The Sozahdahs have a lot in common with the Kardashians. They're fashion-savvy sisters enjoying the high life in Los Angeles with a habit of butting into each other's personal business and engaging in an endless cycle of bickering and bonding.
But there's a significant difference between them and Kim and company: Their lives are intrinsically tied to their faith.
"Secrets & Sisterhood," now streaming on Hulu, has its fair share of public meltdowns, ill-advised affairs and ego trips, the ingredients for many successful reality shows. But viewers will also learn a lot about what it's like to be Muslim American immigrants.
"At first glance, you may think, 'Oh, they are just like the Kardashians," executive producer Erika Bryant said Monday in a Zoom interview. "But you soon realize this goes way deeper. Not to discredit what the Kardashians have done. They've had a huge influence on the culture at large. But the Sozahdahs are in a class all their own, blazing their trail for shows in which you can explore these cultural and religious differences."
Viewers get an education by watching the 10 sisters (yep, 10!) celebrate Eid al-Adha, one of the most important Muslim holidays, and talk about Zakat, an obligation to help the needy.
They perform a native Afghan dance for their mother, who they worship and fear with equal intensity. In one scene, the siblings discuss how their fashion choices might get them killed in Afghanistan, from which their parents fled in the 1980s after the Soviet invasion.
The references to their faith are sometimes more subtle. After one family fight, there's a group hug.
"Thank you, Allah!" one of them says.