Scholarly activist research

The
Feeling

Muslim Project

The first study to directly ask American female converts to Islam what it means to feel Muslim — not just become Muslim. 257 women. Their voices, unaltered.

257Respondents
73%Distinguish becoming
from feeling Muslim
40Survey questions

Scholarly activist research · University of Georgia · 2015 · Centering the voices of 257 American female converts to Islam

The Project

What does it mean
to feel Muslim?

The Feeling Muslim Project grows from a single, powerful question first posed by Karla N. Kovacik (then Evans) in her 2015 University of Georgia thesis: for American female converts to Islam, is there a difference between becoming Muslim — the formal act of taking the shahada — and feeling Muslim, the interior, lived experience of Muslim identity?

By a wide margin, the majority of the 257 respondents — 73.15% — affirmed yes, there is a difference. Many gave rich, detailed descriptions of the subtle nuances between being, becoming, and feeling Muslim. One major theme that emerged across responses is that feeling Muslim is a gradual process, a transition — marked by the ebb and flow of positive and negative experiences.

This study provides American female converts to Islam a platform on which to tell their own stories of conversion and experiences of Islam through a uniquely American lens — and to build communities that actively nurture their feelings of Muslimness.

— Karla N. Kovacik, M.A.

Key Findings

The data, in their words

257 respondents · IRB-approved · University of Georgia · 2014

73%
Distinguish becoming Muslim from feeling Muslim
The central finding
41%
Say feeling Muslim develops gradually over time
Largest single response
80%
Report outside influences affect feelings of Muslimness
Community matters profoundly
72%
Satisfied with their current feelings of Muslimness
With room to grow
87%Want to feel integral to their Muslim community
but

Only half currently feel that way — a gap that calls Muslim communities to action.

48%Do not currently feel integral to their community

Participant Voices

257 women.
Unfiltered.

"

I feel Muslim because I have a community where we all actively try our best to help each other out — having people with so many things in common, not feeling alone.

SumayyahQ20 / 40
"

They are not the same. One is an external formulation — the shahada — and the other an internal state. The two may coincide, or one may precede the other.

KerryQ18 / 40
"

Feeling Muslim is an evolving process — a steadiness in the heart, a God-consciousness threading through daily life even when nothing outward marks me as Muslim.

AmiraQ20 / 40

Explore the Project

Where would you
like to go?

"A new moon teaches gradualness and deliberation, and how one gives birth to oneself slowly."

— Rumi