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U.S. Hispanics embracing Islam By Amy Green | 
The Christian Science MonitorOctober 5, 2006
 With her hijab and dark complexion, Catherine García 
doesn’t look like an Orlando native or a Disney tourist. When people ask where 
she’s from, often they are surprised that it’s not the Middle East but Colombia.
 That’s because García, a bookstore clerk who immigrated to the U.S. seven years 
ago, is Hispanic and Muslim.
 
 On this balmy afternoon at the start of Ramadan, the Islamic holy month, she is 
at her mosque dressed in long sleeves and a long skirt in keeping with the 
Islamic belief in modesty. “When I was in my country, I never fit in the 
society. Here in Islam, I feel like I fit with everything they believe,” she 
says.
 
 García is one of a growing number of Hispanics across the U.S. who have found 
common ground in a faith and culture bearing surprising similarities to their 
own heritage.
 
 From professionals to students to homemakers, they are drawn to the Muslim faith 
through marriage, curiosity and a shared interest in issues such as immigration.
 
 The population of Hispanic Muslims has increased 30 percent to some 200,000 
since 1999, estimates Ali Khan, national director of the American Muslim Council 
in Chicago.
 
 Many attribute the trend to a growing interest in Islam since the 2001 terrorist 
attacks and also to a collision between two burgeoning minority groups.
 
 They note that Muslims ruled Spain centuries ago, leaving an imprint on Spanish 
food, music, and language.
 
 “Many Hispanics … who are becoming Muslim, would say they are embracing their 
heritage, a heritage that was denied to them in a sense,” says Ihsan Bagby, 
professor of Arabic and Islamic studies at the University of Kentucky.
 
 The trend has spawned Hispanic Islamic organizations such as the Latino American 
Dawah Organization, established in 1997 by converts in New York City.
 
 Today the organization is nationwide.
 
 The growth in the Hispanic Muslim population is especially prevalent in New 
York, Florida, California and Texas, where Hispanic communities are largest.
 
 In Orlando, the area’s largest mosque, which serves some 700 worshippers each 
week, is located in a mostly Hispanic neighborhood.
 
 A few years ago, it was rare to hear Spanish spoken at the mosque, says Imam 
Muhammad Musri, president of the Islamic Society of Central Florida.
 
 Today, there is a growing demand for books in Spanish, including the Koran, and 
requests for appearances on Spanish-language radio stations, Musri says. The 
mosque offers a Spanish-language education program in Islam for women on 
Saturdays.
 
 “I could easily see in the next few years a mosque that will have Spanish 
services and a Hispanic imam who will be leading the service,” Musri says.
 
 The two groups tend to be family-oriented, religious and politically 
conservative, Bagby says. Many who convert are second- and third-generation 
Hispanic Americans.
 
 The two groups also share an interest in social issues such as immigration, 
poverty and health care.
 
 Earlier this year, Muslims joined Hispanics in marches nationwide protesting 
immigration-reform proposals they felt were unfair.
 
 In South Central Los Angeles, a group of Muslim UCLA students a decade ago 
established a medical clinic in this underserved area.
 
 Today, the nonreligious University Muslim Medical Association Community Clinic 
treats some 16,000 patients, mostly Hispanic, who see it as a safe place to seek 
care without fear for their illegal status, says Mansur Khan, vice chairman of 
the board and one of the founders.
 
 Although the clinic doesn’t seek Muslim converts, Dr. Khan sees Hispanics taking 
an interest in his faith because it focuses on family, he says.
 
 One volunteer nurse founded a Latino Islamic organization in the area.
 
 Another Hispanic woman told Khan she felt drawn to the faith because of the head 
covering Muslim women wear. It reminded her of the Virgin Mary.
 
 The trend is a sign that Islam is becoming more Americanized and more indigenous 
to the country, Bagby says.
 
 As Republican positions on issues such as immigration push Muslim Hispanics and 
blacks in a less conservative direction, Islam could move in the same direction.
 
 Muslim Hispanic and black involvement in American politics could demonstrate to 
Muslims worldwide the virtues of democracy, eventually softening 
fundamentalists.
 
 Bagby believes the Osama bin Ladens of the world are a small minority, and most 
fundamentalists are moving toward engagement with the West.
 
 “The more Hispanics and other Americans (who) become Muslim, the stronger and 
wider the bridge between the Muslim community and the general larger American 
community,” Bagby says. “Their words and approach have some weight because they 
are a source of pride for Muslims throughout the world.”
 
 García left Colombia to study international business in the U.S. Always 
religious, she considered becoming a nun when she was younger. But her Catholic 
faith raised questions for her. She wondered about eating pork when the Bible 
forbids it and about praying to Mary and the saints and not directly to God.
 
 In the U.S., she befriended Muslims and eventually converted to Islam. Her 
family in Colombia was supportive.
 
 Today, she says her prayers in English, Spanish and Arabic, and she eats halal 
food in keeping with Islamic beliefs.
 
 “It’s the best thing that happened to me,” says García in soft, broken English. 
“I never expected to have so many blessings and be in peace like I am now.”
   Source: 
http://www.freenewmexican.com/news/50234.html# |