Why This Woman Started
A Mosque Run Entirely By Women
Founder Sherin Khankan called it a "feminist project."
- Antonia Blumberg Associate Religion Editor, The Huffington Post
A new mosque in Copenhagen,
Denmark, features all the trappings of a traditional Muslim house of worship
except Mariam Mosque will be led entirely by women imams, or worship
leaders.
Founder Sherin Khankan, a
well-known author and political commentator in Denmark, told Danish newspaper Politiken
she started Mariam in February because she "never felt at home in the
existing mosques."
"Many women and young people
don’t even go into the mosques as you enter into a male dominated and
patriarchal space in which a man has the floor, a man leads prayers, men are in
focus and dominate. That is why we are now setting up a mosque on women’s
terms," Khankan said.
Mosques traditionally have men and
women sit separately during services, often with dividers
between them. Some women feel that these separate
conditions affect their worship experience by blocking their view of the
imam.
Khankan, who is serving as one of
two imams at Mariam Mosque, called the house of worship a "feminist
project."
“We have normalized patriarchal
structures in our religious institutions. Not just in Islam, but also within
Judaism and Christianity and other religions. And we would like to challenge
that,” Khankan told
Agence France-Presse.
The mosque will be open to men on
most days except for during Friday prayers, AFP reports.
Women's mosques have existed
in China for several hundred years, but have started cropping up in other
parts of the world more recently. A women's-only mosque opened
its doors in Los Angeles in 2015 with the hopes of "increasing women's
access to Islamic knowledge, encouraging female participation in existing
mosques and fostering Islamic leadership and scholarship -- both within and
outside of the Muslim community," the founders told The Huffington Post.
Though women typically lead worship
services at such mosques, there is ongoing
debate surrounding whether women can or should serve as imams.
In 2006, Morocco
became the first Arab country to allow the training of female religious
leaders. The move was "a rare experiment in the Muslim world," according
to Merieme Addou, who served as associate producer for a documentary
about this new generation of female imams.
"Many think Islam oppresses
woman and restricts their freedoms, but this is because of traditions that have
nothing to do with Islam," Addou told
Reuters in 2015. "Men and women are equal in our religion. There
is no difference."
Founder Sherin Khankan called it a "feminist project."
- Antonia Blumberg Associate Religion Editor, The Huffington Post
A new mosque in Copenhagen,
Denmark, features all the trappings of a traditional Muslim house of worship
except Mariam Mosque will be led entirely by women imams, or worship
leaders.
Founder Sherin Khankan, a
well-known author and political commentator in Denmark, told Danish newspaper Politiken
she started Mariam in February because she "never felt at home in the
existing mosques."
"Many women and young people
don’t even go into the mosques as you enter into a male dominated and
patriarchal space in which a man has the floor, a man leads prayers, men are in
focus and dominate. That is why we are now setting up a mosque on women’s
terms," Khankan said.
Mosques traditionally have men and
women sit separately during services, often with dividers
between them. Some women feel that these separate
conditions affect their worship experience by blocking their view of the
imam.
Khankan, who is serving as one of
two imams at Mariam Mosque, called the house of worship a "feminist
project."
“We have normalized patriarchal
structures in our religious institutions. Not just in Islam, but also within
Judaism and Christianity and other religions. And we would like to challenge
that,” Khankan told
Agence France-Presse.
The mosque will be open to men on
most days except for during Friday prayers, AFP reports.
Women's mosques have existed
in China for several hundred years, but have started cropping up in other
parts of the world more recently. A women's-only mosque opened
its doors in Los Angeles in 2015 with the hopes of "increasing women's
access to Islamic knowledge, encouraging female participation in existing
mosques and fostering Islamic leadership and scholarship -- both within and
outside of the Muslim community," the founders told The Huffington Post.
Though women typically lead worship
services at such mosques, there is ongoing
debate surrounding whether women can or should serve as imams.
In 2006, Morocco
became the first Arab country to allow the training of female religious
leaders. The move was "a rare experiment in the Muslim world," according
to Merieme Addou, who served as associate producer for a documentary
about this new generation of female imams.
"Many think Islam oppresses
woman and restricts their freedoms, but this is because of traditions that have
nothing to do with Islam," Addou told
Reuters in 2015. "Men and women are equal in our religion. There
is no difference."
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