Over the course of a century, Muslim Utahns have grown from a few isolated families into a resilient, multifaceted, and dynamic community, with a growing network of organizations. Founded in 2006, Al Mustafa Foundation of Utah (AMFU) is a nonprofit deeply grounded in faith. A key support for the Muslim community in Utah, it emphasizes education, culture, and heritage. It shares insights into Muslim traditions and Islamic principles through workshops, celebrations, art initiatives, and historical displays. AMFU strives to bring the community together and build bridges with other societal groups. Since its beginnings, the foundation has been involved in various community-driven projects, including educational activities and charitable gatherings. In 2017 and 2019, AMFU organized the first Muslim Heritage festivals in Utah. Those events, open to all, showcased Muslim contributions to civilization across centuries. This article extends AMFU's efforts by shifting the lens from Muslim civilization to the local community.Between 2019 and 2025, members of the foundation collected dozens of oral histories from the Utah Muslim community as part of an ongoing effort to highlight and educate the public on Muslims’ contributions across time and locations.2 Those testimonies provide an original account of Muslims’ presence and integration in the state. This article relies largely on these interviews to demonstrate the role of Utahn Muslims’ agency as their demographic grew. Beyond merely adapting to their new environment, they built an enduring community amid shifting structural challenges and opportunities. The chronological approach of the article helps retrace this journey step by step. The first section focuses on firstcomers, mainly explorers or manual laborers. Their presence, while marginal, raises questions about common misconceptions about Muslims in Utah and illustrates core traits consistently displayed by subsequent Muslims. In the second part, stories of isolated Muslims, who came to Utah seeking knowledge in the mid-twentieth century, demonstrate how the seeds of a community were planted at a time of rapid global change. As immigration policy at the federal level in 1965 shifted partly in response to international events, the local Muslim presence increased. The third part focuses on how these changes facilitated the establishment of a more structured community. The article concludes by mapping the current efforts of a growing community to build an enduring legacy. Rather than a passive presence in the state, this legacy is one of purposeful and active contributions to Utah's economic, cultural, spiritual, political, and social landscape.The presence and contribution of Muslims in Utah are often perceived as a recent phenomenon. However, to understand how the Utah Muslim community took root requires looking further back at the firstcomers, explorers, slaves, and laborers, whose arrival paved the way for future generations.3As European explorers set out on their journey to the Americas, Muslims played a crucial role. Their presence, often as mapmakers and guides, is attested in many Spanish colonial documents by the late 1500s.4 Estevanico's journey illustrates that broader context. An enslaved Moroccan guide, often referred to as the first Muslim in America, Estevanico the Moor participated in multiple westward expeditions, contributing to the expansion of the frontier. He eventually reached the Colorado Basin, where he disappeared after an encounter with the Zuni tribe of the Native American Pueblo people in 1539.5As the transatlantic slave trade intensified by the middle of the sixteenth century, hundreds of thousands of slaves were forcibly transported from the West African shores to North America. While estimates are difficult to ascertain, scholars acknowledge the presence of a significant Muslim population among them.6 Specific information regarding enslaved individuals in Utah is sparse.7 However, historian Ronald Coleman noted that “the history of Blacks in Utah is a microcosm of the history of Blacks in the United States.”8 Furthermore, in at least one instance, records have shown that one former slave with Muslim roots converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, albeit before the Mormon migration to Utah.9 Though no explicit declaration of faith from enslaved individuals in Utah could be found, these elements suggest the possibility of Muslim heritage in the enslaved population in the state.10By the late nineteenth century, a new wave of migration to Utah emerged from the Ottoman Empire.11 As highlighted by Robert Zeidner, many Middle Eastern migrants during the late 1880s belonged to Christian denominations.12 While likely fewer in number, Muslims, often young men, also traveled to work, earn money, support their families who remained in their country of origin, and open opportunities for other family members.13 Their presence in Utah was first recorded in the 1910 census through traditionally Muslim names such as Mustof Hasen or Aslam Sremer.14Among them, Darwish Kader arrived in Provo in 1915, after spending two years in New York selling clothes from a trunk on the streets. From a village near Jerusalem in Palestine, Darwish Kader saw Utah as a land of opportunities, one that resembled his homeland. After purchasing between thirty and fifty acres of land, he settled and established a successful fruit and dairy farm west of Rock Canyon, Provo. Before returning to Palestine decades later, Darwish Kader offered a place for other family members who had also decided to migrate in search of better economic prospects.15Moses Kader had arrived in New York around the same time as Darwish and worked as a peddler. Despite his father pushing him to emigrate to avoid being drafted into the war by the Ottoman Empire, he went on to fight in France until 1919 on behalf of the United States. After he returned as a wounded war veteran, he settled in Provo and established his farm, not far from Darwish. Both men eventually brought their wives from Palestine and welcomed children. Living as a close extended family, they strived to preserve Islamic traditions and principles. Moses's son, Omar, recalls, for example, his unparalleled religious integrity and adherence to daily practices such as prayers and reading of the Quran.16Far from retreating to themselves, they were simultaneously committed to building relations and understanding. Year after year, Moses consistently reached out to his neighbors, sharing treats to celebrate Islamic holidays or harvest season and giving charity. Having what Omar described as a soft heart for religious causes, he would eventually sell at a lower price part of his lands to support the construction of a Latter-day Saint meetinghouse.17The family's efforts were, however, not always reciprocated and, at times, even met with rejection. Omar recounts a time he and his mother were driving back home from one of their farms. As officers stopped them and asked what they were doing in their city, a feisty Aisha Kader reaffirmed her sense of belonging in rudimentary English, reminding them it was also her city and a free country.18 Unknowingly, her stance would echo in future generations of Muslim women committed to making this state their home and fully embracing their role as members of this society.A third family member, Ismael, followed Darwish and Moses's path, leaving Jerusalem in 1919. After staying in Cuba for six years, he reached Provo in 1925 and established his own business, a men's clothing store. He would eventually relocate to the Chicago area, likely for business prospects and the presence of a more established Muslim community before returning to Palestine in 1947.19Economic opportunities attracted Muslims beyond the Middle East, whether those opportunities were real or the result of labor agents’ false promises. While most railroad workers and coal miners were migrants from China, Italy, Finland, Greece, the Balkans, Japan, and Mexico,20 the 1930 census suggests the presence of more nationalities among their ranks. For example, S. H. Mohammed, born in 1892 in India, was recorded as a coal miner in Carbon County. The fact that he was listed as Hindu stemmed from immigration officials labeling all migrants from India as “Hindu,” even though his name strongly suggested his Muslim roots.21 More broadly, this illustrates how the Muslim presence in Utah might have been overlooked at the time.Muslim firstcomers in the American West exemplify the Islamic injunctions to explore the earth, migrate when necessary, and actively contribute to their communities of adoption. They also demonstrate adaptability, attachment to religious traditions, and a desire to engage with their neighbors. These traits would continue to define the next wave of Muslims, many of whom came seeking knowledge in the rising center of the liberal world.At the dawn of the twentieth century, Muslim migrants appeared to be motivated by economic prospects and a better future in their newfound home. Their contributions included establishing successful businesses and fostering cultural exchange with their direct neighbors.The mid-twentieth century ushered in a new chapter, though. Muslims from Asia and the Middle East were driven to Utah by a different desire: to seek knowledge before returning to their home countries, many of them emerging from the decolonization process. Despite their initial desire for a temporary stay, some remained to plant the seeds of a more structured community, uniting the cultural diversity of the Muslim world.The international context had an impact on more than individuals’ decisions to migrate. It also influenced the destination they chose. Sultan Mahmud, a Pakistani student in civil engineering, attributes his decision to come to Utah to pursue a master's in 1948 to a random encounter in Lahore.22 His acquaintance pointed to the emergence of the United States at the end of the Second World War (WWII) as a superpower offering better opportunities than England. It would convince him to change his initial plans and travel to Utah.Similarly, the decision to stay or return to their country of origin could be traced, at least in part, to events far beyond migrants’ individual lives. Tariq Kergaye initially came from his native Iraq in 1958 to pursue higher education.23 His country's political instability at the time of his graduation led his family to encourage him to stay longer and seek opportunities abroad. This decision proved to be consequential. Tariq became the patriarch of a family that exemplifies to this day the contributions of Muslims to Utah. He became the first Middle Eastern person to work as an engineer for the Utah Department of Transportation,24 leading generations of public servants.In contrast, Sultan Mahmud, who was already married and the father of two children left behind in Pakistan, decided to return home. This decision did not rupture his bond with Utah. In his granddaughter's words, he and his colleagues “that shared similar educational experiences in the US and returned home to nurture and tend to their infant country, were instrumental in literally paving roads and infrastructure in their country, and doing so figuratively in their respective families.”25Despite their divergent trajectories, Sultan Mahmud and Tariq Kergaye were profoundly impressed by their initial experience in Utah. Both recall feeling welcomed by the local population, who appeared to show polite curiosity toward them. While this impression certainly contrasts with the documented xenophobia in American society at that time,26 it was sufficiently felt at their level to ease Tariq's decision to remain in Utah. It also ignited Sultan's fervor for Western higher education, which led his daughter and sons to study and settle in the United States.While both individuals facilitated the journey of others later, their own time as students in the mid-twentieth century remained marked by cultural isolation. As pointed out by Tariq Kergaye, “at that time there wasn't many Muslims, hardly just few students sic.”27 Isolation inspired students from otherwise different cultural backgrounds to unite around their faith and create a Muslim student association at Utah State University in 1960.This step offered a much-needed common space for Muslims. However, because of the nature of student associations, this organization was still geared toward a population expected to be in Utah. 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Since it has offered a space to nurture Muslim and American More broadly, Muslim women in Utah and educational for and in public and This article is an these recent efforts not a response to demographic also the legacy of a dynamic community that to Utah's and a few isolated individuals at the of the twentieth century, Muslims in Utah have built a resilient, and dynamic community. While their arrival in Utah was often by shifting and international their individual and agency their presence in the state, as as the legacy they from a community to a one with across the state brought opportunities and those a few traits be consistently though. Muslims’ to their Islamic traditions is a of the community. However, it has not into a to Muslims have a desire and efforts to engage with Utahn society and contribute to its economic, cultural, and political Muslim women have often been at the of Aisha and sense of belonging when her place in the state was oral this community and at its Muslims to own the way they their to others and The oral history is also a for future for them not to their roots and the journey to build Muslim community. It is a for them to be to building and to what it to be Muslim Utahn through of and article would not have been the contributions of members of the Muslim community in Utah and of AMFU in to Kergaye, and their of from 2019 to 2025, historical records and and oral histories of the community. would to and for their efforts in the and migration to who work to and original would be not to whose community this the diversity of community. While these women were at the of this there are other and community members that this and most to to individuals who shared their stories and AMFU with them.
Perrier et al. (Thu,) studied this question.