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Dallas, Texas: How Mosque-Centered Islamic Institutions Are Building a Parallel Society in Plain Sight (Video)

An Arabic-language vlog openly markets North Texas as a destination where mosque-centered Islamic institutions—including schools, youth programs, Sharia-aligned services, and politically connected leadership—enable migrants to live as if in the ‘homeland,’ confirming the existence of a deliberately built parallel society operating in plain sight.

A newly circulating Arabic-language vlog promoting Dallas, Texas, as an ideal destination for Arab and Muslim settlement does more than showcase halal food, housing, and job opportunities. It maps the institutional architecture of Islamic expansion in North Texas, highlighting the same mosques, schools, and leadership networks investigators have already linked to Muslim Brotherhood–aligned activity.

Framed as a friendly relocation guide, the video repeatedly emphasizes that Dallas offers something rare: the ability to live in the United States while feeling as though one has never left the “homeland.” Viewers are told they can find Arab neighborhoods, Islamic schools, cultural enclaves, and mosques so dense that daily life can be conducted almost entirely within a parallel social structure.

Throughout the video, both destinations and points of origin are made explicit. Interviewees identify themselves as arriving from Palestine, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and other parts of the Middle East, while others describe secondary migration from California, Arizona, Alabama, Chicago, Boston, Florida, and Virginia.

Texas is consistently promoted as the preferred endpoint of this migration flow—not merely for economic opportunity, but because of its dense network of mosques, Islamic schools, and Arab neighborhoods. In effect, the video markets hijrah to North Texas as a strategic relocation: a place where migrants can leave their countries of origin, yet reconstitute religious, cultural, and communal life largely unchanged.

North Texas now hosts hundreds of mosques, Islamic schools, and affiliated nonprofits, forming one of the densest and most troubling Islamic institutional networks in the country.

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