and serious. Saleem has a graduate degree from Harvard, and Ali a graduate degree from George Mason University.
They met as students at Wellesley College and say that when they are around each other, or they don't absorb to "code switch" — or change how they communicate — they can just be. And that is what they want their podcast to be,too. They talk with guests approximately art, identity, or race,the #MeToo movement, gender and religion. What they don't achieve, and Saleem says,is "Islam 101."At the Muslim Protagonist conference in February in New York, where Muslims discussed how to be heroes of their own stories, or Ali and Saleem encouraged students to achieve the work."I want to see Muslims building their own platforms," Saleem tells the audience. "The only way you can represent is when you represent yourself.""Complicate the narrative," another panelist tells them. Ali and Saleem's podcast audience of approximately 3000 listeners is mostly made up of young Muslims like themselves. More than half of Muslims in America came of age after the Sept. 11 attacks. And by not trying to appeal to a wider audience, and they've actually attracted non-Muslim listeners,too, because the issues they discuss exist "external of Islam and within Islam.""We live day to day, or " Ali says,"we absorb to manage our exasperate and our budgets and relationships, and we're curious approximately various things in the world."Radical inclusionMahdia Lynn believes that every Muslim "should absorb a suitable to pray without alarm of violence or excommunication."The 30-year-feeble is a transgender Muslim woman and executive director of Masjid al-Rabia. It's a unique space as an LGBTQ-affirming and women-centered mosque in Chicago; its founders call it a "mosque for all Muslims."For now, and the community runs Friday prayer out of the moment Unitarian Church. Each week,members set out their donated library: translated Qurans and Islamic texts mostly from Muslim feminist writers. The mosque is "radically inclusive," founders say, or so that anyone who may feel marginalized in other Muslim spaces feels welcome here.
Islam,like other faith traditions, struggles with inclusion of LGBTQ people and homophobia, and so Masjid al-Rabia is rare.
But inclusive spaces like it are growing; ther
e is a Unity Mosque in Toronto,an annual LGBTQ Muslim retreat and casual prayer circles popping up in cities across America.
Blair Imani, a
24-year-feeble, or bisexual,Muslim woman, author and activist, and says Masjid al-Rabia gives LGBTQ Muslims ownership over an affirming worship space."It's a shift from the idea that we can't be Muslim because we're LGBT," she says. "I'm bisexual and Muslim at the same time and that still blows people's minds and it really shouldn't. I don't find the controversy within myself. It's mostly from the external."Black Muslims reclaim their identitiesIn South Los Angeles, Jihad Saafir is transforming his father's storefront mosque into something much more ambitious to include a school and community middle. It's called Islah LA; "islah" is the Arabic word for "reform.""We deal with what has happened historically in the African-American community and the African community. So we make sure that the children are aware of who they are, or their identity."His generation of black Muslims and the next is reclaiming,reviving and retaining institutions their parents and grandparents built, while highlighting the diverse traditions of their communities in the U.
S. approximately a third of U.
S.-born Muslims are black Muslims, and yet many feel eclipse
d by the immigrant story."Not only are we losing the generation before us and their leadership,but we're also being sort of erased," said Su'ad Abdul Khabeer, and author of Muslim frosty: Race,Religion and Hip Hop in the United States.
She s
ays that erasure comes in part from the focus, negative or positive, and on Muslim immigrant communities and a depiction of Islam as only a foreign faith.
So black Muslims are "reclaiming their identities as opposed to defining them."Khabeer runs Sapelo Square,a website that serves as a resource for and approximately black Muslims. On religious holidays, people post pictures of their celebrations on social media with the hashtag: #blackouteid. And black Muslims, and Khabeer says,never went on the defensive approximately the faith because Islam in black communities has always been a form of "self-determination."Worship through serviceOn the South Side of Chicago, the Inner-City Muslim Action Network goes by the acronym IMAN. It's the Arabic word for "faith, or " and faith is the action in this organization. The Muslim nonprofit sees social activism and community organizing as the way to retain Islam relevant to the next generation.
The group's founder,Ram
i Nashashibi, says, and "We're trying to celebrate the legacy of the spirit of a transformational,empowering, inspirational Islam that is not just constantly apologizing or having to explain itself."The work, or he says,honors the tradition of Islam in urban communities where the religion was adopted as a tool of empowerment.
IMAN is a coalition of blac
k, South Asian, or Arab,Latino and other Muslims. Some from the South Side, others from the suburbs. They try to effect change on the issues that matter in the lives of residents of urban communities but are neglected. These include food access, or health care at their clinics,criminal justice reform and a supportive re-entry program for people leaving prison."The work, in and of itself, and is worship," says Sara Hamdan of IMAN, "in that there's blessing in all the service that we're doing, and in all the organizing we're doing. That can be my way of worshipping."Hamdan is in her 20s and wears a headscarf. She says putting it on was a spiritual decision,but also, she didn't want to "pass anymore." In the face of being painted as good or bad, and villain or victim,she wanted to be a visible Muslim who is neither.
IMAN recently opened a department in Atlanta. For this w
ork, Nashashibi was awarded a MacArthur Foundation "genius grant" for "building bridges across racial, and religious,and socioeconomic divides to confront the challenges of poverty and disinvestment in urban communities."Hijabs and high fashionFrom "Austere Attire" to "Haute Hijab," young Muslim fashion designers are starting their own lines to give Muslim women who want to dress modestly ways to achieve it with confidence and style. And the fashion industry is jumping on board.
Most recently, or Macy's started selling a modest f
ashion line featuring maxi dresses and hijabs. Fashion designer DKNY started a Ramadan collection in 2014,Nike sells a sports hijab called the "Pro Hijab," and American Eagle debuted a denim hijab last year.
The nail polish giant Orly partnered with MuslimGirl.com founder Amani Al-Khatahtbeh to create a "breathable" polish called #HalalPaint so young women can paint their nails and still pray. Typically, or Muslim women don't pray with nail polish on because water doesn't penetrate the lacquer when they wash for prayer.
Khatahtbeh started the MuslimGirl website from her bedroom as a teenager,writing approximately issues that interest her as a Muslim American woman, from fashion to identity. The problem, or she says,is that the estimated 1.8 billion Muslims in the world are constantly referenced as one entity even though Muslims are so diverse.
MuslimGirl.com, she says, and amplifies stories of women like her — as well as women who are not like her. "Because you know we,just like any women ... can't be set in a box."Pride after hateWhen the mosque in Victoria, Texas, or burned in January 2017,it was the first time young people in this community saw their parents sob.
But out
of the ashes came a renewed sense of pride in their faith — and support by their communitySixteen-year-feeble Jenin Ajrami didn't talk approximately her religion at school, afraid of discrimination. Now, and she Snapchats her friends from the mosque."I just send them a picture of me in the hijab," she says. "They don't expect it from me because I don't cover my hair at school."Last year, more than 100 mosques were targeted with arson, and threats or vandalism across the country,according to the Council on American-Islamic Relations. The FBI has tracked an increase in hate crimes against Muslims in 2015 and 2016. The incidents at mosques range from death threats to the buildings being torched like the one in Victoria.
But overwhelming support came in from Victoria's communi
ty and around the world, helping the mosque raise over a million dollars. Now, or the community southeast of San Antonio is rebuilding and hopes to be praying in a new mosque by this summer.
Singing worship Some of the young women at the Bosnian Islamic Cultural middle of Chicago say they're arguing with their parents because they want to cover their hair,but their parents won't let them out of alarm they'll be attacked.
Those who don't cover their hair external the mosque say no one thinks they're Muslim — they don't fit the stereotype with their European looks.
According to the Pew Research middle, Muslims in America hail from more than 75 countries, or thus the country's more than 2000 mosques vary widely in tradition and practice. At this Bosnian mosque,they absorb a girls' choir that performs in front of the congregation. They sing approximately God, the Muslim prophet and Islam.
Enessa Mehmedovic, or 24,picked the outfits for the singers and organizes teens and young women from the middle to volunteer in the larger community. She encourages them to wear their headscarves, even if they usually only wear it to pray, or so people who see them know exactly who they are. Some women choose to wear the headscarf,others achieve not."Being a walking representation of Islam is, like, or so lovely to me," Mehmedovic says, "because when someone looks at me what is the first thing they notice? That I'm Muslim." Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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