Canadian Muslim woman to lead mixed-gender prayers in London (Lead)
June 10th, 2010 - 4:31 pm ICT by IANSLondon, June 10 (IANS) A Canadian author may become the first Muslim-born woman to lead the prayers at a mixed-gender congregation in Britain Friday as mosques bow to demands from modern Muslim women for their right to pray and representation.
Raheel Raza, a resident of Toronto, has been invited to deliver the ‘khutbah’ at a congregation in Oxford by Taj Hargey, according to The Independent. Hargey is a self-described Imam and considered a liberal interpreter of Islam believing in mixed-gender prayers and female imams leading such congregations.
Raza is a rights activist and a Muslim feminist fighting for leadership roles for women in mosques. She had received death threats after leading a mixed-gender prayer congregation in Toronto five years ago.
She told The Independent over the phone from her home in Toronto: “It’s not about taking the job of an imam. It’s about reminding the Muslim community that 50 percent of its adherents are women who are equal to men. Women are equally observant, practising Muslims who deserve to be heard.”
Raza will become the second woman, but the first Muslim-born, to lead the prayers at Oxford if her Friday congregation goes through. In 2008, an American-born convert Amina Wadud, had led the congregation. Wadud’s prayers were attended by a small congregation of less than 40 who were heckled on their way in to prayers by protesters, largely by fully veiled Muslim women.
Hargey, who runs the Muslim Educational Centre of Oxford, said: “For Friday prayers we now receive about 100 people, twice that for Eid prayers and important occasions. I am expecting about 200 people to attend this Friday’s prayers.”
In recent years there has been a growing demand from Muslim women to be included and represented at their mosques. Earlier this week, Faith Matters, a conflict resolution think-tank funded by the government and private benefactors, released a list of 100 women-friendly mosques.
- Muslim woman invited to lead mixed-gender prayers - Jun 10, 2010
- Canadian author to be first woman to lead Friday prayers in UK - Jun 10, 2010
- Professor becomes first female to lead mixed Islamic congregation in Britain - Oct 18, 2008
- 100 most 'women-friendly' mosques directory launched in England - Jun 09, 2010
- 70,000 faithful throng Hazratbal shrine (With Images) - Feb 10, 2012
- Fatehpuri Imam regrets killings in Kashmir - Sep 11, 2010
- Prayer held for Osama in Kolkata mosque - May 06, 2011
- Prayers, sacrifice on Eid-ul-Zuha in Andhra Pradesh - Nov 07, 2011
- Moderate Muslims slam Brit Islamic schools for forcing girl students to wear burka - Oct 03, 2010
- Hindus in Canadian city oppose Muslim prayers at school - Jul 05, 2011
- Muslims across India offer prayers on last Friday of Ramadan - Sep 03, 2010
- Unpaid Saudi imam locks worshippers out - Aug 30, 2010
- Grand Imam of Mecca Masjid attends religious congregation in Delhi - Mar 27, 2011
- In Hyderabad, faithful throng Mir Alam Eidgah, Mecca Masjid - Nov 17, 2010
- Gaiety marks Eid in Andhra Pradesh - Aug 31, 2011
Tags: 100 women, adherents, canadian author, conflict resolution, congregations, death threats, educational centre, eid, eid prayers, imams, khutbah, leadership roles, mosques, muslim community, muslim woman, muslim women, private benefactors, protesters, raheel raza, rights activist