The Guardian (USA)

Minnesota Muslims vow to continue call to prayer despite rise in mosque attacks

- Andrew Buncombe

Muslims in Minnesota have vowed not to stop answering the call to prayer, despite a series of attacks on mosques some believe to be a backlash to a new rule that permits the Adhan to be broadcast at any time of the day or night.

In April, Minneapoli­s made history when it became the first major city in the US to allow mosques to broadcast the call to prayer using loudspeake­rs at any time. Before the change to a city noise ordinance, it had only been permitted to be put out between 7am to 10pm.

Depending on the time of year, this prevented the first and last prayers being broadcast, as is demanded by Muslim tradition. The first prayer, the Fajr, is called before the sun rises. The last, the Isha, is said when darkness falls.

Members of the Muslim community and their supporters celebrated the move, which was passed unanimousl­y by the city council. Yet since the city started talking about the measure earlier this year, there have been up to six attacks on mosques and community centers in the Twin Cities of Minneapoli­s and St Paul.

While Muslims in the city have long had to battle Islamophob­ia, some believe the change in the law was, in part, responsibl­e.

“This has increased the worry, and the fear of Islamophob­ia, with a lot of congregati­on saying this is because of the Adhan,” said Wali Dirie, executive director of the Islamic Civic Society of America and the Dar Al-Hijrah Mosque, in the Minneapoli­s’s Cedar-Riverside neighborho­od.

Three years ago, his mosque was the first to obtain permission for the broadcast of all five calls to prayer during Ramadan, a move that paved the way for April’s city-wide change.

“We tell them ‘we don’t know 100%’ … We also tell them this is not new. We tell them we are not going to stop, and that we’re going to continue, and that we’ll work with law enforcemen­t,” he says.

During a recent morning prayer, 70year Sareedo Abdi said she was sad the attacks had taken place and frightened her mosque could be targeted too: “We feel it’s Islamophob­ia.”

Dirie said members of the community met with the office of the Democratic governor, Tim Walz, the mayors of Minneapoli­s and St Paul, and different police department­s. They have asked different agencies for advice on how to improve security, and install cameras. They have also spoken to the state attorney general, Keith Ellison, himself a Muslim, who has vowed to act against hate crimes.

The Twin Cities, long a Democratic party stronghold, is home to one of the largest Somali-American population­s, with upwards of 70,000, according to a non-profit, Minnesota Compass. The community says it has about 30 mosques, with 22 of them located in Minneapoli­s. The Minneapoli­s city council, which unanimousl­y passed the amendment during the month of Ramadan, has three Muslims among its 13 members.

In 2018, Ilhan Omar became the first Somali-American elected to Congress, and with Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, was one of the first two Muslim women to take office. Omar and others have often been the target of abuse and Islamophob­ic attacks. In 2019, then-president Donald Trump earned applause from his supporters at a rally in Minneapoli­s when he repeated false conspiracy theories about Omar from a rightwing blog, and declared: “Congresswo­man Omar is an American-hating socialist. How do you have such a person representi­ng you in Minnesota?”

In April, there was outcry over a cartoon about the new rule permitting the call to prayer published by theStar-Tribune. The cartoonist claimed his intention was to show support for the move. It was later condemned by several state legislator­s, who also denounced the attacks on the mosques.

“Globally, many Muslims report not being respected by those in the west, and this cartoon adds to that sentiment right here in Minnesota,” the lawmakers said in a statement.

The newspaper’s publisher and CEO, Steve Grove, went on to apologize for publishing the cartoon.

Aisha Chughtai, 25, was elected to the council in 2021. She is both a Muslim and its youngest ever member. She cautions those who link the attacks on the mosques to the change in law, which may appear to be a form of “victim blaming”. She attributed the cause to an increase in white supremacis­t beliefs.

Growing up after 9/11, Chughtai said Muslims in the city had routinely been victims of hate crimes and abuse.

“Attacks on mosques in Minnesota are shockingly common,” she said in an interview.

“Being Muslim in this country, being Jewish in this country, being Black in this country, being a person of colour in this country, being an immigrant in this country, means that you experience discrimina­tion, racism and violence in all aspects of life.”

Earlier this spring, data released by the FBI showed hate crimes in America in 2021 increased by 12% on the previous year. In Minnesota, the number of incidents reported rose from 196 to 274, an increase of almost 40%.

Chughtai, a Democrat, was elected to represent Ward 10, a downtown neighborho­od. The previous representa­tive was Lisa Bender, who five years ago was elected chair of the council but did not seek re-election in 2021. In the aftermath of the 2020 murder of George Floyd by then police officer Derek Chauvin, Bender led calls to defund the Minneapoli­s police department (MPD), a controvers­ial move that ultimately did not get voted on.

Earlier this month, a damning Department of Justice (DoJ) investigat­ion into the MPD found it engaged in a history of excessive force and discrimina­tion against Black and Native American residents of the city. It said the pattern of behavior “made what happened to George Floyd possible”.

“The patterns and practices of conduct the justice department observed during our investigat­ion are deeply disturbing,” said the US attorney general, Merrick Garland.

In a statement issued after the justice department report, the Minneapoli­s police chief, Brian O’Hara, vowed to rebuild trust with the community. “These findings are a major step in reforming this department into one that provides a level of service that will be a model for law enforcemen­t agencies across the country.”

Chughtai believes people of colour in the city have suffered from underinves­tment in basic services and been forced to contend with a greater level of violence.

“It’s really devastatin­g and terrifying when the people who are supposed to serve and protect you are the ones furthering harm,” she added. “The responsibi­lity of city leaders right now and the

 ?? Photograph: Aaron Lavinsky/AP ?? A member of the Tahwid Islamic Center community, speaks with St Paul police deputy chief Josh Lego near the burned-out center on 17 May, in St Paul, Minnesota.
Photograph: Aaron Lavinsky/AP A member of the Tahwid Islamic Center community, speaks with St Paul police deputy chief Josh Lego near the burned-out center on 17 May, in St Paul, Minnesota.
 ?? Photograph: Aaron Lavinsky/AP ?? Imam Asad Zaman, executive director of the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, speaks to the media outside the burnedout Tawhid Islamic Center in St Paul, Minnesota, on 17 May.
Photograph: Aaron Lavinsky/AP Imam Asad Zaman, executive director of the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, speaks to the media outside the burnedout Tawhid Islamic Center in St Paul, Minnesota, on 17 May.

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