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Q-Notes
Alan Rickman's new
play My Name is Rachel Corrie has
the Jewish community up in storm. Malls
and minarets - English
cityscapes could radically alter with minarets and domes as part of a
radical new project aimed at integrating diverse cultures. Gaddafi, the Opera. Unholy Alliance:
Fox News buys Al-Jazeera (or
does it?). O Layla, where art thou?:
Cyberspace is bustling
with Muslims in search of true love and a happily-ever-after. In
defence of the nation: 100 women graduate from Iran’s female police
academy.
First person
Channel 4’s Torture: the Guantanamo Guidebook subjected seven
volunteers to the methods of torture used by American interrogators on
alleged terrorists at the infamous detention centre in Cuba. The
results of the experiment were chilling. Among the volunteers were
three British Muslims. Of them, Isra Iqbal and Fauzi Waraich explain
why they agreed to take part and how “two days in hell” changed their
lives.
An Islamic
history of Europe
Rageh
Omaar went in search of Europe's
lost civilisation and found a tale of racial tolerance, flourishing
culture and remarkable scholarship. This is the story of Islam in
Europe and the spirit of convivencia that shaped it.
The day women
merely became more like men
On 18 March 2005 Amina Wadud led the first
female-led jummah prayer. On that day women took a huge step towards
being more like men. but, did we come closer to actualising our
god-given liberation? Yasmin Mogahed reflects.
Forcing the
debate on the future of Muslim women
Most
books on the rights of Muslim women contrast their position in Arab
society before and after the coming of Islam. Sadly, argues Humera
Khan, most stop there. Thus, Amina Wadud’s recent decision to
lead congregational Friday prayers in New York can be seen as a
desperate attempt to focus the attention of the community on the
deteriorating position of Muslim women.
Not in my name
In the days leading up to the election call, the
government decided to drop the proposed legislation on incitement to
religious hatred from its parliamentary agenda, promising its
reintroduction if Labour gets its coveted third term.
Khalida Khan argues that support for the bill by the
Muslim
Council of Britain and others is misplaced. British muslims don’t need
symbolic, ineffective laws, but comprehensive measures to outlaw
religious discrimination.
A new beginning
with the British Muslim Forum
The story
of Muslims in Britain is a tale of true grit - of courage, innovation
and hope.
Gul Muhammad, secretary-general of the newly
launched British Muslim Forum, explains why a new national body is
needed to carry this story forward into an era of new challenges.
Out of control
orders
The
Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005 grants the home secretary powers to
circumvent standard legal procedures in its treatment of suspected
terrorists. It is frightening, unprecedented and as Stop Political
Terror’s Saghir Hussein tells
Sonia Malik, its implementation threatens to
victimise and criminalise Muslims across Britain.
Diary
Affan
Chowdhry on dancing monkeys, the world’s slowest imam and the
search for his uncle’s grave.
St George, The
Ubiquitous
On
the same day in April, white banners with red crosses fly from English
churches, a splendidly attired Greek orthodox bishop in Beirut
celebrates a special four-hour mass, a Syrian monastery embraces
thousands of pilgrims, and ailing Egyptians wait for miraculous cures
in a small Nile delta village. the day? St. George's day, of course,
April 23.
Review: Rather
dull, actually
Sarah Hussain watches the BBC’s
much-anticipated Pakistani Actually, an evening of
documentaries about British Pakistanis, and finds the results lack
creativity and invention.
Write Mind:
The Friday prayer blues
Have you heard that the ummah can only be saved if
Muslim kids get
married early? Hamzah Moin explores the modern tragicomedy of
the Friday sermon.
Classic Q
Experiencing Q-News. Isla
Rosser-Owen walked into the office and found chaos, creativity and
confidence. It was exactly what she needed.
Upfront
Photographer Clement Cooper’s striking compositions of young
British Muslim women are statements of startling beauty and profound
dignity.
Fiqh
questions, with Faraz Rabbani
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FROM THE PULPIT
April
2005, Issue 362
Buy a copy
of this issue online
Please
click on the titles on the left
and the right to
read individual articles.
The General
Elections of 2005 might still turn out to be a milestone in the story
of British Islam. Throughout the country there is a raging debate
taking place within all parts of the community. From the pulpits to the
kebab houses we are robustly engaged on matters political. Essentially
the sophisticated discussions can be reduced to two critical issues:
should Muslim take part in the electoral process? And how should they
vote?
After more than a decade of debate and wrangling, the ayes have it. The
argument that Muslims should not take part in a plebiscite is now old
hat. Despite their vociferous and passionate arguments those advocating
disengagement are today a relatively tiny minority. To continue airing
such views is not only reactionary but unwise: an unnecessary
radicalism that betrays lack of maturity, astuteness and strategy.
For the majority of the community the real debate is what should be the
real aims of our participation in the general election and how we
realise them. Traditionally Muslims voted Labour because it was the
party that catered the most for their immediate social, cultural and
political needs - committed to the anti-racist struggle,
multi-culturalism and positive about immigration and Kashmir.
But it has all changed so dramatically. First, there is the issue of
demography. Today the majority of British Muslims are not from the
sub-continent. We consist of more than 56 nationalities speaking nearly
a hundred languages. Furthermore, ours is a young confident community -
obviously more diverse and more British if anything. The younger
generation is pro-active, sophisticated and cannot be taken for granted.
Of course, they are bothered by the traditional 'Muslim' issues but
their disquiet is broader than the plight of Kashmir, Palestine and
Chechnya. They are bothered about global poverty and warming, the
rising tide of Islamophobia and the MRSA bug, the abysmal fall in
education standards and in the criminalisation and radicalisation of
young people.
The fact of the matter is that British Muslims are a
much more savoir
vivre than either those who parade themselves as 'representative'
bodies or party campaign managers could ever imagine. Woe to those -
ideologues or simpletons - who want to perpetuate the notion that we
are a monolithic entity.
Every day Islam in Britain undergoes a process of change
and
metamorphosis. The real struggle is to rise above the one-dimensional
image being sustained by Home Office mandarins, their partners within
the community and a lazy and insidious media. The Noble Prophet, peace
be upon him, acknowledged diversity within the Ummah as a blessing.
Those who want either to deny or dilute it are doomed to failure.
Come May 5 and the majority of Muslims will go out to
vote like their
fellow citizens. They will - or should - be guided in their voting by
the same factors that steer other people in this society: concern about
the plight of others elsewhere, of the challenges facing the young, the
old, the sick, the less disadvantaged and the future.
It is not all black and white but then this is why we are what we are:
human beings not animals. We must put into practice our ability to
discern and remember that we are going to be accountable for our
decisions on the Day.
However, now is a good time to chill out. The last
couple of weeks have
been the best British Muslims have had as we are wooed by all the
political parties. The new sense of our importance can only uplift our
self-esteem and give us a respite from the normal barrage of contempt
and Islamophobia that is normally our lot.
It is also time for political horse-trading. This might not be to all
our taste but it is the reality of living in a modern democratic
society. We need not take part in it if we feel strongly about it but
we have no right to forbid it to those who want to. Our responsibility
at the end is to ensure that our communities and their interests are
not sold cheaply.
The only way to do that is to work towards mobilising
our people at the
grassroots to be both wise and vigilante. If anything, this coming
elections promises to expose those have so far paraded themselves as
either 'representatives' or 'leaders' of our communities. Their
inability to deliver to the politicians who manufactured them in the
first place can only be to the benefit of the ummah in the long term.
Whatever we do we should not forget that we are a median
community
instructed to enjoin good and forbid evil. Let us never forget the fact
that what we have to offer society is more than hot air radicalism or
pious rhetoric. It is time we made clear our vision of society: a
vision in which we want to see young people thrive, the elderly and the
sick are cared for, poverty eradicated and peace and harmony prevail,
in our country and all of humanity.
Fuad Nahdi
Editor-in-Chief
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Do we dare be
European Muslims?
The
Burda is recited in London, iMacs are used in Makkah - the yin
of the ‘West’ is no longer disparate from the yang of Islam. In
the first of a two-part essay,
H.A. Hellyer presents a vision for European Islam consistent with
its classical heritage and compatible with modernity.
And so it
begins...
Tony Blair on
earning the public trust,
his vision for a third term and his fear that politicians will use
faith to get votes. Michael
Howard believes Muslims are
just as
concerned as other voters about healthcare, uncontrolled immigration,
and chronic underachievement. Charles
Kennedy talks tough on
foreign policy, anti-terror legislation and admits he’s eager to earn
the confidence of the community.
Constituency
Watch
The
concentration of Muslim voters in certain constituencies amplifies
their voting power. In this election, which is shaping to be much
closer than anticipated, the political parties are not taking any
chances. Frontbenchers from all sides of the political spectrum have
been dutifully visiting mosques, community centres and reassuring
voters that their party has only the best interests of Muslims in mind.
But the obedient Muslim voter of the past is no longer easily
convinced. Abdul-Rehman Malik explains.
Is there a muslim
vote?
Politicians
have been climbing over themselves to endear themselves to the Muslim
community. Has the Muslim vote really become so important?
Dal Nun Strong investigates.
The long
and
winding road
Only
when we
become more serious about playing our role as citizens can we be sure
of our political maturity, argues AbdelWahab El-Affendi. The
community must do more than squander its limited political capital on
marginal issues and get serious about dealing with real problems.
A
progressive
victory in East London?
The
Respect Party has energised East London’s political landscape. Aysha
Ali and Adam Riaz Khan report on George Galloway’s chances of
unseating an increasingly unpopular and uneasy Oona King.
Paving the way for
Nick Griffin
Quiet,
almost forgotten, Keighley is about to become very important.
With Nick Griffin running in a town which already has two BNP
councillors, Azhar Hussain looks at how the town’s significant
Muslim population is responding and how the sitting MP may be held
accountable for Griffin’s rise.
Scotland’s quiet
revolution
Feeling
betrayed by Labour, Arifa
Farooq reports on how
Scottish Muslims are challenging the political status quo and might
even be willing to ditch Westminster for the promise of Holyrood.
Labour’s struggle to get Welsh Muslims
onside
As
more Welsh Muslims consider supporting the Nationalist Plaid Cymru,
the second generation are becoming increasingly cynical about the
political process - they simply feel unrepresented. Shabnam Ahmed
reports on why Labour is worried and working hard to get Muslims onside.
A
bolder ambition
Salma
Yaqoob is constantly asked, “What’s the
point of being part of something small and fringe?” By running for
Respect in Birmingham’s Spark Brook and Small Heath constituency, she
is hoping to do more than become an MP. She’s hoping to shift the
foundation of political debate in Britain.
“Our
votes are
useless”
Having
bargained with our communities, undermined our unity and caused
infighting in mosques, politicians have given Muslims little in return.
That is why it’s time to stop dancing to their tune and, as the Hizb
ut-Tahrir’s Abdul Wahid argues, develop a political agenda that is
truly our own.
Tashkent
to
Blackburn
When
Craig Murray condemned the use of torture in Uzbekistan, he lost
his job as UK’s ambassador. Now, he tells Sonia Malik, he’s
challenging Jack Straw to come clean on Central Asia’s most brutal
regime.
Still our
safest
bet
Labour
behaved dishonourably in Iraq and left Afghanistan to fend for
itself but, as Baroness Pola Uddin tells Sanjana Deen, it is
still the only party which can deliver equality, justice and freedom
for all.
Voting
is not
enough
Having
just been through a vicious political season, American Muslims
know a thing or two about tactics, strategy and getting out the vote.
Although there is a sense of urgency to Muslim political involvement in
both Britain and the united states, Svend White advises
caution. Political activism, he says, has stark limitations in the
absence of other types of civic engagement.
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