Here’s Why More Latinos Are Converting to Islam

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  • Latino converts said they are drawn to Islam because of the intense devotion to God, a simplicity in faith and focus on community…

Taking the decision after years of thinking, Luis Lopez still recalls the nervous moments as he walked to the crowded prayer hall in Union City with his son before taking shahada, USA Today reported.

FEED THE POOR

Feeding the poor and needy is an act that draws us closer to Allah. We earn His forgiveness, mercies and blessings through this act of charity.

“Anyone who looks after and works for a widow and a poor person is like a warrior fighting for Allah?s cause, or like a person who fasts during the day and prays all night. (Bukhari)

“There is no God but Allah, and Muhammad is the messenger of
Allah,” they declared at the mosque, located in a columned brick building
that once housed a Cuban community center.

The 41-year-old father said the conversion and embrace by the congregation four months ago have brought a feeling of peace and a recognition of how far he’d come from a life that nearly ended 22 years ago in gang violence.

Lopez, who moved to the US from Puerto Rico as a child, said
two events prompted him to change his life: a gang-related stabbing in 1997 and
the birth of his son a year later.

At his friends’ urging, he visited a mosque and started
reading about the faith.

“They told me, ‘Come to the mosque, you’re going to feel welcomed,’” said Lopez, 41, a truck driver and former professional boxer from North Bergen.

Growing Community

By converting, Lopez and his 21-year-old son joined a
growing segment of the Latino population who are leaving Christianity for
Islam.

According to the institute’s annual report ‘American Muslim
Poll: Predicting and Preventing Islamophobia’, only 1% of Muslims identified as
Hispanic in 2009. By 2018, it expanded to 7%.

According to a study of the Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Religion on Muslim Latinos in the US, many American Latinos convert to
Islam for a similar reason: the desire to have more direct and personal
experience with God.

In fact, most American Latinos who converted to Islam are women of Mexican or Puerto Rican origin who justify their conversion as a return to a pre-Hispanic and pre-Catholic Muslim identity.

Here's Why More Latinos Are Converting to Islam - About Islam
Imam Mohammad Alhayek, center, teaches a da’wah class at North Hudson Islamic Educational Center in Union City on November 13, 2019. AMY NEWMAN/NORTHJERSEY.COM

Outreach to Latinos 

Latino Muslim communities have found a home in urban areas like New York City, Miami, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Houston.

Many Latino Muslim groups see Islam as a part of their heritage. They say they are returning to their roots because of the nearly 800-year Moorish rule of Spain that left an Islamic influence on Hispanic language and culture.

The message is that “we’re not choosing to abandon Latinx culture or embrace marginalization. We’re choosing to embrace something that’s already there,” said Harold Morales, associate professor of philosophy and religious studies at Morgan State University in Baltimore, Maryland.

Morales wrote the 2018 book, “Latino and Muslim in
America: Race, Religion, and the Making of a New Minority.”

At the North Hudson Islamic Educational Center, where Lopez prays, the number of Latino converts has increased significantly.

“Our vision is to share the true teachings of
Islam, the guidance of Islam, with as many people [as we can] in the North
Jersey Hudson area,” said Mohammad Alhayek, the imam of the mosque.

“That is our first priority and then beyond [to reach]
as many people as we can.”

Read Original Report Here By About Islam

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