One Immigrant Muslim’s Battle with Alcoholism in the US

A Muslim man closes his eyes in prayer during Ramadan at the Islamic Center of Southern California, in Los Angeles. (Photo: Bear Guerra)

A Muslim man closes his eyes in prayer during Ramadan at the Islamic Center of Southern California, in Los Angeles. (Photo: Bear Guerra)

Khalid Iqbal is a man in his early 60s; an immigrant from northern India who has practiced Islam for as long as he can remember. He has also always known that the Koran prohibits drinking alcohol–even as he tried his first beer, about four decades ago.

“Maybe I was 22 or 23 when I was in college,” says Iqbal, recalling how it all started. “After one or two years, I started drinking a couple of beers in the evening, or a couple of shots—not every day, but on and off.”

Iqbal and his family moved to Los Angeles in the ‘80s and he soon realized that alcohol was easy to get. By 1997, he could no longer function without alcohol.

On a recent weeknight, Iqbal and his wife sit down to dinner. They eat on the floor over a plastic mat, following their custom, and drink water and coconut juice. His wife offers him a gentle smile as Iqbal talks candidly about how the pressures to succeed in America led him to depression and alcoholism. The only time he could stop drinking, was during the holy month of Ramadan.

“I would quit for a month or 40 days or 50 days, but as soon as it’d be over again, I’d start,” he says. “One time I quit for almost a year without any help. I had two DUIs … but last DUI, when they held me in a cell, I decided ‘no, this is over.’ I’d hit my bottom.”

He knew he had to do something. He ran a small grocery store – and it was now going bankrupt because of his drinking habit. So his college-age son, Shafi, encouraged him to head to Alcoholics Anonymous.

“You know? I always thought of it as a human problem, so it didn’t shock me,” says Shafi, who knew of his dad’s drinking even though the family did not talk about it.

“I’ve always seen that in our community—in many religious communities—there’s things that are said and done in public, and there’s a different reality in private.”

But going public about drinking in Islam can be tantamount to denouncing one’s faith. The Koran prohibits drinking alcohol, and making or selling it. Breaking those rules can bring shame, says Mona Amer, a psychology professor at the American University of Cairo. She focuses on mental health and substance abuse among Muslims.

“Often times the concern amongst people who are using alcohol is not the religious prohibition per se, but more of the stigma within the community,” she explains

There is little public health research about substance abuse among Muslims. But findings so far point to a trend: most Muslims who do abuse alcohol, start around college-age, like Iqbal. In her workshops in the US, Amer has found parents in denial about their kids’ drinking and worried their mosques will also judge them.

Those worries are what led Yassir Fazaga to become a family therapist. An immigrant from Eritrea, Fazaga is also an imam at the Orange County Islamic Foundation, where he would hear from families worried about their alcoholic relatives.

“That is when I felt I was very deficient, and I think that I also felt a bit dishonest, because it takes a lot within the community for people to come out and say: ‘I have this problem’” says Fazaga. “Imams are very trusted in the community, so what do you do at that point?”

Back then, he felt he couldn’t do much besides listen and encourage abstinence, like most religious leaders would. Now, Fazaga suggests more, like rehab and therapy programs. And he makes sure that alcoholics know that their faith will help in their recovery.

Khalid Iqbal has been sober for five years now. After some initial struggle Alcoholics Anonymous eventually worked for him. AA has roots in Christianity and the Bible, but Iqbal doesn’t mind that, at all.

“AA doesn’t talk about religion—it started that way, but they say, you have to have some kind of faith,” he explains. “That “supreme power” can come from anywhere. I’m a religious person from the beginning, so I have faith in God, so for me it was not hard to go back and practice on that.”

Iqbal’s history of alcoholism has made him eager to help fellow Muslims in need. But it’s not easy to get people to talk and seek therapy. For now, there’s a newer 12-step program called “Millati Islami.” It started in Baltimore in 1989 and is like AA, but rooted in the teachings of the Koran. But many mosques in the US are still somewhat resistant to it.


Discussion

3 comments for “One Immigrant Muslim’s Battle with Alcoholism in the US”

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/DYCV5FAM26IL4TDDI2ASMT6OC4 Abdul-Jabbar

    As Salaamu Alaikum, my name is Abdul-Jabbar Salaam Jami, and I have been given the role as California Chairperson for Milatti Islami in the Western states. My Grand Wali, (Khalil Abdul-Karim Sr.), had been heading the position for roughly twenty years. My beloved mentor returned to ALLAH last year, and I was given the responsibility of keeping Milatti Islami alive here in the western states. This has not been an easy task, as I have been unable to reach alot of people due to my lack of funds. My mentor was able to travel at will, and during that time he had expanded Milatti Islami all over California, and had entered Milatti Islami into the Califiornia Department of Corrections. Having Milatti Islami in the penal system helped men, and women to find there way from addiction while doing there time. It made it easier for the inmate to adjust to a better way of life. The benefits have been tremendous. The most critical thing in Islam for the Muslim is exposure. Our Din has our Islamic adab as such that will not allow our community to accept the muslim that suffers from the fallen human condition called addiction. Those brother’s,and sister’s that do have this problem usually hide it in the mist of our community, yet by way of deterioration find themselves mentally naked in the wake of their addiction. There have been some that have stopped using on their own, merely by abstaining from associating with those,people, places, and things that invade our Islamic balance. There are also those that are not as strong in their faith to take those measures, and hopelessly find themselves being eaten alive by the addiction, and ultimately themselves. I presently run a Milatti Islami meeting every saturday morning at: The Bilal Islamic Center: 4016 So. Central Ave. Los Angeles , Calif., 90011, from 9:00am to 11:00am. Everyone is welcome, and participation is open for all that attend. I can be reached at (213) 448-3069 for anyone that need additional information about the program. 

    Sincerely, 
    Abdul-Jabbar S. Jami As Salaamu Alaikum

  • http://www.facebook.com/noor.doumbia Doumbia Jewette

    ASA, All praise is to Allah(SWA).  The issue of not exposing your sins as per hadith, is a valid question that has caused much of the resistance from imams and addicts alike.  I hope that some intrinsic changes can develop in the Millati Islami program, Inshallah. 
    Please let it be known that this program is not just for drug and alcohol addiction but for any compulsive behavior that causes you to place other illah(gods) before Allah(SWA).
    For more info contact, the Millati Islami website, for Philadelphia vicinity meeting contact Quba Institute meeting Wednesdays at 7pm. 
    Peace, Noor Doumbia

  • http://www.chrisdeline.com/ Chris DeLine

    I guess I just assumed that this wasn’t much of an issue in the Muslim community because of the religious connotation – very eye opening. Going to check out Millati Islami now to read a bit more about their process. Thanks.