Circus Arabs, 19th c.
Buffalo Bill’s Wild West and many circuses featured Arab equestrians performing jaw-dropping feats on the world’s finest horses—Arabians whose bloodlines flow through today’s thoroughbreds. Their presence brought visions from the Arabian Nights to life and exposed Americans and Europeans in big cities and small towns alike to people who were not just presented as Moors but as Muslims. Performers came from Morocco, Egypt, and Syria. When they weren’t wowing crowds with their skill and bravery they could often be viewed by the public performing Muslim prayers between shows. Strobridge Lithograph, Co. c. 1895 Circus World Museum, Baraboo, WI.
Walter Brister’s Old Kentucky Home,
1893-1898
The Muslim Midway, 1893
Brister was on Broadway in 1893, but the Midway of Chicago’s Columbian Exhibition was a critical site for transmitting American fascination with the Islamic Orient. It was also where members of the U.S. secret society the Shriners, or the Nobles of the Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, passed their rituals to 13 African American freemasons, led by John George Jones. Noble Drew Ali would take his title, his fez, and many other attributes from the Shriners, whose secret initiation ritual centered on the early history of Islam and the life of the Prophet Mohammed. Shriners swore a “Moslem’s oath” to “Allah, the God of Arab, Moslem, and Mohammed,” and they used “Moslem Greetings” such as “Es Salamu Aleikum” (Peace be with you) and “Aleikum Es Salaam” (With you in Peace).
Pawnee Bill’s
Wild West & Wild East
From 1898 to 1900, Walter Brister performed a new role as Hindoo Wonder Worker Armmah Sotanki in the Pawnee Bill Wild West Show, and he was joined by Eva Alexander, who was also from the Kentucky side of the Cincinnati area. They married in Cincinnati on August 18, 1900.