By Justin CoxAmerican Way of Life MagazineApril 21, 2010 Across the Hudson River from the World Trade Center’s twin towers, on the Stevens Institute of Technology campus where he studied engineering, he watched plumes of smoke billow from gaping openings where the planes had just hit. All at once, he was overcome by the realization […]
Latino Muslim Articles (Archives)
Newspaper and magazine articles about Latino Muslims from 1992 until 2015 reveal a growing interest in this community. Notably, in 2011 alone, there were 25 articles dedicated to exploring various aspects of the Latino Muslim experience.
The Latino American Da’wah Organization and the “Latina/o Muslim” Identity in the U.S.
By Patrick D. BowenJournal of Race, Ethnicity, and Religion:Volume 1, Issue 11 (September 2010) Introduction: LADO and the Growth of the U.S. Latina/o Muslim Community Latina/os have been slowly and quietly converting to Islamic communities in the U.S. since at least the 1920s. Many conversions came through contact with African-American-majority Muslim movements such as Moorish […]
Early U.S. Latina/o – African-American Muslim Connections: Paths to Conversion
By Patrick D. BowenThe Muslim WorldVol. 100 no. 4 (2010), pp. 390-413. Introduction While the literature concerning Latina/o Muslims in the United States has been growing, much about them still has yet to be explored, including the history of those who converted through joining African-American-majority Islamic groups prior to 1975 (the year of the formation […]
Latino Muslim Community On The Rise In U.S.
By Jason MaUSC Annenberg School of JournalismMarch 2010 With last month’s premiere of El Clon — a Telemundo soap opera about a Muslim girl caught in a love triangle with a man and his genetically engineered clone — viewers curious about Islam will find a growing number of Latino Muslims at whom to direct their […]
Latina/o y Musulmán: The Construction of Latina/o Identity among Latina/o Muslims in the United States
By Hjamil A. Martínez-VázquezPickwick PublicationsJanuary 1, 2010, 160 pages Book Description: Latinas/os are the fastest growing “minoritized” ethnic group in the United States and Islam is one of the fastest growing religions in the U.S. It is therefore no surprise that the Latina/o Muslim population is one of the fastest growing communities in the U.S. […]
Happy Ramadan, Latino Muslims. Have We Got A Date For You.
By Alex AlvarezGuanabeeSeptember 18, 2009 (Forgive our pun. Please.) We often discuss religion and Latinos on this site in terms of crippling Catholic and Jewish guilt, and sometimes touch upon the rise in Latino Evangelical Christians, but rarely do we mention the other People of the Book. Since we’re currently in the midst of Ramadan, […]
Volunteer joins Houston-Area Mosques to help Refugees
By Mike TolsonHouston ChronicleJanuary 18, 2009 Mostaffa Mohammed had a good life, or as good as you could expect in Iraq under Saddam Hussein. A chemical engineer by training, he made a respectable income from an electrical tool business and never had to worry about a roof over his head or food on the table. […]
NU Cultural Groups Host Film, Rapper
By Maria LaMagnaThe Daily NorthwesternOctober 27, 2009 For students of both Hispanic heritage and Muslim faith, an event Tuesday unified the two worlds as several women filed into McCormick Tribune Center’s auditorium wearing traditional Muslim hijab while others chatted in Spanish and embraced. The students were scattered around the auditorium to view “New Muslim Cool,” […]
Islamic and Hispanic Cultures Intermesh as Muslim Community grows
By Spence KimballThe MonitorAugust 08, 2009 McAllen-Islam came to Dante Peña late in life. Peña grew up in a Catholic home under the influence of his deeply religious mother. His Catholic faith played such a central role in his life that he decided to become a priest. But Peña felt unfulfilled after he completed his […]
Catholic Latinos Converting to Islam
By Benjamin PeimNYU JournalismMarch 22, 2009 There are about 200,000 Latino Muslims in the country, and that number may be growing. When Milagros Ali immigrated to the U.S. from her native Peru in 2002, she never would have thought that six years later she’d be a Muslim. “I never thought I’d convert,” she said while […]