
Ibtihaj Muhammad is the first practicing Muslim to represent the U.S. in women's fencing. She's ranked second in the U.S. and 11th in the world. Ibtihaj stands out because she wears her hijab headscarf that is worn by Muslim women.
Carter: Maplewood woman could be first American Muslim to wear hijab while competing at OlympicsBy
Ibtihaj Muhammad jogs lightly across the second floor gym at the Manhattan Fencing Center in New York. She’s warming up, eager to get some work in.
Ready! Fence!
Fencers are already on the strip, a narrow fighting lane, and they’re going at it, the air filled with little razor-like hisses and whispers. Many are Olympic hopefuls, like her, preparing for the World Championships Saturday in Italy. The competition is another chance for Muhammad to earn qualifying points in her quest to make the 2012 London Olympics in July.
“I don’t think I ever wanted anything so much,” said Muhammad, 25, of Maplewood. “I just want to make sure I’m doing everything I can to make this Olympics.”
When it’s her turn to spar, she slips the fencing mask over her hijab, the headscarf Muslim women wear. In a room full of fencers, it’s the one thing that makes her stand out. If she makes the Olympics, she’ll stand out even more. Fencing officials believe Muhammad is likely to be the first American Muslim woman wearing a hijab to compete at the games. The United States Olympic Committee doesn’t track athletes by religion, but the demographic is something Muhammad thinks about, knowing what an accomplishment it would be since few Muslim women compete in sports.
“I didn’t have female Muslim role models to look up to in the athletic world,” she said. “It’s really important for people to know my story. I think it’s something I have to do, because I want Muslim female youth to believe they can do something like this.”
Muhammad is ranked number two in the United States and 13th in the world in women’s sabre, a fencing style in which strikes are made above the waist with any part of the weapon. Locally, she represents the Peter Westbrook Foundation in New York City, training at the Fencers Club on West 28th Street, where she is coached by Akhnaten Spencer-El, a 2000 Olympic fencer. Under him, she’s a tactical, cerebral fighter who caught the fencing world off guard in 2009.
She won the U.S. national title that year, cracking the top 16 world rankings. Last year, she won a bronze medal at the Pan American Championships and a coveted spot on the U.S. women’s national team.
“She’s still young in the game and she’s only going to get better,” Spencer-El said.
Back to the strip. She goes against a member of the U.S. men’s national team, then her teammate, Dagmara Wozniak of Avenel. You can hear the constant ping of saber blades colliding. Everyone has cat-like footwork that is lickety-split quick, calculating and aggressive. They duel back and forth trying to outsmart each other, snapping their weapons at the wrist to score. The long electrical wires attached to the edge of their fencing jackets register hits. All of them look like puppets dancing on a string, lunging toward each other and their their shot at gold.
Getting to Italy isn’t easy. Each country is allowed two spots for women’s sabre and Muhammad and her teammates are the top four fencers in the U.S. The best of them is two-time Olympian Mariel Zagunis of Oregon, and she’s number one in the world.
Muhammad is unfazed. She trains daily, except for Sunday, running in the morning before conditioning at a women’s gym. In the evening, she’s in New York City fencing for four hours.
“I just keep going,” she said. “I don’t want to get to a competition and lose a bout, because I didn’t work out that extra hour.”
You can see she’s super-competitive, hating to lose, constantly critiquing herself. She’s all business for this once in lifetime shot, but Muhammad does pause for what’s important.
The third of five siblings in an athletic family, Muhammad finds strength in her faith. In August, she stayed focused through Ramadan, the annual Islamic month of fasting during the day. But Muhammad wants no sympathy, saying her sacrifices are not unlike anybody else’s. She kept hyrdrated, waking up every 90 minutes at night to eat and drink. If she makes the team, Muhammad will be used to the regimen since Ramadan next year falls during the Olympic competition.
It doesn’t matter at this point. Muhammad has come a long way in a career that started when she was a high school freshman. She stumbled on the sport driving past Columbia High School with her mother, who could see the team practicing through the large cafeteria windows. Inayah Muhammad didn’t know what they were doing but thought her daughter should try it because the uniform would cover her body and that was suitable to Islam’s tenet of modesty for women.
“I had know idea it (fencing) would take us this far,’’ said her mom, a Newark schoolteacher. “She’s so in love with the sport. I don’t think she really understands how good she is.’’
Muhummad was an epee fencer with Columbia until her former coach, Frank Mustilli, saw she was a better fit for sabre’s combative vein. At practice one day, Mustilli said his mild mannered athlete got upset after she got hit hard and lashed out.
“She showed me a little bit of fire. She screamed and attacked,’’ said Mustilli, head of the New Jersey Fencing Alliance.
At Columbia, Muhammad also played softball and volleyball but was captain of two state championship fencing teams before going to Duke University. She became a three-time NCAA All-American, earning dual degrees in International Relations and African-American studies with a minor in Arabic.
After graduation in 2007, her father, Shamsiddin Muhammad, said his daughter’s passion for fencing did not wane. The family supports her financially and she chipped in what she could last year as a substitute teacher at Shabazz High School in Newark and fencing coach at Columbia.
“I know this is her dream and inspiration,’’ said her dad, a retired Newark cop. “We believe that what is written is going to happen.’’
That belief helps her deal with distractions on this journey. At times she’s wondered if her race or religion played a role in a judge scoring unfairly. When traveling, she has been treated as a foreigner who can’t speak English, and worse, she feels the stares that say terrorist.
In Belgium this year, security officials told her to leave the airport unless she removed her hijab. Muhammad would not. Her mother interceded and there was a compromise to have her head patted down. Muhammad said it’s frustrating making others comfortable, but she’s not going to let “closeted views” derail her purpose.
“If God wants me to succeed, no one can take it from me,’’ she said. “That’s the way I approach it and I think that’s what keeps me sane and grounded in this sport.’’









October 10th, 2011 at 10:28 am
I can hear Geller’s version on this: “HAJABI JIHADI PRACTICING BEHEADING OPPONENTS ON US OLPYMPIC TEAM!!!!”
October 10th, 2011 at 10:32 am
Good luck-USA, USA
October 10th, 2011 at 12:01 pm
I would pay real money to see her fence Mrs MacBeth aka pammy .
October 10th, 2011 at 12:32 pm
Mindy1
You are one of my favourite posters. You allways make me smile sister!
/Avraham
October 10th, 2011 at 12:35 pm
Mindy1
You are one of my favourite posters. You allways make me smile sister!
On topic: This Ibtihaj persona is rather interesting: though the sport in itself is not as interesting. Thumbs up for all the muslim/jewish/christian/hindu/atheist etc players out there trying to be unbiased.
/Avraham
October 10th, 2011 at 1:26 pm
Homeland Security Bill Targets Homegrown Islamist Extremism
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/10/homeland-security-bill-homegrown-islamist-extremism_n_1003352.html
WASHINGTON — A House bill set for markup on Wednesday would give protection against civil lawsuits to those who report suspicious activity, designate a federal czar to counter homegrown violent Islamist extremism, and require Border Patrol agents to be capable of stopping every single person who tries to cross into the country illegally.
But perhaps the most noteworthy aspect of the fiscal 2012 legislation is that it marks the first time since the Department of Homeland Security was created eight years ago that both House and Senate committees have passed authorization bills for the behemoth federal agency.
Countering homegrown radicalization. Like the Senate version, the House bill calls for Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano to designate a specific official to coordinate efforts to prevent “homegrown violent Islamist extremism, including the violent ideology of Al Qaeda and its affiliated groups, in the United States.”
“See something, say something” protection. Any person who in “good faith” reports suspected terrorist activities or suspicious behavior that is later proved unwarranted would be protected against civil lawsuits under the House bill. Similar legislation has been introduced separately in the Senate.
The lawsuit protection measure, stalled since it was first introduced in 2007, was crafted in response to the “flying imams” case in 2006, when six Muslim clerics were forcibly removed from a US Airways flight after they were reported to be engaging in “suspicious” behavior — praying in the terminal. The imams later threatened to sue several passengers for targeting them because of their religion but ultimately dropped them from the suit. Just last week, a U.S. citizen of Pakistani descent sued Southwest Airlines for discrimination after she was booted off a flight when a flight attendant claimed she heard the woman say something suspicious on her cell phone.
The bill would not provide immunity from civil lawsuits to those who knowingly make false accusations. Still, even advocates of heightened civic engagement acknowledge possible pitfalls.
Operational control of the border. The House bill would require DHS to devise “a comprehensive strategy for gaining operational control of the borders and ports of entry within five years.” That means not only being aware of every person crossing the border illegally, but being in a position to physically stop that person. The Senate version calls for only “situational control,” in which border officials using surveillance technology can monitor crossings but not necessarily be in a position to stop all illegal crossings.
October 10th, 2011 at 11:22 pm
^ Daniel
LOL!!!!
“If God wants me to succeed, no one can take it from me,’’ she said. “That’s the way I approach it and I think that’s what keeps me sane and grounded in this sport.’’
She sound like Muhammad Ali. Where they put confidence to God 1st. I like people like them. GO ON SISTER!!!!
October 11th, 2011 at 1:43 am
She looks soo cute with her hijab. I know hijab haters wont admit this, but the hijab enhance the aura of grace for women who wear it. It makes them radiant and shiny.
October 11th, 2011 at 5:41 pm
I’m not American, but YAY!!!!!!!!!!!!
And betel, I totally agree!
February 18th, 2012 at 6:04 pm
Saw a report on this young lady on CBS news. She is being (1) true to her religion (2) a role model for her students (3) a role model for athletes. Your can scramble those any way you like – she is a role model and a credit, to herself, her faith and to her country. I hope she is secures a spot and is able to put her hand over her heart, as she lifts her scarfed head high, in pride of her achievement.