Anonymous wrote:I’ve noticed minority wise a lot of Arabs live in Va, and Jews live in Moco.
But in Silver Spring where I live there are a lot of East Africans some of them are Muslim so you do have so religious diversity in Silver Spring. I’m saying that because Silver Spring/Kensington is definitely a stronger gayborhood. School wise, in Montgomery County be prepared for Muslim populations to protest school content when it comes to lgbt issues because that has happened so there is definitely a Muslim voice in this county.
I see more Indian families from Potomac area up through Gaithersburg and a number of them may be Muslims.
Sorry I can’t think of a gay friendly and mostly Muslim neighborhood mostly because Muslims aren’t necessarily gay friendly. Welcome to America. 😆
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They'll be fine anywhere in the DC area. Their decision about where to live should be driven by commutes and schools.
Incorrect. There are some very unwelcoming conservative enclaves. I know because I accidentally live in one.
Where? Asking for a friend
Belle Haven
Anonymous wrote:Definitely not Kensington. And probably not NoVA.
The safe parts of DC with the very best schools will be liberal and welcoming.
Takoma Park and Silver Spring will also be liberal and welcoming. But SS is huge, and large swaths aren’t great in terms of schools, so you need to do your research.
The west part of MoCo is more expensive, has better schools, and has more middle eastern/indian/asian diversity…but these communities skew conservative.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in downtown Bethesda, used to live in downtown Silver Spring, and I think all the locations you mention would be reasonably welcoming. Takoma Park is known to be particularly "crunchy" and left-leaning.
I suppose you know this but: this couple probably wants to be around people who are culturally American or western European (regardless of their ethnic origins). Other parts of the world don't exactly embrace homosexuality. So me, personally, I would avoid all communities of immigrants who have strong ties to the home country, who tend to socialize amongst themselves, and try to foster the same family values and traditions that they have in their home country. Because those can be hotspots for transferring racial, religious and other prejudices to the US, that perhaps their American neighbors aren't even aware of. I'm not Middle-Eastern, I'm East Asian, and I experienced this with an East Asian community as a child. They were more traditional and misogynist than the people I knew in my home country, because I think they felt threatened by their progressive community and were trying to preserve their values. Just FYI...
Anonymous wrote:if they are gay, should stay away from muslim neighborhoods
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They'll be fine anywhere in the DC area. Their decision about where to live should be driven by commutes and schools.
Incorrect. There are some very unwelcoming conservative enclaves. I know because I accidentally live in one.
Where? Asking for a friend
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They'll be fine anywhere in the DC area. Their decision about where to live should be driven by commutes and schools.
Incorrect. There are some very unwelcoming conservative enclaves. I know because I accidentally live in one.