21 December 2010

Muslim students find acceptance at Catholic colleges

Excerpts from an article in the Washington Post:
In the past few years, enrollment of Muslim students such as Shabnan has spiked at Catholic campuses across the country. Last year, Catholic colleges had an even higher percentage of Muslim students than the average four-year institution in the United States, according to the Higher Education Research Institute. The influx has astonished and sometimes befuddled administrators. Some Catholic campuses are creating prayer rooms for new Muslim students and hiring Islamic chaplains to minister to them. Others are unsure how to adapt...

Muslim students say they enroll at Catholic schools for many of the same reasons as their classmates: attractive campuses, appealing professors and academic programs that fit their interests. But there is also a spiritual attraction to the values that overlap the two faiths.

"Because it is an overtly religious place, it's not strange or weird to care about your religion here, to pray and make God a priority," said Shabnan, a political science major who often covers her head with a pale beige scarf. "They have the same values we do."

Georgetown University, whose Muslim student numbers have also been climbing, has a prayer room, student association and an entire center devoted to Muslim-Christian understanding, and the school hired a full-time Muslim chaplain in 1999. Catholic administrators at colleges that have added similar features say they haven't perceived the efforts as a challenge to their religious identity.

"We're not going to take down the cross or change our name. We're proud of who we are," said Marco Masini, associate vice president of student life at Benedictine University in Illinois. "Hospitality is a part of the Benedictine philosophy, so it's important we welcome individuals of all faiths."

Basiri said his Islamic faith has grown and matured in the past four years while studying in buildings named after Catholic leaders, in classrooms adorned with crucifixes, and with classmates often named after saints.

"The face of my prophet and my God has changed," he said. "It is even more beautiful now."
More at the link.

3 comments:

  1. That really doesn't surprise me. I attended a community college when my Mom's ability to homeschool me ran out in the middle of high school. Another homeschooled friend and I found that we had much more in common with the Muslim girls than with the general population. The cultures and values (at least among the non-crazy types) are very similar. Beliefs matter, reverence and moral behavior matters, and 'coolness' really doesn't.

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  2. Thanks for posting such a beautiful, thoughtful article.

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  3. This is great to hear and one of the reasons I was looking into Catholic colleges in PA when I was going to college. Accepting others really is the key to our futures I feel.

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