Some other key moments:
1778: Morocco, a Muslim theocracy, is among the first foreign nations to recognize the independence of the United States.
1805: President Thomas Jefferson hosts a Ramadan celebration at the White House while welcoming a Tunisian envoy.
1930: Wallace Fard Muhammad founds the Nation of Islam, a Muslim sect for Black Americans.
1934: The Mother Mosque of America, the oldest continuously operating purpose-built mosque in the U.S., opens in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
1957: Dwight Eisenhower is the first sitting president to visit an American mosque when he attended the dedication ceremony for the Islamic Center in Washington, D.C.
1962: Omar Sharif is the first Muslim actor nominated for an Academy Award, for his supporting performance in Lawrence of Arabia. (He lost to Ed Begley of Sweet Bird of Youth.)
1964: Muhammad Ali, under the mentorship of Malcolm X, announces his conversion to Islam.
1965: President Lyndon Johnson signs the Immigration and Nationality Act, which significantly expanded the ability of people from Muslim-majority nations to emigrate to the U.S.
1967: Muhammad Ali refuses to be inducted into the U.S. Army, citing religious objections, and is stripped of his heavyweight title.
1991: Charles Bilal is elected mayor of Kountze, Texas, a town of about 2,000 residents, becoming the first Muslim elected to run an American municipality.
1996: First Lady Hillary Clinton hosts the first iftar, the dinner to begin Ramadan. Presidents Bush and Obama carried on the tradition. Trump skipped 2017 and 2020 but held iftars in 2018 and 2019.
September 11, 2001: Nineteen members of the Islamic terrorist group Al-Qaeda crash four planes in New York, Pennsylvania and the Pentagon.
September 17, 2001: President George W. Bush visits the Islamic Center in Washington, D.C. to urge Americans not to blame all Muslims for the 9/11 attacks.
2003: The U.S. invades Iraq and overthrows Saddam Hussein on grounds, later debunked, that he had an illicit chemical weapons factory and connections to Al-Qaeda.
2005: The Islamic Center of America, at 120,000 square feet the largest mosque in North America, opens in Dearborn, Michigan.
2007: Keith Ellison of Minnesota is sworn in on Thomas Jefferson’s Quran as the first Muslim member of Congress.
2009: Zaytuna College, the first accredited Muslim liberal arts college in the U.S., opens in Berkeley, California.
2011: The Learning Channel airs All-American Muslim, a reality show centered around Muslims in Dearborn, Michigan.
30 Firsts for American Muslims
Fot.: Getty Images
2014: Farhan Zaidi is hired as the general manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers, the first Muslim in that role in any American sports franchise.
2015: Presidential candidate Donald Trump calls for a “a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country’s representatives can figure out what the hell is going on.”
August 2016: At the Summer Olympics in Rio, runner Dalilah Muhammad becomes the first Muslim American woman to win a gold medal. Bronze medalist fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad becomes the first U.S. Olympian to compete wearing a hijab.
September 2016: Riz Ahmed is the first Muslim to win an Emmy in a lead acting category, for the HBO series The Night Of.
January 2017: President Donald Trump imposes a ban on travel from Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Libya, Iran, Syria and Yemen, all Muslim-majority nations. His successor, Joe Biden, revoked the bans on his first day in office in 2021.
April 2017: Mahershala Ali becomes the first Muslim actor to win an Academy Award, for his supporting performance in Moonlight.
November 2018: Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan become the first Muslim women elected to Congress. Also, Keith Ellison is elected Minnesota’s attorney general, the first Muslim to win statewide elected office.
2019: Sadaf Jaffer is sworn in as mayor of Montgomery Township, New Jersey, making her the first female Muslim mayor in the U.S.
January 2020: Ramy Youssef, creator and star of the Hulu dramedy Ramy, wins the Golden Globe for Best Actor and opens his acceptance speech by saying, “I would like to thank my God. Allahu akbar.”
30 Firsts for American Muslims
Fot.: Getty Images
November 2020: Candidates in five states—Colorado, Florida, Delaware, Oklahoma and Wisconsin—become the first Muslims elected to their states’ legislatures.
January 2021: Robert Saleh is hired as head coach of the New York Jets, the first Muslim in that position in the NFL.
June 2021: Judge Zaidi Quraishi is the first Muslim confirmed by the Senate for a seat on the federal judiciary. Also, Lina Khan is confirmed as chair of the Federal Trade Commission, becoming the first Muslim to run any federal regulatory agency.
[SŁOWNICZEK]
abandon faith – porzucić wiarę
theocracy – teokracja (forma rządów)
envoy – wysłannik, emisariusz
conversion to Islam – przejście na islam
be inducted into the army – być powołanym do wojska
be stripped of something – zostać pozbawionym czegoś
municipality – miasto, gmina
iftar – pierwszy posiłek spożywany po zachodzie słońca podczas ramadanu
overthrow – obalić (np. rząd)
debunked – zdemaskowany
illicit – zabroniony, zakazany
be sworn in – zostać zaprzysiężonym
sports franchise – franczyza sportowa
shutdown – zamknięcie, zaprzestanie
wear a hijab – nosić hidżab (chusta noszona przez muzułmanki)
impose a ban – nałożyć zakaz
mayor – burmistrz, prezydent miasta
federal judiciary – sądownictwo federalne
Task 1
Read the text and answer the following questions:
In which year …
1. … was an American mosque visited for the first time by a sitting U.S. president?
2. … was the first Muslim member of Congress sworn in?
3. … did the oldest continuously operating mosque in the United States open?
4. … did an Islamic terrorist group attack New York, Pennsylvania and the Pentagon?
5. … was an Olympic gold medal won for the first time by a Muslim American woman?
6. … did a U.S. president hold a Ramadan celebration at the White House for the first time?
7. … was an Oscar won for the first time by a Muslim?
Task 2
Match the words to form collocations and verb phrases that will help you describe the issue presented in the article. (See Key)
Collocations:
Ramadan
religious
sports
Muslim-majority
statewide
female
nations
elected office
celebration
Muslim mayor
objections
franchise
Verb phrases:
come
abandon
fight
carry
win
wear
a gold medal
on the tradition
faith
to the New World
a hijab
on the American side
Task 3
Use the collocations and verb phrases above to sum up the key points of the text. Record your text analysis on a voice recorder, or practice delivering your presentation in a group setting.
Examples:
Before the 19th century, most Muslims …
There are records that show …
The prospect that a Muslim could become …
The Founding Fathers kept …
Task 4
Now it’s time to put forward your views on the issues. Write an article on the topic: America’s Islamic heritage.
Points to consider
∗ Decide on the style of the article
∗ Think of a short, clear, appropriate headline to attract the reader’s attention
∗ Deal with a different aspect of the topic in each paragraph
∗ Use linking words/transitions to connect your ideas (although, yet, moreover, etc.)
∗ Avoid using simplistic words (good, bad, nice, etc.)
Fot. Justin Case/Stone/Getty Images, Ann Ronan Pictures/Print Collector/Getty Images, Bettmann/Getty Images, Katherine Young/Hulton Archive/Getty Images, Gerald Martineau/The The Washington Post/Getty Images, CNN/Getty Images, Stanley Weston/Getty Images, Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call/Getty Images, Oliver Contreras/Getty Images, David Ramos/Getty Images, Mike Marsland/WireImage/Getty Images, FilmMagic for HBO/Getty Images, Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg/Getty Images, Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Getty Images, Roy Rochlin/WireImage/Getty Images
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