Homeless Muslim Women

They usually have children and often have ex-husbands that have made their way elsewhere.

However, some are cases in which the husband - the only provider in the family - passes away suddenly and the wife - having not worked in years and left with no savings and no Muslim extended family - must fend for herself and the children. Some people actually try to go out and DO something about this problem in the face of great odds (and denial) in the community. Anyone that has worked the soup kitchen in DC or gone to the park to feed the homeless on a consistent basis will tell you that they almost always run into a Muslim.

The point is that Muslims ARE affected by the same problems as the community at large and this is one reason why we need to get involved. (Even if NO Muslims were affected we should do this anyway) Issues like affordable housing and homelessness ARE “Islamic” issues no matter how some people may scream that they are not. This article mentions two current shelters, but sister Asma Hanif is trying to establish a third

They sleep in mosques. Or on the streets. Or in Christian-oriented shelters that might hold prayer meetings or services at odds with their own religious beliefs. For Muslim women without a place to live, particularly those who have been battered or are immigrants, being homeless can test their faith at the time they need it most.

When Muslim women are sent to shelters that serve the general population, they are often exposed to lifestyles that challenge their faith, such as drinking, abusing drugs, eating pork and undressing or bathing in front of others, says Imam Faizul Khan of the Islamic Society of Washington in Silver Spring. They return from such shelters “with sad stories,” he says.

The Virginia Muslim Political Action Committee estimates that several hundred Muslim women are homeless in the Washington region, based on U.S. Census Bureau data and local surveys. That is a small fraction of the homeless population and of the estimated 250,000 Muslims in the region, but local Islamic leaders say the problem has grown in recent years. Kahn said homelessness in the Muslim community was almost unheard of several years ago.

Some Islamic leaders have begun to raise money to establish more shelters that cater to the Islamic community. There are now just two serving the Washington-Baltimore area, according to local mosque leaders. The leaders said they were unaware of any in Northern Virginia.

Muslims going through hard times in Northern Virginia - which has some of the richest counties in the entire country - usually have to make their way to Maryland, where the cost of living is a little lower.

 A four-bedroom, one-bath shelter in downtown Baltimore, the al-Mumtahinah home, holds 12 women. When the brick rowhouse is full, shelter director Nadia Auxila McIntosh squeezes women into a sitting room or dining room. The Islamic Center of Maryland runs another shelter in Gaithersburg, with room for six to eight.

Social workers, clerics and lawyers who work with Muslim homeless women said most were driven from home by abusive husbands or are unable to work because of their immigration status, leaving them without money for housing. Some face both troubles.

“If a battered Muslim woman is also an immigrant, she may be that much closer to homelessness,” said Mazna Hussain, an attorney with the nonprofit Tahirih Justice Center, a women’s advocacy group in Falls Church. “If she doesn’t have the right to work, she can’t build up a safety net.”

[...]

Imam Hassan Amin of Masjid Us Salaam in downtown Baltimore said more Muslim women are seeking shelter. “I’ve been dealing with women who would come to us and don’t have any place to stay. . . . It’s a big issue.”

If the women end up at Christian-oriented shelters, they are asked to “come out of their Muslim dress,” Amin said. “There are almost always prayer circles, and they play gospel music. Muslim women . . . are pushed to be a part of that group.”

Michael Stoops, acting executive director of the D.C.-based National Coalition for the Homeless, said the Washington region has about 12,000 homeless people on any given night. There are more than 740,000 nationwide, according to 2005 data from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

[...]Most women staying at al-Mumtahinah in Baltimore were dressed in scarves and long robes. Some covered their faces almost completely. McIntosh opened the shelter, whose Arabic name means “to be examined,” in March with help from Muslim donors.

In 2003 and 2004, McIntosh was homeless herself in Texas after she lost her job. She said she was assured when she sought shelter from the Salvation Army that she would not have to attend church services, which she would have considered a sin against her Islamic faith.

But the first night she was there, McIntosh recalled, the woman who had given the assurance ordered her to go to Christian worship or pack her bags. “I left,” McIntosh said.

Based on her experience, McIntosh decided to open the shelter when she moved to Baltimore. She said she was stunned by the extent of the problem. “A lot of sisters are sleeping at the mosques,” she said.

Kenyatta El Sa’id Farag was one. A Muslim convert, she makes $25 every Friday cleaning bathrooms at a nearby mosque. That is not enough to support her and her 12-year-old daughter.

“I know I’m going to have hard times and easy times,” said El Sa’id Farag. “I have a roof over my head.”

She squabbles frequently with McIntosh, who is trying to encourage her to get a better-paying job instead of waiting for someone to come rescue her from homelessness.

“I know good and well I’m not going on welfare,” said the mother, while mopping up syrup with a waffle in the shelter kitchen.

Out of earshot, McIntosh explained why she has been encouraging El Sa’id Farag to look for more work.

“This is not a free thing,” she said. “I have to pay for it. If you’re not using the space to help better yourself, I can’t help you.”

Before some of you, outside of the area, start to think “man they got problems in DC”: if you think that this is a problem only in our area, then you are sadly mistaken. I encourage everyone to get in touch with these shelters and see what they can do to help.

12 Responses to “Homeless Muslim Women”

  1. Assalaam aleikum Brother Tariq.

    May Allah (SWT) reward you handsomely in this life and the next for having the guts to call it as it is. We Muslims EVERYWHERE love to close our eyes to these situations and pretend they do not happen.

    As a former Christian, I admitt it, there are some bible passages I still remember fondly. They are those that are supported by the Qur’an and the Sunnah. Like the one that says (and I paraphrase here) “I was hungry and you did not feed me, I was homeless and you did not shelter me. Come on Muslimun, this is Islam!! Pure and simple. How long are we going to prettend here. The only reason Allah (SWT) gave us resources is to share them with those who have less or even nothing at all.

    I anticipate we, starting with myself, will be very, very, very surprised when the day of judgement comes and we’ll see and hear all these people witnessing against us for all the things we had the opportunities and resources to do for them, and we didn’t. This is starting with you Farhanahz.

    And Allah knows best.

  2. May Allah (swt) give success to the current shelters and allow more shelters to be resurrected. Ameen!

    Do they have any sites where we can donate online?

  3. Keep up the good work in reporting all of this stuff bro - everyone needs a ‘reality check’ every now and then. I wish more Muslims would contribute to community work to help these types of situations - for other Muslims and non-Muslims.

  4. Excellent post, brother Tariq:

    It is a sad part of our society that is often given the blind eye. May Allah bless you for reporting on it, and make the eye look at what it does not want to see.

    Ya Haqq!

  5. Happy New Year to you and your family, brother. May Allah bless you all with health, happiness, and ever increasing love and wisdom. Ameen.

    Ya Haqq!

  6. http://synkronyzer.wordpress.com/2008/01/03/father-kills-2-daughters/

    Dallas Muslim Father kills 2 daughters.

  7. [...] Homeless Muslim Women [...]

  8. there are an number of brothers in jacksonville ,fl who are looking for wives and i’am one of them. i’am fifty years old, american, and an practicing muslim ,insha Allah, so if there is any sisters desiring to be married and relocate to F.L , I welcome the opportunity, if there is an sister form an muslim country who needs legalization , and she is truthful , meaning love’s Allah and his rasul s.a.w, please feel free to contact me .

  9. I need an wife, cont. begoodathome@yahoo.com

  10. Bismillah

    Assalaam Alaikum!

    I happen to know of one Muslim shelter which desperately needs funds. It has had to temporarily shut down due to lack of money.

    http://www.geocities.com/homs99/index.html
    Contacting them proves to be difficult.. The Phone number and hotmail email account are no good. There may be other ways though in the website, it’s self.

    I have started a program today to try and help with this epidemic. It is called SurvivorsAreUs Sponsor A Muslim Family. For more information please go here

    http://www.survivorsareus.com/index.cfm/SurvivorsAreUs_Sponsor_A_Muslim_Family

    Jazzakamullahukhairun
    Halimah

  11. p.s. Sorry I had to change the url address here is the new address

    http://www.survivorsareus.com/index.cfm/SurvivorsAreUs_Foster_R_Us_Homeless_Program

    Jazzakaalhukhair
    halimah

  12. I will admit, when you hear of the talk about homeless Muslim women, it’s like ” Muslim people, homeless? nah!” It also doesn’t help when you have people saying that there are no homeless Muslims like a couple of Muslim brothers( who were computer engineers) I’ve heard saying these same words. It’s is such generalizations like those and the silence of the society is why the general public rarely or in many cases, will never hear about it.

    I think about silence, Like I think about High Blood Pressure ads. Look at the them and the guy will tell you that it is a ” silent ” killer. While this topic isn’t about one’s health, the simile in it is similar to the consequences of being such. We’re not invincible people no matter what we’re relgion were in. God knows that we’re not perfect. The sad thing about religion, is that once we’re doing god’s work people feel that we’re going to be problem free, which could so far from the truth.

    It is also unfortunate that these women we’re forced to give up temporarily give up their faith to stay in the shelter. As a former Christian, I was always taught that you help the one that is in need no matter what and was taught the scriptures from it. The lord helped out Christians and non-Christians, Black and non-Black alike. I rememered reading the book of James 2( I think, but not 100percent certain)where god mentioned his displeasure of people who look down on those who were down and out. If that lasy was a true Christian, she would have never blackmailed the young Muslim lady into doing that. Her help should have been unconditional because god didn’t have special rules inhelping out those in need. He even helped out people who doubted his credibility.

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