Consider This from NPR

Anti-Muslim rhetoric rises as Zohran Mamdani embraces his Muslim faith

10 min
Mar 17, 2026about 1 month ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, the first Muslim mayor of America's largest city, has brought his Islamic faith prominently into his public role during Ramadan through high-profile iftar dinners and prayers. His visibility has sparked intense anti-Muslim rhetoric from Republican politicians and media figures, while also becoming a symbolic moment for Muslim New Yorkers who feel newly welcomed in their city.

Insights
  • Political visibility of Muslim leaders is increasingly weaponized by far-right figures with minimal pushback from mainstream Republican leadership, creating a hostile environment for Muslim public servants
  • Community-centered religious observance by elected officials can serve as both spiritual practice and political defiance, reshaping public perception of marginalized groups
  • Anti-Muslim sentiment is being mobilized strategically through fear-based messaging tied to isolated violent incidents, despite these incidents not representing broader Muslim communities
  • Interfaith and cross-community gatherings in public spaces offer practical counternarrative to polarizing rhetoric and can build solidarity across religious and socioeconomic lines
  • The normalization of Muslim civic participation at all levels—from jails to city government—represents a cultural inflection point that triggers backlash from those threatened by demographic and political change
Trends
Escalation of anti-Muslim rhetoric from elected Republican officials without proportional party leadership condemnationStrategic use of isolated violent incidents by extremists to justify blanket discrimination against entire religious communitiesMuslim political leaders using high-visibility public religious observance as both personal practice and political statementFar-right activism targeting Muslim elected officials and their residences, with some incidents involving alleged terrorist plotsInterfaith and community-based approaches to countering religious polarization through shared meals and dialogueIncreased visibility of Muslim Americans in civic institutions (government, law enforcement, social services) triggering organized oppositionMedia figures amplifying anti-Muslim messaging with minimal professional consequences or editorial pushbackMuslim communities reframing religious observance as acts of defiance and normalization in response to discrimination
People
Zohran Mamdani
First Muslim mayor of New York City; central figure observing Ramadan publicly and facing anti-Muslim attacks from Re...
Tommy Tuberville
Alabama Republican Senator who posted image of Mamdani's iftar next to 9/11 attacks with caption 'the enemy is inside...
Brandon Gill
Texas Congressman who posted 'no more Muslims immigrating to America' on social media
Randy Fine
Florida Republican who posted on X 'we need more Islamophobia, not less'
Andrew Clyde
Georgia Representative who posted 'no more Islamic immigration denaturalized deport repeat'
Andy Ogles
Tennessee Republican House member who posted Muslims 'don't belong in American society'
Mike Johnson
House Speaker who defended anti-Muslim rhetoric as response to perceived Sharia law threat
Sid Rosenberg
Influential New York talk radio host who called Mayor Mamdani a 'cockroach' and accused him of hating Jews
Khalid Latif
Influential imam at Islamic Center of New York City discussing organized fear-based mobilization against Muslims
Syed Adnad Bukhari
New York City worker who attended Mamdani's iftar and expressed pride in Muslim political representation
Quotes
"This is me just being a Muslim New Yorker. And I think there are some for whom that is a political act. And there are a million or so of us here in the city for whom it is simply a day-to-day existence."
Zohran Mamdani
"For nearly as long as there has been a New York City, there have been Muslim New Yorkers. And yet for nearly just as long, those with power and platform have sought to dehumanize us."
Zohran Mamdani
"You actually don't lose rights by ensuring someone else has more rights. That's just not how it works, but the ability to mobilize people through fear has been a proven strategy."
Khalid Latif
"It's a proud thing to not be looked down upon, especially we have someone as powerful as the mayor here. That's a blessing."
Incarcerated man at Rikers Island
"Because it is together that we find ease. It is together that we do so in solidarity. And we find it in the city that is our home."
Zohran Mamdani
Full Transcript
History was made in New York on Monday night. For the first time, a Muslim mayor observed Ramadan with men incarcerated at Rikers Island. They knelt to pray. And then the men spent an hour talking and breaking their fast with mayors over on Maudani. This is me just being a Muslim New Yorker. And I think there are some for whom that is a political act. And there are a million or so of us here in the city for whom it is simply a day-to-day existence. A day-to-day existence that is increasingly being attacked as congressional Republicans engage in anti-Muslim rhetoric. Last week, Alabama Senator Tommy Tuberville posted a photo on X of Maudani breaking the fast next to an image of the 9-11 terror attacks post-Maudani described as bigoted. Congressman Brandon Gill of Texas wrote on social media, no more Muslims immigrating to America. Florida's Randy Fine posted on X, we need more Islamophobia, not less. Representative Andrew Clyde of Georgia, no more Islamic immigration denaturalized deport repeat. And Andy Ockels, a Republican House member from Tennessee, posted Muslims don't belong in American society. Pluralism is a lie. But unlike in past political eras, these comments have faced little pushback from Republican leaders. But House Speaker Mike Johnson had to say about this tweet from Ockels. There's a lot of energy in the country and a lot of popular sentiment that the demand to impose Sharia law in America is a serious problem. That's what animates this. Consider this, New York Mayor Maudani has brought his Muslim faith to the center of his political life, but his effort has faced a backlash. From NPR, I'm Mary Louise Kelly. This week on Up First, three weeks into the U.S. and Israel's war in Iran, Israel says operations will continue for three weeks more, with global oil prices on the rise and tanker traffic in the Strait of Hormuz at a standstill. Join us each morning as we make sense of a relentless barrage of headlines and tell you what you need to know to start your day. Up first on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. It's considered this from NPR. New York City Mayor Zoran Mamdani has been using his office to bring his faith, Islam, into the center of his city's cultural life in a way we haven't seen before. During this Ramadan, he has hosted half a dozen public prayers and celebrations. NPR's Brian Mann reports. Just before sunset, a big festive crowd gathers in the Museum of the City of New York in Harlem. They've come to share Iftar, the traditional dinner, that marks the end of each day of Ramadan fasting, hosted on this night by Mayor Zoran Mamdani, who stands to speak. And it's not every day that we see in one room the sheer breadth of Muslim life in New York City. And I will say it once more, Ramadan Mubarak, my friends. As a musician plays, people break the fast with dates, then pass platters of food. With his trademark grin, Mamdani, the first Muslim mayor of America's biggest city, goes table to table. It's a celebration of the roughly one million Muslims who live here. But during this speech, Mamdani also describes this gathering as an act of defiance. For nearly as long as there has been a New York City, there have been Muslim New Yorkers. And yet for nearly just as long, those with power and platform have sought to dehumanize us. It's responding to Alabama's Republican Senator Tommy Tuberville, who'd reposted earlier that day an image of Mamdani celebrating one of these public Iftars next to an image of the 9-11 terror attacks, with the words, the enemy is inside the gates. NPR reached out to Tuberville's office for comment. They didn't respond. Speaking to the crowd in Harlem, Mamdani described Tuberville's post as bigotry. And when I hear such hatred and disdain unchecked in its rancor, I feel in isolation and aloneliness that I know that many of you have felt as well. These attacks on Mamdani from the right began last year during his rapid ascent as the country's most influential Muslim politician. And Tuberville's post isn't the only attack Mamdani's faced during Ramadan. After Mamdani criticized President Trump's decision to launch a war against Iran, one of New York City's most influential talk radio hosts, Sid Rosenberg, blasted Mamdani on social media, calling the mayor a cockroach and accusing him of hating Jews. Mamdani described Rosenberg's post as racist. To be called animals, insects, to be called a jihadist mayor, to be called a cockroach, this language is both painfully familiar to me as a Muslim New Yorker, but also as someone who was born in East Africa. Rosenberg offered a partial apology on his radio show saying he regretted calling Mamdani names. Then he doubled down, describing Mamdani as dangerous. And I think his policies should scare the living daylights out of any decent New Yorker. Tensions escalated again a few days later on March 7th, when a small group of far-right activists gathered outside Mamdani's official residence in Manhattan, calling for an end to what they described as the Islamic takeover of New York City. Counter protesters turned up. There were clashes, and two Muslim men from Pennsylvania allegedly threw improvised explosive devices, this from ABC News. The alarming scene here in New York City outside the official home of Mayor Zoran Mamdani. Two suspects allegedly trying to detonate homemade bombs right during a protest. FBI officials say the attack was inspired by ISIS. The devices failed to detonate. There were no injuries, and the men were arrested in a awaiting trial. At a press conference, Mamdani spoke carefully, condemning the anti-Muslim rally and the attempted violence. While I found this protest appalling, I will not waver in my belief that it should be allowed to happen. Ours is a free society where the right to peaceful protest is sacred. Far-right bigotry against Muslim Americans isn't new, but it's intensified in recent weeks after other violent attacks in Michigan and Virginia allegedly perpetrated by Muslims, which are also being investigated as acts of terrorism, one targeting a synagogue. Tennessee Republican Congressman Andy Ogles posted on acts that Muslims quote, don't belong in American society. Khalid Latif, one of New York's most influential imams, thinks efforts to blame all Muslims for these attacks are well-organized and often effective. You actually don't lose rights by ensuring someone else has more rights. That's just not how it works, but the ability to mobilize people through fear has been a proven strategy. NPR met with Latif at his Islamic Center of New York City, where volunteers were preparing an evening iftar meal of chicken and rice and dates with the entire community invited to join. Latif says these gatherings offer a chance to set aside differences. You and I can be at an iftar dinner together, and you don't have to share faith with me, we can just both sit and eat. Mamdani has continued to hold his high profile iftar dinners, the latest at Rikers Island, the city's massive jail complex, where he prayed last night and broke his fast with Muslim men behind bars. This is one of the most meaningful evenings that I've had as the mayor of New York City. Does it send any kind of message, or is it strictly a moment of worship and community? This is me just being a Muslim New Yorker. There are some for whom that is a political act. As much as there have been attempts to caricature what it means to be Muslim in this city, we can see in this room so many different ways to be Muslim. Jail officials allowed NPR to speak with men who prayed and ate with Mamdani on the condition that we not use their names. They described the mayor as a Muslim brother. I'm ecstatic. You care about us, even though we're going through a rough time. It's a proud thing to not be looked down upon, especially we have someone as powerful as the mayor here. That's a blessing. Other Muslim New Yorkers have told NPR they see Mamdani's public observance of Ramadan as a pivot point for their community, a moment after years of stigma and suspicion when they feel welcome in a new way. Syed Adnad Bukhari is a city worker who joined Mamdani's iftar in Harlem. You know, we're good people and we have nothing to hide. And I think Zohran being elected is showing the positive side to everyone. Mamdani's been in office less than four months and there are still deep tensions here. Verbal and social media attacks by the far right aren't going away. Mamdani faces suspicion among many Jewish leaders over his support for Palestinian rights. And the war in Iran and continued violence in Gaza, Israel and other parts of the Middle East are felt deeply in New York City. After all of that, Mamdani says Muslim families will keep gathering. Because it is together that we find ease. It is together that we do so in solidarity. And we find it in the city that is our home. Mamdani has been careful to show he's not only mayor of the city's Muslim community. Last night he observed Ramadan. Today he celebrated St. Patrick's Day, joining the big parade here and attending a Catholic mass. Brian Mann and PR News, New York. This episode was produced by Jason Fuller, Sarah Ventree and Karen Zamora with Audio Engineering by Ted Mebane. It was edited by Jason DeRose, Andrea DeLeon, Daniel Burke and Courtney Dornig. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan. It's Consider This From NPR. I'm Mary Louise Kelly. This week on Up First, three weeks into the U.S. and Israel's war in Iran, Israel says operations will continue for three weeks more, with global oil prices on the rise and tanker traffic in the Strait of Hormuz at a standstill. Join us each morning as we make sense of a relentless barrage of headlines and tell you what you need to know to start your day. Up first on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.