Islam in Peru

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peruvian Muslims
The Bab al-Islam Mosque in Tacna
Total population
c. 15,000 (0.015%)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Mostly in Lima and other urban areas
Religions
Sunni Islam
Languages
  • National language
  • Regional and minority languages
    • Arabic
    • Bengali
    • Indigenous Peruvian languages

The statistics for Islam in Peru estimate a total Muslim population of 15,000, largely based in the capital city Lima;[1] This represents 0.015% out of total population of 32,555,000 inhabitants.

Islam was historically introduced by Spanish Moors, although today's population is almost entirely of Syrian, Lebanese and Palestinian origin.[1][2]

History[]

In 1560, the Spanish rulers of Peru sentenced Lope de la Pena, described as a "Moor from Guadalajara", to life imprisonment for the crime of "having practiced and spread Islam" in Cuzco and was also required to wear the Sanbenito around his neck for his entire imprisonment.[3][4][5] Other sources give his name as Alvaro Gonzalez.[6]

His colleague, the mulatto "son of a Spaniard [Juan Solano] and a black woman",[6][7][8] Luis Solano was similarly convicted of spreading Islam, but was executed for the offence.[7][9]

As persecution increased in the Spanish dependencies, Muslims ceased identifying themselves by their religion and became nominal Christians; eventually Islam disappeared from the country entirely.[10]

In 1911, Stuart McNairn, a British missionary based in Cusco, wrote about "God's call to His Church to go in and possess the land [in] Africa, in view of the great Moslem advance. We must take the Light to the Dark Continent before the apostles of Mohammedanism enshroud it in yet greater darkness".[11]

Islam was reintroduced to Peru in the 1940s, during the Palestinian exodus, Palestinian and Lebanese Muslims fleeing from the Arab-Israeli war.[10]

In 1974, the Nation of Islam, through its counterpart in Belize, began importing Pacific Whiting fish from Peru to the United States, where it was sold as an Islamic alternative to mainstream fish markets.[12]

A Peruvian by the name of Louis Castro converted to Islam and later studied at the Islamic University of Madinah in the 1980s.[13] In 1993, the Muslim community opened a masjid in the Jesús María District of the capital, but it was later closed due to financial difficulty. Another location was opened in the Villa El Salvador district, but met with similar difficulties and also closed.[10]

Present circumstances[]

Historical population
YearPopulation±%
1980 5,000—    
1992 15,000+200.0%
Source: [1][2]

There are a handful of Islamic organizations in Peru, including the Asociación Islámica del Perú, the Musulmanes Peruanos of Naqshbandi Haqqani tariqa and Asociación Islam Peru in Lima. A group of Muslims have also set up a webpage www.IslamPeru.org

In 2007, there were unsubstantiated claims that Islamist militant sympathisers were helping arrange entrance to the United States through their country.[14]

The Latin American Muslim Unity (LAMU) organization, based in Fresno, California, United States, has drawn up a proposal for the first Islamic orphanage in Peru, although it has not yet materialized.[citation needed]

In January 2011, Peru joined a number of other Latin American countries in announcing its recognition of the State of Palestine as a legitimate nation.[15] This decade also marked a migration of Muslims from Bangladesh and other Asian countries to Peru as well.[citation needed]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Shaikh, Farzana. "Islam and Islamic groups: a worldwide reference guide", 1992
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Cook, Matt (March 2007). "Islam in Latin America" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04.
  3. ^ Encyclopedia of African-American culture and history: the Black experience in the Americas, Volume 4, page 1561
  4. ^ Servants of Allah: African Muslims Enslaved in the Americas, Page 147
  5. ^ Central Institute of Islamic Research, Pakistan, Islamic studies, Volume 45, Issues 1-2, 2006
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Lea, Henry Charles. "Inquisition of the Spanish Dependencies", Page 321
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b Bowser, Frederick P. "The African Slave in Colonial Peru", Page 251
  8. ^ Louis Cardaillac, "Le Probleme Morisque en Amerique, Page 293
  9. ^ The African Slave in Colonial Peru 1524-1650 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1974), 251.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c LAMU, History of Islam in Peru
  11. ^ Wherry, E. M. "Islam and Missions", 1911
  12. ^ Curtis, Edward E. "Black Muslim Religion in the Nation of Islam", Page 105
  13. ^ Ahsani, S. A. H. (1984). "Muslims in Latin America: A Survey—Part I.". Journal of the Institute of Muslim Minority Affairs (5): 458.
  14. ^ http://www.livinginperu.com/news-4948-law-order-us-target-muslim-terrorist-o[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ Reuters

External links[]

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