Pretty amazed to open the Washington Post homepage to see an article on Muslim American identity, featuring not one, but two friends in D.C., up-and-coming actress, Zehra Fazal, whose one-woman show, “Headscarf and the Angry Bitch” puts a hilarious and humanizing face on the identity challenges faced by young American Muslims, especially in a post-9/11 world; and Imam Yahya Hendi, Georgetown University’s Muslim chaplain, who has been serving as a resource for students for over a decade.
A great piece by Marc Fisher (The Washington Post)

Pretty amazed to open the Washington Post homepage to see an article on Muslim American identity, featuring not one, but two friends in D.C., up-and-coming actress, Zehra Fazal, whose one-woman show, “Headscarf and the Angry Bitch” puts a hilarious and humanizing face on the identity challenges faced by young American Muslims, especially in a post-9/11 world; and Imam Yahya Hendi, Georgetown University’s Muslim chaplain, who has been serving as a resource for students for over a decade.

A great piece by Marc Fisher (The Washington Post)