1. Introduction
The central aim of the research project #ImamsBritain and was to explore how Imams, as faith leaders, could best address the current needs of South Asian Muslim families and communities’
1 The traditional role of the Imam was that of providing “religious teaching, and spiritual guidance” (
Schmid 2020, p. 2) to the local Muslim community. However, over the last thirty years, the evolving socio-economic and political climate in Britain has affected the needs of Muslim communities and brought about far-reaching changes to the nature of the Imam’s role. Imams are now presented as “professional function holders who need a wide range of abilities corresponding to the needs and requirements of both communities and wider society” (
Schmid 2020, p. 65). In common with non-Muslim families, Muslim families’ needs now incorporate (amongst others) issues such as: mental health problems; domestic abuse; drug and alcohol abuse and hate crime, the implications of which are discussed in detail later. This paper draws on the findings from a British-based research project that originated from a series of discussions with Imams, in the north of England, about how their faith leadership could best address their communities’ current needs. These discussions sought the views of Imams on their evolving role and its wider responsibilities, and the research project aimed to: explore the range of issues the Imams dealt with and which they considered to be additional to their (traditional) duties and responsibilities; identify the further skills the Imams perceived they needed to address these additional issues and to assess the Imams’ level of need for training and qualifications to establish those skills they considered as priorities for their own professional development.
#ImamsBritain was a small-scale research project, conducted by a team of researchers that comprise university academics
2 and experienced professionals from a third sector
3 Muslim organisation, Arooj. The initial discussions with the twenty-one respondents revealed a consensus on two significant issues. Firstly, the Imams feel that there is a pressing need for a professional level qualification for Imams that corresponds to the training/preparation for ordination in the Church of England, the seminary training for Catholic priests and the rabbinical training for leadership in the Jewish faith. Secondly, the Imams agreed on the need for an ongoing professional training programme, to help them develop the skills that they need to support their communities more effectively and better meet the diverse nature of the needs of Muslim communities in 21st century Britain.
Identifying the need for a professional training programme for Imams is not an original finding and has been the subject of research and reviews over recent years. Ten years ago, the Department for Communities and Local Government (CLG) set up an advisory group to steer a review, in response to consultations with Muslim communities, that would reflect “the importance of the training of Imams” (
Mukadam et al. 2010, p. 8). The review acknowledged that whilst there was “much good practice in Muslim faith leadership training in Britain at all levels—secondary education, higher and further education”—there was also an urgent need for further development of this training (ibid., p.12). The implications of this “urgent need” are the focus of this paper, which will critically discuss the research data and findings from #ImamsBritain and identify more precisely the different elements of the training and developmental need as they apply to Imams today.
The findings from this small-scale research project present Imams’ individual perceptions of their specific training and development needs, which gives us a unique framework around which to construct a common set of values and a professional guide for Imams in Britain, which currently does not exist. (This development is the anticipated, longer-term outcome from this project.)
2. Literature Review
The discussions and arguments in the next two sub-sections draw on the literature that was reviewed for the project. In the first section, the problematics of the Imam’s role are discussed with regard to the kind of training needed to equip Imams with the necessary skills to meet the changing needs of Muslim communities in Britain today. In the next section, the discourse of professionalisation will be discussed critically with regard to the wider role of the Imam, as perceived by the research respondents. These discussions will probe some of the potential tensions and conflicts that can emerge when a faith-based, third sector organisation (such as a mosque) is subject to the bureaucratic processes of professionalisation, with specific regard to the implementation of a standards framework and monitoring the quality of professional practice. The methodology for the research is then outlined, including the design, sampling and the tools used for data analysis, followed by the findings and discussion sections.
2.1. The Problematics of the Imam’s Role in Britain Today
Hussain and Tuck (
2014, p. 5) wrote that in the wake of the migration of Muslims into Europe, in the second half of the twentieth century, “Western European Muslim communities concentrated on retaining the traditions, norms, cultures and practices of their countries of origin rather than focusing on integrating into European societies”. The legacy of this is that “Imams have traditionally been brought in from outside Europe. The necessary frameworks and institutions needed to train domestic Imams were slow to materialise, and in many cases remain inadequate considering the current size of the Muslim population in Europe”. Written six years ago, this provides a useful historical context within which to consider a framework of training for Imams today, which is designed to help them develop the professional skills they need.
Reaffirming the need for professional training,
Mukadam et al. (
2010, p. 9) cite the Muslim Council of Britain as stating, “there is a feeling that not enough Imams are being developed from Britain and that the existing training is inadequate or has serious shortcomings. It has been claimed that graduates from British seminaries are“without sufficient communication skills, without leadership skills and without a good understanding of British culture”. The respondents from #ImamsBritain strongly agreed that there is an absence of national policy, professional guidance or training available from either Muslim organisations, the government or educational establishments that are tailored to meet the new demands of Imams in Britain. These new demands can be attributed, certainly in part, to the changing socio-economic and political climate that has prevailed over the last ten to fifteen years and the consequences of these changes for Muslim communities
4.
According to
Mukadam et al. (
2010, p. 16), “from as far back as 1997 there [has been] an increasingly widespread perception in Muslim communities that Imams are not equipped by their own training to help young British Muslims cope with issues such as unemployment, racism and Islamophobia, drugs, and the attractions of Western youth culture”. This mismatch is also identified by
Scott-Baumann et al. (
2019, p. 8) who draw on the work of
Lewis (
2006), who “reflected on the new social roles emerging among the graduates of the Darul Ulooms (Muslim seminaries) … {who} were forging paths into community service and leadership that their training did not equip them for, nor even intend”. Bauman et al. argue that the lack of contiguity between the traditional form of Imam training (focusing mostly on religious teaching) and the more secular demands made of Imams today is due to the outmoded syllabus of the Deobandi
5, which was originally “geared to producing civil servants for the Mughal Empire, not necessarily youth workers and local mosque Imams in England”. The factors associated with this “new social role” of Imams today create a wider and more complex range of pastoral care needs within families and their communities, and these issues are reflected in the #ImamsBritain findings. Some of the more significant of these issues, identified by the respondents, were associated with general health, mental health, family issues, drugs and alcohol and domestic abuse.
The increased incidence of these health, family and social issues in the Muslim communities can be contextualised within the prevailing socio-economic and political situation in England, over the last ten to fifteen years, which Sir Michael Marmot summarised bleakly in the Marmot Review 10 Years On (
Marmot et al. 2020): “For part of the decade 2010–2020 life expectancy actually fell in the most deprived communities outside London for women and, in some regions, for men” (ibid., p. 5). This refers to the decade that followed the credit crash of 2008 and the government’s subsequent swingeing financial, austerity cuts to public services, which gave rise to a range of pronounced, negative effects on the health and well-being of people in the most deprived communities. The Casey Review (
Casey 2016) supports this, with statistics that show 26% of the Muslim population live in the 10% most deprived areas in England and that, more broadly, “Pakistani and Bangladeshi ethnic populations and Muslim faith populations live disproportionately in the most deprived areas in England compared with other ethnic or faith groups” (ibid., p. 78). Evidence from the first Marmot Review (
Marmot et al. 2010) and the Marmot Review 10 Years On (
Marmot et al. 2020 p. 42) shows that in England minority ethnic groups—especially Pakistani—have the lowest levels of life expectancy, the highest rates of poverty (Bangladeshi, Pakistani and Black people in particular) and that the lowest levels of “disability free life expectancy” were experienced by Bangladeshi men and Pakistani women (
Marmot et al. 2020, pp. 21–23). These politico-economic changes over time and the fact that “austerity was followed by failure of health to improve and a widening in health inequalities” strongly suggest the two factors are connected. Whilst Marmot is at pains to point out that this does not prove that the one caused the other, “the link [between the two] is entirely plausible” (ibid., p. 5). Therefore, the range of health, family and social issues that Imams are now dealing with can be attributed, in no small part, to these changing political, social and economic factors, alongside emerging social problems such as family conflict, drugs and alcohol. Furthermore, since writing this paper, the effects of COVID-19 have also added considerably to the range of health and social problems for families and, perforce, to the workload of the local Imams.
2.2. Professionalising the Imam’s Role
One of the key drivers for conducting the #ImamsBritain research work was that in Great Britain there are no statutory requirements for Imams to have any formal or specific education or training. Indeed, the educational qualifications of the Imam respondents for this project reveal a widely varying picture, ranging from post-graduate to entry level 1–3
6. The providers of training for Imams in France and Germany—as discussed by
Hussain and Tuck (
2014, p. 6)—offer a subject-based teaching and learning provision through courses in Arabic language, Islamic theology, law and Qur’anic studies (amongst others).
Aslan (
2012, pp. 39–40) discusses the training that is available for Imams in Britain as falling into two categories. The first is foundation training (i.e., pre–higher education), which is provided by some 54 traditional secondary schools, known as “Dar-ul-ulum” and these award the academic qualification of Imam scholar. The second category is provided by specialist, higher education institutions that offer academic training in Islamic Studies, or Islamic Science. The content of these models of training, discussed by Hussain and Tuck and Aslan, is essentially academic and in direct contrast to those skills identified by the research respondents as priorities for their own learning and professional development. These priorities focus on developing their practitioner and professional skills, rather than gaining academic qualifications and they included: working with young people and women; communication skills; counselling; dealing with hate crime and engaging more fully with government legislation. The need to bridge this gap between academia and the provision for a more professional, practitioner-weighted form of training is echoed by
Gilliat-Ray and Timol (
2020, p. 6). In the introduction to their guest edition of the journal
Religions, they discuss how “programmes of Islamic Studies in many British universities were seen by those from some Institutes as too heavily orientated towards historical, linguistic, and textual approaches, at the expense of attention to … personal self-development, contemporary issues, and an appreciation of Islam in its British, inter-religious context”.
The analysis of the data from #ImamsBritain (discussed in detail in
Section 3) revealed that respondents felt strongly that their role would be improved by the introduction of a framework of national standards for Imams alongside a continuing professional development programme and accredited training to help them upskill. The nature of these skills bears a close resemblance to those included within the professional standards frameworks for both teachers and social workers in Britain. These frameworks promote professional skills such as effective communication, tolerance of and respect for the rights of others, safeguarding individuals’ well-being and adhering to the relevant statutory frameworks (
Social Work England 2020;
Department for Education 2011). Therefore, constructing a framework of national standards/guidelines and best practices for Imams in Britain would be a significant step towards meeting the professional needs expressed by the #ImamsBritain respondents, not the least because currently there is no formal process involved in becoming an Imam.
However, the discourse of professionalisation encompasses a number of critical issues relating to the bureaucratic processes that characterise a ‘professional’ workforce and these issues are particularly relevant to workplaces that operate in the public sector or third sector (such as a mosque) rather than in a commercial organisation. A useful working definition of the term ‘professionalisation’, for this article, can be found in the European adult education sector, where it is discussed in terms of “functional markers of professionalism—increasing competence, quality and qualification” (
Jutte et al. 2011, p. 7). This is often the rationale for professionalising a workforce, that of improving the quality of provision and the competence of practitioners. For those professions that do adhere to a set of professional standards (such as schools and local authority children’s services), they are subject to inspection by the relevant regulatory authorities, such as the Office for Standards in Education (Ofsted) and the Care Quality Commission (CQC), and the quality of practitioners’ performance is judged against these standards.
There was a strong consensus of agreement across the #ImamsBritain respondents of the need for some kind of professional qualification and national standard of performance, along with an ongoing professional development programme to support Imams in the wider range of work they are now expected to do within their communities. The process of measuring standards of professional practice can create conflict and tension for practitioners in any organisation, and particularly so in faith-based, third sector organisations (see notes 3 and 4 for working definition of third sector organisations, applicable to mosques). In 2014, “amid increased pressure on third sector organisations (TSOs) to provide evidence of the effectiveness of their services” (
Harlock 2014, p. 1), Harlock writes that “the Public Services (Social Value) Act (2012) has been seen as an important opportunity for third sector organisations (TSOs) to demonstrate the value and impact of what it is they do”. The concept of social value is directly relevant to the role of Imams, whose pastoral role is based on a framework of cultural and social values, closely bound with building trust and non-hierarchical relationships with individuals and communities.
Research undertaken by Harlock examines the “nature of the evidence required by commissioners from TSOs to demonstrate their effectiveness” and findings showed that “difficulties in quantifying and measuring social value posed considerable challenges”. These difficulties stem from the fact that the “evaluation of success or failure has come to rest on indicators of internal systems performance” (
McLaughlin and Muncie 2000, p. 178).
Harlock (
2014) is critical of this approach to “quantifying and measuring social value, based on the wider public sector model of assessing performance delivery, where outcomes tend to be measured in terms of cost effectiveness” (ibid., p. 5). The danger of this,
McLaughlin and Muncie (
2000) suggest, is that such a mechanistic approach to evaluating the performance of third sector professionals can serve to subsume or replace the typically “transformative” aspects of their work, such as supporting individual needs, providing counselling and pastoral care, into a range of “actuarial techniques of classification and resource management” (ibid., p. 178). They write at length about the danger of adopting this kind of commercial approach to performance evaluation in a third sector organisation, where it could serve to curtail and reduce the professional’s role to one of productivity and output rather than a provider of care and support. This has implications for Imams, whose pastoral role is complex and demands a high level of interpersonal skill and sensitivity and these kinds of skills are not easy to measure or quantify, which presents a challenge to this aspect of professionalising the Imam’s role.
The bureaucratic burden of actually carrying out such a process of evaluation presents additional challenges to the establishment of professional standards because it raises the question of how or, indeed, if Imams should be assessed in the performance of their duties in this way. Therefore mosques—and particularly the Imams—would need to decide if this kind of regulatory framework is the best means through which to implement the professionalisation of their role. There is also the question of identifying a suitable body, possibly at a national level, which could take on the necessary bureaucratic duties of professionalising the Imamate and fulfilling functions such as the registration of Imams, verification of their level of professional performance and implementing professional standards.
Professional Standards
The necessary bureaucratic duties associated with professionalising a workforce will also include the determination and structure of the professional standards themselves. “These standards of practice should describe practices to which Imams and leaders aspire. They should recognize that personal and professional growth is a developmental process, and that Imams move through a variety of career and life changes that affect their practice” (
ISSA 2016, p. 6). This statement is taken from the Professional Guide for Canadian Imams, which was produced by the Islam Social Services Association (ISSA) in Canada. ISSA worked collaboratively with a number of religious organisations and the Canadian Association of Social Workers’ (CASW) Code of Ethics to create a set of Professional Standards and guidance for Imams that gives them the information and resources “pertaining to ethical, legal and professional protocols” (ibid., p. 2). The implementation of these necessary, bureaucratic processes can be burdensome for smaller, third sector organisations, discussed by
MacMillan (
2015), who views the professionalisation of third sector organisations from the critical standpoint that they are in danger of “losing their distinctive and valuable starting points as informal associations”. Once in the grips of the process of professionalisation, … “Many organisations drift, sometimes unknowingly … towards becoming more formal and hierarchical bureaucracies” (ibid., p. 105), to the extent that they may find themselves curtailing or “reforming their own advocacy roles and functions” (
Hough 2016, p. 11), which in turn can become subsumed by the whole process. This argues that there is a potential danger of the professionalisation process becoming an end in itself, rather than a means of providing a “set of norms for the education and formation of an office of the Imam” (
ISSA 2016, p. 6). This critical point highlights another potential challenge to implementing the process of professionalisation and provides the context for the discussions and findings sections on later on.
5. Conclusions
At the outset of the #ImamsBritain research project, the Imam respondents were unanimous in their agreement that there was a pressing need for their roles to be conferred with a professional status that would place them on an equal footing with the religious leaders of acknowledged faiths in Britain. The research findings reveal there is an absence of any clearly defined national policy, professional guidance or development in place for the Imamate (in fact, the approach to the selection of Imams is mostly informal). Critical discussions of the research findings, in this paper, argue that the rationale for professionalising the Imamate workforce and establishing a programme of professional training/continuous professional development should be one of responding to the changing needs of Muslim communities in 21st century Britain. As well as the practicalities of establishing a set of professional and ethical standards, implicit within the scale of this level of change will be the need for new and necessary systems and procedures to ensure consistency of professional practice that matches these standards. This also introduces the issue of how the quality of an Imam’s performance might be evaluated with regard to professional standards.
Harlock (
2014) discusses the potential tension this can create for practitioners in third sector organisations, where “measuring” the quality of professional standards is not simply a mechanistic, or box ticking process, but altogether far more complex. This is because the provision of care and support for vulnerable groups and individuals is closely bound up with “many factors that are complex and intangible, such as the psycho-social aspects” of people’s lives that are characterised by “chaotic, personal circumstances” (
Hough et al. 2018, p. 14). Therefore, any evaluation schedule, or process for monitoring the quality of Imams’ work would need to be sensitive to this.
Harlock (
2014) suggests that a more appropriate approach to measuring performance in the third sector, rather than trying to measure cost effectiveness or outputs, is one that focuses on ends rather than means, which serves to promote “the evaluation of longer-term benefits and differences made for service users and communities”. This would be a more appropriate approach to consider for evaluating the quality of an Imam’s performance, giving critical regard to Harlock’s arguments above.
There are also models of guidance for professional and ethical standards for Imams to be found in Europe and Canada, aspects of which might prove useful to the introduction of professional changes to the British Imamate. For example, in Canada, the Islamic Social Services Association (ISSA) worked collaboratively with other religious organisations and the Canadian Association of Social Workers (CASWS) to create a set of professional standards and guidance that related to “ethical, legal and professional protocols” (
ISSA 2016, p. 2). As discussed in the findings, Leiden University collaborated with two Islamic organisations to develop a professional training programme for Imams. However, despite these arrangements, the cooperation and agreements with the relevant Muslim communities were never completed and, in 2011the programme was discontinued. This outcome highlights the importance of parties agreeing the terms for cooperation and collaboration at the outset of setting up a new programme, establishing a well-founded partnership between both religious and state authorities, before embarking on a significant programme for change such as one that involves faith, culture and education. If there is insufficient sharing of ideals and values and trust at the start of the venture, there is the danger that the actors involved will see the state’s intervention as that of agent of control rather than co-worker. This is an issue worth considering with regard to establishing professional standards and development programmes for Imams in Britain.
Leadership and management were identified, in the research findings, as the priority skills for the Imam’s role and these encompassed a wide range of related responsibilities, from pastoral care to administration and management of staff. Leadership and management were discussed with regard to some of the complexities that are associated with the working structure of the mosque.
Gilliat-Ray and Timol’s (
2020) definition of the leadership role of the Imam acknowledges that it spans a wide spectrum, from the community-based work of providing “pastoral, moral and spiritual guidance” (ibid., p. 2) to a more outward-facing role in society. The critical discourse of leadership and management provides a, perhaps, more realistic perspective from which to consider some of the difficulties an Imam may encounter in fulfilling their leadership role, with regard to the leadership and management functions of the mosque committee. El-Yousfi’s research (2019) showed that the authority of the Imam can become “controlled by the bureaucratic authority of the committee members” and “conflicting factions within the Mosque committee” (ibid., p. 1). Therefore, when considering the provision of professional development or training in leadership for Imams it would be of benefit to consider, firstly, the scope of the management and leadership roles that are already occupied by their own mosque committee. The extent to which an Imam is able to fulfil the range of his/her leadership responsibilities is likely to be subject to the regime within the management committee.
The research respondents perceived that the most important competences and skills needed by Imams were pastoral care and counselling. A number of additional areas of skill were also seen as significant, such as being able to work with different age groups and, specifically, women and being able to reach out to members of the community who do not attend the mosque. These additional skills contribute directly to the main competences of pastoral care because “pastoral care should neither be prescriptive, following a preconceived script for specific situations, nor should it take place as a mere … formality, [or] as a statutory requirement…the pastoral carer that adopts this sort of approach is like a medical doctor who treats the disease or symptoms which are presented without being concerned for the whole person” (
Guilherme and Morgan 2016, p. 141). Within this context, pastoral care can be seen as an overall or core competence that encompasses a range of other skills that take account of people’s holistic needs. Counselling can be viewed within a similar context. Leavey’s research findings (
Leavey 2008) showed that certain faith organisations and leaders provided pastoral care through a counselling approach (ibid., p. 81) that relieves “anxiety or other emotional pain often caused by life events and difficulties such as relationship problems, loss and bereavement”. The relevant skills underpinning this definition of counselling are associated with communication and listening and these were specifically identified by the respondents in the first iteration of the Delphi process.
As discussed earlier, an Imam’s skills are challenged further through the conflicts that Muslim families and communities are coping with today, as the result of the 21st century values and cultures being absorbed and lived—especially by the younger generations—who are living lives that are at odds with much of their traditional religious teachings (according to the older generations).
Frank (
2006) sees this as the process of an “individualisation of Islam” (ibid, p. 106) , where different generations (or older and younger generations) within the family are engaging in a “social adaptation process of Muslim minority groups”, which places “Islam within the three interrelated paradigms of secularization, individualization, and privatization, which have until recently been distinctive characteristics of Western societies” (p. 106). This suggests that as successive generations and members of Muslim families adapt and individualise their own ‘version’ of Islam, they are moving closer to living their faith alongside/in terms of the cultural norms of contemporary Western society. If this is the case, then a secular, , or more business-based approach to professionalising the Imam’s role, for example by implementing professional standards and assessing performance to these standards, would provide a strong professional context in which to position the Imam’s role. Such a professional framework would be well-placed to provide guidance to Imams on how to balance the religious–secular binary of how the Imam maintains his/her religious authority whilst also advising and supporting Muslims who are selective in the kind of Islam they choose to embrace in their lives. This reinforces the importance the research respondents attached to having the competences and skills to deliver effective pastoral care and counselling to individuals and families in response to these contemporary issues and the value of providing Imams with a professional framework of guidance to their role in 21st century Britain.
To conclude, the research data from #ImamsBritain shows that the Imam respondents perceive that their work in mosques and Muslim communities today lacks professional status and training. The findings have been critically discussed with regard to some of the challenges that would present as the result of professionalising the Imamate as a workforce. There are models of professional standards and guidance for Imams to be found in Europe and Canada and elsewhere, which reflect some of the successes and pitfalls inherent in implementing such programmes of change. However, perhaps one of the more significant conclusions to make is the importance of taking a strategic approach to professionalising the Imamate. Such an approach is evident in the European and Canadian models discussed and was argued for in
Section 4 on the key skills needed by Imams. If mosque committees and Imams worked collaboratively with other agencies, for example branches of social services (as in the case of the Canadian model), this would be more likely to produce professional development and training programmes that reflect a wider and more realistic range of content that spans social, mental health and general health needs. Imams would then be ‘tapping into’ skills training that is responsive to social change at a national level, whilst maintaining a close focus on the cultural and faith-based needs of their own communities.