In the American context one should not expect a woman named
Imani to be Muslim.
It has been quite common the last 50 years for African-American Christians, especially in large Northeastern cities like New
York and
Philadelphia, to give their children "Muslim" names. The famous singer
Aaliyah's parents were
Roman Catholics. Former U.S. Representative
Floyd Flake and his wife
Elaine, who are both pastors in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, named their four children
Aliya, Nailah,
Rasheed, and
Hasan.
Of course many Arabic names which people in the West think of as "Muslim" are just Arabic and used by Arabic speaking Christians in Egypt, Lebanon, Palestine, Iraq, and other places in the Arabic speaking world where there is still a sizeable minority of Christians. Also, many educated African-Americans would be aware that about 30% of slaves brought to North
America back during colonial times were Muslims, so almost all African-Americans with slave ancestry had some Muslim ancestors.
This sort of goes double for names like
Imani which are derived from Swahili instead of directly from Arabic. There are quite a few names regularly used by African-Americans which are Swahili words adopted as names, even if they are not actually used as names in East
Africa. And
Imani is particularly well-known within the African-American community because it is the seventh day of the Kwanzaa celebration. Because of Kwanzaa, there are a lot of African-Americans who probably think of
Imani as just an African word for "faith" and who don't think of it as a particularly Muslim concept at all.
This message was edited 4/28/2022, 6:30 AM