More Muslims Going into
Law
By Kim Vo
Minal Hasan was exploring
careers -- teacher? journalist? -- when two planes sliced
through the World Trade Center.
In the days and months that followed, friends and relatives
exchanged tales of harassment, dubious arrests and assaults
nationwide. Someone threw rocks at Hasan's car. Someone
else spat at her.
The Fremont woman then followed an increasing number of
American Muslims, rocked by the fallout of Sept. 11: She
applied to law school.
The "civil rights of our community are being encroached
upon, and we don't even have enough lawyers in our community
to help us. A lot of people in our community thought that,"
said Hasan, who graduated from Berkeley's Boalt Hall School
of Law in May. "I thought that, too."
Though firm numbers are elusive -- law firms and schools
don't ask about an applicant's religion -- the number of
Muslim lawyers and law students is growing. The National
Association of Muslim Lawyers, which began in 1996 with
24 members, now has 500. Half of the 100 members of the
Bay Area Association of Muslim Lawyers, known as BAAML,
are law students, a sign of the swelling ranks. And Muslim
law student associations are sprouting from Berkeley to
Yale.
Muslims' growing interest in law is also part of social
evolution that occurs as children of immigrants explore
professions beyond the medicine and engineering paths available
to their parents…
(Courtesy , Mercury News, 7/9/06
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/living/14999997.htm)
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