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American Muslim History |
A chronological summary of some of the major events I
found in relation of the Muslims' personal and political life in American
history.
1178 A Chinese document known as the
Sung Document records the voyage of Muslim sailors to a land known as Mu-Lan-pi
(America).
1310 Abu Bakri (Abu Bakar), a Muslim
king of the Malian Empire, spearheads a series of sea voyages to the New World.
1312 Mandinga, African Muslims, from
Mali and other parts of West Africa arrive in the Gulf of Mexico for exploration
of America's interior using the Mississippi River as their access rout.
1527 A Muslim from Morocco by the
name of Estevanico of Azamor lands in Florida with the expedition of Panfilo de
Narveaz and remains in America to become the first of three Americans to cross
the continent in 1539.
1530 More than 30% of the estimated
10 million African slaves, uprooted from the areas of Fulas, "Fula Jallon", "Fula
Toro", and "Massina" as well as other areas of "West Africa" governed from their
capital "Timbuktu", that arrived in America during the slave trade of that time
and sent to Mexico, Cuba, and South America were Muslims, they and became part
of the backbone of the American economy of that period.
1732 A Muslim slave by the name of "Ayyub
Bin Sulaiman Jallon" from "Boonda, Galumbo" is set free by James Oglethrope, the
founder of Georgia, and provided transportation to England. In 1735, three years
later, he arrived home.
1790 Moors from Spain are reported to
be living in South Carolina and Florida
1807 An African Muslim by the name of
Yarrow Mamout is set free in Washington DC, after the United States Congress
prohibits the importation of slaves into America after January 1st, 1808, and
later becomes one of the first shareholders of the Columbia Bank, the second
charted bank in America. It is implemented that Yarrow may have lived to be more
than 128 years old, the oldest person in American history.
1809 A Muslim by the name of "Omar
ibn Said" is enslaved in Charleston, South Carolina, and imprisoned after
running away. Later in prison he was visited by John Owen, who became later a
Governor of North Carolina, and taken to Bladen County to be placed on the Owen
plantation and it is reported that he lived to be 100 years old
1828 A slave by the name of "Abdulrahman
Ibraheem Bin Sori", known to many "The Prince of the Slaves" because he was a
former prince from West Africa, on a Georgia plantation is freed by the order of
Secretary of State Henery Clay and President John Quincy Adams. A drawing of him
by Henery Inman is displayed in the Library of Congress.
1839 “Sayyid Sa'id", ruler of Oman
orders his ship "The Sultana" to set sail to America on a trade mission,
reaching New York, April 30, 1840. And although the voyage was not a commercial
success, it marks the point of Muslims successful friendly relations with
America, which still continues to exist between many of the Islamic nations and
the United States of today.
1856 The United States cavalry hire a
Muslim by the name of "Hajji Ali" to experiment with raising camels in Arizona.
1865 During the American Civil War,
the "scorched earth" policy of the North destroyed churches, farms schools,
libraries, colleges and a great deal of other property. On the morning of April
4, when the Federal troops reached the campus of the University of Alabama with
orders to destroy the university, "Andre’ Deloffre", a modern language professor
and custodian of the "Rotunda library" at the university, appealed to the
commanding officer, to spare one of the finest libraries in the south. The
officer, being sympathetic, sent a courier to General Croxton at his
headquarters in "Tuscaloosa" asking permission to save the library, but the
general's reply was negative, so the officer reportedly said "I will save one
volume as a memento of this occasion" and the volume selected was a rare copy of
the Qur'an"
1889 A noted scholar and social
activist by the name of Edward W. Blyden travels throughout the Eastern and
Southern parts of the United States lecturing about Islam and in one of his
speeches before the Colonization Society of Chicago he told his audience that
the reasons Africans choose Islam over Christianity is that, "the Qur'an
protected the black man from self-depreciation in the presence of Arabs or
Europeans."
1893 "Mohammad Alexander Russel
Webb", one of the earliest "White American Converts", founds the "American
Islamic Propaganda Movement". And on September 20th and 21st, he appeared at the
First World Congress of Religions and delivered two lectures: "The spirit of
Islam," and "The Influence of Islam on Social Conditions."
1908 Muslim immigrants from the
provinces of the Ottoman Empire, who are mainly Turks, Kurds, Albanians, and
Arabs arrive in North America.
1913 "Timothy Drew" (Noble Drew Ali)
establishes an organization in Newark, NJ, known as the "Moorish Science Temple
of America" (MSTA), responsible for many of today's African-American converts to
Islam, and who was reportedly commissioned by the Sultan of Morocco at that time
to teach "Negroes" in the United States
1915 Albanian Muslims build a Masjid
(Mosque) in Maine and establish one of the first associations for Muslims in the
United States, and in 1919 they build
another Masjid in Connecticut.
1920 The Red Crescent, a Muslim
charity modeled after the International Red Cross, is established in Detroit.
1926 "Dues Muhammad Ali," mentor of
"Marcus Gravey" and the person who had considerable impact on Gravey's movement,
establishes an organization in Detroit known as the Universal Islamic Society.
Its motto was "One God, One Imam, One Destiny."
1926 Polish-speaking Tatars build a
mosque in Brooklyn New York.
1930 African-American Muslims build
the "First Muslim Mosque" in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
1933 The organization of the Nation
of Islam is founded by "Fard Muhammad" or (Wallace Ford), a mystic
who introduced his philosophy to the United States and disappeared in 1933.
(Original NOI was a separatist, religious, and socio-political organization,
with a declared aim of resurrecting the spiritual, mental, social, and economic
condition of the black men and women of America and the rest of the world). The
late Eli-jah Mohammed, succeeded Frad in 1933 and built the organization into a
strong ethnic movement advocating Islam (according to NOI beliefs) as a way of
life for Afro-Americans. Though a # of Islamic principles were used in the formation of NOI, but it was
not part of the mainstream ISLAM, i.e. Quran & Sunnah of the final and last
Prophet Mohammed (PBUH). The reason to bring NOI in picture here is because it was a
milestone to really bring the words "ISLAM & MUSLIM" in the broad US media and
in general American public's attention.
The fact is that many people including "Warith Deen
Mohammed" (Son of Elijah Muhammad) later rejected the NOI principles and came to
the Mainstream/Orthodox Islam. (For reference, please see the history of NOI at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nation_of_Islam). As
mentioned, the NOI is one of the
most well known organizations that had its prints on the history of United
States, as well as the American Muslim history in an effect that it holds itself responsible for
converting a high percentage of African-Americans to NOI. It was highlighting
American Christians' difficulties combating the effects of slavery and racism
among African-Americans. The organization that really started more on political
side to upraise and safeguard the rights of Black Americans, ended up loosing a
lot of its followers to converting towards Sunni Orthodox Islam. Two of the most famous African-Americans, "Muhammad
Ali" and "Alhajj Malik al-Shabazz" (Malcolm X), were early adherents of this
movement, but both later embraced the broader multiethnic concepts of orthodox
Islam or mainstream Islam. A major portion of the NOI has now embraced the
orthodox Islam and are adherents of Quraan and Sunnah of the last and final
messenger Prophet Mohammed (Peace be Upon Him صلی اللھ علیھ
وعلی الھ وسلم)
1934 The Lebanese community of Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, opens its Masjid.
1939 "Sheik Dawood" founds the
"Islamic Mission Society" in New York, which publishes a magazine entitled,
"Muslim Sunrise".
1952 Muslims in the Armed Services
sue the Federal Government to be allowed to identify themselves as Muslims.
Until then Islam was not recognized as a legitimate religion.
1955 “Sheik Dawood Ahmed Faisal"
establishes the "State Street Masjid" in New York City, which is still in use
today and represents a special point in the development of the American Muslim
community. And it is from this Masjid the "Dar-ul-Islam movement" was later born
in 1962.
1960 The NOI's University of Islam
schools flourishes drawing the attention of the American media, but the coverage
focuses upon the "Black Muslims' self-help programs for Blacks" yet considers
them a "threat" to the white establishment.
1962 The newspaper "Muhammad Speaks"
is published by the Nation of Islam, which later on becomes the largest minority
weekly publication in the United States reaching 800,000 readers at its peak.
But it eventually underwent some name changes over the years, following the
various transformations its publishers (NOI) underwent as well, such as "Bilalian
News" (named after a famous black Muslim hero and scholar), the "A.M. Journal",
and currently The Muslim Journal.
1963 Establishment of the "Muslim
Students Association" (MSA), an organization to aid foreign Muslim students
attending schools in the United States.
1965 The assassination of "Al-Haj
Malik al-Shabazz" (Malcolm X), one of the most outstanding Muslims in American
history as well as a dedicated fighter for justice and equality for
African-Americans and other oppressed people, takes place in New York.
1968 "Hamas Abdul Khaalis" founds the
"Hanfi Movement" in New York and builds the "Hanafi-Hab Center" there, but
latter on moves to Washington DC His movement had a membership of more than 1000
and one of the first Muslims who first came into contact with Islam through this
movement is "Kareem AbdulJabbar" the famous Lakers basketball player. But in
1977, Khaalis and some of his followers seized control of 3 buildings in D. C.,
holding hostages for more than 30 hours, one man was killed. Khaalis is now
incarcerated in Washington DC and is serving a sentence of 41 to 120 years,
marking a challenging period in American Muslim history.
1975 "Elijah Muhammad", the late
leader of the Nation of Islam (NOI) dies and is succeeded by his son "Warith
Deen Mohammed," who is regarded as one of the leading Muslim spokesmen in the
United States of today and is credited disputing many of his father's ethnic
beliefs and statements and for moving the organization toward the broader
universal concepts of Islam.
1982 The "Islamic Society of North
America" (ISNA) is established in Plainfield, Indiana, which is now the umbrella
organization.
1986 "Dr. Isma'il R. al-Faruqi," the
founder of the "American Muslim Social Scientists" organization and the
International Institute of Islamic Thought, and his wife are murdered in their
home outside Philadelphia. Dr. Faruqi and his wife are the authors of the
Cultural Atlas of Islam and many other books. His murder was predicated without
name by the president of Jewish Defence League one week before his death in the
Village Voice, New York by claiming that within a week an outspoken Palestinian
professor will be eliminated.
1987 Muslim Alert Network was
established in Chicago to mobilize Muslim response to media and discrimination
against Muslims. Later on the same concept was used to establish CAIR.
1990 Muslims hold the first
solidarity conference called "Muslims Against Apartheid." This was the first
conference of its kind in support of Muslims for the struggle against Apartheid
in South Africa. The conference was organized by the American Muslim Council.
1991 Imam Siraj Wahhaj offers an
invocation (opening prayer) to the United States House of Representatives. He
was the first Muslims to do so.
1992 Imam Warith Deen Mohammed gives
the invocation in the Senate.
1992 Bosnia Task Force, USA was
established as an allience of ten national Muslim organizations in support of
Bosnia.
1993 Bosnia Task Force, USA and
National Organization of Women (NOW) organized joint demonstration in 100 cities
in America against the rape of women in Bosnia.
1993 Bosnia Task Force, USA organized
the largest rally to date by Muslim in favor of Bosnia in Washington DC attended
by 50,000 Muslims
1994 Islamic Shura Council of North
America was established choosing four of the largest participents of the Bosnia
Task Force, USA
1995 Oaklahoma Bombing took place
which launched a hate campaign agains Muslims in America
1996 Iftar-Dinner on Capitol Hill
sponsored by American Muslim Council February 13 hosted by Senator Joseph I.
Lieberman (D CT), Congressmen Nick J. Rahall (D W. VA), Dana Rohrabacher (R CA),
Thomas M. Davis III (R VA), James P. Moran (D VA) and attended by ambassadors
and representatives from most of the Muslim countries.
1996 The White house celebration of
Eid Al-Fitr, February 20, 1996 by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton the first
Eid celebration ever at the White House.
2000 Muslims endorsed Governer Bush
for bloc vote who won in one the most narrow election in the history of the US.
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Majority of this article is gathered from
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this information for educational purposes. All views expressed here are only
mentioned to express how Muslims and Islam played some role in the US history in
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