“I Feel as Though I’m Doing the Job of the Imam for Them”: Considering ‘Tactical’ Muslim Leadership Through the Case of ‘Muslim RE Teachers’
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Representative Positions and Muslim Leadership
According to Saward… accepting the fact that the British Muslim population is diverse and divided does not mean jettisoning the idea of Muslim representation entirely, as the critics mentioned above appear to believe it does. Representation can be taken on a claim-by-claim basis. Groups can speak for Muslims—or Muslim women, Muslim converts and so on—on some issues and not on others, at sometimes and not others.
- Delegation: ‘the building up of ‘grass roots’ support from community institutions or voluntary associations and using that to try and establish credibility and ultimately influence policy’ (Jones et al. 2015, p. 215).
- Authority: meaning ‘religious authority, and the role that religious authority can play in allowing individuals a public voice and access to government’ (Jones et al. 2015, p. 216).
- Expertise: ‘expertise in a given field—such as discrimination law—has given Muslim individuals the opportunity to enter governance spaces in which they can then speak for the interests of an identity group’ (Jones et al. 2015, p. 217).
- Standing: ‘how public prominence can enable an individual to speak out on topics that have relatively little to do with the reason why that person is in the public spotlight’ (Jones et al. 2015, p. 218).
This does not mean that they are powerless, but that their power operates in a different mode from that of the powerful—a tactical rather than strategic mode. They duck and dive, think on their feet, turn and weave. A tactic, according to de Certeau (1984: 38), ‘is determined by the absence of power just as a strategy is organized by the postulation of power’. But contrary to a narrow Foucault-inspired position, the tactical does not merely practice arts of ‘resistance’: it can be highly creative and constructive in what it does with the structures and strategies in terms of which it operates: ‘sly as a fox and twice as quick: there are countless ways of “making do”’.
3. The Research
3.1. Methods
3.1.1. Semi-Structured Interviews
3.1.2. Participant Shadowing
3.2. Sample
3.3. Ethics, Positionality and Presentation of Data
4. Results
4.1. Ambassadors
I guess, in a classroom, they can’t walk away from you. You know, they’re in front of you whether they like it or not, and you have enough time to win them round, in a way.(Interview 17, 12:24–17:53)
Thus, as ‘Muslim RE teachers’, they acted in an ambassadorial role for non-Muslim pupils as part of their embodied experience of RE teaching. In doing so, the participants occupied a representative position by acting as an example for non-Muslim pupils about what Muslims are really like.I think it’s important for people to see that there are individuals out there that want to be nice, that are decent… But they’re also Muslim, because it’s this idea of Muslims are the bad people. And I wanted to be, sort of, the walking, talking evidence against that.(Interview 17, 12:24–17:53)
For Miss Sumar, this involved contending with the views of pupils’ parents,Yeah because they always assume that… that you must have had an arranged marriage and that you’ve done this and you’ve done that, and I’m like NO.(Interview 1, 46:00–46:12)
This kind of ambassadorial role modelling, through “breaking stereotypes”, echoes the influence of representatives like Mo Farah and Nadiya Hussain. On the one hand, something like these celebrities’ capacity to present a ‘palatable’ Muslim for white, non-Muslims was arguably present here. Yet, Everington (2015) has noted how the use of ‘personal life knowledge’ by Muslim teachers can bridge ontological gaps with non-Muslim pupils to challenge their views. By sharing their experiences, they were able to act as interlocutors between their world (as Muslims) and the worlds of their non-Muslim students and staff. So, whereas these celebrities are “walking, talking evidence” on television, these teachers were able to incorporate local narratives into their teaching. Doing so meant they were able to challenge to prevailing racist, Islamophobic discourses surrounding Muslims in Britain by relating specifically to the pupils as part of their community.Their parents were saying stuff like y’know all Muslims are terrorists, that sort of stuff… I felt like I had this additional responsibility in a sense… I felt like I had to try and be the best that I could.(Interview 7, 39:10–41:28)
Here Mr Chowdhury had configured his experience of being a Muslim in a predominantly white area as a pedagogical resource in the classroom. These experiences reveal an entanglement of race and faith in their experience of ambassadorship, almost being forced to occupy ambassadorial role modelling positions in predominantly white contexts given their obvious racial differences. Basit et al. (2007) have also noted this entanglement in the experience of BME teachers more widely. Yet, in the case of ‘Muslim RE teachers’ their lack of representation both in teaching and within their local contexts almost necessitates that they act as ambassadorial role models, reifying the hypervisibility of ‘Muslimness’ and the unique professional discourses surrounding the RE teacher that explicitly incorporates aspects of faith and race into the role. Furthermore, this was even the case for those working in more ethnically diverse contexts, in terms of “Muslim” role modelling (discussed later).Well, you know, I made it very clear, you see, from when… When I got my feet in, you know, I became more established, you know, I would share personal stories with students. I was very explicit with my experiences…To make [RE] real, I had a huge advantage of being a brown Muslim who had experienced it, than just a normal, white RE teacher who is referring to examples.(Interview 18, 27:17–37:32)
4.2. “Muslim” Role Modelling
I felt it because it was a school… [with a] Muslim majority, Bengali background, just like me—home situation just like me, a lot of girls who were literally like how I was when I was in Sixth Form, so they used to come to me and be like “Oh Miss how was Uni? How did you cope with this?”—they saw me as somebody who had already gone through it and had come out of it still with my faith intact, and so they wanted to know.(Miss Sumar, Interview 7, 1:18:29–1:20:21)
Mrs Iqbal’s account is a powerful statement of the participants’ potential influence in how Muslim pupils understood and embodied their faith. I would tentatively suggest that a (perceived) lack of female Muslim leadership more widely contributed to the importance that these teachers placed on being role models for Muslim girls, and so these teachers moved in to fill this gap. Specifically, their role modelling resonates with the examples I previously highlighted—Khan’s (2018) photography and the Women Like Us tv series (Choudhry 2018)—with a message to Muslim girls that they can be Muslim and do these things (like go to University and go into teaching). As such, the experience of female ‘Muslim RE teachers’ seems to reveal a gap in contemporary Muslim leadership: role models for young British Muslim girls.Yeah definitely, like especially for the girls, I mean there’s been quite a few of the girls that have started wearing hijab, which I thought was interesting.(Mrs Iqbal, Interview 1, 19:34–21:23)
Evident in Mr Ali’s account is a conflation from Muslim pupils of these participants’ teacher and faith identities, constructing them as ‘Muslim RE teachers’ and then positioning the teachers as role models. It is possible that, in part, this reflects the pupils’ blurring the boundaries between their state education and any supplementary Islamic education, through a shared construction of ‘Muslim teacher’. This brought with it, willingly or unwillingly, a commitment to dealing with matters of religion as part of their teaching role, as they ended up dealing with Muslim pupils’ religious needs and concerns.When I became a teacher, I made it absolutely clear that I refused to be a role model because that’s too much pressure for me, because one mistake can be magnified. But it’s happened. I notice it all the time. Moreso in the last couple of years of my teaching, and I first feared it quite a lot. I’m like ‘pppfffttt’ this is a big burden on my shoulders, but actually it’s made me think about what I say and do a bit more—which is a positive thing. And if I want to be a mirror of what I want my [Muslim] students to be—in terms of the character and the way they think, then I’m like okay no problem then.(Interview 8, 45:24–47:15)
These apprehensions begin to show the contours of role modelling as a representative position by exposing some theological and eschatological limitations. As Mr Ali and Miss Noor expressed, there was an implicit understanding that the kind of guidance they should provide should be restricted in relation to other sources of guidance for Muslim children—such as their parents and traditional Islamic authorities. Their apprehensions and concerns are important here considering the responsibilities that Muslim pupils seemed to put upon them, which blurred the boundaries between religious and non-religious authority. Yet, these apprehensions did not stop either Mr Ali or Miss Noor from giving advice or acting as an example for Muslim pupils.I know for a fact that she didn’t want me to know, and I wouldn’t even know how to deal with that. ‘Cos I’m a Muslim doesn’t mean I’m going to be able to say to her “Oh you’re going to Hell”—it’s out of my league! I can come to her in terms of religious knowledge—as to what to say—but like I can’t give fatwas, like that’s not within my control.(Interview 10.2, 20:09–24:12)
4.3. Muslim Representatives
4.4. Religious Authority
Miss Meer recounted challenging the views of Muslim parents:I mean I used to do lots of different things, different activities, I took about 200 girls, it was like a proper assembly every week for half an hour, so sometimes I got some girls to do a role play, or take part in different things—just imagine there is no-one there and just speak—because you need to learn what Islam is and what culture is. Because it is a shame. And the reason that it happens in [area] is because then they get married to people from back in Pakistan. It was never, what can you say, they wouldn’t ever question what Islam is, and what religion actually is.(Interview 3, 1:06:50–1:10:14)
The authority of the participants afforded by their role as RE teachers allows them to engage with, and challenge, prevailing narratives within their communities, in a variety of ways that are arguably hidden from “official” sources of authority outside the school gates. Miss Meer’s account is particularly powerful, demonstrating the capacity for Muslim women to deploy their state-given authority as teachers to challenge the views of Muslim men in the classroom and at parents’ evenings. Through their Muslim pupils, this is coupled with their position as “Muslim” role models to shape the beliefs and values of their local Muslim communities beyond the school gates. Again, the potential impact of their voice, given that these participants were at the heart of many Muslim pupils’ education about religion through their statutory RE lessons, cannot be understated.So, you know, even stereotypes within the Muslim community is something that I wanted to battle. What I have found lately, and it is something that really frustrates me, is even getting respect from men in the Muslim community is sometimes… If you’re not wearing a hijab, then, you know, go home, sort yourself out, or come back with a gentleman, come back with your husband or your Dad. And that’s the way it is. And that’s something that’s always frustrated me.(Interview 17, 12:24–17:53)
And my Mum’s always said, keep your mouth shut, keep your mouth shut, because the community aren’t going to look at you well. And I thought, no. And I guess teaching gives me that voice.(Interview 17, 12:24–17:53)
Mr Jones took this further;Because sometimes I feel as though I am doing the job of their imam for them, where I’m actually exposing, not exposing them [pupils], I’m enabling them to understand that Islam is much more than just a religion of rituals and practices and growing beards and covering your head and hitting the ground with your forehead and throwing pebbles in Mecca.(Interview 13, 50:34–57:20)
These accounts powerfully suggest that these teachers represent a different kind of authority to that of the local imam, in turn putting them on the leadership map. Their commitment to exploring the meaning of Islamic beliefs, not just the “rituals and practices, especially with a critical edge, and awareness of other worldviews, resonate with wider critiques of Islamic education (Gilliat-Ray 2006, p. 67; Sahin 2013). In turn, they attend to this gap by bringing their Islamic knowledge into the professional and pedagogical frameworks of RE teaching. Again, this reflects a kind of ‘tactical’, interlocutory leadership that sits between what is traditionally understood as Muslim authority and leadership, by incorporating more ‘secular’ modes and frameworks.I think the biggest problem… is this fear of infection by ideas that we couldn’t counter. Y’know that we—I don’t know if Muslim parents do withdraw their kids from RE—they might feel that that’s putting their head above the parapet, but there’s certainly a sense of real guardedness about engaging with RE for fear that you’ll… like somehow the pristine pure theology that we’re so carefully curating in the mosque will get undermined. And who is it who says—the sign of an educated man is that he can entertain a thought without believing it? And I just feel that the community, if we can call it collectively, is very bad at doing that—they don’t think you can do that, there’s almost an a priori impossibility that if I’m entertaining a thought—“Oh I must believe it!”(Interview 6, 1:24:40–1:27:00)
5. Concluding Discussion
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | With a possible conflation of the participants as ‘Muslim RE teachers’ with teachers of Islam—those who taught in the madrassah. Several participants mentioned that this kind of conflation was commonplace amongst Muslim parents. |
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Vince, M. “I Feel as Though I’m Doing the Job of the Imam for Them”: Considering ‘Tactical’ Muslim Leadership Through the Case of ‘Muslim RE Teachers’. Religions 2019, 10, 420. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10070420
Vince M. “I Feel as Though I’m Doing the Job of the Imam for Them”: Considering ‘Tactical’ Muslim Leadership Through the Case of ‘Muslim RE Teachers’. Religions. 2019; 10(7):420. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10070420
Chicago/Turabian StyleVince, Matthew. 2019. "“I Feel as Though I’m Doing the Job of the Imam for Them”: Considering ‘Tactical’ Muslim Leadership Through the Case of ‘Muslim RE Teachers’" Religions 10, no. 7: 420. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10070420
APA StyleVince, M. (2019). “I Feel as Though I’m Doing the Job of the Imam for Them”: Considering ‘Tactical’ Muslim Leadership Through the Case of ‘Muslim RE Teachers’. Religions, 10(7), 420. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10070420