Post-9/11, Growing U.S. Muslim Communities Describe Mix of Fears and Acceptance

Some recount lingering prejudice two decades after terrorist attacks but also improved relations as Islam gains broader presence
By Cameron McWhirter

(WSJ) WATERLOO, Iowa—In the years since 9/11, Saif Bhuiyan said he was questioned rudely by security personnel and officials at airports and elsewhere. On the first anniversary of the terrorist attacks, someone hurled a water bottle at him.

At the time, Dr. Bhuiyan was in the U.S. as a university student from Bangladesh. Twenty years later, the 42-year-old information-systems professor at the University of Northern Iowa says he still sees perils to being Muslim in America and often treads carefully after a violent event involving Muslims hits the news.

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