The Converts (2011-present) is an ongoing body of work which explores the experiences of Americans who have chosen to become Muslim. I am interested in what draws people to Islam. What motivates converts despite the anti-Muslim undercurrent which runs through our culture? How do converts understand their identities and find a sense of belonging?

I borrow visual language from Western Christian iconography to undermine the misconception that Islam exists outside of, or in opposition to, our culture. I invite viewers to question what the know, or what they think they know, about Islam, while also unearthing deeply held anxieties in American culture rooted in the fear of the other.

Although I am not Muslim, the origins of this project are rooted in personal experience. As a young adult I was compelled to respond to the attacks of 9/11 and the anti-Muslim backlash which followed. Shortly thereafter I moved to Bénin, West Africa to work as a public health volunteer with the Peace Corps. It sounds naïve now, but at the time I just wanted to contribute something good in the face of so much horror. In Bénin I lived in a village of comingled Muslims, Christians and practitioners of the local traditional faith, Vodun. The co-existence of these groups was striking because it extended well past tolerance to a place of friendly warmth, so different than the way these religions were pitted against each other in the American popular imagination.

The works in this series were made with a combination of 4x5 inch film and medium format digital, and were printed as 30×40 inch pigment prints.