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DFW Airport’s ‘Interfaith Chapels’ Replace Crosses With Muslim Prayer Rugs

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07.04.2026

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DFW Airport’s ‘Interfaith Chapels’ Replace Crosses With Muslim Prayer Rugs 

So-called ‘interfaith’ chapel at airports are essentially mini-mosques. There was not a single cross in two chapels I visited.

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On Palm Sunday, I was traveling through Dallas-Fort Worth Airport (DFW) on my way home from CPAC 2026 and, having gone through security very early, I had a few hours to spare inside the terminal (thanks, Congress). So, I did what I usually do when I have extra time in airports — I looked for the chapel.

Airport chapels have long been a curiosity of mine, ever since I discovered they exist. I used to have terrible flying anxiety, and I found it comforting to stop in, pray, and look over the guest book to see what experience others have had in that space. It has always seemed a uniquely American privilege, a recognition of God’s sovereignty in the skies as well as on Earth. In recent years, I’ve noticed the chapels disappearing. Some major hubs have placed them outside the terminals, perhaps to accommodate the ever-growing number of Muslims staffing our airports.

I find it sad and frustrating, so I was pleasantly surprised to discover DFW had reinstalled their chapel since my last visit years ago. In fact, they had three (I have since learned there are two more outside the terminal). With hours left until my flight, I decided to visit them all — terminals B, D, and E.

What I found was the opposite of pleasant. They were essentially mini-mosques, labeled as “interfaith” chapels.

The first “chapel” had a prayer bench, at least. But it also included a lot of........

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