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Q-Notes
Halal comic book heroes, A slap in the face of decency, America's human rights
record, 30 days trial Islam, Islamic music at this year's summer festivals, how
it all began in Pakistan and more.
Respect or respectability?
Are you thinking what we’re thinking? Thank God, it’s all over. But did all that
sound and fury about the “Muslim vote” signify nothing? Are British Muslims
moving towards a politics of accountability or are the old ways of patronage
still decisive? Yahya Birt reflects after all the ballot papers have been
counted.
Vote early, vote often
Imagine a Muslim voter waking up on Friday 6th May for his fajr prayers. In the
half-light of early dawn, he is in a reflective mood. He turns on the television
catching the hilariously yet disturbing Paxman-Galloway “interview”, which while
entertaining, was scarcely enlightening. Our thoughtful Muslim returns to bed,
but is unable to sleep. What to make of this night of electoral drama? Was
Galloway’s result an aberration? Did he make the right choice? Did his vote
count? Did it count three or four times? So many questions. Dal Nun Strong
has some answers.
Déjà Vu All Over Again
Déjà Vu All Over
Again
The last time Khalida Khan wrote about Muslim girls and school uniforms was
fifteen years ago in, Muslimwise. At that time it was the Alvi sisters,
students at Altrincham Grammar School, who were fighting for the right to wear
the hijab. Fast-forward to 2005 and Shabina Begum. Sadly, she argues, we are
still obsessed with what is on the body rather than what is in the head.
Let's call a spade a spade
The Arab media is quick to point out double standards in American foreign
policy, but is often silent about homegrown violence, like the murder of
civilians in Darfur and Iraq. Veteran journalist Abdallah Schleifer takes stock
of moral ambivalence in the Muslim world and sees some much needed signs of
hope.
Raping the shariah
She was dragged into a shed screaming for help in the name of Allah. Her clothes
were torn from her and she was subjected to the most brutal and traumatic
experience a woman can suffer. Four different men beat her and forced themselves
onto her, over and over again. Isla Rosser-Owen asks what you would you
do if this happened to your wife, your mother, your sister or your daughter?
Isn’t it time we stopped overlooking the brutalities of tribal ‘justice’?
A tortured book
Newsweek
probably reasoned that when squared against the physical abuse of Guantanamo
prisoners, the torture of a book would be a mere footnote to the main story.
Their miscalculation led to outrage around the world. Yet Newsweek’s retraction
doesn’t change what is already well-documented. Based on exclusive interviews
with former Guantanamo insiders, Nazim Baksh reveals the extent to which
the Quran is desecrated inside America’s gulag and what it means for Muslims,
here and abroad.
Diary
Affan Chowdhry
on Martin Lings, America’s incredible capacity for kitsch, and a little baby who
desperately wants to run.
What about making greed history?
Make Poverty History is the kind of global campaign that everyone can get behind
- politicians, corporations, NGOs, even rock stars. But haven’t African nations
paid back their debts already? Isn’t the current debt burden actually due to
crushing interest payments? offers a dissenting view on the current campaign and
questions whether we are addressing the right issues.
Classic Q
Angst on the way
to the altar. Being young, Muslim and unattached is like being on death row,
so Amil Khan prepares to enter the dreaded ‘marriage market’.
Upfront
Wedding Breakfast
Painter Rafiqa Clare Basel explores the terrifying deaths of an Afghan wedding
party in a new series of work that seeks to humanise “collateral damage”.
My name is Rachel Corrie
The Royal Court’s production of the life of the American born activist is a tour
de force. As N.A. Kassem explains, the play is a powerful and intimate
portrait of a contemporary hero - an amazing young woman speaking in her own
words before tragically becoming an icon.
Keeping the sacred trust
The magnificent Topkapi Palace in Istanbul holds many treasures, but none
greater than the relics of the Prophet Muhammad - intimate items associated with
his magnificent life and emblematic of his noble example. Preserved by
generations of Ottoman Sultans, these incredible objects have now been
photographed and presented for the first time in a limited edition book.
Nazim Baksh reflects on the importance of its publication.
Write Mind
Ain't no mountain high enough
It appears that two Iranian women have become the first Muslim women to scale
Mount Everest. This impressive feat will no doubt be heralded around the Muslim
world, and for good reason. All will applaud and take great pride in their
accomplishment. We’ll all cite this as an example of how liberated Muslim women
are, contrary to the slanders against Islam one hears today. But, Svend White
asks, do many of us really have the right to be proud of them?
Conquest in Istanbul
The Ataturk stadium trembled as the Anfield anthem rang out with chants
cascading from all sides: “You will never walk alone”. Against all odds, in this
city of conquerors and empires, Liverpool - a plucky, but oft-wounded gladiator
- had won the UEFA Champions League for a record fifth time. Yasser Chaudhary
was there to see it happen.
Secrets of Moorish Spain
Jason Webster’s first book Duende was an account of his years spent feeding an
obsessive interest in flamenco. Mujadad Zaman maintains Andalus is
nurtured from a similarly compulsive sentiment. To what extent, Webster asks, is
contemporary Spain still moulded and influenced by its Muslim past?
Fiqh questions, with Faraz Rabbani |

FROM THE PULPIT
June 2005, Issue
363
Buy a copy of this
issue online
Read this issue online (4.69 mb
PDF)
Adobe Acrobat required
Every issue of Q-News
has a soundtrack - music we listen to as we prepare the magazine. A few
months ago it was Youssou N’Dour’s latest album Egypt, a Grammy award
winning collection of songs in praise of Senegal’s great Sufi shaykhs (in
fact we listened to Youssou for two or three issues and most of us can now
sing the entire album in almost perfect Wolof).
Then came Egyptian troubadour Mohamed Mounir, whose album Al Ard Al Salam
- “Earth and Peace”, was introduced to me by a South African friend.
Besides being an actor, musician, songwriter and talented studio producer,
he is a lover of the Prophet Muhammad and Al Ard Al Salam was composed and
written to honour the Messenger. “I swear by the keys of heavens”, he
sings “that I remain engulfed in my love for the Messenger of God.” It is
an inspired work which draws on the great mawlid traditions of Upper
Egypt’s Nubian peoples.
As we struggled to prepare this memorial issue in honour of Shaykh Abu
Bakr Siraj ad-Din, Dr Martin Lings, we turned to the music of the
legendary Ali Farka Touré, arguably Mali’s greatest contemporary musician,
the father of the African blues. A deeply devout and spiritual man, he
quit touring several years and returned to his hometown of Niafunké on the
Niger River to farm. Although he is now the town’s mayor, he took a short
leave to record his latest album In the Heart of the Moon, a collaboration
with kora maestro Toumane Diabaté. The result is heavenly music - a
seamless blend of guitar and kora (a 21-string West African harp) that one
reviewer called “supernatural”. As Toure often says his music is a product
of his soul. At a recent concert appearance he began with a composition in
praise of the Prophet.
What is common to all these musicians is they are Muslims from Africa.
After all, Africa is practically a Muslim continent. In the lead up to the
G8 summit at Gleneagles, there has been much talk of Africa. With the Make
Poverty History campaign about to reach its musical crescendo with the
massive Live 8 concerts planned for London’s Hyde Park, the world’s
attention will be on Africa as it hasn’t been for a generation. It is
unfortunate that it takes rock stars and celebrities, some well past their
best before dates, to get people interested in one of the most important,
resource rich and culturally diverse regions of the world. There were no
benefit concerts when millions died in Rwanda. Few people knew about
Africa’s growing AIDS crisis until Nelson Mandela launched his 46664
campaign with a concert in South Africa in 2003. This year’s Africa 05
festival is trying to introduce some of the continent’s leading artistic,
literary and musical talent to new audiences. Even the BBC has launched a
season of long overdue programming about Africa.
What’s been left out of the coverage is that Africa is a majority Muslim
continent. Conservative estimates peg Africa’s Muslim population at around
586 million people, around 65% of the total population. Yet, very little
mention is made of its Muslim cultures and civilisations.
Ignorance of our African Muslim heritage is as rampant amongst Muslims.
It’s time we liberated ourselves from the narrow vision that the only
Muslim identity is an Arab one. How many of us know of the great empires
of Mali, of Mansa Musa and the famed universities of Timbukto? What about
Shehu Uthman Dan Fodio’s Sokoto Caliphate and the great scholarship
produced by both women and men during its history? What is the name of the
Shaykh who led the first freedom struggle in Southern Africa? (It’s Shaykh
Yusuf Macassar, if anyone is still wondering.)
Fewer still care to know about the contributions of African Muslims, past
and present, to the development of thoelogy, science, architecture and
urban planning. We have forgotten Africa and we are the poorer for it. A
cultural reconnection to African Islam is needed - and there is no better
time than now.
Uniting for the Prophet, the mawlid we were honoured to help organise on 2
May 2005 under the auspices of Mahabba Unlimited, was a starting point,
featuring musical traditions from the Sudan and other parts of the Muslim
world. Future programs must do more. By allowing ourselves to experience
and engage the rich and diverse palette of Islamic cultures, we in turn
encourage the development of a cultural agenda for Muslims in Britain and
beyond.
As I recently wrote elsewhere, for years, literalists have downplayed the
importance of music, art and literature (particularly in the West where
debates over whether these things are permissible or not is a favourite
pastime of the religious classes). Islamic civilisations gave birth to
some of the most sophisticated cultural and artistic expressions.
Celebrations like the mawlid are essential elements of the cultural
calendar of most Muslim societies and were the catalysts for repeated
cultural evolution and revival.
We need to revive those musical and artistic traditions that have begun to
vanish. A people without a cultural agenda that particularises and
localises religious expression, present no hope for their young people.
Today, there is a Maghrebi Islam distinct from an Anatolian Islam. Neither
loses its link to the universal Islamic principles, but both have a unique
cultural expression. Q-News is committed to playing an important role in
this great and necessary cultural project.
And Allah knows best.
Fareena Alam
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“You call me a terrorist when
I’m the one who is oppressed.”
Indie-band Belle &
Sebastian are used to taking on social justice causes in their hometown of
Glasgow, where their mix of transcendent pop and straight talk has made them
local heroes. But nothing prepared them for the devastation they saw on a recent
human rights mission to Palestine, or for the bravery of the new heroes in the
fight against poverty and racism. War on Want’s Nick Dearden reports.
“It’s almost like we don’t
exist”
More than just a sun-soaked holiday destination, Malta was once almost entirely
Muslim. Carol Gatt is one of only a few hundred indigenous Maltese
Muslims, part of a new community struggling to build a future on these
Mediterranean islands. She talks about her conversion to Islam, the poor
prospects for immigrants and her plan to kickstart the Muslim population.
Heaven's warrior
Ghassan Massoud has suddenly become very famous. As the actor chosen by Ridley
Scott to play Salahuddin al-Ayyubi in the film Kingdom of Heaven, Massoud
bore a tremendous responsibility in communicating Scott’s radical retelling of
the Crusades. Already an accomplished actor in his native Syria, Massoud spoke
to Abdul-Rehman Malik about his love for Salahuddin, working with Scott
and why he refuses to enter Jerusalem.
The heart of illumination
As a student at the
Visual Islamic and Traditional Arts Programme, Unaiza Karim was just beginning her exploration of traditional Islamic arts
when she met Dr Martin Lings. The meeting changed the course of her life,
inspired her work and will forever shape the craftswoman she aspires to be.
"That is the man who speaks to
flowers and who is much loved"
Shaykh Abu Bakr lived in his
last home with his beloved wife for over thirty years, writes Emma Clarke.
During this time he created and tended to a garden of such beauty that it takes
one’s breath away. It is both joyful and serene, with a certain intellectual
rigour underlying it - truly a reflection of Shaykh Abu Bakr’s own soul as well
as of the celestial gardens.
A spiritual giant in an age of
dwarfed terrestrial aspirations
Shaykh Hamza Yusuf pays tribute to Dr Martin Lings, the man who led his heart to
Islam.
A truly holy soul
To be perfectly well, the soul must be complete. ‘Holiness’, ‘wholeness’ and
‘health’ are in origin the same word and have merely been differentiated in form
and in meaning through the fragmentation of language. The virtues of simplicity
and sincerity are inseparable from this perfection, for each in its own way
means undividedness of soul.
Reza Shah-Kazemi can think of very few passages that more accurately
express the character of Shaykh Abu Bakr than this one. Put simply, he was “all
there”, a truly “whole” man, who was indeed holy, and from whom utter sincerity
radiated with disarming simplicity.
A tribute to universal wisdom
Mike O’Brien reflects on the importance of the mawlid and finds that the
charity, wisdom and dignity of the Prophet give us all principles to live by.
Signing got the Prophet
For deaf British Muslims, Uniting for the Prophet was perhaps the most
accessible mawlid they had ever attended. Tahira Amin, trained in British Sign
Language, spent almost seven hours signing out the day’s proceedings. Sonia
Malik, whose uncle was one of those who benefited, reports.
"The world was all submerged in
light on the night of Muhammad's birth"
Ten years after Q-News held Britain’s first modern mawlid in 1995,
Uniting for the Prophet organised under the patronage of Habib ‘Ali Al-Jifri at
Wembley’s conference centre on 2 May 2005 attracted over 2700 people from across
the country. They came to hear orations from the most important contemporary
Islamic scholars and listen to beautiful music and litanies of remembrance. Most
of all they came to unite across ethnic, linguistic and sectarian lines to
express love and devotion to the man God called ‘the mercy to all the worlds’.
Fozia Bora was there and declares the first truly national British mawlid a
blessed success.
An assembly of love
From Sumatra to Samarkand, the mawlid is the most important cultural event in
the Muslim calendar. Fuad Nahdi wants it to become an essential feature
of British Islam. Kicking off Uniting for the Prophet - an event that he dreamt
of organising for almost a decade, he says it’s time to make the mawlid a truly
national celebration.
Saints, sufis and Star Wars
A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away noble Sufi shaykhs trained
young dervishes to battle dark powers that sought to lead people along the path
of hatred and anger. They floated through the air, walked on water and did
remarkable acrobatics - all by invoking the divine Force. Sound familiar? It’s
better than you think. Irfan M. Rydhan explores the secret relationship
between Islam and Star Wars.
Life on the Streets
The Homelessness Experience? Sounds like a new reality show, doesn’t it? As
Sonia Malik can testify, it was anything but. In the last weeks of winter,
she and six others volunteered to become rough sleepers in a bid to raise
awareness about the hardships of living without shelter on London’s mean
streets. Two days of dodging police, seeking warm alcoves and scraping together
meals from handouts has changed her perceptions of those with no fixed address.
Becoming integral to Europe's
future
In the concluding part of his essay Do we dare be European Muslims?, H. A.
Hellyer challenges the failure of Muslim communities to become intrinsic to
the European societies they are a part of. We are not, he argues, a dangerous
fifth column, but integral to the debate over the future of Europe - a community
of purpose, ready and willing to make its contribution.
Dragging myself up to heaven
There are over 650 muscles in our body and if you ever wanted a really good way
of locating every single one of them - particularly that elusive posterior
cruciate ligament - climb a mountain. Sarah Waseem took on Ulfa Aid’s Ben
Nevis challenge and grunted and groaned her way to (some kind of) enlightenment. |