New York
Muslims Exult in Mamdani’s Victory: ‘Now This Is Our Time’
Zohran
Mamdani’s victory as the city’s next mayor is a milestone for hundreds of
thousands of residents who see one of their own atop the city’s political
infrastructure.
Sadiba
Hasan Maya King
By Sadiba
Hasan and Maya King
Nov. 5,
2025
Updated
1:13 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/05/us/muslim-new-yorkers-mamdani.html
On
Tuesday night, not a seat was empty at Moka & Co., a coffee shop nestled
among the halal takeout restaurants and Yemeni cafes that line the streets of
Astoria, Queens.
Hundreds
of people had crowded into the shop an hour before polls closed for an Election
Night watch party hosted by the Muslim Democratic Club of New York and several
other Muslim and South Asian groups.
As the
first results in the New York City mayor’s race began to appear on three large
televisions, those in the crowd chatted excitedly in English, Bangla and
Arabic. What once seemed impossible now appeared almost certain: New York’s
hundreds of thousands of Muslim residents would live in a city led by its
first-ever Muslim mayor.
When the
race was officially called for Zohran Mamdani just after 9:30 p.m., chants of
“Mamdani!” rang out. Cellphone flashlights lit up the cafe as the excited
throng sought to record history. The atmosphere was electric.
“Alhamdulillah,”
one young man said to a friend, using the Arabic phrase giving thanks to God.
“It’s
surreal,” said Fatima Khan, 32, adding that she was in awe to be in the
presence of so many Muslim leaders at a single cafe. “He won!” she shouted,
barely able to contain her enthusiasm.
When Mr.
Mamdani is sworn in as mayor on Jan. 1, he will become the most prominent
Muslim elected official in the United States. His victory is also an inflection
point for New York’s Muslims, who have often felt excluded from many aspects of
the city’s public life.
With Mr.
Mamdani’s election, as with his campaign, his fellow Muslims have not only
become a vital part of the city’s political infrastructure — they can see one
of their own at the top of it.
“I voted
early, and I cried,” said Sumaiya Chowdhury, a 41-year-old pharmacist who lives
in Bayside, Queens. Before the election, she said, she would not have imagined
that a Muslim could be elected mayor of New York.
As of
late Tuesday, Mr. Mamdani had racked up about a million votes, roughly half of
the more than two million tallied — the highest total for a New York City
mayor’s race in more than five decades.
The high
cost of living in New York City — or, in Mr. Mamdani’s one-word formulation,
affordability — was his indelible campaign message. It attracted hordes of
working-class voters, many of whom were casting ballots for the first time.
Working-class Muslims were among those drawn by the message.
“It feels
good that he is Muslim, but it’s not important,” said Tarek Mnawer, 46, who
voted for Mr. Mamdani in the Bronx on Tuesday. “It’s about what it can do for
the community, the people.” He added: “New York is an expensive place, but if
you make it affordable, then that is good for everybody.”
Known for
its social-media savvy, Mr. Mamdani’s campaign also engaged in old-fashioned
retail politics, sending thousands of volunteers to knock on doors in heavily
Muslim areas of Queens like Ozone Park and Jamaica; Brooklyn’s Kensington
neighborhood; and the Parkchester section of the Bronx. The campaign reached
voters in Arabic, Bangla and Urdu. Many Muslim and South Asian voters became
his earliest and most ardent supporters.
In
weaving his faith into his campaign, he prayed with fellow Muslims in visits to
more than 50 mosques. He also generated one of the campaign’s first viral
moments and touched off a pseudo-controversy on social media by posting a photo
that showed him eating a burrito on the Q train to break his Ramadan fast.
Many
voters noted how deftly Mr. Mamdani addressed the episode. Muslim New Yorkers
also saw a candidate who was comfortable talking about breaking the Ramadan
fast. It was a nod to the everyday faith and culture of the city’s Muslims, who
had rarely felt so seen.
“Muslims
are literally everywhere in the city,” Rana Abdelhamid, the founder of a Queens
nonprofit, said. “Educators, business owners from bodegas. Walk down the
street, you’re going to get halal food. We’ve been the backbone of so many
parts of the city for so long, and now this is our time.”
Since the
Sept. 11 attacks, Muslim New Yorkers have often had to contend with blatant
Islamophobia. Mr. Mamdani’s rise reignited that sentiment. In the closing weeks
of the campaign, attacks on his faith pushed him to veer from his core economic
message.
Standing
in front of the Islamic Cultural Center of the Bronx in late October, he
delivered a 10-minute address describing his faith, his identity and the
tendency among Muslims, including himself, to live “in the shadows” of the
city. He vowed not to hide his faith.
“We talk
about New York being this melting pot, being this place that everyone can feel
like they belong in,” said Asad Dandia, a public historian and tour guide who
sued the Police Department successfully in 2013 after it spied on his mosque
and community. “And sometimes it feels like we’re speaking in theoretical
terms. Part of me felt that New York just was not ready for a Muslim mayor.
“But it
turns out we have one right now,” he added.
Several
Muslim community leaders and organizers said they expected an increase in
political engagement among Muslims and South Asians across the city as a result
of Mr. Mamdani’s political ascent. In recent months, two Bangladeshi candidates
have announced plans to run for office in Queens, including Mary Jobaida, who
is seeking Mr. Mamdani’s state assembly seat in Astoria.
For
Muslims like Aminata Diallo, a 28-year-old student who moved to the Bronx from
Mali, Mr. Mamdani’s victory on Tuesday was the first time she felt that a
political leader represented and understood her.
“Zohran’s
story is so many of our own stories,” she said, later adding, “He’s showing
that we belong in every space — that our voices and values have a place in
shaping the city’s future.”
Wesley
Parnell contributed reporting.
Sadiba
Hasan reports on love and culture for the Styles section of The Times.
Maya King
is a Times reporter covering New York politics.


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