Is Islam Banned in China? I Went to Find out!

Eid isn't allowed in China... or so you thought. I'm an American who has lived in Shenzhen, China, for over 7 years. And every single year, something happens right outside my front door that the mainstream media will never show you. Today I'm bringing you inside the real Eid al-Adha celebration in Shenzhen — and what I found will change everything you think you know about Muslim life in China. Is Islam banned in China? I went to find out. 30 million Muslims live in China. I went to find out the truth about religion in China — from a 7-year resident of Shenzhen. And yet, almost none of this makes the news. On Eid al-Adha, thousands of people gather for Eid prayer at the local mosque, spilling out into the streets. After the prayer, the area transforms into a massive Halal street food market — lamb skewers loaded with cumin and chili, Northwest Chinese style. Some of the best street food China has to offer. Then there's the history you've probably never heard: the Hui people have been Muslim and Chinese for over a thousand years. They are as Chinese as anyone else here. This isn't foreign. This is China. The news picks one story and repeats it. Life in China is a thousand stories happening at once.In this video: ✅ Eid celebration in Shenzhen — thousands show up for Eid prayer ✅ The Halal street food market that takes over the city on Eid al-Adha ✅ The real story of Muslim life in China ✅ Chinese Muslim history — who are the Hui people? ✅ An American expat's honest perspective on China daily lifeWhether you're watching from the USA, Singapore, India, or anywhere else in the world — if you want the real truth about life in China, you're in the right place.Follow for more China tech, travel, and food. 🇨🇳📌 More from Omerinchina: $5 in China Street Market:    • What $5 Actually Buys at a China Night Mar...   30-Day Tea Challenge:    • Day 5: My Least Favorite Tea So Far 😬   #eid #eiduladha #streetfood #halalfood #chinatravel