Malika Bilal

Country

United States

Known for

Host, Producer at Al Jazeera English

Dates

1900-Present

Malika Bilal

Biography

Malika Bilal sometimes finds herself in the role of Muslim explainer – even to fellow Muslims who incorrectly assume that she’s a member of the Nation of Islam. “People don’t always understand the African American experience,” Bilal says. “First thing they’ll think is ‘Okay, she’s Muslim, but she’s probably Sudanese, she’s probably Somali, she’s from East Africa.’ “When I have to explain, ‘No, actually my parents were born here, my grandparents were born here, my great-grandparents were born here,’ they don’t get it. You get a lot of ‘No, no, but where are their parents from. Where are you really from? “To be honest, the amount of hate I’ve gotten is like a drop in the bucket to the amount of love and the amount of support I’ve gotten from people,” she says. “I remember when I was first starting out…there was a young girl on Twitter and she said ‘I just wish I could open my eyes and see you in front of me and talk to you, you’re such an inspiration.’ At the time, it made me embarrassed…Sometimes it doesn’t dawn on me until I hear those messages and I think, ‘Yes, this is a responsibility.’” Bilal shares her story with McClatchy White House Correspondent Franco Ordonez and Congressional Correspondent William Douglas. She describes growing up in Chicago and attending Muslim schools. She half-jokingly says that one of the toughest jobs in this country is being an African American hijabi woman. “You don’t really think about all the things you are until you’re forced to think about all those things,” she says. “We all remember very vividly the election campaign that led to last year’s election. “That was a time when all three of those things were at the forefront,” she said, referring to being a black Muslim woman. “So I was kind of forced to think about them more on a day-to-day basis than I had been at any other time.” Bilal gravitated to journalism school at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., where she initially envisioned a career as a print journalist “because I saw what the broadcast kids looked like and they don’t look like me.”

Sources

https://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/nation-world/national/article189614914.html https://about.me/malika.bilal