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A Western Muslim Identity
Posted under american muslim, thinkers by rahmaVia Imam (soon to be Sheikh?) Suhaib Webb’s blog:
Egypt Today Article: Faces “Suhaib Webb†by Farzina Alam
As a Western convert to Islam, Webb has found himself in an unusual position: smack in the middle of East and West. Coming to terms with the responsibility such a position holds isn’t always simple. “As Western Muslims, we have a complex when we deal with the tradition. [In the sense that] we are told that traditional Islam is the savior for everything in the West. But I don’t buy that.  Our job as Western Muslims is to synthesize and articulate a Western Islam.
“There’s nothing wrong with that. The Malaysians articulate a Malaysian Islam. The Pakistanis love biryani; the Arabs hate spices and the Africans like a mix. We in the West, because of the society we live in, because of the way our society moves, we cannot just merely regurgitate sixth- or seventh-century texts and try to answer the crisis of humanity. Our job is to fuse both.â€
As a convert, knowing what aspects of East and West to adopt or reject is also a challenge. “I have to engage the tradition first, understand it, then what I learn from the teacher, I have to translate into my experience as a Westerner. And I shouldn’t be ashamed of that.
“We have a lot of brothers and sisters who convert to Islam who experience crises in dealing with modernity. What brought sovereignty to women and urbanization is modernity, what brought management — we don’t have any management here — is modernity.
“At the same time spiritually, I have issues with modernity. The absence of God, the absence of a creator. The outcome of modernity was basically Hitler and Mussolini, but we can take just the good. I felt that I didn’t want to lose my identity as a Westerner. I don’t want to start speaking like,†and he adopts a fake Indian accent for a moment, “‘Hello, my name is Suhaib from Oklahoma.’ I meet brothers who go through this crisis. I meet people who don’t want to dress like a Westerner — why not? You’re a Westerner, brother! The Prophet rarely asked people to change their dress or their names unless their names meant something really bad.â€
Webb believes converts in the West have not really come to grips with this fusion. “Our job as Western Muslims is to learn our religion well, to have an understanding and articulation that’s balanced within the confines of our environment, because we represent a reservoir of prophetic guidance to the West. And the West represents a reservoir of material guidance for us.†The trick, he believes, is knowing how to fuse the two.
“All of us, whether you like it or not, here [in the East] we are representatives of the West; [over] there, we are representatives of the East. Although I’m definitely not Eastern: My hair is blond, my eyes are blue. But immediately people assume I have experience with the East because I’m Muslim.â€
Asalaamu alikum was rahmatullah,
This is such wonderful advice to Western Muslims- those who have emigrated here generations back or reverted.
I would like to add something of my own reflection- people have this idea of “back home”…this is home, here in Britain, for me. Perhaps yes, I would find a link with the land of my parents, but home is here, definitely.
When the Muslims went to Spain, they brunt their boats after crossing the straits of Gibraltar- look at what wonderful fruits and benefits to the world came from Andalusia- a wonderful example of multi-culturalism as taught by Islam. I think many Western Muslims should stop dreaming of a home that isn’t there and of a home they have never experienced and face reality.
I’m away from Dont be sad until mid-February.
Keep up the good work.
Dont be sad
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