First Impressions
Finding the Masjid Muhammad was a little difficult as I drove through the same traffic circle three times until I finally stumbled upon the
continuation of P street in Northwest DC. I pulled into a small parking lot and struggled to find the entrance of the mosque. It was close to the noon day prayer so I just waited until someone showed up and could find the entrance for me. The entrance of the majid was anything but elaborate. It was a basement with white tile, bulletin boards and posters put up randomly along the wall, all in english. The receptionist, Cynthia, wore a Hijab but she had a familar American accent unlike some of the people I had met at the other mosques. She was also very cordial and was able to provide me with some information about the Masjid Muhammad because she had grown up in the mosque all her life.
Brief History Lesson
The Masjid Muhammad wa first established in 1941 as a mosque for the Nation of Islam, an organization established for the spiritual, social, mental, and economic, well being of the African-American community. Not knowing enough about the subject, I’m not sure what prompted the change from the Nation of Islam to traditional Islam but I do know that it was a significant change and had a large impact on what the Masjid Muhammad meant to the community.
This mosque differs greatly from the others because as Cynthia said, the Islam in this mosque was a grassroots movement rather than the traditonal religion passed down through generations of immigrants. Because of the transition from the Nation of Islam to Islam, the members of the mosque had to learn the essence of true Islam. Interstingly, some of the older members of the masjid were brought together by the Nation of Islam but continued to practice Islam even after the masjid was no longer affiliated with the Nation. Cynthia, on the otherhand, was raised in the masjid and has always lived under traditional Islam. And unlike many of the other mosques, the majority of the congregation is comprised of Americans. A detail that greatly adds to the Middle Eastern components of Islam. In some ways, the Masjid Muhammad had an atmosphere that likened the black Baptist community that I am apart of.
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