Photo in JET, except a head shot. By Sunny Tyrell, a Muslim woman |
It was perfect timing that the article came out in this week's JET with Queen Latifah on the cover. Why? Because just Monday I received this tweet from Arabic Funk:
Where's @IbtihajMuhammad@aminawadud Fatima Jackson@jamillahkarim Intisar Rabb?thrivalroom.com/32-photos-that…@SanaSaeed
The link in the tweet is Thrival Room's (hadn't heard of this site before) "32 Photos That Hope to Change the Way We Look at Muslim American Women." The women profiled range from artists to educators to doctors.
BUT there was not one African American Muslim woman featured. The women appear to be of Arab and South Asian descent.
My first thought was that it
demonstrated the continued relevance of my first book American
Muslim Women, where I argue that
African American and South Asian American Muslim women generally occupy
separate ethnic spaces, though ummah ideals of unity and other social dynamics
occasionally facilitate our crossing our race, class, and gender
boundaries.
My children and the richness of life pulled me away from
these thoughts until facebook returned them as African American Muslim women
discussed what it meant to be left out again and as efforts were made to
create alternative lists.
Mohammed Schools senior class on NYT, 1993 |
Yes, images and books and lists are powerful and we need all
of them to fight Islamophobia, but know that we've been in the trenches
shattering the myth of the oppressed, deprived, foreign Muslim
woman for some time now. And it's paying off.
We have been featured in our own presses such as the Muslim
Journal, but also in mainstream presses such as the New York Times.
Just recently, the image of a Black woman first featured on a back cover
of Azizah magazine was chosen by the U. S. Department of
State for its 2014 publication on American Muslims.
For me, the greater achievement is when our media are
recognized by the larger community, as in the case of Azizah Magazine,
or when we are included in an important list by a publication that is not
Muslim. And not because others are defining us, but because others find us
valuable and relevant.
The JET article in which I am featured is
titled "The Chosen Few", and it reads, "With a passion for
raising spirits, these new faith leaders inspire truth-seekers to listen for
God in the still and the storm." Each faith leader is introduced and quoted
with words of wisdom on some aspect of human experience such as love or
failure.
Alhamdulillah, I am the Muslim among the five faith leaders
featured. Though the feature is small in print, the meaning of this is enormous
because it demonstrates American Muslims' ability to offer something beautiful
and meaningful from our tradition to a larger human community beyond our faith.
The great historian of Islam Marshall Hodgson notes that indeed this ability to
offer something relevant to people is indication that a new religious tradition
has succeeded in becoming an integral part of society.
Actor Sumayya Ali, The Washington Times |
But
of course, our success started with creating our own value, our own images, but
even as we created and promoted our own, we have been most effective when the
mission is beyond establishing ourselves in this country, and showing
compassion and concern for the people who were already here.
Two
leaders, whom I highlight in my first book, come to mind most immediately in
this light: Dr. Umar Abd-Allah who has encouraged Muslims to make the concerns
of non-Muslim Americans their concerns and Imam W. D. Mohammed, whom Dr. Umar
holds as a model of this principle.
Speaking
to an audience largely second-generation South Asian and Arab Muslim, Dr. Umar
stated, "You have to love your people. If you don't love your people, how
can you take Islam to your people? And how can you not love your people?"
Imam
W. D. Mohammed loved his people.
The
Nation of Islam created the Muhammad Speaks newspaper as a
medium for Black Muslim expression and images. When Imam W. D. Mohammed became
the leader of the Nation after his father's death, he changed the name of the
paper from Muhammad Speaks to Bilalian News. Imam
Mohammed coined the term Bilalian and offered it as a name for all African
Americans, not just Black Muslims.
A 1976 cover of the Bilalian News |
Ana
Karim states, “The Imam had told us Bilal is a prototype of us. . . .His enslavement
did not break his will. He held fast to Almighty God. So, the imam said, ‘We
are [now] the prototype; we are Bilalians.' The Imam wanted us to be a beacon
or harbinger to the future generations to reach for excellence.” The Bilalian
News (later changed to Muslim Journal) was an
offering, inspired by the Muslim tradition, to all Black Americans.* Ana continues:
Bilalian News stood on the shoulders of Muhammad Speaks in
that the Honorable Elijah Muhammad said in Muhammad Speaks, “Up you
mighty Nation, you can accomplish what you will.” Imam W. D. Mohammed, by
naming it Bilalian News, he was saying to our people, “You have the
wherewithal within you, God has put all the ingredients in you, to
become a great people and become respected by the world. . . .He was reaching
out to our people to strive for human excellence.
My
recognition as a young faith leader by a Black magazine is simply one of the
many fruits of the efforts of Imam W. D. Mohammed and his early followers,
including my parents. Because Imam Mohammed loved his people and dedicated his
community's newspaper to Black Americans at large, it is no surprise that we
are now recognized by one of the most important magazines in the history of the
Black freedom struggle.
Indeed,
I associate JET with my Granny and Grandpapa, Mrs. Lavada
Smith and Dr. Harvey Smith, who always had a copy of the magazine on their
coffee table. It was hard for my Granny when my father became a Black Muslim,
but over time, as her grandchildren grew with character and intellect, she
began to see the beauty of the new life my father had chosen. Her seeing me
in JET as a faith leader in the Black community would
have sealed her appreciation for Islam, I like to imagine. I am blessed that my
91 year old grandfather has lived to see this day.
May
our sons and daughters bring greater light and clarity on a faith meant to
benefit all of humanity.
* Bilalian
News included a statement of its “policy objectives.” The first five were: “1.
Advancement of the moral, and educational development of the entire society. 2.
Encourage support for the financial development of economically deprived
communities in the society. 3. The presentation to the world of the religious
mission of the World Community of Islam in the West, and its community building
activities. 4. The presentation of positive Bilalian achievements within and
without the United States. 5. The censuring of destructive and negative
influences which have traditionally impeded Bilalian development.” “Bilalian
News Statement of Policy,” Bilalian News, August 26, 1977, 2.