The Number of American Muslims Grew at Mosques after 9/11

Published in O Globo
(Brazil) on 25 August 2011
by O Globo (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Jane Dorwart. Edited by Heidi Kaufmann  .
Xenophobia descended upon the country, and Muslims felt the need to identify more with their roots. Look at what changed in the past 10 years.

It is not known how many Muslims live in the United States, however they have not reached 3 percent of the population. But disproportionate attention is given to them, and many have been viewed with distrust since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Many have been arrested and charged without evidence. Some spent many years incarcerated. Talat Hamdani, a teacher and mother of a paramedic who died helping the wounded in the World Trade Center and who was later also accused of being a terrorist, stated that "The damage of xenophobia has been done."

Many Muslim Americans are not practicing. But since 9/11, there has been growth in the number of young people at mosques. According to Moustafá Bayoumi of Brooklyn College, "the principal reason for this is a question of identity, because it became necessary for us to define ourselves and not to leave our self-definition to others.”





Número de americanos muçulmanos aumentouz nas mesquitas após o 11/9

A xenofobia se intalou no país e os muçulmanos sentiram necessidade de se identificar mais com suas raízes. Veja o que mudou nos últimos 10 anos.


Não se sabe quantos muçulmanos vivem nos Estados Unidos, porém, não chegam a 3% da população. Mas a atenção dada a eles é desproporcional e muitos passaram ser vistos com desconfiança desde os ataques de 11 de setembro de 2001. Muitos foram presos e perseguidos sem provas. Alguns passaram muitos anos encarcerados. Talat Hamdani, professora e mãe de um paramédico muçulmano que morreu ajudando feridos no World Trade Center e chegou a ser acusado de ser também um terrorista, afirma: "O dano sobre a xenofobia foi feito".

Muitos americanos muçulmanos não são praticantes. Mas depois do 11/09, houve um aumento no número de jovens nas mesquitas. Segundo Moustafá Bayoumi, do Brookyn College, "a razão principal é uma questão de identidade, porque há uma necessidade de nos definirmos e não deixar que sejamos definidos por outros".


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