“…Despite drastic increases in religious discrimination, hate crimes, and terror attacks targeting religious minorities in Western contexts (CAIR, ; FBI, ), studies examining the impact of discrimination based on religious group membership are scant. Preliminary research indicates that religious discrimination is particularly harmful for individuals’ mental health perhaps because it threatens one's religious group identity, which is particularly salient for religious minority youth given that it carries an “eternal significance” and is attached to a sacred and highly appraised belief system (e.g., Fleischmann & Verkuyten, forthcoming; Phalet, Fleischmann, & Hillekens, ; Ysseldyk, Matheson, & Anisman, ). Hence, Muslim‐American adolescents may be at risk for psychological difficulties and mental health problems because they are members of a socially devalued religious minority group and face discrimination on an individual level in their interpersonal relationships (e.g., having hijab pulled off, being called a terrorist) and are also exposed to anti‐Muslim rhetoric and public stigma against Muslims as a group in the form of Islamophobia (Abu‐Ras, Suárez, & Abu‐Bader, ; Husain & Howard, ; Ocampo et al., ).…”