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In New York, fear of ICE raids casts shadow over Ramadan for West African Muslims

by NORTH CAROLINA DIGITAL NEWS


NEW YORK (RNS) — Since the start of Ramadan, the Islamic month of fasting and prayer, once lively group chats among New York’s West African Muslims have grown quieter. Fearing immigration enforcement operations, mosques have scaled back gatherings — even encouraging some congregations to stay home.

“Imams have warned congregants that it might be better for some people, if they have any issues with immigration status, to actually just conduct their prayers at home,” said Husein Yatabarry, executive director of the Muslim Community Network, which hosted “Know Your Rights” sessions ahead of the holy month.

Like many Muslims across the country, members of New York’s West African community say this Ramadan has been overshadowed by fear of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations and rising anti-Muslim rhetoric, complicating communal traditions and nightly gatherings at mosques for tarawih prayers.

“They have to choose between their safety, their freedom, their livelihood versus their religious right to practice,” Yatabarry said.

“Black and African Muslims, we’ve been a target in the Canal Street raids,” he added, referring to ICE sweeps last October targeting street markets in Manhattan’s Chinatown neighborhood. The operation, which the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said was aimed at curbing the sale of counterfeit goods, led to the arrest of 10 West African vendors from Mali, Mauritania and Senegal. Three of them were released mid-February after federal judges deemed their arrest unlawful.

Husein Yatabarry. (Photo courtesy of Muslim Community Network)

But the raids left the community fearing they would be targeted again, said Yatabarry, and pushed West African Muslims to take greater precautions in preparation for Ramadan.

Afrikana, a Harlem-based nonprofit that serves West African and Muslim migrants, posted an advisory on its Instagram page with its recommendations for interacting with ICE agents — including seeking an interpreter and checking arrest warrants.




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