Their followers rub shoulders in the narrow, numbered alleys that slice up Yangon, which to an outsider feels like a multi-cultural Asian city on the make after decades sealed off under military rule.
But Yangon's downtown diversity masks a more unsettling reality for the city's Muslims -- a rising tide of Islamophobia among the country's Buddhist majority.
Than Aung, a lawyer and a regular preacher at Yangon's 59th Street mosque, blames the divisions in Rakhine State on poverty and lack of job opportunities, saying he feels sorry for both the Rohingya Muslims and Buddhists. However, he says the crisis has made life difficult for non-Rohingya Muslims.
"The hate speech overwhelmed the minds of most of the people in Myanmar, if you look at these people, it's all because of fear, and because of this fear, they are afraid of us and we are afraid of them," he says.
And in January, Ko Ni, a high-profile Muslim lawyer and government adviser, was killed by a gun-wielding assassin outside Yangon's international airport while he held his grandson in his arms.
Harassment, no go zones
For decades, authorities labeled them illegal immigrants and denied them citizenship. Newspapers largely carry the government's account of the latest crisis, casting it in terms of the military responding to attacks by terrorists. There are few references to the accusations of ethnic cleansing or alleged massacres.
And the Rohingya crisis has raised fears among other Muslims in Myanmar, even though they enjoy full citizenship rights.
Sann Aung, the chairman of the Society of Enlightening Quranic Knowledge, says he and his family have been harassed, especially when they travel outside Yangon.
"Security forces check me, not the others, ask me where I'm from, where I'm going, what I'm doing. It's embarrassing."
Khin Maung, an imam at 59th Street Mosque, says he doesn't fear for his own family but does worry about Muslim families living outside relatively cosmopolitan Yangon.
"Village people get overwhelmed by hate speech so the Muslim people in the rural areas, I worry for them. Buddhist people do not understand about Muslims."
Since 1962, when the military took power in a coup, no new mosques have been opened -- a bone of contention for many Muslims as cities like Yangon expand, says Aye Lwin, chief convener of the Islamic Center of Myanmar and a commissioner on the government's Advisory Commission on Rakhine State.
Many Muslims have moved to new suburbs and satellite cities but once there find there's no place for them to worship. They've resorted to worshiping and teaching their children at home but Aye Lwin says this has attracted the attention of authorities after protests.
"Muslims are a growing population. They need to practice and learn about their religion. I'm not talking about proselytizing, they are teaching their own children how to pray and how to read the Quran and how to practice Islam in their daily life," he says.
Tensions
Aye Lwin blames the toxic climate on Buddhist nationalists, who have whipped up tensions. Muslims only make up around 5% of the population but some Buddhist monks preach they pose an existential threat to the country.
"People think it's a clash between two major religions. No, religion has been hijacked by people with a hidden agenda to use it as a political tool," he says.
"We are worried that they will explode our ethnic heritage, cultural buildings, religious monuments and our brethren, when they carry out suicide bombings," he told CNN.
Pope Francis, who visits Myanmar this week and has spoken out in support of the Rohingya, has been advised by his own cardinal to refrain from using the word Rohingya, a politically charged term, during his trip.
However, he says there have been no negative remarks about the Pope's trip, even from extremist Buddhist monks, who "are in favor of receiving" him, but "he has to be very careful about what terms he will use."
The Pope meets Tuesday with Aung San Suu Kyi, the country's de facto leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner, who has been roundly criticized internationally for not doing more to halt the violence against the Rohingya.
However, Muslim leaders like Aye Lwin defend how she has handled the crisis, stressing the limits of the power-sharing agreement she has with the Tatmadaw, Myanmar's powerful military.
"I'll be very blunt, if she comes out and defends the Muslims it would be political suicide for her," he says.
Extreme nationalism
In 2015, there was hope that the election of Suu Kyi after decades of military rule would calm religious tensions. The murdered Muslim lawyer, Ko Ni, was one of her top legal advisers and one of the country's highest profile Muslims. He was also a campaigner for Rohingya rights to citizenship.
"When I turned around and look, my father was on the ground so I run and help him but there was no sign of life," says Yin Nwe Khaing, the daughter of the murdered lawyer who was at the airport when he was shot.
She said she didn't know much about her father's work but had warned him to be more careful.
"My father was a very principled man. He'd never discuss his professional life. Others knew much more than us, " she said, while playing with her son at her Yangon home.
"We told him please take care...and he just smiled. He said 'you only have one life.'"