Grasping the Nettle
Five years after the 2001 street disturbances rocked Britain,
Atif Imtiaz
puts forward a new primer on the integration question and asks whether the policy diktats have simply missed the point.

Nanu Miah - The King of Parr
How did an anti-racist street fighter jailed for a violent attack at the age of 16 become one of Oldham’s most celebrated heroes?
Shamim Miah tells the remarkable story of a man whose life was turned around by faith.

Does Terror Grow
in Our Garden Too?

The idyll of Toronto’s middle class suburbs was shattered last month with the arrest of 17 young Muslims accused of plotting to bomb Parliament and take over the national television network.
Nazim Baksh
has been on the trail of global terror for over a decade. Now he’s searching for answers in his own backyard.

Educating Against Islamophobia
Solutions for tackling Islamophobia are too often one-off, short-term and unrealistic.
Shiraz Khan
takes the long view and sees a critical engagement with the education system as the only way of nipping this prejudice in the bud.

That Wouldn’t be Very Christian, Would it?
Farzina Alam reports from the headquarters of Christian Aid on the charity’s Muslim employees and how this truly modern faith-based charity is taking on the stereotypes head-on.

The Unravelling of Ayaan Hirsi Ali
With her reputation in ruins,
Mohamed N. Husain
reports on liberal Europe’s most celebrated “Muslim’ as she ditches the continent and gets ready to take her confused message to the US.

Is Poverty History Yet?
A year after the Make Poverty History fanfare, leading anti-poverty activist
Kumi Naidoo
talks about a dream deferred.

The Fundamental Fear
Why did Malaysia ban a book by a prominent British Muslim academic?
Farish A. Noor
explores the political crisis in Malaysia that has stalled the much-touted reform agenda.

Crime in the Valley
Nick Dearden
reports from the Jordan Valley, the other, ignored side of Palestine, on the human tragedy that’s taking place where the cameras fear to tread.

The Taliban Strikes Back
As British soldiers die in record numbers,
Chris Sands
reports from the frontlines of a security situation spiralling out of control.

Cover
A Sweet Interrogation

American Islam’s Poet Laureate Daniel Abdal Hayy Moore talks to
Fareena Alam
about the future of Muslim culture, why poetry matters more than ever and the danger of idolising Islam.

Uniting for the Prophet 2006
Fuad Nahdi on unlimited mahabba.
With the miasma of gloom left by the Danish cartoon controversy and the fallout from the London bombings, this year’s national mawlid celebration was anticipated with great expectations.
Fozia Bora reports on a day of joy and delight where the remembrance of the Prophet cast away the darkness and gave some much-needed hope.
Daniel Abdal Hayy Moore on being in the company of “giants” plus a photo essay chronicling the landmark event -“Somehow, even in London, pattered by the merciful rainfall that followed, we left a space in which the Presence was more than a rumor or distant report. It was a tasted reality, and relief and joy were the outcome - a mawlid that brought disparate hearts together out of our separate realms.”

Travel
Plovdiv: Granada of the East.

Most of Bulgaria’s Ottoman Islamic heritage lies in ruins - the victim of Communist hatred and Orthodox Christian suspicion. In this special essay,
Abdal-Hakim Murad
explores the once magnificent city of Plovdiv and finds, amid the destruction, signs of a rebirth.

Life in the Zongo
In the squalor and sprawl of Ghana’s Muslim ghettos,
Abdullah Bradford
finds faith and an ancient past.

Hollywood Not History
Sufia Lodhi
finds that United 93 raises, but fails to answer, some unsettling questions.

Painting a Difficult Conversation
Unaiza Karim
is excited about how British Museum’s new exhibit of Arabic gets tradition and modernity talking.

Shaykh Che

Jennifer Varela and Amina Nawaz
discover why Osama Bin Laden is in Che Guevara’s debt.

Wayfarers to God
So-called spiritual manuals are a dime a dozen. Cheaply published, poorly researched, badly written, they are the grist and fodder of “Islamic” publishing houses the world over.
Qaisar Latif finds that Habib Ali’s latest book is a refreshing departure from the norm.

 

 


FROM THE PULPIT

July 2006, Issue 367
Buy a copy of this issue online

Please click on the titles on the left
and the right to read individual articles.

Long before the 7/7 attacks took place some of us had been warning of the inevitable tragedy but to no avail. The authorities - blinded by their own make-believe world of British Islam constructed with the help of their chosen ‘community leaders’ - preferred to ignore all the signs.
Now, a year after the tragedy, it is time for reflection - and introspection. Both, by the way, are an integral part of the Islamic message. Despite all the pressures and obstacles the majority of British Muslims - 1.8 million of them - have been engrossed in these processes already. The result is that today we are among the most engaged, plural and aware communities in the country.
Only Makkah and Madinah are more diverse than London, the Muslim capital of the West. London is home to Muslims from over 60 countries speaking in more than 100 languages. Its 300 mosques represent all kinds of madhhabs (schools of thoughts) and the dozen or so Muslim bookshops give a fascinating insight into the intellectual struggle for hearts and minds within the community.
Ours is a young community full oomph - critical, cynical and combative. The more than half who are under 25 years of age are more British than anything else. Proof of this is widespread: the dogged determination to more than survive the climate of racism and Islamophobia that engulfs them every day, their passionate opposition to injustice and oppression in the world and the willingness - amongst a few - to participate in foreign conflicts that are perceived as genocide (Bosnia-Herzegovina) or ruthless occupation (Iraq). Koestler and Orwell did it in Spain, so why not Ahmed or Sadeq in Afghanistan?
Okay, we may be Britain’s new underclass with problems in employment and housing, underachievement in schools and public representation, a faltering voluntary sector and suffering from years of neglect by social service providers. But the victim mentality displayed by some of our umbrella organisations and ‘leaders’ is erroneous. We are as apt as any other community when it comes to economic and social enterprise: there are more than 5,000 Muslim millionaires (Muslims give more to charity than the average Briton) and we have no significant partners when it comes to the ownership of our intricate infrastructure.
All of our 1,500 mosques - roughly valued at £500m - and our more than 100 schools have nothing to do with either the CRE or any government funding. Our mosques are fiercely independent. They are everything except havens for terrorism. Our mosques are also run by spiritual warlords accountable to no one. Nevertheless, the vast majority of our imams are valiant warriors trying to juggle with the issues facing communities.
The so-called “Muslim Task Force” invited to Windsor Castle for a two-day summit was a commendable step in the right direction. It raised a lot of expectations. It was by far the most inclusive consultation of British Muslims and the recommendations adopted quite reasonable. But we weren’t expecting miracles.
It was with this sense of realpolitik that I accepted the offer to implement one of the critical recommendations agreed upon by members of the Preventing Extremism Together working groups. Looking back the unquestionable success of the Radical Middle Way Project has depended on several factors, the key one being the exploratory, innovative and imaginative way in which the partnership at different levels have been forged. You could not get a more powerful - and inclusive - partnership than the quartet involved: the Federation of Student Islamic Societies, the Young Muslims Organisation (UK), Q-News and Mahabba Unlimited, a not-for-profit cultural charity.
From the beginning it became obvious that the Project was going to be a delicate process of engagement and building both arguments and trust. We improved on the original terms of reference: ours became a community-led programme aimed at articulating the mainstream understanding of Islam and to provide intellectual space so that issues pertinent to young people could be mooted by qualified scholars of the faith.
Our job is to create a tent big enough to embrace every opinion and nurture a culture of tolerance and civilised powwow. We refuse to be judgemental - only imaginative. We trusted the sensibilities of our communities and the different people we give platform to. The result has been an unprecedented outreach exercise that has touched the understanding and passions of tens of thousands of people, old and young, men and women.
The Radical Middle Way is no ‘sham’: the title is the product of imaginative Muslim minds, the phenomenal success is the outcome of a partnership between relevant Muslim groups and civil servants who have trusted them. We are proud that we are showing the way ahead on how government has to work with Muslims in Britain. The openness, candour and confidence shown to us by officials at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, our partners in government, have been invaluable. The result has been a success story that is the envy of governments in the West and in the Muslim world.
Halfway through the Project’s term the effect of our strategy is obvious to all. The speakers we invite and the diverse platforms we have created have only one thing in mind: consolidating and strengthening the understanding of the teaching of mainstream Islam which are based on co-existence, tolerance and love. Not for us the red herrings of identity politics: instead we prefer to deal with the real issues of foreign policy and the fact that British Islam is to be borne out of more tangible issues than beards, scarves and halal meat.
The thousands who flock to our meetings and visit our website seem to agree with our call to go back to the basics. This means combating ignorance by spreading and empowering arguments for the ‘middle way’ - a strategy of inner transformation as old as Islam itself when faced with extremist ideas.
Part of our challenge has been to define leadership in terms of an Islamic understanding. Not surprising critics of the Project have included intellectually challenged ‘representative umbrella bodies’ and self-appointed reformers and specialists of Islam. All continue to fantasise from the margins as we move forward in our ambitions to nurture an Islam that is true to its traditional understanding, relevant to its present situation and an asset to British society. From the cockpit those leading - qualified in the sciences of navigating the choppy theological and moral waters we are passing through - keep shouting down at us: “remember, we are not desperately seeking to be European Muslims - only intelligent believers.”

Fuad Nahdi

Publisher

 

What Little Difference A Year Makes
British Muslims have been getting an awful lot attention. Too much attention, grumble some. But, with the formation of a high-profile Home Office task force and an action plan to tackle ‘extremism’, there ought to be reason for genuine optimism. Not likely, argues
Humera Khan.
In a political culture of quick-fix, the opportunities of the last year might well have been squandered.

A Year of Political Drift
The year following the London bombings has been a time of squandered chances and missed opportunities. With a lack of bold, imaginative and visionary leadership from politicians and Muslims representatives alike,
Yahya Birt
believes the real debate over integration, identity and multiculturalism is just getting started.

Our Upside Down World
Many British Muslims live with the feeling that they are under the microscope - forced to apologise for the actions of others, compelled to keep quiet lest their words are used by the police to pay them a midnight visit. Enough is enough.
Ibrahim Hewitt thinks it’s time to stop apologising and stand up proudly for who we are and what we believe in.

London: The Strength of a Soft City
Some argue that one year after the London bombings and the killing of Jean Charles de Menezes, and in the midst of the trial of the Uxbridge 8 and the fallout from the misconceived Forest Gate arrests, London has been spoiled. That its precious tolerance and openness, the balance between the citizen and the forces of the law, has been smashed both by the assault of medievalist murderers and heavy-handed authoritarians. Nonsense, says
Caspar Melville.


The Chilling Price of Security
Solicitor
Imran Khan
doesn’t pull punches. Whether it was taking on the Metropolitan Police during the Stephen Lawrence inquiry or the Prison Service in his bid to understand why murdered Muslim teenager Zahid Mubarek was allowed to share a cell with a violent racist thug in Feltham prison, his pursuit of justice is dogged, determined and at times controversial. In his assessment of the Islamophobia post-7/7, Khan is damning and clear - British Muslims face gross institutional discrimination and “community leaders” have been able to do little about it.

“To care about the ummah is a blessing, not a danger”
Isn’t it about time that Britain’s Muslims wrestled their destiny away from government sanctioned initiatives that aren’t working and took ownership of their faith?
Hizb ut-Tahrir’s Abdul Wahid offers a contrarian view of the path ahead.

Looking Back from the Future
From anti-terrorism laws and foreign policy to extremism and radicalisation - Britain’s Muslims have been reacting to crisis, dealing with real and perceived conundrums, rolling up their sleeves and trying to make the best of what at times has seemed like an awfully bad situation. It’s been a year of fire fighting. That’s all right for now, says H.A.Hellyer,
but it’s no way to develop a long-term vision of Muslim communities that are truly integral to Britain’s future.

Write Mind:
The Purse and the Accidental Activist

Lilit Marcus bought a designer purse decorated with Arabic script. The reaction to her bout of innocent retail therapy were surprising - and revealing.

Diary
Fuad Nahdi
travels to the fabled city of Timbuktu, mulls over an Ottoman victory in a Vienna café, explores the weird and wonderful possibilities of South African Islam, finds (re)new(ed) truths in Makkah and settles down at yet another conference in Istanbul.

Upfront
The Peace Warrior

Inspired by the remarkable story of an athlete whose mystical friendship with a modern-day spiritual master leads him to forsake the glory for a more eternal truth, The Peaceful Warrior is a contemporary retelling of the story of Rumi and the enigmatic Shems-e-Tabriz.


Classic Q

Prerogatives of the Mosques
A blast from a 1993 edition of Q-News. Muhammad Khan warns that unless Muslims wake up and turn their mosques into real forces for change, we will fail to produce a much-needed generation of young leaders. Not much has changed it seems.

Vox Populi
Q-Readers
tackle terrorism, morbid anniversaries and ask whether their favourite Muslim magazine is losing its edge?

Q-Notes
Making a Better Wudu

Considering Pew

Leeds’s Caged Muslim

The Failure of Mike Gapes MP

The World Halal Industry Comes to London

US Congress Gets Ready for its first Muslim

 

 



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