国产视频

In Short

Muslims in the Metropolis

American Muslims
San Francisco Women's March

This past presidential election cycle was brutal for American Muslims. The tragic attacks in Paris, Brussels, San Bernardino, and Orlando provided plenty of material for some politicians, pundits, and media outlets to bet big and engage in all-out fear-mongering about Muslims. Chris Christie, for instance, said he wouldn鈥檛 allow even a into America鈥攕uggesting to the American public that there鈥檚 something so fundamentally dangerous about Muslims that even unaccompanied, vulnerable children should be denied entry to our country. President Donald Trump famously doubled down on his strident a 鈥渢otal and complete聽shutdown聽of Muslims entering the United States,鈥 and for 聽the resettlement of all Syrian refugees, regardless of their age, gender, and need.

This barbed political rhetoric, coupled with 国产视频 electoral victory, has coarsened public discussions about Muslim communities. It鈥檚 created fear and conspiratorial views that have to take matters into their own hands, as has been made clear by a sharp rise in aimed at Muslims. And it鈥檚 had serious policy outcomes. Just this week, the Supreme Court announced that, in October, it would consider the legality of 国产视频 travel ban, which has already been excoriated for its disproportionate impact on Muslim-majority countries.

It shouldn鈥檛 come as a surprise, then, that most Muslims feel that the current political season is significantly worse than at any time in memory. But is there a way to change this climate?

That鈥檚 exactly the question I鈥檝e sought to investigate in my role as the聽director of 国产视频鈥檚 Muslim Diaspora Initiative, in hopes of bettering our understanding of Muslim communities and pulling apart some of the myths that have, over the years, cropped up around Muslims. At the macro-level, we have an OK understanding of the American Muslims writ large鈥攂ut at the local level, this understanding thins out.

And so to correct course, perhaps the questions to ask are these: What kind of impact do Muslims have on their neighbors and their neighborhoods? What role do they play in the civic life of their neighborhoods and cities? What effect do Muslim communities have on housing, schools, and health care? And to what degree鈥攅specially in this political environment鈥攄o Muslims feel a sense of belonging in wider society?

As I round out my first 90 days here, I鈥檝e visited Muslim communities in Austin, Chicago, Houston, Las Vegas, the suburbs of Maryland and Virginia, southeast Michigan, New York City, and Peoria. And over the next year, I鈥檒l continue to meet with and survey Muslim communities across the country. Doing so will, I anticipate, provide the best evidence to date of the many ways鈥攂ig and small, obvious and subtle鈥攖hat Muslims contribute to their local communities.

While there鈥檚 still much work to be done, here are two takeaways so far. First, it鈥檚 at the local level鈥攊n cities and neighborhoods鈥攚here things get done. Second, it鈥檚 not all negative. In fact, there are inspiring stories happening every day across the country鈥攚e just don鈥檛 hear them.

It鈥檚 at the local level where discrimination, harassment, and bullying take place, yes, but it鈥檚 also where communities and ordinary Americans come together to confront and address a range of challenges. In 2015, for example, when Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner wanted to in his state, the Syrian American community leaped into action. They worked hand-in-hand with other faith-based communities in Chicago, along with Mayor Rahm Emanuel鈥檚 office, to ensure refugee resettlement would continue and that refugees would feel welcome and be integrated. As a consequence of Governor Rauner鈥檚 anti-refugee policy proposal, the was created, and it now provides local services to refugees not only in Chicago, but also in Atlanta, Phoenix, and San Diego.

This sort of work doesn鈥檛 stop there, though. In Flint, Mich., the Muslim community has to provide clean water and free medical services to those affected by the Flint water crisis. And long before the water crisis, the Muslim community in Flint had been engaged in other forms of community building. For example, they purchased a large, run-down building鈥斺攊n one of the city鈥檚 most neglected neighborhoods and repurposed it as a neighborhood center to support underserved local youth, regardless of their faith. 聽

In a time of remarkably polarized partisanship, it鈥檚 at the local level, it seems, where common ground and common purpose are being sought out. In Chicago, the Muslim community has helped organize 鈥溾濃攁n initiative to bring Iftar (breaking fast after sunset) into a few synagogues during Ramadan as a way to provide a safe space for interfaith prayer, dialogue, and understanding. Also in Chicago, Muslims started an initiative called 鈥攁 move to encourage Muslims to be more environmentally mindful鈥攚hich has included campaigns for car-pooling and consuming less meat, as well as building the first solar mosque in America.

In examples like these, the common thread is that ordinary Americans are coming together to solve problems, restore trust, and help renew their communities.

All told, the answers to America鈥檚 most pressing problems most likely won鈥檛 be solved in Washington D.C., but rather through bottom-up community efforts. This is because communities are the level of society where people are moving beyond partisanship to solve problems. By examining these types of efforts, it鈥檚 possible to highlight innovations that may be portable and replicable in other parts of the country. But more than that, the hope is that this can also remedy the public record on common, and damaging, misconceptions about Muslim communities.

More 国产视频 the Authors

Robert L. McKenzie
Muslims in the Metropolis