This article discusses the experience of Muslim migrants in the Netherlands in terms of the majority-minority relations. In the wider context, regional and global changes have been worked to reconstruct the politics of identity, especially in dealing with Islamic imagination within the western society. The position of Muslim migrants in the Netherlands has been historically constructed in academical narrative and power relations represented in policies and public opinions. In this sense, the idea on multiculturalism is contested with more coercive views in terms of integration policies. The active respons to these changing intellectually come from the Muslim migrant communities themselves that negotiated their position within the Dutch society.