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Digging for the
Red Roots
by Mahir Abdal-Razzaaq El
----------------- My name is Mahir Abdal-Razzaaq
El and I am a Cherokee Blackfoot American Indian who is Muslim. I am known
as Eagle Sun Walker. I serve as a Pipe Carrier Warrior for the Northeastern
Band of Cherokee Indians in New York City.
There are other Muslims in our group. For the most part, not many people are
aware of the Native American contact with Islam that began over one thousand
years ago by some of the early Muslim travelers who visited us. Some of
these Muslim travelers ended up living among our people.
For most Muslims and non-Muslims of today, this type of information is
unknown and has never been mentioned in any of the history books. There are
many documents, treaties, legislation and resolutions that were passed
between 1600s and 1800s that show that Muslims were in fact here and were
very active in the comunities in which they lived. Treaties such as Peace
and Friendship that was signed on the Delaware River in the year 1787 bear
the signatures of Abdel-Khak and Muhammad Ibn Abdullah. This treaty details
our continued right to exist as a community in the areas of commerce,
maritime shipping, current form of government at that time which was in
accordance with Islam. According to a federal court case from the
Continental Congress, we help put the breath of life in to the newly framed
constitution. All of the documents are presently in the National Archives as
well as the Library of Congress.
If you have access to records in the state of South Carolina, read the Moors
Sundry Act of 1790. In a future article, Inshallah, I will go in to more
details about the various tribes, their languages; in which some are
influenced by Arabic, Persian, Hebrew words. Almost all of the tribes
vocabulary include the word Allah. The traditional dress code for Indian
women includes the kimah and long dresses. For men, standard fare is turbans
and long tops that come down to the knees. If you were to look at any of the
old books on Cherokee clothing up until the time of 1832, you will see the
men wearing turbans and the women wearing long head coverings. The last
Cherokee chief who had a Muslim name was Ramadhan Ibn Wati of the Cherokees
in 1866.
Cities across the United States and Canada bear names that are of Indian and
Islamic derivation. Have you ever wondered what the name Tallahassee means?
It means that He Allah will deliver you sometime in the future.
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Article Taken from:
MESSAGE, July 1996
(Copyrights Message Magazine as long as proper acknowledgement has been
stated, it can be reproduced) |
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