
By Zainab
Khan
26 March, 2015
Mohammed Abdullah Saleem, who faces new criminal
charges of sexual assault, tried to ban Zainab Khan from burying her father.
Now, she tells her courageous story of standing up to one of Chicago’s most
powerful imams.
The decision by courageous women in Kabul,
Afghanistan, to defy the orders of mullahs and carry the coffin of a young
woman, Farkhunda—slain for the false accusation of burning the Quran— took me
to a dramatic moment last spring when I faced off against an imam, not in some
faraway city in our Muslim world, but in our own backyard, right here in the
United States, in the Chicago suburb of Elgin, Ill.
Today, that imam, Mohammed Abdullah Saleem, faced new
criminal charges for alleged sexual assault.
My confrontation with the imam was about something
much more ordinary, but also deeply personal, and my experience reveals the
challenges women face in standing up to Muslim clerical leaders—as women do in
most faiths, but particularly in ours, stuck as it is religious hierarchies
that are the exclusive domain of men.
On May 29, 2014, my beloved father, Jehan Zeb Khan,
passed away from prolonged sickness. I was heartbroken. Born in Afghanistan, my
father came to the U.S. in the 1950s, knowing that he wouldn’t have the same
chances for success had he remained in Afghanistan. He wanted his family to
have the life and dignity which he foresaw that he would be stripped of, had he
chosen to live there.
Freedom, education, equality, empowerment—these were
the ideals that my father struggled for. He taught me determination. He taught
me love, he taught me courage, he taught me what the word strength really
means. But, more than anything, he taught me gratitude. And he taught me to
value everything that was provided to me.
When my father died, I felt my world crumble. Little
could I know how an imam in my local mosque would make my grieving even more
painful. My experience is a window into the deeper issues of abuse of power,
misogyny and corruption among religious leaders in too many of our Muslim
communities, including in the U.S.
I wanted to ensure that my father received traditional
Islamic funeral processions. I didn’t realize the monumental challenge I faced,
as I soon realized that I was left to fight for the right to participate in his
burial. With three daughters, my father didn’t leave any male heirs. For women
such as myself, unmarried with no brothers and no sons, the chances of equal
participation in something such as a burial required me to be dependent upon a
male. My values of empowerment and independence, something my father vehemently
instilled in me, were left to be compromised.
The identity of an American-born Muslim such as myself
is challenging, as we are either encouraged to obey faulty leadership, be
socially ostracized, or choose to drop out of the community completely. In the
cases of many Islamic institutions, American Muslims of my generation are
challenged to conform to a radical agenda that do not reflect our values. Many
young Muslims, including friends of mine, choose to keep their heads down. They
do not want to embarrass their families or cause problems for relatives back in
the Muslim world. Others, including several of my relatives, are so disgusted
that they have turned their backs on the Muslim community altogether. They no
longer want to be called Muslims.
To bury my father, I had to get permission from one
man: Saleem, an imam at the Masjidul Islam, Institute of Islamic Education in
Elgin. This was a community mosque my family associated with since its inception.
I wanted to honour my father with a traditional Muslim
funeral, but Saleem quickly declared that my two sisters and I could not attend
our father’s funeral. He told us, we would have to wait downstairs in the
mosque during the service and stand across the street from the cemetery as our
father’s body would be interred. The imam sought to deny us the basic right to
say goodbye to our father in person.
The reason: We are female.
The imam’s decree created a moral dilemma. Should we
submit to the values of a bigoted male leader just because of his position of
authority? Our father was so close to us—and I had spent the last year nursing
him through his illness. The last thing he would have wanted, or we wanted, was
for us to be apart at the very end. He had raised us to stand up for what we
believed in, to do what is right and to not let others hold us back.
This left me with only one choice, which was to rebel
against the norms and take a stand for something which, if I didn’t, I knew
would haunt me for the rest of my life. The imam finally relented. Ultimately,
it was my two sisters and I who took the stance to bury my beloved father. I
remembered looking across as I lay the handful of soil on his grave, catching
sight of my mother, who chose to stand with the remaining congregation of women
on the other side of the cemetery. It was more than a road that divided us: it
was a generational difference in attitudes towards submission.
Religious figures such as Saleem have kept a strong
hold on Muslim community members, to the point of coercing silence even when we
are addressing clear violations. The cultural barriers to speaking out against
someone who holds such leadership has created an environment that attributes
blame towards anyone who questions religious authority in Islamic institutions.
Law enforcement formally charged him with criminal
sexual assault earlier this year. (Saleem and his lawyer deny the charges,
which his lawyer called “troubling”.)
Just today, new indictments came against the Islamic
leader. Separately, four women have filed a civil lawsuit accusing Saleem of
sexual assault and battery. The plaintiffs include Saleem's accuser in the
criminal case; the other women say they were minors when the alleged abuse took
place.
It took years of alleged abuse for a formal charge to
be filed against Saleem. Community leaders were quick to defend him; some even
offered “mediation” to discourage the alleged victim from pressing charges.
The allegations have divided the Muslim community in
its need for a more proactive role in addressing sexual exploitation and
violence, which has yet remained to be discussed without stigmatizing victims
or discouraging survivors from speaking out. On multiple social media blogs and
sites, people were advised: “Don’t cause a fitna,” strife or sedition in
Arabic—the phrase often used to discourage the survivors from speaking out.
While my experience with my father’s burial procession
is minor compared to that of the alleged sexual assault of these victims
suffered, I realized that the real issue stands with the wrestling over ethics.
The divide comes between respecting heritage and holding traditional values,
and challenging the monopolization of control that is held by Islamic
leadership.
The importance of a male religious figure in the
Muslim community has resulted in a passive hesitancy in reporting abuses and
inequalities—not just because it disrupts the stability of the status quo, but
because it goes against the authority figures who dominate piety and morality
in many Islamic institutions. This imam was well-known for preaching an
ultra-orthodox agenda, which included the maintenance of strict gender
separation, and women praying in a separate space in the lower level of the
mosque.
The traditional prominence of male religious figures
in Muslim communities unfortunately makes many people reluctant to report
abuses and injustices committed by these leaders.
In Saleem’s case, the cleric controlled many aspects
of the local Chicago community. A representative of the extremist Deobandi
movement, he brought with him from South Asia an ultra-orthodox agenda suffused
with misogyny. With both charisma and coercion, he asserted his will on the
community—apparently sometimes directly upon young women in the community.
The invisibility of abuse and control perpetrated by
Islamist leaders has created a silent stigma that is further fueled by
discouraging people who do stand up to inequalities and abuse. There is a vacuum of holding leadership such
as Saleem accountable for decades of alleged sexual misconduct, which has
unfortunately ended up with females, some of whom were children at the time of
the incidents in question, now voicing how they endured years of alleged abuse
under this celebrated imam.
In many Muslim communities, gender segregation is
defended as preserving value and respect for women. But in reality, the divide
continuously promotes a larger process of degradation and submission. I can live with myself, though, because,
rather than accepting a distant place across the street, I gathered the courage
to be at my father’s side as we laid him to his final rest.
In remaining silent about injustices, we are just as
guilty in implementing it. If we neither punish nor reproach wrong-doers, we
are not simply protecting their outdated views, and the foundations of justice
are dismantled from new generations. As an American Muslim, I know that respect
for any religion does not mean turning a blind eye towards injustices that are
continuously committed by unjust leadership. My generation of Muslim-Americans
similarly needs to reject failed leaders who represent imported ideologies that
do not make sense in 21st-Century America. If we stand up for what we believe
in, we can set the agenda for the future.
Zainab Khan is the United
Nations Association delegate for the Commission on the Status of Women. She is
a women’s-rights advocate and UN Women liaison based in Chicago. She is the
recipient of the YWCA Racial Justice Award 2014.
Source: http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/03/26/how-i-stood-up-to-chicago-s-abusive-imam.html
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-west/how-i-stood-up-chicago/d/102133