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Olé to Allah
Hisham Aidi profiles New York's thriving
Latino Muslim convert community
On a recent crisp Friday afternoon
in El Barrio, the Puerto Rican heart of East Harlem, Ramon Omar Abduraheem
Ocasio, Imam of the Alianza Islamica, delivered a khutba (sermon) in Spanish,
English and Arabic on fatherhood and responsibility to a motley congregation of
Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, Panamanians, Spaniards, and African Americans.
Although it might seem surprising to find a Muslim mosque thriving in such a
traditionally Catholic community, organizations like Alianza Islamica represent
the ongoing growth of Islam among Latinos in North and South America.
Founded in 1975 by a group of
Puerto Rican converts, the Alianza Islamica (Islamic Alliance) was the United
States' first Latino Muslim association. Before its current location at 106th
Street and Lexington, the Alianza coordinated its social programs and grassroots
initiatives from different bases in East Harlem. The Alianza was founded by men
who came of age during the 1960s and were involved in anti-war protests, civil
rights protests, and Puerto Rican nationalist movements. Amin, the caretaker of
the masjid (mosque), removes his skullcap to show his scarred scalp -- "all
from police batons," he chuckles.
The Alianza's social and political
engagement resembles the activism of African American Muslim groups. In the
Barrio, Latino Muslims have been at the forefront of battles against gang
activity, drug dealing and prostitution. The Alianza has confronted gangs and
drug posses, trained young men in martial arts as community law enforcers,
brokered truces between rival gangs, and mentored jailed members of the Latin
Kings, a local Puerto Rican gang. The Alianza's director, Hajj Yahya Figueroa,
speaks about Islam and spiritual health at prisons, explains the difference
between "el Islam" and "el Farrakhanismo" at rallies, gives
"sensitivity talks" to police officers, and has even addressed the
United Nations.
And in addition to community work,
the Alianza also holds cultural programs, celebrations and weddings which are a
fascinating display of the rich syncretism of "Latino Islam,"
featuring congregational prayers in Arabic, sermons in Spanish and English,
traditional Puerto Rican pork dishes served with lamb instead, Spanish poetry
slams, and conga jam sessions. A growing number of Latinos have embraced Islam
during the past two decades. In the U.S. alone, Latino mosques now exist in Los
Angeles, New York, Newark, and Chicago, and the community is estimated to be
40,000-strong. The appearance of Latino Muslims is due in part to the growing
Latino presence in U.S. inner cities and their subsequent exposure to African
American Muslims. On an ideological level, Latino Muslims have been profoundly
influenced by their African American counterparts, adopting similar ideas of
spiritual self-discovery and emancipation in their approach to Islamic theology.
Like many African American
Muslims, Latino Muslims celebrate a glorious past rooted in Africa -- their
rhetoric often romanticizes Islamic Spain, the civilization established by the
Moors, the Muslims from northern Africa who dominated Spain from the 8th to the
15th century.
Like most Latino Muslims in the
U.S., Imam Ocasio acknowledges the influence of African American Muslims, but
also points to important differences. "Yes," he smiles, agreeing that
black American Muslims have had a significant impact on Latino converts, but
unlike our African American brothers, we do not change our last name upon
conversion. "Latino Muslims don't have to," he proudly explains,
"because many Spanish last names -- like 'Medina' -- are actually
Muslim."
Members of the Alianza Islamica
share a view of Latin American and Spanish history that is increasingly aired by
a younger generation of intellectuals who question the "Westernness"
of Western culture. Latino Muslims like Imam Ocasio reject the idea that their
culture came wholly from Europe, and instead trace their cultural ancestry to
northern Africa. "Most of the people who came to Latin America and the
Spanish Caribbean were from southern Spain, Andalusia," Ocasio explains.
"They were Moriscos, Moors forcefully converted to Christianity. The
leaders, army generals, curas [priests] were white men from northern Spain...
sangre azul [blue bloods] as they were called. The southerners, who did the
menial jobs, slaves, artisans, foot soldiers, were of mixed Arab and African
descent. They were stripped of their religion and culture, brought to the
so-called New World where they were enslaved with African slaves. But the
Moriscos never lost their culture."
According to Ocasio, there are
many Islamic and Moorish elements in Latin culture; he says that the Spanish
"ojala" is derived from the Arabic "insha'allah" (both
expressions mean God willing), while the Spanish exclamation "olé"
comes from "Allah." Some scholars seem to agree. "In a sense, no
single word could be said to encapsulate as such Spanish history as that
three-letter word 'Olé,' " one historian wrote recently. "'Olé' is
the Spanish adaptation of 'Allah', the Arabic word for God. So when Spaniards
say 'Olé' at a bullfight, they are saying Praise 'Allah'." Ocasio also
sees Islamic influences in Spanish and Latin American architecture. "[Just
look at the] fountains, tiles, arches," he says. "You want proof that
many artisans and workers were secretly Muslim? There are churches and
cathedrals in Latin America which were built facing Mecca."
The debate over the Moorish
influence in Spanish culture dates back to the early 20th century. While at that
time many scholars refused to acknowledge Spain's Muslim and African past, or
saw it as a negative influence if they admitted it at all, a few sought to
celebrate that heritage. The poet Manuel Machado proudly declared himself a
member of the "Moorish race, a race from the land of the sun," and the
celebrated Spanish writer Federico Garcia Lorca confessed his "feeling for
those who are persecuted...the Negro...the Morisco." But it was much more
common for Spanish intellectuals to dispute the extent of the Moorish influences
and to look on that past with hostility.
Now, younger critics are
questioning and challenging the origins of Spanish literary and philosophical
traditions that have previously been held to be quintessentially and inviolably
"Western." Many scholars have identified African and Islamic
influences in Spanish literature, music and thought, and have even traced those
influences to the New World, particularly the Spanish Caribbean. The work of
scholars like Lucia Lopez-Baralt, a professor of literature at the University of
Puerto Rico, and the Cuban historian Maria-Rosa Menocal, would seem to support
the contention of Latino Muslims like Imam Ocasio, that the Spanish Caribbean
owes a tremendous cultural debt to the Moors.
Many even claim that the first
non-Indian language to ever be spoken in the New World was Arabic -- Columbus
set sail for the Americas, the story goes, with a crew of Moriscos and a Jewish
translator, Luis de Torres, who spoke Arabic; upon landing in La
Hispañola (now the Dominican Republic), de Torres is said to have
addressed the local Indian chief in the language of the Koran: "Asalam
Aleykum." With such history to refer to, for Ocasio and members of the
Alianza Islamica, converting to Islam is like reclaiming a lost Muslim and
African heritage.
The Alianza's banner, hanging
proudly in front of the organization's two-story converted townhouse,
unabashedly celebrates this revisionist view of Latino history: against a red,
white and blue backdrop stands a sword-wielding Moor, flanked by a Taino Indian
(one of the indigenous inhabitants of Puerto Rico) and a black African. The
Spanish Conquistador -- "who raped and pillaged" -- is simply left
out.
Cultural pride, alienation, and
the Barrio's wretched social and economic situation, have at least partly
influenced the Latino Muslims' rejection of Christianity, which many regard as
the faith of a guilty and uncaring establishment.
But in rejecting Catholicism, many
Latino Muslims have alienated friends and family. Khadija, who
"reverted" to Islam 26 years ago, says her family was opposed to her
becoming a Muslim. "My father used to pull the veil off my head," she
recalls. "My mother used to cook with pork tallow. It was war." One
evangelical group on 107th Street, a block from the Alianza, was also
aggressively opposed to the Muslims' activities, but most Barrio residents now
view the Alianza with curiosity and respect because of its community service
work. As part of an AIDS outreach program, the Alianza gave lectures on HIV
infection and drug abuse, helped the sick get treatment, and gave free iftar
meals (festive gatherings at which Muslims break their day-long fast) during the
holy month of Ramadan. "We were called the AIDS group," remembers
Mohamed Mendez, the Alianza's Education Officer.
Although the local Latino
community has been largely supportive of the Alianza, some non-Latino Muslims
have not. Mendez says many Arab and Pakistani Muslims seem critical of the
Latinos' efforts to adopt Islam. Immigrant Muslims sometimes attend djumma
(Friday) prayers at the Alianza, but they often criticize the group's command of
Arabic and their understanding of Islam; one Pakistani Muslim even said that
Puerto Ricans are "too promiscuous" to be "good" Muslims.
And in fact, the Alianza is actually being ousted from its current location by
an immigrant Muslim landlord.
Despite the hostility of some
Asian and Middle Eastern Muslims, the Alianza's director, Hajj Yahya Figueroa,
is undaunted, and hopes to establish a dawah (proselytizing) center in the South
Bronx. "In Harlem, about three people take the shahada [convert to Islam]
each month," he says. We could get a bigger following in the Bronx."
Wherever the Alianza ends up, it
will probably continue to grow and thrive, and will certainly continue to
celebrate the Spanish Caribbean's Muslim African roots. "We are reclaiming
our history after a 500 year hiatus," Imam Ocasio proclaimed at a recent
Alianza event. The Catholics never successfully stripped the Moors of their
identity. "We are the cultural descendents of the Moors."
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