Born and raised in Oklahoma, Sarah Albahadily will wear her headscarf to a Brad Paisley concert and her cowboy boots to mosque. There are two things she says she never misses: Friday prayers and University of Oklahoma football games.
But after seven in 10 Oklahoma voters on Tuesday (Nov. 2) approved State Question 755, a constitutional amendment that prohibits courts from using Islamic law, known as shariah, Albahadily suddenly feels a little less at home in the Sooner State.
“It’s disheartening. Even though it was expected, you still feel the blow,” said Albahadily, 27, as she drove to the Mercy School, a K-12 Islamic school in Oklahoma City where she teaches science.
In many ways, State Question 755 will likely have little impact either in Oklahoma or elsewhere -- Muslims quickly point out they never lobbied for shariah law, and many wouldn’t support its use anyway.
What really worries Muslims is the anti-Muslim fervor that fueled it. It’s the same sentiment behind the aborted Quran bonfire in Florida and the opposition to an Islamic community center near Ground Zero. The bottom line: Muslims increasingly feel unwelcome, unwanted and viewed by their neighbors as un-American.
And if that sentiment can be legislated in one state, they say, it could be legislated in another.
Yet rather that retreating from public life, Oklahoma Muslims like Albahadily are vowing to increase their involvement in community affairs and raise their visibility, confident that when fellow citizens get to know them, their prejudices will dissolve.
Albahadily said she would put on a brave face for her teenage students.
“If they see me upset, they’re not going to want to participate in civics or community life. But if I can be upbeat, and say, ‘OK, we’re going to stand firm,’ they’ll respond.”
Less than 24 hours after the polls closed, Albahadily’s mother was organizing local Muslims to meet newly elected lawmakers; local Muslim groups and the ACLU announced a bid to have the referendum declared unconstitutional.
There are an estimated 30,000 Muslims in Oklahoma, which has 3.7 million residents. They describe themselves as well-educated, prosperous and attracted to Oklahoma’s friendliness, slow pace of life and safety.
The referendum was primarily authored by Republican state Rep. Rex Duncan, and sailed through the state’s legislature. In 2007, Duncan made headlines when he refused a copy of a Quran given to lawmakers by the Governor’s Ethnic American Advisory Council. On Tuesday, he won a bid for a county district attorney position.
Muslims say the referendum worsened anti-Muslim prejudice that was already enflamed by the Ground Zero controversy, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and frequent visits from Islamophobic speakers like Brigitte Gabriel, hosted by local churches and conservative
organizations.
“It’s really brought the Muslim-haters out,” said Allison Moore, a Muslim activist in Tulsa.
Since the referendum was introduced in June, Moore and other Muslims said, mosques saw an increase in hate mail and threatening phone calls. Children walking home from a Muslim school in Tulsa were harassed by people in passing cars. Some Muslim women left their headscarves at home.
Muslims found a small measure of optimism in Tuesday’s vote.
“At least 30 percent of Oklahomans are educated about the issue,” said Imam Imad Enchassi, president of the Islamic Society of Greater Oklahoma City. “This is a very red state. But people are being educated.”
Muslims say they were also buoyed by support from non-Muslims. Almost 20 organizations in Tulsa -- from the Police Department to the local Interfaith Council to the Jewish Federation of Tulsa -- formed the “Tulsa Say No To Hate Coalition,” which condemned the referendum for
fanning “flames of bigotry.”
Oklahoma Muslims have been down this road before. In 1995, they were wrongfully accused of blowing up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. In the days after, Enchassi accompanied then-Gov. Frank Keating to a local mosque in a public display of solidarity.
Studies show familiarity breeds solidarity and support, so Muslims say they need to be seen and known now more than ever. But Sheryl Siddiqui, a spokeswoman for the Edmond-based Islamic Council of Oklahoma, said there are limits to how much they can do.
“Muslims in Oklahoma do a phenomenal amount of outreach,” she said. “It’s not on us anymore. There are people out there who still believe Obama is a Muslim.”
Siddiqui moved with her husband to Oklahoma from Massachusetts in 1984, and admitted she occasionally thinks about returning to the liberal state where, at least in Cambridge, schools are closed on a major Islamic holiday.
“People are really different. They’re more open,” she said. But she always concludes that Oklahoma is home. “Muslims have been here a long time, and we’re going to continue to make this the best place to live that we can make it.”