
It was a cool and unusually rainy Saturday in Washington, not the best day for an outdoor event, but that didn’t stop more than a dozen members of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Association from hosting a 5K run/walk to raise money for a local food bank and an international charity.
Some of the money the runners raised is going to the Capital Area Food Bank, which serves Washington and surrounding communities in Virginia and Maryland. The funds are for anyone who needs them, not just for Muslim communities.
“We want to give to our neighbors first,” said Haris Raja, national director for the event, known as Walk for Humanity USA. “We want to serve our local communities first and make an impact in America.”
Raja, a systems engineer with a degree from the University of Maryland, near Washington, said his group’s charity work is meant to show that young Muslims can be, and want to be, productive members of the community.
“We’re doing this in America to tell our fellow Americans that our religion is about helping humanity, our religion is about serving people,” he said. “The people who know us, and the people who know good Muslims, they will tell you that a blanket statement of saying Islam is bad or all Muslims are bad is not true.”
In addition to the food bank, another charity receiving proceeds from the event is Humanity First USA, which works on disaster relief and human development projects.
This Muslim youth group is one of many in the U.S. engaged in charity and service work throughout the year. Young Muslims in Houston recently stepped up to help the needy, particularly those affected by recent floods there.
Other examples include U.S. Muslim youth groups in:
- Dallas, organizing monthly service projects.
- New York, helping build homes for low-income communities.
- Michigan, volunteering for a local homeless serving community center.
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Association has 70 chapters and more than 4,000 members across the United States. It sponsors Walk for Humanity USA events in a number of large U.S. cities, including Philadelphia, New York, Houston and Los Angeles. The event has raised more than $250,000 since it began in 2012.