Mamdani
Is First New York Mayor to Use the Quran at His Swearing-In
Zohran
Mamdani, New York City’s first Muslim mayor, put his hand on Islam’s holiest
book at his swearing-in ceremony.
Maya King
By Maya
King
Published
Dec. 31, 2025
Updated
Jan. 1, 2026, 3:24 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/31/nyregion/mamdani-quran-inauguration-muslim.html
Mayor
Zohran Mamdani represents a range of demographics that New York City has not
seen before in top leadership: South Asian, millennial, Muslim.
For the
hundreds of thousands of Muslim residents who have taken pride in seeing one of
their own rise to the mayoralty, his inauguration brought another significant
first.
During
his swearing-in ceremony shortly after midnight on Thursday, he put his hand on
the Quran, Islam’s holiest book, making him the first mayor in New York City to
do so.
One of
the Qurans was from Mr. Mamdani’s grandfather. The other once belonged to
Arturo Schomburg, the Black writer and historian. It was lent to the mayor by
the New York Public Library.
For a
separate public ceremony at City Hall on Thursday afternoon, Mr. Mamdani will
use his grandfather’s Quran and one owned by his grandmother.
Showcasing
the Quran that belonged to Mr. Schomburg, an Afro-Latino writer whose work
shaped the Harlem Renaissance, underlines the city’s blend of faiths and racial
and ethnic backgrounds.
“It’s a
highly symbolic choice because we’re about to have a Muslim mayor swearing in
using the Quran, but also a mayor who was born on the African continent, in
Uganda,” Hiba Abid, the library’s curator for Middle Eastern and Islamic
Studies, said ahead of Mr. Mamdani’s swearing-in ceremony.
Ms. Abid
helped Zara Rahim, a senior adviser to Mr. Mamdani, and Rama Duwaji, Mr.
Mamdani’s wife, select the Quran for the inauguration. “It really brings
together here elements of faith, identity and New York history,” she said.
Mr.
Schomburg’s Quran will be on public display for the first time as part of a
special exhibit at the New York Public Library that coincides with a yearlong
celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Schomburg Center. The exhibit will
begin on Tuesday.
Mr.
Schomburg, who was born in Puerto Rico, was not a Muslim but kept the Quran as
part of his archive of books and artifacts. He sold his collection, which
contained more than 4,000 pieces, to the New York Public Library in 1926,
building the foundation of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.
He died in 1938.
His
inclusion of the Quran in his collection was meant to show the full expanse of
Black artistic, cultural and religious life. He also wanted to rebut a claim
from a childhood teacher, who once remarked to him that Black people lacked
significant figures or history. His Quran was acquired from Ottoman Syria and
was written and designed for everyday use, as evidenced by the style of its
script and binding.
Ms. Abid
said she hoped that putting Mr. Schomburg’s Quran on display would allow New
Yorkers to learn more about the holy book and Muslim life in the city. She and
Mr. Mamdani’s advisers also plan to use the display to encourage more people to
take advantage of the archival resources that are available at the library.
Though it
is traditional for most elected officials to take the oath of office with their
hand on a religious text, they are not required by law to use one — or any
book, for that matter.
Most past
mayors have placed their hand on a Bible. But Mr. Mamdani’s faith was a
defining feature of his campaign.
In a
statement, Ms. Rahim said that Mr. Mamdani’s use of the Quran would correct “a
long-deferred absence” of Muslims in the city’s public life.
“This
moment will mark a turning point in the civic history of New York City, and it
belongs to every New Yorker whose lives shaped this city quietly, without ever
being reflected back to them,” she said.
Mayors
have opted for a mix of personal heirlooms and artifacts while being sworn in.
In 2021, Eric Adams took his oath of office with one hand on his mother’s Bible
and in the other a framed photo of her image floating in a brandy snifter. His
predecessor, Bill de Blasio, put his hand on a Bible that once belonged to
President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Mr.
Mamdani will join a small group of prominent elected officials in the United
States to use a Quran for their swearing in. Keith Ellison, Minnesota’s
attorney general, became one of the first American elected officials to put his
hand on the book when he was sworn into Congress in 2007. Representative Ilhan
Omar of Minnesota, who succeeded Mr. Ellison, also put her hand on a Quran for
her swearing-in.
In New
York, Shahana Hanif was sworn in to the City Council in 2022 with her hand on a
family Quran that her sister used during her wedding. Ms. Hanif said Mr.
Mamdani’s plan to use the Quran highlighted the inroads that Muslims have made
in city politics.
“Let’s be
honest, Muslims have not been in electoral life for decades like other ethnic
groups and communities,” she said. “I think the Quran represents this example
of extending solidarity to the Muslim community in New York City and, really,
abroad.”
Maya King
is a Times reporter covering New York politics.


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