Everyday Lived Islam among Hazara Migrants in Scotland: Intersectionality, Agency, and Individualisation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Everyday Religiosity of Muslim Minorities in Western Europe
2.1. Theoretical Reflections
2.2. Empirical Research
3. Methodology
4. Results
4.1. Reconfiguring Everyday Religious Practices
As a Muslim, my religion and practice are centred on humanity. I don’t practise frequently like others do, except on special occasions like Ramadan or Muharram. I believe that God doesn’t need my praying or fasting. When I am a good human and value humanity by not harming others or violating their rights, I’m a good Muslim even if I don’t practise all the time. There’s a saying that a house is incomplete without a window; I think religion is similar. True religiosity and Muslimness stress on more than rituals; they involve the human values. For me, religiosity is not limited to actions and is fundamentally about being a good person, which I strive to be.
Here, unlike in Afghanistan where I was mainly at home, sometimes I can’t do all my prayers. There is no time. I have a tight schedule managing my children and going to sports. So, there is no time for praying each time or going to the mosque. I practice whenever I can, like in the evenings at home. There are mosques near us, but I think praying at home or in a mosque makes no difference. Maybe there is more Thawab (reward) for it, but God is with me everywhere, even if I can’t practice all the time. So, there should be no problem with it.
When I reflect on myself, and I should say, it is not only me but many others I see here, we’ve changed a lot in the way we were religious. For instance, if I may say, I am no longer fasting or praying. Maybe this unconsciously developed in my new life here, not practicing as I did routinely in Afghanistan. I have now adopted different habits. This doesn’t mean I am not religious anymore. No! I consider myself a less religious person, not living as strictly as before. For instance, after coming to the UK, I started questioning the logic of fasting as others and clerics say, just to make God happy. The fasting hours are longer in Scotland, and if I fast and can’t work properly or fulfil my family duties, would God be happy? I think God is happier when I serve my family and take better care of them.
I was a religious person in Afghanistan and regularly practised in an organised way. But this was not entirely personal; there was pressure to attend rituals like Muharram mourns, Nazr o Niaz [vow and distributing free food], and congregations. Some people performed daily prayers and fasting because their parents or families emphasised it. Since resettling in Scotland, I distanced myself from those religious spaces and found more freedom of choice. Even if I wanted to practise like in Afghanistan, nobody hinders me, and as a Shia, I can do it safely without worrying about being attacked during ceremonies or at the mosque. However, the distance and time spent here led me to develop a new habit of not practising like before. Migration made me more independent of family and community influences from Afghanistan, allowing me to think and decide better what to perform. There are no elderly family members here to pressure to practice daily or do it out of respect for them. I believe God is always watching me, regardless of practising. So, my current religiosity is more a personal choice.
In terms of practising, it is almost the same as when I was in Afghanistan, like praying, fasting, and giving Zakat. I did it there and here as well.
I think I can’t attend the mosque as frequently here. In Afghanistan, it was almost every day and very close to our home, but here I’m very busy with my studies, and the mosque is not close. But this is fine, and I maintain my practising even if it is at home or at the University prayer room. And even if sometimes I can’t, I make sure to do Qadha [make-up prayer/missed prayer]. This is my duty as a Muslim. Another difference is that here, my practices have become more conscious. Previously, I was practising without understanding the meanings of those practices or the reasons behind them. I learnt it from my family, and they told me to do it, but here I researched and chose to perform them. I mean, here I’m living my religion based on the research I did myself and understanding the meaning of these practices, such as why as a Muslim I should pray, fast, or wear a Hijab.
In my schools in Scotland, I encountered many questions from my non-Muslim friends about why I should pray or fast. Especially, I was asked all the time about why I wear a Hijab. They assumed my family made me do it. So, I started searching for the meanings of these practices and increased my religious knowledge to answer their questions. I told my friends it was my own choice to wear a Hijab and nobody forced me. I also had a close Muslim friend from Pakistan who is a very good friend and a good Muslim who also wears Hijab. We started a dialogue about our practices every day when we met, discussing what we do as Muslims. This was also very helpful for me.
4.2. Navigating Religious Authority: Tradition, Digital, and Personal References
I attended the mosque in Afghanistan until I was a teenager. I accepted whatever the Mullah said during religious occasions like Khutbahs (sermons delivered by an imam (prayer leader) as part of Sharia and Islam. At that time, I had no education or migration experience to compare different perspectives. When the Mujahidin and Taliban took over, claiming to represent true Islam, their actions contradicted Islamic teachings and plunged the country into internal war. Since then, I haven’t followed any Mullahs or religious figures. Instead, while at university, I studied, searched, and understood the Quran’s verses and hadith myself. Now, I know I can decide for myself.
There hasn’t been much that I don’t know about my faith. I started practising early in Afghanistan, like other girls. So, when I moved here, nothing changed about praying or fasting style, but the timing did. In Afghanistan, it was easy; you could hear Adhan (ritual call to prayer) from mosques or TV channels. Here, I didn’t know what to do at first. But then I found an app online and installed it on my phone. The app seems made for the Pakistani Shia community here, but it’s useful for all. That’s how I figure out prayer timing. Fasting was more confusing because timing is stricter, but I found information on the Facebook page of an Islamic centre. So, whenever I want to pray or fast, I use these.
I think it’s easier today to find answers. There’s no mosque close to where we live, and even if there was, I practice more at home. So, I just type my question into Google using my phone, and I find my answers there. It’s much easier. You don’t need to wait to ask anyone as we did before, during religious ceremonies where the Mullah discussed Ahkam [Islamic rulings]. Now, I find these online.
I feel very comfortable talking to my parents about my questions, especially my father. I ask him why I should pray, why I should practice certain things, or avoid what is Haram (forbidden under Islamic law). He explains without forcing me to do them. But sometimes they don’t know the answer, like when I asked why boys start practicing later than girls. I looked for this online and I discussed what I found with them. So, we have handled everything together so far, and there hasn’t been a big issue we couldn’t manage.
In Afghanistan, I asked my questions to religious A’lims (religious scholars). I would call them whenever I faced difficult questions, like when I wasn’t sure whether something was haram or halal (lawful or permitted by Islamic law), and they would inform me. But here, I don’t feel the need for such advice because I am now more mature and ethical, and I avoid actions I believe are wrong. Religion is also about ethics, isn’t it? For example, if someone steals, I see it as immoral rather than just haram. So, I feel I was more influenced by religion in Afghanistan, but here my attitudes have changed. However, there is one aspect where I might still seek a cleric’s help, which is conducting burials and FatihaKhani (funeral prayers and reciting Quran for the deceased). This is a sensitive issue, and if it arises, I may look for a cleric’s assistance.
4.3. Navigating Intersectional Identities
Being a Muslim and a Shia is a value for me; this is how it is defined for us. I grew up with these values and lived with them all my life. Being Muslim is a religious value that has been passed heart to heart and generation to generation for us. So, of course, I know myself as a Muslim and a Shia. These become inseparable from our life and culture. Just because of being known as a Shia and Hazara, we have been targeted and massacred by Daesh [ISIS] and the Taliban. My folks even can’t safely go to mosques or education centres for their rituals or studying.
In my daily life in Scotland, it’s not really important if I am a Hazara or a Shia. Where I work, my clients have never heard about these. They only ask about my nationality—where I came from? When I say Afghanistan, they automatically think of me as a Muslim and don’t know what a Shia Muslim is. Sometimes, I talk to them and share the stories about how our people are suppressed in Afghanistan. That comes as a shock to some of them.
Here, my local ethnicity (being Hazara) and denomination (Shia) are not known most of the time. I think people only know that I’m a Muslim when they see my hijab. Otherwise, if I don’t wear it, how would they realise that I’m a Muslim or specifically belong to the Shia community unless they ask me? But with the hijab, I have received many questions from my classmates about this and other habits—what I’m drinking or eating and what not. So, I feel sometimes that I should explain everything each time. It’s challenging, but I also learned more about Islam.
While I’m not practicing myself, I take part in religious and cultural gatherings by Muslim communities in Scotland. Whenever I am invited, as they know I am a Shia Muslim from Afghanistan, I respect this and attend the events, like commemorations. This is because such gatherings are a part of my culture and my life. Like for Eid, it’s a great opportunity to get together, support each other, and feel better. So, here I’m more engaged with other Muslim and Shia communities from everywhere that I had no idea about before, and this is good.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | I use the term ‘minority’ as defined by the International Organization for Migration (IOM), which refers to a ‘group numerically inferior to the rest of the population of a State and/or in a non-dominant position, whose members possess ethnic, religious or linguistic characteristics differing from those of the rest of the population and show, if only implicitly, a sense of solidarity, directed towards preserving their culture, traditions, religion or language’ (Sironi et al. 2019). |
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Mosawi, S.M. Everyday Lived Islam among Hazara Migrants in Scotland: Intersectionality, Agency, and Individualisation. Religions 2024, 15, 950. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080950
Mosawi SM. Everyday Lived Islam among Hazara Migrants in Scotland: Intersectionality, Agency, and Individualisation. Religions. 2024; 15(8):950. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080950
Chicago/Turabian StyleMosawi, Sayed Mahdi. 2024. "Everyday Lived Islam among Hazara Migrants in Scotland: Intersectionality, Agency, and Individualisation" Religions 15, no. 8: 950. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080950
APA StyleMosawi, S. M. (2024). Everyday Lived Islam among Hazara Migrants in Scotland: Intersectionality, Agency, and Individualisation. Religions, 15(8), 950. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080950