A halal taco truck helps vaccinate Orange County Muslims
For more than three years, Rida Hamida has used a halal taco truck as a way to unite Muslims and Latinos across Southern California
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.When Rida Hamida approached a mosque with the idea of breaking Ramadan fast with a taco truck, she faced a tough sell. When it comes to the evening iftar — the dinner Muslims share after a day’s fasting in Ramadan — the Muslim population in Orange County south of Los Angeles is accustomed to traditional Arabic and South Asian biryani meals, with rice and meat kebabs.
But besides being immediately gratifying and accessible, Hamida thought, the taco would also bring Orange County’s Latino and Muslim communities together. So she made a proposal: She’d bring a taco truck to the mosque to serve halal tacos, while the mosque’s leader provided biryani. Then they’d see what the people would prefer.
“Everyone went to our taco truck,” said Hamida, executive director and founder of the group Latino & Muslim Unity.
More than three years later, Hamida’s # TacoTrucksatEveryMosque initiative has become a pipeline to address a host of social issues affecting marginalized communities in Southern California, from answering the U.S. census and voter registration to accessing the COVID-19 vaccination, she said.
Through Latino & Muslim Unity, Hamida, a Muslim of Palestinian descent, is working to help the area’s Muslims by bringing the vaccine directly to their mosques, where community leaders can assure the congregation that Ramadan fasting doesn’t preclude immunization during the holy month.
___
This content is written and produced by Religion News Service and distributed by The Associated Press. RNS and AP partner on some religion news content. RNS is solely responsible for this story.
___
“We stated that if they’re able to, if they’re physically capable, they can get the vaccine even while fasting,” said Azeem Syed, a pharmacist and chair of the Islamic Shura Council of Southern California. “It does not invalidate or compromise what they’re trying to do for their faith.”
To help put Muslims at ease, Hamida has organized a mobile vaccination unit from Care Ambulance Service to visit the Islamic Center of Santa Ana on Saturday (May 1) after sunset, for a vaccine and a halal taco iftar.
But vaccine hesitancy among Muslims extends beyond concerns over Ramadan, Hamida said, to worries about government involvement. Direct contact with congregants and others has been necessary.
Lucy Silva, who serves on the advisory board for Latino & Muslim Unity, was initially unsure of how the vaccine would affect her health. After reading more about it and seeing friends and loved ones get vaccinated, including Hamida, she decided it was safe. Plus, she wanted to travel and realized it was the best decision for the people around her.
Now, Silva is helping encourage Latino Muslims and Spanish-speaking people to receive the vaccine. Silva needed to believe in the vaccine before advocating for it. “It’s something you have to be a believer in,” she said.
Hamida believes it will take this kind of direct contact with those who have had the shot to convince those who are hesitant. “It takes another person to get them engaged and to encourage them and to make them feel safe,” Hamida said. “This is a safe space that we’ve created. People have felt like they belong.”
The day before Ramadan began April 12, Hamida, with the help of other groups like the Islamic Shura Council, mobilized more than 100 people to get the Johnson & Johnson vaccine at the Anaheim Convention Center’s mass vaccination site.
This effort took weeks of coordination with the Orange County Health Care Agency and involved Hamida explaining why it was so important to get Muslims vaccinated before they started fasting for Ramadan. In the end, more than 100 slots were set aside for Hamida, who with other organizers, filled those spots with residents in her community.
“Each and every person we called, we educated on what to expect, reassured them this was safe and helped them understand this was an effort to end the pandemic,” Hamida said.
Now, other mobile vaccine units are happening at mosques in the county.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations in Los Angeles, the Islamic Society of Orange County and the Orange County Health Care Agency will provide 200 Moderna vaccines during tarawih prayer on Friday. County spokeswoman Molly Nichelson said the county has hosted sites with churches and other houses of faith and now with mosques.
Another combination vaccination-taco truck event, organized by Latino & Muslim Unity, will be held May 8 at the West Coast Islamic Society in Anaheim.
Hamida formed Latino & Muslim Unity in 2017 as Muslims and Latinos were targeted by former President Donald Trump’s travel ban impacting refugees and foreign nationals from mostly Muslim countries, as well as his proposed U.S.-Mexico border wall.
Muslims and Latinos were organizing rallies and protesting, but they didn’t know one another, Hamida said.
“We were fighting for our own communities, but we weren’t fighting for one another,” she said. “This has really created a space for us to trust one another by breaking bread.”
But even before this, Hamida began laying the groundwork for Latino & Muslim Unity by organizing tours of the Little Arabia District, a hub for the area’s Arab Americans where Lebanese and Palestinian cuisines are prevalent. Located in Anaheim, the district was surrounded by Latino residents who had never visited or eaten there. Hamida wanted to change that.
On Saturday, Moises Moreno, who operates Tacos El Moy, will arrive early at the Islamic Center of Santa Ana to prepare the tacos that will be served that evening. Moreno has been working with the #TacoTrucksatEveryMosque ever since Hamida and Benjamin Vazquez, who co-founded the initiative, spotted his bright green taco truck parked at a street corner. They approached him and asked if he was interested in collaborating on the cause.
Moreno picks up the meat from a halal butcher and uses corn tortillas to wrap the meat with onions, cilantro and green or red salsas he prepares. The butcher hand cuts top-of-the-line beef, which doesn’t go through the grinder. The fat is cut out from the beef and chicken.
Moreno hadn’t heard of halal meat before working with the mosques; now he enjoys cooking with it. “It’s a meat that’s very tasty, very clean,” he said.
“It’s the best meat I’ve seen,” Moreno said.
Hamida said she could have easily partnered with a taco truck owner who is Muslim or Arab, but she wanted to stick with the spirit of her initiative to unite Latinos and Muslims through food.
Now, Moreno is more aware of the county’s Muslims, which he was not familiar with before this initiative.
“It’s something very nice to be serving the community this way,” Moreno said.