Cape Times

Muslim conversion­s in Catholic Mexico

- Edgard Garrido

SAN CRISTÓBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico: A trip to Mexico’s indigenous Maya heartland showed me how a vibrant Muslim community had sprung up in this predominan­tly Roman Catholic country.

In the southern state of Chiapas, home to a lush mountainou­s landscape, I photograph­ed members of a small Muslim community made up of hundreds of mostly indigenous Tzotzil men and women, many of whom converted to Islam from Catholic or other Christian denominati­ons.

The Muslim men here are distinguis­hed by their prayer caps, or kufis, and the women by their hijabs, the form of traditiona­l Maya shawls.

Locals say the conversion­s to Islam here began in the late 1980s, around the same time Mexico’s Zapatista movement was gaining traction in Chiapas, as institutio­ns including Christiani­ty and capitalism came under increasing criticism.

According to the last census, about 83% of Mexicans are Catholic. And although Muslims make up less than 1% of Mexico’s 120 million popula- tion, a disproport­ionate number are indigenous clustered in and around San Cristóbal de las Casas, a highland city in Chiapas that mixes both Maya and Spanish identity.

“People gave us a weird look when we converted, they thought we were terrorists and were scared of us,” said Mustafa, a member of the nearby Ahmadia community. “But with the passage of time and our own actions, that opinion has changed,” he added.

Umar, an indigenous former evangelica­l pastor, converted to Islam in the late 1990s and now serves as a bridge between local Christians and Muslims.

“Ours is a monotheist­ic religion,” he said. “But we don’t worship saints.”

I later met 55- year- old Mohamed Amin who invited me to his home, offering me cookies and tea. He showed me where he prays five times a day and introduced me to his family. He asked me if I believed in God and I said no. That did not appear to bother him.

He went on to explain the main reason behind his conversion to Islam.

“I like to be clean and change my clothes,” he said. “This is a clean religion and that’s what originally drew me to it.” Anisa, 20, dressed in a hijab made from a traditiona­l Maya shawl. Umar, 64, a Muslim from the Tzotzil Maya ethnic group, adjusts his Islamic prayer cap. Mohamed Amin, 55, a Muslim from the Tzotzil Maya ethnic group, prays inside his house in San Cristóbal de las Casas, in Chiapas state, Mexico.

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