(De)constructing a Dar-ul-Uloom Aalim’s Identity in Contemporary Britain: Overcoming Barriers of Access
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Methodology
3.1. Research Design
3.2. Positionality
4. Data Collection
5. The Interview and Reflexivity
6. Findings and Analysis
“Well, my identity is an Aalim, so if I was to say that, you know, the person who I am today is because I’m an Aalim I won’t be lying. I think, everything positive about my character, about my… the way I approach people, about my professionalism, is because I’m an Aalim. So, for my self-development, I think it [referring to his DU education] was excellent. It was, I think… the best thing that happened to me.”
6.1. Identity Construction
“One of the biggest things I experienced [referring to misunderstandings about Ulamaa]… I know for a fact if I wasn’t a DU student, no one would point a finger at me. The fact that I wear headphones instead of earphones… I wear it because it keeps my ears warm (laughs), but people would point fingers like, it doesn’t suit you to be wearing headphones, because… and I was like because what? I mean why? Why? Why can anyone else wear headphones and I have to wear earphones… that was one of them. Also, I think we’re expected to wear a certain type of clothing. The clothes play a big role in our community, it’s like if we’re wearing the clothes of you know… the way we do dress, with long thobes [traditional Muslim gown] all the way up to above our ankles and you got a hat on our head, then we’re wearing clothes appropriately. Whereas if we just normally go out with anything casual, then it’s as if we’ve done the worst thing in the world.”
“Although I do believe that you [referring to Islamic scholars] don’t have to wear a thobe to be wearing the Sunnah libaas [Islamic dress code], as long as you’re covered, your clothes are above the ankle and, you know… that’s completely fine. Me, I think it’s a personal thing with me. I’m just comfortable with what I wear [referring to the traditional Muslim gown] so I wouldn’t go out wearing anything else because I’m just generally, not comfortable with it. But I mean even my own brothers [who are also Aalims], they wear different things at different times and its completely normal. I’ve seen amongst my friends as well, when we would go out to eat or we would go out to the shops or something like that and, whoever’s wearing long clothes… this is the funny thing, in our community, if you’re wearing long clothes, long dress, a thobe and everything, you’ll be treated with respect and the other person, will be treated as okay, you’re just the guy with him.”
“In our communities… we’re the black sheep, I’d say the scapegoats. Some people in the community, I might say the vast majority even, have this kind of thought, that if he’s gone to DU, that means (laughs) his family had no other use for him. He won’t be a doctor, he won’t be an engineer, he won’t be anything that will make any difference to the community, let’s just send him to DU… that’s the family’s last resort kind of thing. If nothing [else] he’ll probably help us in the hereafter… that’s our golden ticket. The rest [those who pursue secular education] you know, they have to be successful, they’re going to have their own houses, they’re going to get married, and you know have successful lives.”
“The community has extremely high expectations and extremely high hopes, I remember specifically when I was here on holiday and my brother mentioned that… the chairperson of my local mosque wanted me to lead Salaah (daily Muslim prayers) as much as possible, because he thought that as long as you’re studying, you’re on the right path. I remember, when I came back from Bangladesh and before I was going Dewsbury there was about a 5–6-month gap, I would constantly go to the mosque, pray there and everything and I remember the community… they had such high expectations and such high hopes, that you know, this is a graduate of our locality, he will one day spiritually lead us… they have quite high expectations, high hopes and I think they treated me like that as well.”
“Yeah, that has changed dramatically I would say, I mean once you leave Madrasah… you have certain mind sets that, you know, you would go out into the community, you would do this, you would lead them, but that changes over time. I think you start to identify yourself on your current situation and place in the community, rather than your expectations.”
“Being an Aalim is a personal thing because what you’ve learned in DU is literally the way of life according to the Qur’aan and the sayings and doings of the Prophet (s.a.w), nothing more, nothing less.”
“Now, amongst all those things in ‘way of life’, you have business, you have family, you have economics, you have farming, you have hygiene. Also, you have leadership [referring to the role of the Imaam] and I think that’s what, that’s one of the only aspects that the outside community sees from you… it’s [the] only one that we’re judged by, or there’s only one that we’re expected to do.”
6.2. Navigating and Negotiating Conflict
“I mean everyone has their different views about it, but I think as long as there’s no physical contact it, it’s necessary because the information [the message of Islam] still has to go to everyone, cause I remember very specifically one of my teachers, they visited the construction site of a new mosque and in charge of the construction was a lady and what she did was, she extended her hand for a handshake, and he didn’t do it, but at the end he, he definitely had to give them an explanation of why he didn’t do it. Obviously [due to] Islamic values, he didn’t do it, but at the end he said, he made it clear that the reason why I didn’t shake your hand is out of respect, because I believe you’re so valuable that the only people that can touch you is [are] your husband, your father, your son, you know it’s out of respect it’s not out of, because we put woman in a lower space and it turned out that she was very respectful of that view.”
“I think understanding the question you just said plays a huge part because if you say takhassus fil hadeeth [advanced studies in Prophetic traditions], and I say a Masters in Art, it sounds completely different whereas I can just say I just did takhassus fil fann [advanced studies in art] or someone might say that you did a Masters or you did a PhD in Prophetic traditions. So, I don’t think they’re different, I don’t think doing a takhassus [advanced study] is different than doing a Masters. The environment might be different, but knowledge is all the same… I understood any type of further knowledge as an enhancement to whatever I’m learning, whatever I did learn in DU is, the only difference is one would be in a DU environment and one wouldn’t, but enhancement of the knowledge that I’ve learnt, is all the same.”
“So, what I’m trying to kind of say is that the majority of the perceived conflict between being an Aalim or the religious, orthodox religious beliefs and values and British society or British values, they’re kind of embedded in culture and not within our beliefs… I don’t know if this will explain it more, so Islam’s religion was not designed for a specific people, it was for anyone and everyone, from any time or space… I’m just going to go into a slightly deeper discussion, here. For example, when Islam came to Turkey, when it came to Egypt, when it came to Morocco, it kind of embraced the culture there, and that’s why you have Moroccan Muslims, Egyptian Muslims, Turkish Muslims, and they all have their… you can identify them by the way they dress, by the way they, they read the Qur’aan… their accent is slightly different. With Islam in Britain, what happened was we didn’t, it [was] not just Islam [that] came over to this country, the entire Indian culture came with it. That’s why the majority of Muslims in this country are from the Indian subcontinent and where, I think, we’re looked at as Muslims and also as Indians. Whereas, if Islam was to spread in this country to the number that we have today through someone like Abdullah Quilliam, it would have been completely different. He used to wear furs, he used to wear a long trench coat, it would have been a bit more different, and we would have seen being an Aalim is not at all contradictory to British values much faster. So, the orthodox beliefs that are, you know, established in DUs, they’re not contradictory to British values. What’s actually contradictory to British values and British society is the culture that came with the Indian scholars that came and propagated the religion [referring to the culture imported by non-Ulamaa when learning about Islam from Ulamaa] but that contradiction that even happened through culture, that wasn’t intentional. It kind of was the vibe at that time because of the entire situation of the segregation, the war between Bangladesh and Pakistan, everything that happened because of the East Indian trading company… it goes a bit deeper than that, but I, I think you know what I mean”.
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Ahmed, K.; Elton-Chalcraft, S. (De)constructing a Dar-ul-Uloom Aalim’s Identity in Contemporary Britain: Overcoming Barriers of Access. Religions 2023, 14, 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14010011
Ahmed K, Elton-Chalcraft S. (De)constructing a Dar-ul-Uloom Aalim’s Identity in Contemporary Britain: Overcoming Barriers of Access. Religions. 2023; 14(1):11. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14010011
Chicago/Turabian StyleAhmed, Kamal, and Sally Elton-Chalcraft. 2023. "(De)constructing a Dar-ul-Uloom Aalim’s Identity in Contemporary Britain: Overcoming Barriers of Access" Religions 14, no. 1: 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14010011
APA StyleAhmed, K., & Elton-Chalcraft, S. (2023). (De)constructing a Dar-ul-Uloom Aalim’s Identity in Contemporary Britain: Overcoming Barriers of Access. Religions, 14(1), 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14010011