Muslims Behind Memory (12)
Muslims in Vietnam: Rise and Fall of the Cham Muslim Emirate
Missionary Activity in the 19th and 20th Centuries
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, missionary activity
in Vietnam increased through French, Spanish, and Dominican missionaries from
the Spanish East Indies, and to a lesser extent through American Protestant
missionaries during the Vietnam War (1945–1946).
The Arrival of Islam in Champa
At that time, Vietnam’s story with Islam began along
the coasts of the Cham Emirate (in southern Vietnam) through merchants and
preachers from Thailand, India, Iran, and the Arabian Peninsula. They settled
in coastal cities and spread Islam, especially among the Cham people. In Ho Chi
Minh City and other towns, Vietnam then comprised several principalities,
including the Cham Emirate in the center of the country.
During the flourishing of trade in the fourth Islamic century
/ tenth CE, interest in Islam grew. Marriages took place between Arab Muslim
traders and Cham residents, and the King of Champa married his daughter
to one of the Arab traders. The emirate expanded, and Islam spread further
until Champa became an Islamic state. It reached the peak of its power and
expansion in the mid-fifteenth century (875 AH / 1453 CE). Islam remained the
main religion of the Cham people for four centuries, who made up two-thirds of Muslims
in southern Vietnam.
Another Muslim community described itself as mixed, with Cham,
Khmer, Malay, Chinese, and Arab origins. They were also called Cham Muslims in
other areas, living in the suburbs of Chau Doc in southwestern Vietnam.
Manipulation of Population Statistics
Regarding the number of Muslims in Vietnam, statistics vary
widely, as is common with Muslim minorities worldwide. Figures are often
obscured or manipulated to show Muslims as fewer than they are, weakening their
claim to rights.
The U.S. State Department’s 2009 report on rights and freedoms
estimated their number between 600,000 and 800,000. Other statistics put them
at 730,000, about 9% of Vietnam’s population. Yet other reports claim only
180,000 Muslims, about 0.2% of the total population of 101 million.
Most Muslims lived in Ninh Thuan and Binh Thuan provinces in
the Mekong Delta, southeastern Vietnam. They preserved and displayed their
Islamic identity. Though Islam is a minority faith in Vietnam, it has a
distinct historical and cultural presence, especially among the Cham minority
concentrated in the Buddhist-majority Mekong Delta.
Vietnam adopted Vietnamese as its official language after
independence from France on September 2, 1945, alongside French, Chinese,
English, and other local languages. Its economy relies on petroleum, rice, and
coffee as major sources of income.
Preserving Islamic Identity
Today, Muslims—especially in Ho Chi Minh City—strive to
preserve their cultural and religious identity through halal restaurants and
community initiatives promoting integration and dialogue with followers of
other faiths.
Ho Chi Minh City is a destination for Muslim tourists from
Malaysia, Indonesia, and Arab countries such as Qatar and Saudi Arabia, as well
as residents from Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Egypt, and Yemen. This strengthens
Islamic cultural presence in public life and reinforces the spirit of tolerance
among Vietnam’s Muslims.
Mosques in Ho Chi Minh City
There are two main mosques in Ho Chi Minh City.
- The
Muslim Mosque (Saigon Central Mosque / Dong Du Mosque):
Located on Dong Khoi Street, built in 1935 originally for the Indian
Muslim community. Its white-and-green exterior features four minarets in
Malaysian style. It provides quiet spaces for ablution and prayer, near
halal restaurants from Malaysia and Turkey.
- The
Mosque of All Muslims (Indian Mosque): Smaller than the
first but with beautiful architecture.
Buddhist Hostility and Stages of Conflict
The expansion of the emirate and the spread of Islam fueled
hostility among northern Buddhists. The Buddhist principality of northern
Vietnam began attacking the Islamic Cham Emirate in the south. The conflict
unfolded in several stages:
- First
Stage (875 AH / 1453 CE – 947 AH / 1525 CE):
With help from China and Thailand, Buddhist Vietnam stormed Vijaya, the
capital of Champa, committing massacres that killed about 60,000 Muslims
and enslaved 30,000, including 50 members of the ruling family.
- Second
Stage (947 AH / 1525 CE – 1060 AH / 1638 CE):
Northern Vietnam entered Kauthara and defeated King Pathem of Champa.
- Third
Stage (1060 AH / 1638 CE – 1237 AH / 1815 CE):
Champa lost Kauthara permanently, moved its capital to Panduranga, while
northern Vietnamese settlers seized fertile lands without compensation.
- Fourth
Stage (1238 AH / 1816 CE onward): Buddhist Vietnam tightened
control over Champa, redistributed lands to Vietnamese settlers, expelled
Cham Muslims, and forced King Po Chon to seek asylum in Cambodia.
Intensification of Massacres
After communists took power in northern Vietnam in 1395 AH /
1973 CE, persecution of Muslims escalated. Brutal crimes increased, such as the
massacre in Hue, where communists buried thousands of Muslims alive over twenty
days. Terror spread, forcing hundreds of thousands to flee abroad, decimating
Muslim communities.
When France occupied Vietnam, it allowed northern Buddhists to
persecute Muslims in Champa, committing massacres that drove Muslims from the plains to the mountains, where they lived in closed communities.
Thus, after the fall of Champa, Muslims endured continuous
persecution, displacement, and extermination under French colonialism
(1858–1883), during the Vietnam War (1945–1946), and under communist
governments since 1975. They became a marginalized minority suffering poverty,
ignorance, and oppression under an atheist regime.
It was one of the most horrific genocides against Muslims,
carried out by the alliance of communists and Buddhists. It forced most Muslims
to flee abroad, reducing their numbers from over one million to just a few
thousand. This will be further analyzed in the next installment, God willing.