TY - JOUR
T1 - How Do Muslims Cope With the Difficulties They Experience in the United States?
T2 - An Examination of Psychological and Spiritual Coping Strategies
AU - Hodge, David R.
AU - Zidan, Tarek
AU - Husain, Altaf
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Society for Social Work and Research. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025/3/1
Y1 - 2025/3/1
N2 - Objective: American Muslims encounter many challenges, but little research exists on how they cope with difficulties such as religious discrimination. Consequently, this study examined the psychological and spiritual coping strategies American Muslims use to deal with the difficulties they experience living in the United States. Method: We used a mixed-method, convergent parallel design to identify and understand the coping strategies used by American Muslims. To obtain a community sample of Muslims ((Formula presented.)), we used a purposive snowball sampling method. Results: Qualitative analysis identified multiple strategies, including looking to God and community, engaging in advocacy, overlooking offenses, focusing on the positive, perspective taking, and contemplating Islamic tenets regarding life as a test, the obstacles early Muslims faced, God’s sovereignty and protection, and the afterlife. Approximately 90% of the sample reported that their spiritual beliefs helped them cope, with approximately half the sample indicating that their spirituality was the most important coping strategy. The importance attributed to spiritual coping was associated with greater participation in Islamic practices but was unrelated to depression symptoms. Conclusions: Our findings provide practitioners with culturally relevant information to identify and leverage potential strategies to help clients cope with and ameliorate challenges.
AB - Objective: American Muslims encounter many challenges, but little research exists on how they cope with difficulties such as religious discrimination. Consequently, this study examined the psychological and spiritual coping strategies American Muslims use to deal with the difficulties they experience living in the United States. Method: We used a mixed-method, convergent parallel design to identify and understand the coping strategies used by American Muslims. To obtain a community sample of Muslims ((Formula presented.)), we used a purposive snowball sampling method. Results: Qualitative analysis identified multiple strategies, including looking to God and community, engaging in advocacy, overlooking offenses, focusing on the positive, perspective taking, and contemplating Islamic tenets regarding life as a test, the obstacles early Muslims faced, God’s sovereignty and protection, and the afterlife. Approximately 90% of the sample reported that their spiritual beliefs helped them cope, with approximately half the sample indicating that their spirituality was the most important coping strategy. The importance attributed to spiritual coping was associated with greater participation in Islamic practices but was unrelated to depression symptoms. Conclusions: Our findings provide practitioners with culturally relevant information to identify and leverage potential strategies to help clients cope with and ameliorate challenges.
KW - coping
KW - discrimination
KW - Islam
KW - Muslims
KW - spirituality
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105014129168
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105014129168#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1086/725431
DO - 10.1086/725431
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105014129168
SN - 2334-2315
VL - 16
SP - 167
EP - 189
JO - Journal of the Society for Social Work and Research
JF - Journal of the Society for Social Work and Research
IS - 1
ER -