Hidden Mosques and Halal Food in Beijing’s Niujie Muslim Qu​

Can MUSLIMS Live in Beijing? ☪️ 🇨🇳 (Hidden Mosques + Halal Food) | 牛街

Destination:ChinaCity:BeijingPopulation:21.5 million
Can MUSLIMS Live in Beijing? ☪️ 🇨🇳 (Hidden Mosques + Halal Food) | 牛街
20Camels2026-03-2939 min

I was shocked to find out that Chinese Muslims have lived in Beijing for over 1,000 years--And are responsible for the original recipes behind ~80% of Beijing's most iconic street food! The Muslim community in China's capital is not small. There is an entire quarter of the city called Niujie or Ox Street (牛街) full of halal restaurants & street snacks, halal butchers, and mosques that are between 500-1,000 years old. Even though the Chinese Muslim community has historically been an important part of Beijing's culture, how are they living today? In this video I'll explore the community with a local who grew up in Beijing's Muslim community and is now raising a family of his own here. He'll take us to hidden mosques as close as ONE MILE away from Chinese President Xi Jinping's Palace, modern Chinese-Muslim fusion cuisine like Halal Hot Dogs, and we'll get to try some of the delicious street food that people from all over Beijing come to the Muslim neighborhood to buy because they make it best!

--- 20Camels
March 29, 2026, Spring in China

Video Chapters

  1. 0:00Intro
  2. 0:52Hidden Mosque (1.5 miles from Xi's Palace)
  3. 13:52Non Muslim-Majority Neighborhood where Chinese Muslims Live
  4. 16:18Islamic School
  5. 16:48Beijing's Largest Muslim Community - Niujie Ox Street (牛街)
  6. 17:11Halal Hot Dogs
  7. 20:45Trying Famous Beijing Muslim Street Snacks
  8. 22:30Halal Butchers
  9. 22:58Halal Supermarket
  10. 27:25Niujie Mosque (1,000 Years old)
  11. 29:13Trying Famous Beijing Muslim Street Snacks (Part 2)

More about the current video:( 3 / 4 )

Can MUSLIMS Live in Beijing? ☪️ 🇨🇳 (Hidden Mosques + Halal Food) | 牛街

A traveler dives into Beijing’s Muslim heartland, uncovering a history that stretches over a thousand years. The video centers on Niujie, commonly known as Ox Street, a bustling quarter packed with halal eateries, street snacks, mosques, and halal butchers. The creator teams up with a Beijing-born local who is raising a family in the Muslim community, offering a lived-in perspective on how life in this historic enclave looks today. Highlights include hidden mosques tucked within the city, even one just about a mile from the presidential palace, a peek at an Islamic school, and the dynamic fusion cuisine that blends Chinese flavors with halal traditions, like halal hot dogs. Viewers are treated to street food tastings that attract people from all across Beijing, a tour of the largest Muslim community in the city, and visits to halal markets and butchers. The video promises a follow-up episode featuring an Iftar dinner with a Chinese Muslim family in Yunnan, extending the exploration of餐

Hidden Mosques and Halal Food in Beijing’s Niujie Muslim Qu​

I was shocked to find out that Chinese Muslims have lived in Beijing for over 1,000 years--And are responsible for the original recipes behind ~80% of Beijing's most iconic street food! The Muslim community in China's capital is not small. There is an entire quarter of the city called Niujie or "Ox...

Attractions in this video: Chan Mosque, New Mosque, Niujie Halal Market