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In 'Becoming Baba,' a Muslim inquires into the nature of a faith-informed fatherhood
(RNS) — A second-generation immigrant, Ismail writes about reconciling fatherhood with other aspects of his identity — and hopes his questioning will resonate with other fathers. 
“Becoming Baba: Fatherhood, Faith and Finding meaning in America” cover and author Aymann Ismail. (Photo by Shawn Jordan)

(RNS) — As far as Aymann Ismail remembers, his father embraced fatherhood naturally, embodying a strong and pious figure in his household.

But when Ismail became a father in 2021, it didn’t all come so naturally. He felt unprepared and doubted whether he would be able to emulate his father — his Baba, as he calls him. He wondered: What does being a Muslim father mean? Will he succeed in connecting his kids to their Egyptian heritage? Will he lose them to the American melting pot?

“I come from many generations of Muslims, the fear that I would be the weakest link in America … made my heart sink into my stomach. I was terrified. I was scared,” Ismail told Religion News Service in a recent interview. “This book is all about that fear.”


A journalist who works for the online magazine Slate, Ismail, 35, has spent years covering American Muslims. For Slate, he produced the video series “Who’s Afraid of Aymann Ismail,” a story about anti-Muslim biases, and he co-hosted the “American Muslims: A History Revealed” documentary series. Still, he had never reflected on what being a Muslim American father meant to him.


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