From 2006 to 2009, Rashid served as the Associate Director of Admissions for Kaplan University.[10] In October 2010, Rashid rallied a group of Muslim youth to march on Washington, raising slogans of "Love for all, hatred for none" as a part of the "Muslims for Peace" campaign.[11] In August of that year, The New York Times ran a feature story on Rashid, covering his outreach efforts in the American Midwest.[12]
In 2019, Rashid announced his candidacy for the 28th district of the Virginia Senate. He defeated Laura Ann Sellers in the Democratic primary, before losing to incumbent Republican Richard Stuart in the general election.[16][17]
Rashid has authored three books, The Wrong Kind of Muslim; Extremist: A Response to Geert Wilders & Terrorists Everywhere; and Talk To Me: Changing the Narrative on Race, Religion, and Education, and has co-authored and co-edited two books, Towards a Greater Jihad and By the Dawn's Early Light.[citation needed]
The Wrong Kind of Muslim
Released in June 2013, The Wrong Kind of Muslim was Rashid's first book.[21] It received financial support through crowd-sourcing.[22] It looks at the treatment of Ahmadi Muslims and other minority faiths in Pakistan. Rashid conveys the stories of those who were jailed, injured, and martyred for their faith. He also seeks to explain why they maintain their faith.
Talk To Me
Talk to Me was published on May 17, 2016. It is a non-fictionmemoir from inspiring thought leaders on how the power of dialogue can overcome racism, xenophobia, intolerance, and violence.[23] It highlights the importance of meaningful and moral conversation between people of all faiths, ages, genders, etc., to facilitate understanding and tolerance and promote a more peaceful society.
Hannah and the Ramadan Gift
Rashid will release his first children's book through Penguin Publishing, Hannah and the Ramadan Gift.[24]
Rashid is an Ahmadi Muslim, is married, has three children, and lives in Naperville, Illinois.[2] He is the younger brother of Tayyib Rashid, a United States Marine who runs a social media outreach brand as "the Muslim Marine".[29] Tayyib Rashid has also given media interviews and raises awareness about Muslims living in the United States.[29][30][31] Rashid grew up with actor Lamorne Morris.[32][33] Rashid has defended his Ahmadiyya faith against criticism.[34]