Cities see rise in Blackamerican Muslims

Can’t say that I have noticed such a trend where more blacks are accepting Islam than before, but ….

The wooden house in Pittsburgh’s rundown Homewood neighborhood looks like any other on the block. But the sign at the door, Masjid Mumin, and the rows of shoes lined up inside on gray, plastic shelves hint of the brand of Sunni Islam its members practice.

The mosque is one of seven in Pittsburgh, home to a vibrant community of about 8,000 to 10,000 Sunni Muslims _ some 30 percent of them black.

Following what appears to be a trend in cities nationwide, religious leaders in Pittsburgh say there has been a rise in black conversions to Sunni Islam since the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

No national surveys have been taken to confirm the increase, but Islamic religious leaders in Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit have also reported growth, said Lawrence Mamiya, a professor of religion and Africana studies at New York’s Vassar College. Experts estimate that 30 percent of the 6 to 7 million Muslims in the U.S. are black, with only South Asians making up a larger number at 33 percent

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Richard Turner, coordinator of the African-American studies program and an expert on Islam among blacks at the University of Iowa, said since Sept. 11, Muslims have been attempting to “disseminate positive information about the religion, so the obvious outcome of that would be more conversions.”

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Rashad Byrdsong, an elder in Pittsburgh’s black Muslim community, hopes the rise in interest in Sunni Islam will help the Mumin Mosque collect money to expand their small house of worship into a larger community gathering place.

The new mosque, still in the planning stages, will look more like a community center than a traditional minaret-topped Muslim place of worship found in the Arab world.

The expanded Homewood mosque will have a daycare facility, a re-entry program for released inmates, a health clinic and a program for entrepreneurs, features that are in great need in the downtrodden neighborhood.

“First, the spiritual aspects, the dawa, but also basic, physical, fundamental needs,” Byrdsong said.

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A growing number of Muslims in America, especially blacks, are building mosques that offer a variety of community services, partly because the federal and state governments do not answer to many of their social needs, Islamic experts say.

These complexes take the religion back to its roots before the modern-day state began providing services to the population.

“What you have here is the creation of a true American Islam,” said Edward Curtis, a religious studies professor who specializes in African-American Islam at IUPUI. “Islam has been a part of this country from its beginning, and the forms of Islam that are successful here are indigenous forms.”

The Homewood mosque, though unique, follows a model similar to other black mosques in the United States, Mamiya said.

In Harlem, the Malcolm Shabazz Mosque has built apartment buildings and townhouses, offers social services and even owns a sanitation company used to provide jobs to former prisoners, Mamiya said.

“The African-American mosque has made itself different in this way from other mosques around the world,” Mamiya said. “Religious institutions in the black community have always been their strongest institutions and have always done more than religious functions.”

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Pittsburgh, then a prosperous steel town, attracted thousands of blacks seeking work, and became one of several cities where Sunni Islam took hold. Today, black Muslims here brag that in 1932 Pittsburgh became home to the first chartered Muslim mosque in the United States.

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Pittsburgh is home not only to black Muslims, but also a broad community of immigrants who practice the religion. However, until Sept. 11, the two communities were largely isolated.

After the attacks, immigrants _ subject to FBI surveillance, police raids and other scrutiny _ began to reach out to black Muslims in Pittsburgh, whose persecution they could suddenly relate to, said Sarah Jameela Martin, 64, an active member of the city’s black Muslim community.

“It really was a time for us to come together,” Martin said.

But Sept. 11 also put an end to any hopes the black Muslim community had to collect money for their mosque project from Saudi Arabia and other Muslim countries overseas, because new U.S. laws put Islamic charities under greater scrutiny.

Now, as immigrant and black Muslims in Pittsburgh try to improve the religion’s image and separate it from global terrorism, blacks are paving the way, Martin said.

Black women, for example, have long worn the traditional head-covering, or hijab, to work, while immigrants have been reluctant to do so, she said. Today, Muslims in Pittsburgh are far more visible, she said.

“Because of our social tag … we didn’t mind,” Byrdsong said, pointing to his dark skin as an explanation to why being openly Muslim has never been a problem for blacks in America. “We can’t hide it.”

4 Responses to “Cities see rise in Blackamerican Muslims”

  1. As-salaamu ‘alaykum. Likewise, I don’t understand how this is news either. If the article was about the growing interest in Islaam by Hispanics in America, then perhaps I could write more of a comment. Before and after 9/11, America’s Black Muslim communities have seen an increase in constituents departing from NOI and onto a more orthodox path of Islaam.

  2. [...] gess brings us a (lengthy) scholarly article on Integrationism when cities see rise in Blackamerican Muslims. [...]

  3. Salaam alaikum,
    I’m glad that there is an article that discusses AA Muslims, but I am still convinced that we are invisible and been rendered largely voiceless in discourse on Islam in America. I was suprised to hear about the decline of a rather large African American Muslim community in the East Bay. Jumuah used to be packed and ta’alim on Sunday used to be crackin. I was so sad to hear about how empty it was and the growing fragmentation. Likewise, I was suprised to see how little progress the other smaller masjid has made in transforming the crime ridden, largely AA, community. I see that people of all ethnicities are still converting despite the repressive political climate, bad press, and atrocious behavior of some miguided Muslims.

  4. Margari, what you just said is the case across the country as so many African-American masjids have split up due to imported thoughts or are just suffering from a plain lack of growth. That is why I also tend to believe that this article is a bunch of bull

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