New Comedic Documentary Explores Muslims in the U.S. | Sojourners

New Comedic Documentary Explores Muslims in the U.S.

“The Muslims are Coming” tells the story of a group of comedians who take their
“The Muslims are Coming” tells the story of a group of comedians who take their show to the Bible Belt. Photo via show website.

Muslim stand-up comedy is nothing new. But what makes “The Muslims Are Coming” different is that it portrays what happens when a troupe of comedians performs before red state Americans in such places as Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Arizona, Utah, and Idaho.

The documentary by Negin Farsad, an Iranian-American, and Dean Obeidallah, of Palestinian-Italian roots, opened in Chicago yesterday.

It follows the comedians as they promote their first gig at a Columbus, Ga., gun show. They organize a “Come Bowl With a Muslim Night,” in Lawrenceville, Ga. The comedians stump an ordained minister at a “Name That Religion” table in downtown Birmingham. They haggle over scriptural literalism with an official from the American Family Association in Tupelo, Miss.

“We wanted to create an environment where people felt comfortable,” said Dean Obeidallah, Farsad’s comedian colleague. “We didn’t want people to think they were walking into an argument.”

The results are mostly funny, sometimes poignant and often telling.

Fed up with what they perceived to be a growing Islamophobia in America, Farsad and Obeidallah started the project in 2011.

“It was alarming to me that being a Muslim became an accusation,” Farsad said.

Jon Stewart, Janeane Garofalo and Lewis Black, as well as public figures such as MSNBC anchorwoman Rachel Maddow and Rep. Keith Ellison, the first Muslim elected to Congress, appear in the documentary.

“The Muslims Are Coming” is also useful as a catalog of Islamophobic remarks by public figures, including Glenn Beck, Herman Cain, Ann Coulter, Bill O’Reilly, Pat Robertson, Donald Trump and others.

What the filmmakers find, however, is that while media and political personalities often demonize Muslims, most Americans are tolerant, at least once they meet a Muslim. In the film’s final scene, Farsad and Obeidallah  hold up a “Hug a Muslim” sign in Temple Square in Salt Lake City.

After one heckler shouts at the American-born comics to “go back” to their own country, several other people approach them with open arms, and soon a line of people ready to hug them is formed.

“They hugged us, like they held us, like a child,” said Obeidallah in the film. “It was great, you felt it right through you.”

The film will also screen in Los Angeles; Seattle; New York; Piscataway, N.J.; Boston; Denver; and Santa Ana, Calif. On Sept. 24 it will be available on iTunes and cable on demand.

Omar Sacirbey writes for Religion News Service. Via RNS.