Lodi News-Sentinel

Travel ban, mosque threats worry California Muslims

- By Sammy Caiola

SACRAMENTO — When Ayman Mohamed arrived at the Tarbiya Institute in Roseville for morning prayer on Feb. 1, he saw his religion had been attacked. On the mosque’s white front walls, “Muslim Out” and other hateful messages about Islam had been spray-painted in black. Even a nearby truck had been vandalized.

Shocked and saddened, the mosque’s director of Islamic studies opened up the building and ushered in his congregant­s for the day’s first prayer. His message to his stricken congregati­on: Stay strong, despite the the angry rhetoric used by some national leaders targeting their faith.

“A lot of people, as the elections were unfolding and after the inaugurati­on, were scared and came to us fearing for their safety and asking, ‘What can we do? How can we protect ourselves?’” he said. “It definitely increases people’s anxiety and puts everyone on edge.”

Coming at the same time as other anti-Muslim attacks and a presidenti­al order banning entry by people from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries, many Muslim Americans are asking themselves whether they still are welcome in this country while they worry about their own safety and the safety of their loved ones.

In response, mosques, student groups and mental health agencies around the Sacramento region are stepping up and offering Muslims a safe place to share their anxieties and receive profession­al help.

The Amala Hopeline, a Sacramento-based mental health hotline for young Muslims, has seen a spike in calls since Donald Trump’s election, said Saba Saleem, a volunteer and founder of the organizati­on. During his campaign, the president promised to ban Muslims from entering the country and accused American Muslims of not doing enough to stop terrorists.

The Amala line received 77 calls in November 2016 seeking help, compared to the usual 15 calls per month, hotline staff said. December and January saw 24 calls each, compared to just seven calls total during the same two months a year before.

Saleem, 23, said mental health issues are rarely discussed in Muslim families because of the stigma attached to mental illness and suicide.

“People are hesitant to openly talk about it because they’re accused of not being religious enough,” Saleem said. “They say you’re depressed because you don’t pray enough, and if you just pray more, your mental health problems will just go away, which is isn’t a solution for the majority of people.”

The two issues people talk about most on the calls are depression and family stress, according to data from the group. Cultural and religious pressures, relationsh­ip problems and financial worries also come up regularly. The line is a project of the Muslim American Society Social Services Foundation and is open five nights a week.

Some mental health counselors say Muslim Americans are in a moment of crisis, and the need for services is greater than ever, said Stanford University psychiatri­st Dr. Rania Awaad. Fear and helplessne­ss, if sustained over time, can make people mentally shut down, she said.

“It becomes a psychologi­cal condition when it starts to interfere with your daily life,” Awaad said. “There is this very real anxiety, and a sense of ‘What if I’m next?’ The ability to cope, in general, has definitely gone down.”

UC Davis student Nida Ahmed is still coming to terms with a string of attacks that have targeted Muslims in recent weeks.

In late January, a vandal smashed six windows, damaged several bicycles and wrapped pork — a forbidden food in the Muslim faith — around the front door handle of the Islamic Center of Davis. Last week, 30-year-old Lauren Kirk-Coehlo was charged with a hate crime in connection to the attack. Police said she wrote in a text message that she wanted to kill “many people” and had looked up informatio­n online about other mosques.

Elsewhere on the continent, a Jan. 29 mosque shooting in Quebec City, Canada, claimed six lives.

As the internal vice president of the Muslim Student Associatio­n on campus, Ahmed said she was so worried about herself and her fellow students that she couldn’t keep up with her studies.

“It really takes away your focus when your identity is being targeted,” she said. “That Monday I was kind of at a breaking point because of everything that was going on. I had a midterm I just couldn’t study for. I emailed my professor and had to postpone it, because I was stressed out and anxious.”

A Pew Research Center analysis of FBI data found that in 2015, anti-Muslim assaults were at their highest level nationwide since 2001, after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Police reported 91 assaults on Muslims nationwide in 2015, up from 56 in 2014.

Bahman Fozouni, a professor emeritus at California State University, Sacramento, with a focus on Middle Eastern government and politics, said the increased violence is part of what he called “terror management.” When people associate a certain community with a traumatic event, they see themselves as an “in group” and the other community as an “out group,” he said.

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