 Muslim American community might be the group that faces more challenges than any other demographics here in this country. But they never stop have their voices to be heard. They came all over the country and gathered here in Washington, D.C. to celebrate President Barack Obama's second term national delegation. Let's get close to them and share their stories. Different belief, different fashion styles, different clothes and even different R&B songs. Everything about the Muslim Americans community are so different that sometimes you might forget they are one of the earliest immigration group in the United States. Every pass back to this country you will find a Muslim by and large. The reason why we're holding this game is to portray what true Muslim America represents. Talib Karim, the co-chair of Muslim American Presidential Inaugural Committee, said when he first came to work in Capitol Hill 22 years ago, things were different. Because when I was first working here in Washington and on Capitol Hill, there were no gatherings such as that. And so oftentimes I wouldn't be able to go in the prayer service. But now staffers don't have to, you know, fill that tension of missing prayer service because they have an opportunity to go to Juma right there in the Capitol building itself. Stepping into 20th century, the Muslim community in America has grown from a small minority to one of the farthest growing religions in this country. Today they have become even more visible, especially after 9-11. We acknowledge that those things are the case and we don't make any apologies for anybody because everybody needs to be judged on their own. Nonetheless, we believe that it's important for the government to avoid stereotyping Muslims. To Nadia McIntosh, a Muslim woman and once her single mom, the life under her scarf is different from many other American women. Because I'm a Muslim, I lost my job. I used to work for San Antonio Housing Authority. It was always an issue, why am I praying? And I usually did my prayers during my break, either my lunch break or my ten minutes break. I never used their time to do that, but I started covering up so they were uncomfortable with that and it didn't like the idea that I was praying, so it was always an issue about that. One day they eliminate the whole position. Unemployment can mean struggling to get by. As a single mom with three children, Nadia said she felt like an underdog. Because I couldn't pay my rent on time, I got evicted by them. Once I got evicted by them, my children and I were living in our car. We lived in our car for like maybe about a month, just going from house to house, getting help, you know, to eat, but we lived in the car, going to different places. Instead of surrending, she showed how the woman wearing her scarf can still change herself and are the Muslim's woman's destiny. She built our non-profit organization to provide the shelters for Muslim women. I ended up opening a shelter. Why? Because I saw women were going through the same thing I went through. The masjids were not helping the women. They were helping the men. The men couldn't sleep at the masjid, but the women could not. Like Nadia, more and more Muslims are Americans trying to prove that even though they are different, they can still be as strong as the others. They can follow their heart and have their own unique life. America is my heritage. That's how, that's who I was born as. Muslim is what I choose to do. It's my religion that I choose. It's my way of life that I choose. That America can be a Muslim is not a competing thing. So I don't like to say I'm one first or the other. And it's always peaceful. I want to go to a land like Zion. I want to go where you can't get higher. To dumb, there should be a paradise with every race living together, equally. I want to go where the corruption is gone. I want to go where you love is gone. The universal song, we want to find out some cultures. Everybody aspires to something higher. And that's what that song speaks to. It speaks to reaching something higher or something better over the long term. But we got to work for that. That means we have to work together and we have to work as people to try to achieve that goal.