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Islam Luring More
Latinos
The steadily increasing number of
Latino Muslims illustrates how deeply rooted Islam has become in the America
landscape - even spreading to communities not normally associated with the
faith, religious scholars say.
By Chris L. Jenkins, Washington Post, January 7, 2001
At dusk, Aminah Martinez prepares dinner in her small Fairfax kitchen. Corn
tortillas for enchiladas, grated cheese and beef for tacos, maybe an avocado for
guacamole -- all staples of her youth.
But dusk is also time for prayer. So every evening, with her husband and two
children, she places her hands together and kneels to the east. It is Maghrib,
Muslims' fourth prayer of the day, and she begins whispering in Arabic as the
subtle aromas of Mexico mix with sounds often associated with the Middle East.
Martinez is one of the thousands of Latinos nationwide who have converted to
Islam. It is an amalgam of two seemingly disparate communities. But in growing
numbers, Hispanics, the country's fastest-growing ethnic group, are finding new
faith in Islam, the nation's fastest-growing religion. Moved by what many say is
a close-knit religious environment and a faith that provides a more concrete,
intimate connection with God, they are replacing Mass with mosques.
"Islam has given me a sense of religious community and well-being that I
was starting to miss in my life," said Martinez, 26, who converted from
Catholicism in 1993. "It's helped give me a sense of completion."
The steadily increasing number of Latino Muslims illustrates how deeply
rooted Islam has become in the national landscape -- even spreading to
communities not normally associated with the faith, religious scholars say. The
Muslim population in the United States is estimated at more than 4 million,
nearly six times the number in 1970, but still a fraction of the nearly 1
billion Muslims worldwide.
Although exact numbers are difficult to find, the American Muslim Council, an
advocacy group in Washington, estimates that there are 25,000 Hispanic Muslims
in the United States. The largest communities are in New York City, Southern
California and Chicago -- all places that traditionally have had large Hispanic
and Muslim populations. All-Spanish mosques have emerged in some of those areas.
Many of the converts say they are choosing Islam because they feel the
religion gives them greater direct contact with God, without saints and a rigid
church hierarchy. Some also point to what they see as a closer-knit, smaller
community that helps replace the extended family they have lost here in America,
as well as a supportive sanctuary to help sort through their sometimes recent
immigration. The Latino Muslims are part of a larger trend of American Hispanics
leaving the Catholic Church, experts say.
In the Washington region, the population of Latino Muslims is largely from
Mexico and Central America, as it is in western states, according to Latin
American Muslim Unity, an advocacy group in Fresno, Calif. In other eastern
cities, including Miami, significant numbers of converts are from Puerto Rico
and Cuba.
"It certainly is a community that we have seen grow throughout the
country over the past several years," said Aly R. Abuzaakouk, executive
director of the American Muslim Council. "The community is not as organized
as other Muslim groups here, so sometimes it's hard to determine the
numbers."
Signs of the growth of Islam in the United States can be seen in everyday
life. A few colleges are building student centers for Muslims, just as they
built Hillel centers for Jewish students or Newman centers for Catholics several
generations ago. The White House now sends greetings for the Muslim holiday of
Id al-Fitr, the feast that ends Ramadan.
"I think on college campuses and other public spaces, you're finding a
greater acceptance of the views and the presence of Muslims," said John L.
Esposito, a professor at Georgetown University and director of its Center for
Muslim-Christian Understanding. "A generation ago you might use the phrase
'Islam and the West,' and now you would say 'Islam in the West.' "
Indeed, acceptance and exposure are fueling the conversions, making it easier
for Latinos to learn about Islam. Martinez, for example, converted when she was
a student at the University of Texas in Austin. The eldest child in a strict
Catholic household, she says Islam was largely alien to her until she began
talking with Muslim students on campus. Like many Hispanics who have converted,
she said she felt a distance from the Catholic Church, both as a religious
community and a spiritual path.
"Growing up, I was a very devout Catholic. . . . Youth groups and
everything," Martinez said. "But as I got older, I felt there were too
many distractions in the church. Islam, to me, was a more direct faith where I
felt a strong sense of belonging."
Her faith was tested immediately. Martinez's grandmother was so disappointed
by the conversion that she asked her granddaughter to leave her home and refused
to support her financially. She saw the defection from Catholicism as a
rejection of family and tradition, Martinez said. It would be a year before the
two would reconcile.
Such stories are common among Latinos who have abandoned Catholicism for
Islam.
Others have had a smoother transition. Becky Diaz Abu
Ghannam, 39, a Chilean
American resident of Sterling who converted in 1984, said that she grew up
feeling that Catholicism did not provide the close-knit religious community she
was looking for. As she became more aware of Islam when she came to America, she
found that it provided a warmth and direction that appealed to her --
particularly the five daily prayers. Initially, like many other Hispanic women
interviewed, she was concerned about the role of women in Islam and whether she
would be forced to take a subservient position to her husband, who is also
Muslim, and other men. Her fears subsided as she learned more about the Koran
and its teachings and how some countries' Islamic communities are less stringent
about such requirements.
And, she adds, her mother, a lifelong Catholic, converted several months ago
after seeing her daughter's spiritual path.
"The sense of sisterhood I felt with others who wore hijab was something
that I had never experienced," said Abu Ghannam, referring to the practice
of Muslim women covering their heads in public. She added that, like Martinez,
she is raising her children to speak all the languages of their upbringing:
Arabic, Spanish, English.
"I think what many [Hispanics] are finding in Islam is a community that
they find more nurturing," said Nicole Ballivian, a Los Angeles documentary
filmmaker who is completing a movie about Latino Muslims called "Luces
Sobre Islam" ("Islam in Focus").
She has traveled throughout South America and the Caribbean and visited many
Hispanic Muslim communities here. She said that many of the converts she has
talked with say the Catholic Church is large and impersonal.
These concerns about Catholicism mirror a trend that many officials in U.S.
dioceses have tracked for years: the defection of Hispanics. The Catholic
Almanac estimates that 100,000 Hispanics in the United States leave the church
each year, although some other experts put the number as high as 600,000. Most
have moved to Pentecostal and evangelical Protestant faiths as well as
Mormonism, Islam and Buddhism. Converts appear to be both men and women in equal
numbers.
"The numbers of Latinos who convert to various religions is certainly
significant," said Alejandro Aguilera Titus, assistant director for the
Secretariat for Hispanic Affairs with the National Council of Catholic Bishops
in Washington. "We find that the conversion efforts of many faiths have
increased recently, which has led many Hispanics away from the Catholic
Church."
Many area Latinos who have converted say their attraction to Islam is
spiritual and pragmatic. And even as their community seems scattered -- with
members attending mosques in Manassas, Herndon, Falls Church, Langley Park and
College Park -- they have formed their own organizations and have produced their
own literature. Spanish translations of the Koran, for instance, are popular at
several Northern Virginia mosques.
The Association of Latin American Muslims, a group based in Takoma Park,
distributes a bilingual, bimonthly newspaper, "La Voz Del Islam"
("The Voice of Islam") with members occasionally walking the streets
to talk to Latinos.
"Organizing here can be very difficult at times, because it is easy to
mistake Hispanics for other ethnicities," said group president R. Abdur
Rahman Campos, who converted in 1982 after coming here from Mexico. Campos, 48,
said he left the Catholic Church frustrated by what he called its heavy emphasis
on saints, which he says distracted him from the word of God.
"But it is important to continue to spread the teachings to Hispanics
and non-Hispanics," he added. "To everyone."
Source: Washington Post, Sunday, January 7, 2001; Page C01
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