[Young
Muslim Americans are finding support and resolve in Muslim student clubs in
high schools and colleges, and at mosques and Islamic youth centers. On college
campuses, Muslim activists are building coalitions with other social action
movements — like Black Lives Matter — to address shared grievances of
inequality and prejudice.]
By
Kirk Semple
Hebh
Jamal does not remember the Sept. 11 attacks. She was 1. Growing up in the Bronx , she was unaware of the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq and was mostly insulated from the surge in
suspicion that engulfed Muslims in the United States , the programs of police surveillance and the
rise in bias attacks.
But
in the past year, especially in the past several months, as her emergence from
childhood into young womanhood has coincided with the violent spread of the
Islamic State and a surge in Islamophobia, she has had to confront some harsh
challenges of being a young Muslim in America .
Instead
of occupying herself with a teenager’s normal concerns, like homework, clothes
and hanging out with friends, she said, she has had to contend with growing
anti-Muslim sentiment, adjusting her routines to avoid attacks and worrying
about how she appears to the rest of society. And she has repeatedly felt
compelled to justify her faith and to distance herself from terrorists who
murder in the name of her religion.
“I
have to sit down and study more and think more, and the idea of thinking more
is really tough, because as a 15-year-old, you don’t want to think more,” Ms. Jamal
said in an interview last week. “I feel like the past two months have probably
been the hardest of my life.”
Ms.
Jamal is part of a generation of Muslim Americans who have grown up amid the
fight against terrorism, in an America in which anti-Muslim hostility, by many
measures, has been historically high.
Young
Muslim Americans, on top of the usual trials of adolescence, have been forced
to grapple with profound questions of identity, society, politics and faith in
a country that has had an ambivalent relationship with Islam. The complexities
and pressure have left many young Muslims feeling isolated and alienated, if
not unwelcome in their own country.
These
challenges have only multiplied in the past year as violent events around the
world have fueled or reaffirmed anti-Muslim feelings in the United States and
elsewhere: the terrorist attacks in Paris; the killings of three Muslim
students in Chapel Hill, N.C.; the San Bernardino, Calif., killings; and Donald
Trump’s proposal to block the entry of all Muslimsinto the United States.
Muslim
children and young adults have been buffeted by prejudice and politics, much of
it playing out on social media, and parents and counselors have grown concerned
about the toll this has taken.
Farha
Abbasi, assistant professor of psychiatry at Michigan State University and an expert in Muslim mental health, said
that since the Sept. 11 attacks, young Muslims in the United States have dealt with “chronic trauma” from the
constant stress of anti-Muslim sentiment.
“On
top of that, you have acute stress since the Daesh attacks started, and all the
frenzy,” she said in an interview, using the Arabic name for ISIS .
Should
the backlash against Muslims persist at or near current levels, she warned, “in
the next few years we will realize how harmful and detrimental that’s going to
be.”
The
world’s Muslim population, an estimated 1.6 billion people spanning continents
and cultures, defies generalization. So do the experiences of Muslim Americans
who have lived most, if not all, of their lives since Sept. 11.
But
a body of scholarship that has emerged in the years since then has described
the extraordinary challenges facing the youngest members of the Muslim American
population as they navigate complex identities while their communities are
scrutinized as potential terrorism threats.
“Being
exiled from the moral community you thought you were a part of is really
stunning,” said Michelle Fine, a psychology professor at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, who has
studied Muslim American youths since Sept. 11. She equated the feelings of
shock and exclusion to those experienced by Japanese youths after their
internment in the United States during World War II.
Even
amid the diversity of New York , which has an estimated Muslim population of at least 600,000, anti-Islamic
harassment has been a part of the landscape, especially since Sept. 11, Muslims
say.
“If
a Muslim hasn’t been called a terrorist in middle school, lower school or high
school, then they’re probably in a really great school — and I’m happy for them!”
Ms. Jamal said.
“I
remember seeing micro-aggressions that my mom faced because she wore a hijab,”
said Jensine Raihan, 17, a student at Townsend Harris High School in Queens .
She, too, wore a head scarf when she was younger, but after enduring “weird”
looks and treatment that she attributed in part to the garment, she took it off.
“I didn’t feel comfortable anymore,” she said.
“I
feel like it’s them against us, that everybody’s out to get you and you have
something to prove,” said Shafiq Majdalawieh, 19, a Brooklyn College sophomore who was raised in Bensonhurst. “Our
aspirations are the same as any other American or teenager or youth. It feels
like they’re trying to shoot down our dreams and aspirations simply because we
practice a different religion.”
As
they have tried to find their way through the world, some young Muslim
Americans have sought to blend into mainstream society by shedding the outward
signatures of their faith and culture. They stop praying in public or speaking
to their parents on the phone in a foreign language. Mohammad might become “Mo. ” Mustafa might become “Matt.”
But
others have had an opposite response, seeking to reaffirm and declare their
ethnic and religious identity.
Over
the course of her teenage years, Zayneb Almiggabber, 19, who was born and
raised in the New
York
area, has had both responses.
For
years, she played down her ethnic and religious identity; the strategy was not
always conscious. “I guess I didn’t tell a lot of people I was Arab in high
school, now that I think about it,” said Ms. Almiggabber, whose father is from Egypt and whose mother is from New York . “I’d tell people I was Mediterranean and they’d guess Italian or Greek and I
wouldn’t correct them.”
But
when she graduated from her Long
Island high school
and entered Hunter College in New York City , she began to introduce herself as Arab and
Muslim. “I got a surge of self-confidence leaving Long Island and leaving high school, which were both
constricting environments,” she recalled. “I found that it was much easier to
get to know others if I totally accepted my religious and cultural identity.”
“The
reality is that I’m just as Muslim and just as Arab as I’m American, and it’s
possible to be all three,” she said.
In
recent weeks, instead of shrinking in the face of growing anti-Muslim sentiment,
she has redoubled her conviction to publicly embrace the complexities of her identity,
as has her younger brother, who is in high school and has been feeling a
backlash from his classmates.
“Since
Paris, other kids in the class talk about getting rid of Islam,” she said. “My
brother said he’s never wanted to identify more as an Arab and a Muslim. I
identify with that, too.”
Young
Muslim Americans are finding support and resolve in Muslim student clubs in
high schools and colleges, and at mosques and Islamic youth centers. On college
campuses, Muslim activists are building coalitions with other social action
movements — like Black Lives Matter — to address shared grievances of
inequality and prejudice.
In
the years after Sept. 11, many Muslim Americans who were coming of age
experienced a civic awakening in the crucible of the backlash, a trend charted
in academic research. The trend has continued among the youngest Muslim
Americans, as events and discourse, amplified by social media, compel them to
wrestle with weighty social and political questions.
“We’re
talking about war, we’re talking about feminism, we’re talking about all this
stuff,” said Aber Kawas, 23, the youth lead organizer at the Arab American
Association of New York. “I don’t think normal teenagers are going to be as
politicized at such an early age as we are.”
Much
of the conversation has played out on social media, which young Muslim
Americans have learned can cut both ways. It has been a useful tool for
organizing people and for reaffirming a sense of community, but it has also
been a weapon of anti-Muslim sentiment.
“Social
media is such a hard place to get through,” Ms. Kawas said. “But it is also a
place where we come to have self-awareness.”
For
many young Muslim Americans, the struggle of this era — to understand what is
happening to them and their community, to figure out how to respond, to manage
fear, to remain buoyant and vital and alive — has been a lot to handle at such
a young age.
“I
find myself coming home,” Ms. Jamal said, “and my parents say: ‘Why are you so
tired? What did you do?’ And I say, ‘Absolutely nothing.’”
“You
feel like the whole world is against you,” she continued. “It’s exhausting.”