Anti-Muslim hatred in Britain has entered a deeply worrying phase, with Muslim leaders, campaigners and community organisations warning that many Muslims no longer feel safe in public spaces, schools, mosques, workplaces or even their own homes.
What was once dismissed by some as isolated prejudice is now being described by Muslim voices as a widespread climate of hostility. The concern is not only about individual incidents, but about the atmosphere that has allowed hatred against Muslims to become louder, bolder and more violent.
During the May local elections in England, a Muslim canvasser in the London borough of Barking and Dagenham was reportedly asked at a doorstep whether she was Muslim. When she answered yes, the person allegedly told her she should be hanged. For Muslim campaigners, this was not merely an ugly exchange. It reflected a deeper problem: Muslims are increasingly being treated as acceptable targets in political, social and public life.
Akeela Ahmed, head of the British Muslim Trust, the government’s official partner for monitoring anti-Muslim hatred, has said she has heard dozens of similar accounts in recent weeks while travelling across the country. She described the current situation as unprecedented since the unrest that followed the Southport killings in 2024, warning that the level of violence and open hostility now being reported reminds many older Muslim families of the racism faced by earlier immigrant generations in Britain.
For Muslims, this is not only a matter of public policy. It is a matter of dignity, safety and justice.
Islam teaches that human dignity is not a privilege granted by society, but a right honoured by Allah. The Qur’an states: “And We have certainly honoured the children of Adam.” This honour applies to people in their homes, their streets, their places of worship and their daily affairs. When a community is intimidated because of its faith, clothing, names, places of worship or identity, it is not only a failure of policing. It is a failure of moral responsibility.
Mosques, Families and Muslim Women Under Pressure
Across Britain, Muslim communities have reported attacks and threats targeting mosques, Islamic centres, families, women and children. Incidents cited by Muslim organisations include attempted firebombings, vandalism, violent assaults, abuse on public transport, hijabs being pulled off, harassment in public spaces and attacks on properties associated with Muslim families and leaders.
Mosques in cities including Glasgow, Edinburgh, Blackburn, Manchester, Liverpool, Shrewsbury and east London have reportedly been targeted in recent months. There have also been disturbing reports of an alleged firebomb attack on an imam’s family home in Bolton, the torching of political activist Salma Yaqoob’s car in Birmingham, and a pig’s head being left outside a Muslim family’s home in Stockport.
Such incidents send a message beyond the immediate victims. They tell Muslim families that the mosque may not be safe, that the street may not be safe, that a woman wearing hijab may be singled out, and that even children may be forced to carry the burden of hostility they did not create.
Muslim women appear to be bearing a particularly heavy share of this hatred. Reports include women being abused on public transport, filmed in public, harassed in the street, and targeted because of visible signs of faith such as the hijab. This is one of the clearest signs that anti-Muslim hatred is not simply disagreement with religious belief. It often manifests as intimidation, humiliation and control directed at visible Muslims.
In Islam, harming a person unjustly, threatening them, violating their dignity or spreading fear among them is a grave matter. The Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him, taught that a Muslim is one from whose tongue and hand others are safe. This principle does not only guide Muslims in how they treat others. It also exposes the injustice of a society where Muslims themselves are denied safety from the tongues and hands of those who hate them.
The Edinburgh Attack Became a Turning Point
For many Muslims in Britain, the recent attack near a mosque in Edinburgh crystallised the fear already spreading through communities. Five people were injured, and a man was charged with five counts of attempted murder aggravated by terrorist connection. Prime Minister Keir Starmer told parliament that the attack appeared to have been motivated by anti-Muslim hatred.
Muslim leaders questioned why the attack did not immediately dominate public attention in the way other terrorist-linked incidents often do. Broadcaster Mishal Husain was among those who raised concern about the level of media attention. In parliament, independent MP Shockat Adam questioned why a Cobra meeting had not been called.
The frustration is clear: when Muslims are the victims, many feel that the language becomes cautious, the outrage becomes delayed, and the institutional response becomes fragmented.
This is the double wound experienced by many Muslim communities. First comes the attack. Then comes the feeling that their pain must be proven before it is taken seriously.
Official Figures Show a Serious Rise
Official figures show that anti-Muslim hate crime in England and Wales rose significantly in the year to March 2025. Recorded hate crimes targeting Muslims reached 4,478, representing almost half of all religious hate crimes. Campaigners also warn that official figures are likely an undercount, as many Muslims do not report abuse, either because they lack confidence in the system or because they have normalised hostility as part of daily life.
A recent survey by the British Muslim Trust and British Future found that more than half of British Muslims reported experiencing religious prejudice in the past year. This is not a marginal issue. It is a national social problem affecting families, children, students, worshippers, workers and public servants.
In Scotland, Muslims have also been identified as a major target of religious hate crime. Community leaders there say recent attacks have changed the way ordinary Muslims think about daily life. Activities once seen as normal, such as attending mosque events, walking home from university, eating in restaurants or travelling in the evening, are now being viewed through a security lens.
This is what hatred does. It shrinks people’s lives. It makes them calculate risks before prayer, before study, before work, before family outings, before simply being visible.
Children Are Learning Fear Too Early
Perhaps the most painful aspect of the current climate is the effect on Muslim children.
Akeela Ahmed has reportedly received repeated requests from parents seeking advice on how to speak to their children about rising anti-Muslim hatred. She also described an incident involving her own 13-year-old son. During a school exercise in which pupils shared their middle names, another boy allegedly responded to his Muslim middle name by calling him “al-Qaida.”
This is not harmless playground behaviour. It is the language of public demonisation filtering into classrooms.
Other Muslim parents have described children being told they do not belong, being associated with terrorism, or being treated as foreigners even when they were born and raised in Britain. Naomi Green from the Muslim Council of Britain described receiving frightening messages during unrest in Northern Ireland, including from families who felt abandoned while their homes were under attack.
She also spoke about her own 12-year-old son being told by other students that he would be next and that “foreigners” like him would have to go home. Green, who is white and converted to Islam two decades ago, said her children have had to grow up faster than others because they are forced to understand hatred, identity and belonging at an age when children should be protected from such burdens.
This is one of the cruellest consequences of anti-Muslim hatred. It teaches Muslim children that their names, faith and families may be used against them.
Political Rhetoric Has Consequences
Muslim campaigners argue that anti-Muslim hatred is being fuelled by political rhetoric that merges Muslims, immigration, foreignness and national threat into one hostile narrative. This framing is dangerous because it treats Muslims as outsiders regardless of citizenship, birthplace, contribution or loyalty.
Some campaigners have warned that parts of the political class have become hesitant to defend Muslims openly, especially in an environment where anti-immigrant rhetoric has become more prominent. The fear is that defending Muslims may be portrayed by opponents as being “soft” on immigration or unwilling to address public concerns.
This is morally weak and politically short-sighted.
A just society does not wait for a community to become popular before protecting it. Justice is not measured by polling. The Qur’an commands believers to stand firmly for justice, even when it is difficult. Silence in the face of hatred does not create social cohesion. It creates permission.
When hatred is not confronted clearly, extremists interpret hesitation as approval.
Government Measures Are Not Enough
The UK government has pointed to steps it says demonstrate action, including the adoption of a non-statutory definition of anti-Muslim hostility, funding for mosque security, and programmes aimed at tackling anti-Muslim hatred. These measures may be useful, but Muslim campaigners argue they do not go far enough.
Security funding can help protect mosques, but it does not address the deeper ideological environment that makes such protection necessary. A definition can help institutions recognise anti-Muslim hostility, but it must be backed by implementation, consistent policing, media responsibility and political courage.
Lady Shaista Gohir, founder of the Muslim Women’s Network, has criticised what she sees as weak leadership and inconsistent policing. She has raised concerns about a postcode lottery in how anti-Muslim hate crime is handled, with some police forces responding quickly while others fail to take victims seriously unless organisations intervene.
This inconsistency matters. If Muslims do not believe they will be protected, they will be less likely to report attacks. If incidents go unreported, the scale of the problem remains hidden. If the scale remains hidden, public institutions can continue to underestimate the threat.
Muslims Should Not Be Forced Into Retreat
Despite the fear, Muslim leaders have rejected the idea that communities should disappear from public life. Akeela Ahmed has emphasised that most people in Britain are good people and that communities must come together with allies to draw clear boundaries around what cannot be tolerated.
This point is important. Muslims should not be forced to abandon public life, avoid the mosque, remove visible signs of faith, stay silent in politics or teach their children to shrink themselves in order to survive.
Islam does not teach humiliation. It teaches dignity with patience, courage with wisdom, and firmness with justice.
The Muslim response must be principled. Communities should report hate crimes, support victims, strengthen mosque security where needed, educate children with confidence in their Islamic identity, and build alliances with fair-minded people who reject hatred against any community.
At the same time, government, police, schools, media organisations and political leaders must stop treating anti-Muslim hatred as a secondary issue. The safety of Muslims is not a “Muslim issue” only. It is a test of public justice.
A society that tolerates hatred against one community weakens the protection of every community.
A Moral Test for Britain
The rise in anti-Muslim hatred in Britain is not merely about statistics. It is about mothers changing how they dress, fathers worrying about mosque attendance, children being mocked for Muslim names, families avoiding certain areas, and worshippers asking whether police will come if they are attacked.
It is about Muslims being told, directly or indirectly, that they do not fully belong.
But Muslims do belong. Their faith, families, work, worship, charity, scholarship and public service are part of Britain’s social fabric. No amount of far-right agitation, media hostility or political cowardice can erase that reality.
The Qur’an reminds us that Allah commands justice, excellence and care for others, and forbids indecency, wrongdoing and oppression. This command is not abstract. It applies in moments like this.
Anti-Muslim hatred must be named clearly, confronted firmly and rejected publicly. Not only when violence becomes impossible to ignore, but before hatred reaches the point of violence.
For Muslims, the path forward is not fear, silence or retreat. It is faith, vigilance, solidarity and principled courage.
And for Britain, this is a test: whether it will protect Muslims only after tragedy, or whether it will finally recognise that the normalisation of anti-Muslim hatred is itself a national crisis.



