HAJER BEN HADJ SALEM
A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY: RELIGIOUS PLURALISM AND AMERICAN
MUSLIMS STRATEGIES OF INTEGRATION IN THE US AFTER 9/11, 2001
Hajer ben Hadj Salem
The High Institute of Humanities of Tunis, Tunisia.
Email: ben_hajer@yahoo.fr
Abstract: In the course of the founding history of America, the American Sacred Ground
has been a contested territory where people who do not share a single history or a single
religious tradition have engaged in the common tasks of civil society to broaden the
contours of religious pluralism in the US. This paper studies the post 9/11 phase of the
public debate on America’s religious identity as the Muslim moment in the long-standing
pilgrimage in American religious history towards participatory pluralism. It underscores
the challenges that both Americans and American Muslims have had to face to help one
another make sense of the startling religious diversity incurred by the 1965 immigration
reforms. My contention is that, compared to the Jewish and Catholic experiences, it is only
since 9/11 that American Muslims have carried through the traditional role of religious
outsiders, abiding by the principles of the American Sacred Ground.
Key Words: Religious Pluralism, American Muslim, religious identity, the American Sacred
Ground, responses to diversity, Jewish and Catholic contributions
Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies, vol. 9, no. 27 (Winter 2010): 246-260
ISSN: 1583-0039 © SACRI