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"Progressive Muslims" voice their concern
asalkuur
08/05/03 at 16:47:39
[slm]
Interesting article. It mentions my masjid and makes it look so negative  :(. I go there all the time and have never felt "second class" just because I have a different door to enter from than the men!
This article talks about a lot of issues that are increasingly becoming challenging for our American Muslim communities.

What do you think? Is YOUR Masjid/community a lot like what this article describes??

Read on....

http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0804/p09s01-coop.html

Headline:  Tailor Muslim practices to fit life in America
Byline:  Ahmed Nassef
Date: 08/04/2003

(NEW YORK)Omid Safi wanted to go the extra mile to make sure his children
experienced an Islamic environment. So he and his family made the
one-hour drive to their nearest Islamic Center in Syracuse, N.Y., every
week, and he enrolled his son in Sunday school there.

Only men were allowed to use the grand main entrance to the mosque.
"Women have to use a back entrance right next to the trash dumpster and
go down to the basement," Mr. Safi remembers. "It felt fake for me to
go through the front door and for my wife to have to use the back
entrance. After a while, I could not justify to my conscience
continuing to go and sending my children there."

Safi, assistant professor of Islamic studies at Colgate University and
author of "Progressive Muslims," stopped attending the mosque, and now
counts his family and a small group of students as his spiritual
community. His experience is not unique among Muslims in the United
States - a population estimated at more than 6 million and often cited
as the fastest growing religious group in the country.

This gulf between the highly conservative nature of most Muslim
American institutions and the liberal views of many Muslims born and
raised in America is reflected in issues such as the role of women and
literalist readings of religious texts. It has sown the seeds for a
progressive Muslim movement that is reinterpreting much of what the
faith means and how it is reflected in daily life.

What Muslim Americans are going through is no different from the
experiences of other faith communities that preceded them here. The
success of the Conservative and Reform movements in the US as
alternatives to Orthodox Judaism, for example, has transformed the
meaning of the faith for millions of Jewish Americans.

Similarly, the increasing number of native-born Americans who are
adopting the faith (constituting about one- third of the total Muslim
American population) and Muslim Americans from recent immigrant
backgrounds - so many of whom are far removed from their parents' and
grandparents' immigrant experiences, with their particular cultural
interpretations of Islam - are looking for an Islam that reflects their
lives in America.

Increasingly, this is translating into a disengagement from existing
Muslim institutions in the US and a search for alternate communities.

Practically all American mosques are led by people who have no academic
training in Islam, or who have received their training from overseas
Islamic academies. Most of these have been taken over by highly
conservative elements aligned with the extremely conservative Wahhabi
interpretation of Islam championed and funded by the Saudi Arabian
monarchy. But progressive Muslims in America are taking their
inspiration from Islamic scholars trained in Western universities who
tend to be critical of authoritarian interpretations of Islam and who
treat the real diversity of Muslim societies more inclusively.

Today, American mosques and advocacy groups, whose representatives are
most commonly called on by the media to speak for Muslim Americans,
reflect only a fraction of the larger Muslim American community.

A study on US mosques conducted in 2000 by four of the main Muslim
American national organizations showed that 2 million of the estimated
6 million Muslim Americans attend Muslim religious institutions at
least once or twice each year, and of those, just 411,060 attend
mosques regularly. Even allowing for possible exaggeration and
duplication - because the survey relied on mosque representatives for
its information - the results still raise issues that most Muslim
American organizations are afraid to tackle. The most obvious one is
that two-thirds of Muslim Americans don't publicly participate even in
the most minimal cultural manifestations of their faith (like a Roman
Catholic who celebrates only Christmas Mass or a Jew who attends
synagogue only during the High Holy Days).

In fact, America's traditional Muslim institutions are isolated from
the daily reality of life in America.

For one thing, they continue to systematically exclude women from
participation. Not only do practically all US mosques shut women out of
the top leadership position, fully half of them either officially
forbid women from serving on their governing boards or, in cases where
there is no such specific prohibition, where women have not served on
these boards over the past five years.

Women who do attend mosques and who aren't willing to fulfill
traditional roles find it hard to participate actively. For Farah
Nousheen, a young Muslim American filmmaker who just completed
"Nazrah," a documentary on Muslim American women, her alienation
reached such a level that, after searching through mosques in the
Chicago and Seattle areas and finding the same stifling atmosphere, she
decided to stop attending altogether. "My experience had a lot to do
with being a woman in an environment where almost all the leadership
were men. At prayers, women sat in a separate area with all the crying
kids. It made me feel less important," says Ms. Nousheen, "There are a
lot of people out there who feel like they don't belong."

Far from moving toward inclusiveness in the way they deal with women,
mosques seem to be doing the opposite. Today, fully two-thirds of
mosques force women to pray in a separate room from men or behind a
curtain, compared to slightly more than half in 1994. Given this
development, it is no surprise that women represent only 15 percent of
attendees at the weekly congregational prayers.

Another element that is driving progressive Muslims away from
traditional mosques is the preoccupation with literalism and the
imposition of foreign customs on a faith that prides itself on its
universalism. Sermons delivered by nonnative English-speakers on
esoteric topics, such as the intricacies of ablution and the ritual
washing before prayers, are the rule - not the exception.

For people like Katelin Mason, a young American Muslim convert and a
graduate student of Islamic studies, the identification with Islam by
the traditional Muslim American leadership of specifically cultural
expressions, such as wearing particular clothing, is a distortion of
the faith. "Wearing hijab [head covering] and having a beard have taken
priority," she wrote in a recent article for our online magazine,
MuslimWakeUp.com. "When the focus is on appearance, actions and intent
become less important. When appearance loses importance, piety emerges."

But much of the media is all too ready to accommodate the stereotypes
of what Muslim Americans look like. As Omid Safi points out, "Whenever
these groups have been called on to appear in the media, it is usually
through a middle-aged bearded man with an accent. We rarely see
African-Americans, or women not in full hijab, and this certainly is
not what our community looks like. Not all Muslim American men have
beards, and many Muslim American women don't wear the full hijab."

But there are signs that a grass-roots progressive Muslim movement is
finally taking hold.

Over the Internet, progressive Muslim mailing lists and websites are
becoming increasingly popular. Groups like the Progressive Muslim
Network and the Network of Progressive Muslims engage in discussions -
on everything from matters of ritual to social relationships - that
would be unheard of in neighborhood mosques. The online magazine
MuslimWakeUp.com which I cofounded, has featured articles that are
openly critical of conservative interpretations of Islam - and
according to the web-ranking company Alexa, it has become the
highest-ranked website geared to Muslim Americans in just six months of
operation.

A slew of books on progressive Islam in the past few years has
energized many Muslim Americans to begin organizing their own
conferences and gatherings. In April, a group in Washington, D.C.
organized the first Progressive Islam conference, where women and men
prayed side by side, and women had the opportunity to lead prayers.

Sufism, the Islamic mystical trend that emphasizes spirituality over
legalism and is exemplified by the popular poetry of Rumi, represents
another haven for progressives.

"The only places I have felt comfortable have been Sufi congregations,
because they are generally more tolerant and inclusive. They keep the
focus on the values and principles of Islam as a living inspiration.
They are imbued with the highest values and are not focused on the
particulars of law and cultural manifestations," says Amina Wadud,
Islamic studies professor at Virginia Commonwealth University and
author of "Qur'an and Woman."

As with any great world faith, Islam has been very open to
transformation, as illustrated by its rich sectarian history - a
centuries-old genre of work exists in Islamic literature that is
devoted to the study of various Muslim theological, mystical, and
philosophical movements. And unless traditional Muslim American
institutions and leaders are willing to deal with reality, more and
more Muslims will feel compelled to find alternatives that address
their spiritual concerns.

This could very well mean the formation of a new school of thought,
with its own mosques and institutions, that is faithful to the
universal principles of Islam.

That could only be a positive step for Americans of all faiths,
especially if the result is an Islam that is inclusive, tolerant, less
authoritarian, and more reflective of Muslims in America.

* Ahmed Nassef, a writer, activist, and marketing management
consultant, is editor in chief of MuslimWakeUp.com.





(c) Copyright 2003 The Christian Science Monitor.  All rights reserved.


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