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Joshua Stanton

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Jews and Muslims in America Have More in Common Than We Think

Posted: 08/11/11 02:25 PM ET

Contrary to common assumptions, many Jewish and Muslim Americans enjoy warm relations. Yet we are only beginning to understand how and why this is so. A Gallup report released last week goes a long way to explaining this unexpected trend and shows that the two communities have more in common than is often thought.

The report, "Muslim Americans: Faith, Freedom, and the Future," reveals that overwhelming numbers of Jewish Americans believe Muslim Americans are loyal to their country -- 80 percent to be exact. Aside from Muslims themselves, no other religious community demonstrates such confidence in the loyalty of America's Muslim citizens.

Further, it seems that Jewish and Muslim Americans share a number of common political views, even about issues as contentious as the Middle East conflict. The same study indicates that 81 percent of Muslim Americans and 78 percent of Jewish Americans support a two-state solution, which would enable Israel and a future independent Palestinian state to live side by side. While dialogue about the Middle East conflict remains contentious, the vision for a long-term solution appears surprisingly similar.

How could this be? Why would two communities, so often portrayed as being at each other's throats, not only have confidence in each other but have similar perspectives on even the most contentious issues?

One possibility is a shared immigrant experience. Jewish immigrants, who arrived in multiple waves of immigration but most visibly in large numbers at the end of the 19th century, often used education as a means of gaining a foothold in America and of finding a way to contribute to their new country. It now appears that Muslims are taking a similar approach. In fact, 40 percent of Muslims surveyed in a 2009 Gallup report, "Muslim Americans: A National Portrait," note that they have obtained a college degree (or more). The study indicates that Muslim Americans are the second most likely of any religious group, behind Jewish Americans, to obtain at least a college education. It seems that Muslim Americans may be carving out a niche and contributing to American society today much as their Jewish counterparts worked to do a century ago.

While Jews and Muslims in America may have highly educated communities, both groups also exhibit fear about perceptions that others hold of their traditions. According to last week's report, Jewish and Muslim Americans are more likely than adherents of any other tradition to conceal their religious identity.

This has caused what may best be described as significant empathy on the part of many Jewish and Muslim Americans for one another. While 60 percent of Muslim Americans polled by Gallup say that they experience prejudice from most Americans, a remarkable 66 percent of Jewish Americans say that most Americans exhibit prejudice against Muslims. This means that Jewish Americans are more aware of anti-Muslim prejudice than any other religious community.

Fear and other negative responses to prejudice may compound the overall drive for Jews and Muslims to obtain a higher education and find a niche in the United States. This process may also create stress for members of both communities. According to the 2009 Gallup report, 39 percent of Muslim Americans and 36 percent of Jewish Americans report experiencing a lot of "worry." This worry may correspond to fear of prejudicial treatment and a desire to conceal one's religious identity. Overt displays of religious identity and the push to succeed in a new society may come into tension for both communities, though this is a hypothesis that warrants further research.

In short, Jews and Muslims share profoundly in their experience in the United States. As small religious minorities, each under 2 percent of the American population (with the population of Muslim Americans perhaps a fraction of that figure) they maintain a sense of marginalization. Yet their response to this adversity is one of contribution to society through significant investment in personal education, which in turn creates new opportunities.

Jewish immigration to America may have peaked over a century ago, while Muslim immigration is still relatively new. But both communities share in their drive not only to make America their home but to play a significant and positive role in that newfound homeland. Both communities would do well to recognize the remarkable parallels in their experiences as immigrants to America, as would Americans in other religious communities. The potential for collaboration is clear, while the narrative of conflict has been significantly debunked.

This article was distributed by the Common Ground News Service.

 

Follow Joshua Stanton on Twitter: www.twitter.com/dialogueeditor

Contrary to common assumptions, many Jewish and Muslim Americans enjoy warm relations. Yet we are only beginning to understand how and why this is so. A Gallup report released last week goes a long wa...
Contrary to common assumptions, many Jewish and Muslim Americans enjoy warm relations. Yet we are only beginning to understand how and why this is so. A Gallup report released last week goes a long wa...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom Key
When criminals take over the Market it is not Free
03:56 PM on 08/28/2011
Great article, dug up pertinent data from good studies.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
season555
Allaah knows best
12:32 PM on 08/15/2011
As a Muslim I have had more Jewish friends than Arabs, the truth is I have know just 2 Arabs in my entire life, yet any time they do something I am asked to apologize.
10:18 PM on 08/12/2011
These statistics are great, and it makes sense. As a Muslim, I find myself pretty attached to my Jewish friends, and have a lot of respect for the Jewish community where I live. My friends have even invited me to shabbat dinners and services, and I was surprised at how welcoming the community was. There's a certain kind of connection you get from being two minorities with very similar faiths. We definitely need more interfaith dialogue and events going on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom Key
When criminals take over the Market it is not Free
03:57 PM on 08/28/2011
Your appreciation of a very similar faith is refreshing.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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07:51 PM on 08/12/2011
So many comments Where do I begin:
1: Jews and Muslims share a lineage that goes back to the time to the sons of Abraham: Issac and Ishmael;
2: Many of the tenets of the Torah: Monotheism- the binding of Issac (no human sacrifice) Exodus are all included in the Qu'ran
3: Both faiths rely on three strong pillars: Prayer, Study and Acts of Mercy(Charity)
4: Moses Bin Maimon (Maimonides) the great physician and philosopher wrote all his sacred texts in Arabic and was an advisor to the sultans and even the Imams sought his counsel
How much more similar can you get?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
swordfis
08:40 PM on 08/16/2011
Definitely.

You don't often see Moses Maimonides mentioned in Huffpost. Thanks! Also, for all the hysteria about "Sharia law," the fact is that it is very similar to Talmudic law, both as a method of interpretation and in the rational application of sacred texts.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DAE
04:20 PM on 08/12/2011
Other than a belief in Mohammad as a prophet of God I don't see any difference between Judaism and Islam.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mike711l
The universe is laughing at you behind your back
10:00 AM on 08/12/2011
Definitely one of the more informative articles I have read recently. I really had no concept of those statistics.
06:36 AM on 08/12/2011
Religiously, Jews and Muslims have more in common than either has to Christianity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mike711l
The universe is laughing at you behind your back
09:58 AM on 08/12/2011
Yes, they have all been persecuted by Christians throughout history.
03:52 PM on 08/12/2011
What a Christian Hating statement-shows your true colors. ALL religions, including Islam and Judaism, have persecuted other peoples throughout the History of Man. Get a grip.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Greatest Darthfruit
So, you the brains of this outfit, or is he?
03:11 AM on 08/12/2011
Clap! Clap! Joshua
12:19 AM on 08/12/2011
Very unexpected, I genuinely thuoght they dont like each other
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
07:42 PM on 08/13/2011
Thanks for saying so.

I really enjoy seeing comments where people's frame of reference has been changed in a positive way, like this.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr Anonymous
Mumpsimus, I am not entertained!
09:59 PM on 08/11/2011
Historically Jewish and Muslim peoples as a whole have had relatively warm relationships. One big contention that has arise recently though has been the creation of the Israeli state and what has transpired between the Israelis and Palestinians.
09:39 PM on 08/11/2011
Rational people will always be able to live together,

Discrimination is nonesense

The only universal truth is to see clearly that all great teachings are equal.

Ryokan
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ELijoi
12:50 PM on 08/15/2011
Who decides what "Great" is?

oops.. there's your discrimination.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Knocker
a mind is a terrible thing to waste
09:38 PM on 08/11/2011
Muslims consider proper slaughtering of an animal (halal), to be very important and it must be done by those who believe in the one and only Creator. HalaI meat was not easily available at one time, and I remember some years back when my parents would go to Jewish store to purchase their meat product.
Sadly, the fact that Muslims give this special recognition and respect to Judaism is quite often overlook by the media and others.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daveh88
SLTFATF
10:39 PM on 08/11/2011
Most Muslims do, but some sects don't. I see many muslims shopping at Kosher stores. But Some groups won't eat anything but Halal, or at least that's what my Muslim friends tell me
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The Knocker
a mind is a terrible thing to waste
11:44 PM on 08/11/2011
Like any other group or religion, Muslims are not homogeneous. nevertheless it is mention in the Quran that Muslims are allow to eat from the People of the Book (Jews and Christians), and that should speak volume.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
09:32 PM on 08/11/2011
Thanks, Joshua; great article.

In the spirit of your article, here's a video of Sheikh Hamza Yusuf receiving a Tikkun (Jewish) award:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0IMzz7p6Mk

Both he, and the Rabbi who introduces him, have some interesting things to say.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
08:17 PM on 08/11/2011
Neither likes the idea of someone telling them where they are wrong.
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Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
07:17 PM on 08/12/2011
Who does?

Christians don't seem too amenable to that, either.
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Rubyfoo
07:54 PM on 08/11/2011
Unfortunately, sometimes having a lot in common only accentuates the differences (e.g, Shiite and Sunni Muslims).
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Gottlieb
hated by left since 1973 and right since 1982
01:37 AM on 08/12/2011
Just like Catholics and Protestants.