A Brief History of Islam in the United States
Information about islam including islam
in america islamic religion muslim and other fact about
islam and religion. Evidence exists that Muslims visited
North America before Columbus. It is believed that Mansa
Abu Bakr of Mali traveled
to the Gulf of Mexico in 1312. Ethno-linguistic analysis
shows connections between certain peoples of the West African
coast and the native Americans living in the Gulf of Mexico
region of the Americas. The evidence is controversial and
fragmentary, and not accepted by all scholars.
Muslims in America before the Civil War
Clear evidence of
the presence of Islam in America begins with the Moriscoes
who accompanied the Spanish invaders.
Following their time, great numbers of Muslim slaves were
imported to this continent to work on the plantations of
the South. They were troublesome slaves, as they often incited
rebellion among other enslaved people and were sometimes
not desired for servitude because of their history of "being
difficult to manage."
"
In fact, at one point during the African holocaust, importation
of bondsmen from certain nations and areas of Africa that
were predominantly Muslim became prohibited. Afccording to
Dr. sulayman Nyang of Howard University, some of the nations
banned were the Jalofs, Biafras, Mandingos, and Hausa-Fullah.
An estimated 25,000 Mandingos, 45,000 Fullah, 15,000 Hausa
and 5,000 Muslims from other communities were brought to
America between 1726 and 1806.1"
As many at least ten percent of the African slaves came from
Muslim backgrounds. Many of these Muslim slaves were highly
literate. Their literacy clearly set them apart from the
rest of the slaves (and most of their owners). As Sylviane
A. Diouf points out, the hostility of the slaveholders expressed
toward the literate Africans derived not from fear that their
property would trick them in some way. Rather, the hostility
described by Theodore Dwight, the secretary of the American
Ethnological Society, arose because in the eyes of the slaveholders
literacy was dangerous. The Africans' skills constituted
a proof of humanity and civilization that did not owe anything
to the Christians' supposed civilizing influence and therefore
represented a threat to the notion of whites' intellectual
domination and refutation of the belief that Africans were
inherently inferior2. Most of these Muslims remain anonymous
or are little more than names in slave-property lists. But
much evidence of the Muslim presence has survived 3. In spite
of the effort to wipeout the slaves' Islamic identity, Islamic
practices and beliefs remained strong with many of them.
Sulayman Nyang points out, "To the best of my knowledge,
there is no evidence of any African Muslim slave family that
survived slavery and maintained Islam as a way of life."4
While the materials available relating to the presence of
Muslims in America during this historical period is gradually
increasing, the story of these Muslims remains little known
outside small segments of the African American Muslim community.
In the early part of this century, waves of immigrants from
various parts of the Muslim world, most notably Palestine,
Lebanon and what is now Pakistan, appeared on these shores.
These people were mostly illiterate, unskilled Arabs who
found work in the auto factories of Detroit, or peasants
from the Panjab who set up house in such places as Sacramento.
Then, beginning in the '50s, the picture changed drastically.
An influx of Muslim professionals, many of them physicians,
finding conditions in their homelands inhospitable, settled
in this country after completing their studies. The black
movements, the back-to-Africa groups, had come into flower
by this time. Great numbers of Muslim students from all parts
of the world also began to arrive in this country.
This was the period which saw the formation of the early
Muslim communities and mosques in such places as Detroit,
Ann Arbor, Gary (Indiana), Cedar Rapids (Iowa), Sacramento
and the like. Visiting scholars and missionary groups from
the Middle East and the Indo-Pakistan subcontinent also began
to arrive. And Islam began, in a very slow manner, to gain
adherents among white Americans.
It was this period which also witnessed the formation of
national Islamic groups, such as the Muslim Students Association
(MSA) of the United States and Canada, later to be replaced
by the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), and their
supporting institutions. Regional and national conferences
of Muslims for the discussion of issues of common concern
were streamlined during this period. Many Muslims who had
never practiced their religion now found their way back to
their roots and began, for the very first time, to appreciate
the value of their faith.
The black movements now came into their own. Most prominent
among them was the Black Muslim sect, headed by the self-proclaimed "prophet," Elijah
Muhammed. Heading a political rather than a religious movement,
Mr. Muhammad was easily able to sell the frustrated, suffering
black community his ideology of reacting to racism with racism
under the heading of "Black Islam." For a time
the movement flourished, but later, with the exposure of
Mr. Muhammad's sexual improprieties, it began to wither and
fade. Malcolm X, who had been its chief spokesman, had turned
against its leader and, after experiencing the brotherhood
of true Islam during his Hajj, changed his position concerning
the inherent evil of all members of the white race. Malcolm's
assassination in 1965 did nothing to halt the dissolution
of the Black Muslims. Subsequently, Elijah's son Wallace,
now Warithuddin Muhammad, led the majority of his father's
ex-followers into orthodox Islam. What remained of Elijah's
followers became the Nation of Islam under the leadership
of the controversial Louis Farrakhan.
Today, mosques, Islamic centers and schools are found in
every community of any size. Islamic organizations and institutions
abound, now at last able to minister to the needs of the
Muslim congregation in America. Muslims' voices are heard
speaking up for their faith in official circles, to the media
and in every field of endeavor, and Muslims are now able
to make a significant contribution, especially in the realm
of spirituality, values and morals, to the life of this nation.
At present, the number of Muslims in the United States is
estimated to be on the order of between 5 to 8 million. It
is the fastest growing faith in this country. Estimates indicate
that by the year 2000, the number of Muslims in the United
States will be greater than that of the Methodists, and that
by the year 2010 the number will have doubled to 10 to 16
million. The estimated conversion rate among Americans is
135,000 per year. The Defense Department reports that there
are now approximately 9000 Muslims on active duty in the
U.S. armed services (it is reported that more than 3000 Americans
embraced Islam during the Gulf war alone). A vast network
of Muslim ministries also caters to some 300,000 converts
in prisons, with an estimated conversion rate of 35,000 per
year.
The predominant group among Muslims in the United States
are Afro-Americans. The immigrant communities, which come
from a great variety of countries stretching from Eastern
Europe to Cambodia and virtually every country in between,
comprise the next largest group. The student community is
the third largest group. Finally, Caucasian and other ethnic
Americans comprise the smallest group, but this too is growing
at a fast rate.
Among all these, Afro-Americans are reported to comprise
42% of the total; 24.4% are Indo-Pakistani; 12.4% are Arabs;
5.2% are Africans; 3.6% are Iranis; 2.4% are Turks; 2% are
from South-East Asia; 1.6% are white Americans; 3.2% are
Albanians; and all other groups comprise 5.6%. The ten states
with the highest concentration of Muslims are California,
New York, Illinois, New Jersey, Indiana, Michigan, Virginia,
Texas, Ohio and Maryland (listed in order of population).
This represents 3.3 million of the Muslim population in the
United States. There are more than 1000 mosques, compared
to 600 in 1980, 230 in 1960 and 19 in 1930. In addition,
there are 400 Islamic schools (108 full-time), over 400 associations,
an estimated 200,000 businesses, and over 80 publications,
journals, weekly newspapers, etc.
The simplicity of Islam
and its appeal both to reason and to the heart accounts
for its tremendous appeal. With teachings
about God, human responsibility and the life hereafter
which are very similar to those of Judaism and Christianity,
it
insists on the necessity of living a pure, God-centered
life following the natural dictates of a balanced mind and
conscience,
following the guidance transmitted through the last prophet
of God, Muhammad, peace be upon him. It honors the previous
great prophets of the Bible, Noah, Abraham, Moses, David
and many others, and also reiterates the belief of early
Christian communities concerning the prophetic mission
of Jesus, ascribing divinity to the Creator alone. Background
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