Authors: Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad and John
L. Esposito
Publishers: Oxford University Press, 2000
Pages: 361
Taking as its starting point the fact
that Islam is the fastest growing religion in the United States, a religion
that will soon replace Judaism, the second largest religion of the country,
this volume examines such issues as Islamic identity, anti-discrimination
laws, African-American Islam, Islam in the American press, mosque design,
economic security, Islamic legal views on Muslims minorities, and female
conversion. These issues are all part, as John L. Esposito notes in his
‘introduction’, of a central question faced by Muslims in the United States:
‘Will they remain Muslims in America or become American Muslims? ’ (p.
3); in other words, to what extent will Muslims become integrated into
American society, and what are the potential costs of such integration?
The first section of the book addresses
what the editors term the ‘American path option’. YvonneYazbeck Haddad
examines the diversity within the American Muslim community, arguing that
the stereotypes of Islam and hostility to Islam and Muslims in the United
States creates a climate where Muslims in the US often feel powerless and
alienated. Various solutions have been formulated by different Muslim communities
to remedy this situation. Some immigrant leaders urge Muslim immigrants
to return to their countries of origin and establish Islamic governments
there; some religious leaders urge the establishment of stronger Islamic
communities within the US that can take constructive action to address
stereotypes of Muslims; and many African American Muslim communities have
become active in promoting programmes to address the problems of the inner
cities. Haddad also touches on an issue that is addressed in several other
articles in the collection – the diversity of Islamic thought and practice
in the US and, in particular, the differences between the African-American
Muslim communities and immigrant Muslim communities.
Khaled Abu al-Fadl continues the discussion
of Muslim minorities in the US by examining how the Islamic law treats
Muslim minorities. The author points out that while traditional legal scholarship
urges Muslims to reside in Muslim majority areas, it also concedes that
Muslims may live in non-Muslim majority lands so long as they are able
to fulfill their religious obligations. Muslim minority communities often
find themselves facing difficult issues regarding how they should live.
Questions such as the advisability of voting, whether state or religious
law is binding, whether or not a Muslim should fight to defend non-Muslim
states/societies, and whether and to what extent Muslims should participate
in the community life of a non-Muslim community are all issues that Muslim
minorities have had to deal with. Abu al-Fadl notes that while reformers
have been calling for a reinterpretation of Islamic law that would enable
the Muslims to deal with such issues, the majority of the ‘ulama’
continue to emphasize the traditional view and argue that Muslims are required
to abide by the teaching of classical Islam.
Yusuf Talal De Lorenzo expands on
this issue in the next article. De Lorenzo takes the Fiqh Council
of North America as an example of the reformist trend mentioned by Abu
al-Fadl. Some North American Muslims have argued that only religious scholars
living in North America are qualified to interpret Islamic law for the
Muslim minority communities there (because they know and understand the
issues Muslim minorities face); the Council was formed in order to respond
to the legal question of Muslims in North America.
The final article in this section,
written by Mohammad A. Muqtedar Khan, addresses the related issue of identity
politics in the United States. Picking up on the theme of diversity within
the American Muslim community, Khan argues that division within the Muslim
community is often a stumbling block to interaction and cooperation among
those of the same faith. Khan’s study concludes that divisions are most
evident among Muslim immigrants, who tend to become more involved in political
issues in the US than they had been at home; in contrast, Khan sees US-born
Muslims as being more open and tolerant and less sectarian. While Khan
points out that such divisions have detrimental effects on the Muslim community
in the US (lack of large contributions to Muslim organizations, failure
to elucidate unified goals and strategies, etc.), he also notes that despite
such diversity and conflict, there are several issues on which Muslims
in the US have common or similar views, for example, international Muslim
politics, the hypocrisy of US foreign policy, and negative media portrayals
of Muslims.
The next section takes up the question
of the veil and female conversion to Islam. Kathleen Moore’s article on
religious discrimination and employment law in the US begins this section.
Moore argues that contrary to the commonly held notion that constitutional
law has been developed to ensure that minority religious communities are
more accepted and tolerated in American society, recent appellate rulings
show a disturbing trend towards conservative interpretations of religious
freedom. These recent decisions emphasize state interest, often at the
expense of religious liberty. Discussing at length a Pennsylvania case
involving a school teacher who wore the Hijab, Moore concludes:
‘American constitutional law as presently constructed is incapable of solving
the problem of the observant Muslim who wears the veil in a secular state.’
(p. 9). Esmail Shakeri continues the discussion in the next chapter. Shakeri
examines the Canadian debate on the Hijab, using as a case study
a Montreal school board decision to ban the wearing of the Hijab in
schools. For Shakeri, the disturbing issue in the Canadian context went
deeper than a conservative interpretation of religious liberty; instead,
the crux of the problem was that the debate on the legality of the school
board decision was not framed in terms of religious liberty at all. Rather,
the discussion was centred on what the Hijab represented to its
opponents.
Carol Amway’s article addresses the
broader issue of female conversion to Islam in North America. The author
studied American and Canadian female converts and examined their reasons
for conversion, their family backgrounds, and the impact of their conversions
on themselves and their families. Amway concludes that as a group, these
converts do not see a contradiction between Islam and American values;
on the contrary, they tend to see similarities in the types of values emphasized
by their religion, Islam, and their American culture, for example, family,
community, education, and discipline.
The third section addresses the diversity
of the African-American Muslim experience. Ernest Allen’s work compares
the formative views of the Moorish Science Temple and the Nation of Islam.
While concluding that the two have theological differences, Allen argues
that the organizing principles of both were similar. Both sought to address
the question of why African-Americans suffered and both sought to formulate
a system of belief and practice that emphasized dual spiritual and material
progress, family life, individual responsibility, hard work, and frugality
in order to provide mechanisms for ending that suffering. Yusuf Nuruddin
continues to address the question of African-American Muslim identity,
arguing that this three-fold heritage (African, American, and Muslim) can
be both a force for conflict. Replete with extensive endnotes, Nuruddin’s
article is an impressive examination of the progression of the African-American
and African American Islamic movements (from black nationalism and black
separatism to radical Islamic separatism, to assimilation movements, to
Farrakhan’s reassertion of the separatist legacy of the Nation of Islam
and movement towards more traditional Islam). The author concludes that
the tension between racial identity and Islamic universalism must be addressed
through organization, combining resources, and pooling talents. Robert
Dannin’s piece on the multi-ethnic dilemma of American Muslims complete
this section of the work. Taking as his starting point the diversity in
local mosques and the diversity in the African-American Muslim reaction
to the Gulf War, Dannin, like Nuruddin, concludes that there is considerable
conflict between race/ethnicity and Islam within local communities. Dannin
points to ‘endless crises of identity’ among African-American Muslims (p.
266) and concludes by arguing that transcending the barriers of race and
ethnicity is ‘the greatest challenge facing American Muslims in the next
century’ (p. 279).
The final section of the book discusses
the difficulties of preserving cultural heritage and adapting to American
life. Greg Noakes addresses the persistent problem of negative coverage
of Islam and anti-Muslim stereotypes in the American media. Identifying
the reasons for such unfavourable press coverage (e.g. sensationalism,
advertising revenue, domestic lobbies, ideological bias of the ‘experts’),
Noakes agrees that while some problems are difficult to be solved, based
as they are in centuries of cultural and political mistrust, others can
be effectively remedied. Noakes urges American Muslims both to take constructive
action and to recognize that negative coverage of Islam may continue so
long as violent acts are carried out in the name of the religion. Elise
Goldwasser’s article on the Muslims community in Durham, North Carolina,
is a fascinating case study of the relationship between economic position
and cultural identity. Goldwasser contrasts the Eritrean community with
a broader, more prosperous Muslim community and argues that because Eritrean
immigrants in Durham are characterized by low economic status, little marketable
skill, and limited English language proficiency, they tend to assimilate
more to American culture. In contrast, the more prosperous Muslim community
tends to assimilate less to American culture, preserving instead its Islamic
identity. Goldwasser contends that in this case, preservation of an Islamic
identity is a luxury affordable only to the prosperous. In the final chapter
of the book, Omar Khalidi examines the history of immigrant mosque building
in the United States. Complete with numerous photographs of different mosque
styles, Khalidi’s article wrestles with the issue of the feasibility of
applying traditional Middle Eastern/Islamic architectural patterns in American
neighbourhoods. After discussing mosque design in several states, Khalidi
concludes that traditional architectural designs reinforce a view of Islam
as a static, unchangeable religion; he urges mosque designers to build
centre of worship that not only fulfill Islamic requirements but also reinterpret
traditions to meet the requirement of a new environment.
This volume thus provides the reader
with a smorgasbord of food for thought. While a final chapter, typing these
issues together and offering concluding remarks, would have been most welcome,
the work nonetheless is extremely valuable to those interested in the tensions
between religious and cultural identity. The recurring themes of the word
(diversity within the Muslim community, intra-faith religious and political
tensions, and adaptation to North American societies and vice versa) allow
the reader to make connections between articles. While one might not initially
see a link between a Canadian school board decision, for instance, and
mosque architecture, the authors are able to use case studies such as these
effectively to illustrate the broader themes of the volume as a whole.
Courtesy: Islamic Studies, Spring 2001
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