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“Young was a way to escape that, to feel a bit of freedom,” she told SBS News.

Omar Kowaider and Joanna Bryla with their children. Source: SBS News / SBS News/Jack Giam
With a vegetable patch and egg-laying chickens, they say a sustainable lifestyle has helped with the rising cost of living.
“When you’re in Sydney, you’re so busy you don’t have the time to sit and really connect with your partner,” Bryla said. “Here, we were able to learn things about each other … and rebuild the friendship that we had before we were married.”
A thriving Muslim community
It’s believed most of them settled here over the last five years, but their imprint on this town dates back to the late 1980s.

Bassem Ali (second from left) with his family in Young, NSW. His parents were amongst the first Muslims to call this rural town home nearly 40 years ago. Source: SBS News
Bassem Ali’s uncle and parents were among the first Muslims to ever move there, taking a “plunge” into the unknown and buying an acreage.
Four decades later, Arabic has become the second most spoken language in Young after English, and it’s said that out of every 10 locals, one is Muslim.
The growing need for a new mosque
“[Young] is away from the city, there’s a mosque, there’s a small community. Just by me saying that to you, you would want to move here,” he told SBS News.
People plant trees but they don’t pick their fruit. Their future does. And that’s how we looked at it.
Bassem Ali, Young resident
“They don’t put it out there to highlight it. They don’t do it for that. They do it because they care. And that’s part of becoming a big part of our community.”

Emad Hamdy, Imam at the Young mosque. Last year, construction began for the new mosque that’s nearly five times bigger than the current one Source: SBS News / Jack Giam
But as the Muslim population grew, so did the desire to build a new mosque with enough room for everyone to pray in.
Last year, construction began for the new mosque that’s nearly five times bigger than the current one, and is expected accommodate more than 1,000 people.

Abdullah Sultan, the head of committee at Young Mosque, said the move to Young is a no-brainer for Muslim families. Source: SBS News / Jack Giam