10 February
2021
Zara
Mohammed, a young Scottish Muslim, last week became the first woman to be elected
as secretary-general of the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB). This marks a
historic occasion for the British Muslim community, and it could pave the way
for much-needed change.
The MCB
describes itself as the “largest and most diverse umbrella body of mosques,
Islamic schools and Muslim associations” in the UK, with more than 500
affiliates. The election of 29-year-old Mohammed has been particularly
well-received by Muslim women, viewed as an encouraging sign to consider
leadership roles.
On 4
February, the BBC's Emma Barnett interviewed Mohammed on Radio 4's Woman’s Hour
programme. I had expected this huge milestone to be recognised with a genuine
interest in Mohammed’s role and journey. Instead, Barnett chided and questioned
her on the presence of female imams, Jewish-Muslim relations and how
self-described "moderate" Muslims would be accommodated (citing Qanta
Ahmed’s 2019 Spectator piece).
Watchful
Gaze
Interestingly,
the clip that the BBC chose to share on social media was when Barnett asked
Mohammed how many female imams there are in Britain. It was less about the
question itself than the persistent and seemingly arrogant way in which it was
asked - the undermining and condescending manner by which Barnett kept
insisting on getting an answer, even interrupting her guest.
Mohammed
rightfully asked Barnett what she meant by the term “imam” - was it a reference
to a chaplain, to a woman who leads prayers? Barnett merely deflected and
shifted the question back onto Mohammed.
This style
of questioning illustrates how the Muslim community continuously finds itself
under a watchful gaze. Even a celebratory moment such as this one is not
afforded to the community, as public commentators find ways to cast Muslims as
the enemy. There is no curiosity or inquiry; instead, antagonism is subtly
infused with Islamophobic undertones.
Whenever
Muslims become public figures, they are confronted with a host of litmus tests.
Once they pass, they are deemed one of the “good ones” - one of the “moderate”
ones (Barnett uses the latter term in reference to Ahmed’s Spectator piece).
The Muslim
figure is somehow morphed into a bogey(wo)man, unless they adopt a public
presence that makes Islam palatable and neatly packaged so as not to disturb
mainstream white audiences; or as long as its traditions are made legible
through the prism of Judeo-Christian traditions.
BBC Radio 4's Emma Barnett interviewed Zara Mohammed, pictured, on the Woman’s Hour programme (Twitter)
------
Studying
the 'Other'
This is
entrenched in a long-standing history by which Orientalists have presumed Islam
to be an extension of Christianity and/or Judaism, refusing to acknowledge its
independent identity. This happened when colonial officers were sent to
Muslim-majority regions to study the faith, and new typologies, categorisations
and terminologies were constructed. Through studying the “Other”, Orientalists
declared that Islam was a faith that borrowed from others.
Barnett’s
attempt to question Mohammed on the presence of female imams, while making
reference to other religions, was not ahistorical. There is a long history of
using Judeo-Christian framing as a normative standard against which to judge
other faith traditions - a flawed premise.
Barnett
also resorts to the classic trope of the Muslim woman’s body as a test of
whether the community - which is almost always framed as monolithic - is truly
“progressive”. The community is still structurally presented as having issues
with women, as though patriarchy and misogyny were exclusively a “Muslim”
problem.
Using the
Muslim woman as a signifier of whether Muslims have caught up with modernity is
an argument with which Muslims are very well-acquainted. Before the invasion of
Afghanistan, US First Lady Laura Bush campaigned for the war, arguing that
Afghan women (read: Muslim women) needed liberating.
Gendered
Islamophobia
Muslim
women enter the public sphere knowing full well how we are scrutinised. The BBC
interview reminds us of how attacks against Muslim women are made in insidious
and coded ways. Research in gendered Islamophobia shows us how Muslim women
bear the brunt of physical violence committed against Muslims by members of the
public.
Barnett’s
incessant questioning offers a glimpse of the Islamophobic targeting that
Muslim women have to endure. The BBC’s choice of that clip to promote the
interview is also part of the problem; it taps into people’s fears of Muslims
and Islam, how Muslims allegedly treat “their women”, and the constant
association with backwardness.
When Muslim
women provide necessary interventions concerning the Muslim community, we do
not want special treatment. But we also do not want our community used in a
manner that deliberately elides Muslim voices in favour of preconceived ideas
about Muslims.
For Muslims
to successfully participate in public and professional spaces there must be a
thorough and non-speculative discussion around having shows where Muslims can
be free to speak about issues without unnecessary, Islamophobic examination.
The latter only pushes Muslim women away from entering the public sphere to
talk about their faith, identity and other issues.
When Muslim
women raise their voices, which might not sit comfortably with many, let’s not
pathologise them. Let’s instead show some genuine curiosity, rather than
masquerading aggressive questioning as inquiry.
Original
Headline: BBC vs Zara Mohammed: An exercise in Islamophobia
Source: The Middle East Eye
URL: https://www.newageislam.com/muslims-islamophobia/instead-celebrating-muslim-council-britain/d/124273
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