Study finds big rise in Number of US
Mosques
Rachel Zoll
The number of American mosques
has increased dramatically in the last decade despite post 9/11 protests aimed
at Muslim houses of worship, according to a new study. The new Islamic centres
serve Muslims who moved into the suburbs and newer immigrants from Africa,
Iraq and elsewhere. Researchers conducting the national count found a total of
2,106 Islamic centres, compared to 1,209 in 2000 and 962 in 1994. About
one-quarter of the centres were built between 2000-2011, as the community faced
intense scrutiny by government officials and a suspicious public. In 2010,
protest against an Islamic centre near ground zero erupted into a national
debate over Islam, extremism and religious freedom. Anti-mosque demonstrations
spread to Tennessee, California and other states.
Ihsan Bagby, a professor at the
University of Kentucky and lead author of the study, said the findings show
Muslims are carving out a place for themselves despite the backlash.
"This is a growing, healthy
Muslim community that is well integrated into America," Bagby said.
"I think that is the best message we can send to the world and the Muslim
world in particular."
The report released on Wednesday,
"The American Mosque 2011," is a tally based on mailing lists,
websites and interviews with community leaders, and a survey and interviews
with 524 mosque leaders. The research is of special interest given the limited
scholarship so far on Muslim houses of worship, which include a wide range of
religious traditions, nationalities and languages.
Researchers defined a mosque as a
Muslim organisation that holds Friday congregational prayers called jumah,
conducts other Islamic activities and has operational control of its building.
Buildings such as hospitals and schools that have space for Friday prayer were
not included. Chapters of the Muslim Student Association at colleges and
universities were included only if they had space off-campus or had oversight
of the building where prayer was held.
The overwhelming majority of
mosques are in cities, but the number located in suburbs rose from 16 per cent
in 2000 to 28 per cent in 2011. The Northeast once had the largest number of
mosques, but Islamic centres are now concentrated in the South and West, the
study found. New York still has the greatest number of Islamic centres — 257 — followed by 246 in California and 166 in Texas.
Florida is fourth with 118. The shift follows the general pattern of
population movement to the South and West.
The study found the ethnic makeup
of mosque participants largely unchanged from 2000. South Asians comprise about
one-third of participants, while Arabs and African-Americans are about
one-quarter each. Bagby found a slight increase in the percentage of Muslims
from West Africa and Somalia. An influx of Iraqi and Iranian refugees is behind
a jump in the number of Shia mosques since the 1990s. Shias still represent a
very small percentage of the US Muslim population.
The study's authors did not ask
specifics of how each community funded mosque construction. After Muslims
started arriving in the United States in large numbers in the 1960s, due to a
change in American immigration rules, it was common for Saudi Arabia, Iran and
other Muslim nations to build US mosques. However, increasing federal restrictions
on foreign funds slowed some mosque construction before and after 9/11. Before
the attacks, some American Muslim communities began refusing overseas funding
even from individual donors as a sign of independence from overseas influence.
Now American Muslim communities, which include many wealthy professionals,
largely fund construction on their own, scholars say.
Estimates of the total American
Muslim population have become a contentious issue as Muslims seek to have a
voice in public life. The US Census does not ask about religion. Pew conducted
a survey last year that estimated the American Muslim community encompassed
2.75 million people, or nearly 1 per cent of the US population, a finding similar
to that of other recent surveys. Bagby's 2000 report had estimated the US
Muslim population to be as high as 7 million, a number widely criticised as
inflated. In this latest report, Bagby did not report a definitive population
number, but stood by his earlier assertion that the United States could be
home to as many 7 million Muslims.
Each congregation reported an
average of around 15 converts to Islam annually, a figure that has held steady.
Latinos jumped from 7 per cent of all reported converts in 2000 to 12 per cent
in 2011, while the percentage of white converts dropped slightly. In findings
similar to those in surveys conducted by Pew Research Centre and Gallup, nearly
all respondents said they supported Muslim involvement in American society and
politics.
The 2011 mosque
study is part of the Faith Communities Today partnership, which researches the
more than 300,000 houses of worship in the United States. Among the report's
sponsors are the Council on American-Islamic Relations, the Hartford Institute
for Religion Research, the Islamic Society of North America and Islamic Circle
of North America.
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