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Muslim spiritual leaders could be denounced publicly by their own community as part of a campaign to expose imams whose silence on domestic abuse is leading to women being burnt, lashed and raped in the name of Islam.
Muslim scholars are to present the Government with the names of imams who are alleged by members of their own communities to have refused to help abused women. Imams are also accused of refusing to speak out against domestic abuse in their sermons because they fear losing their clerical salaries and being sacked for broaching a “taboo” subject.
Some of Britain's most prominent moderate imams and female Muslim leaders have backed the campaign, urging the Home Office to vet more carefully Islamic spiritual leaders coming to Britain to weed out hardliners. A four-month inquiry by the Centre for Islamic Pluralism into domestic abuse has uncovered harrowing tales of women being raped, burnt by cigarettes and lashed with belts by their husbands, who believe it is their religious right to mistreat them.
At least 40 female Muslim victims and many social workers from northern England - including Bradford, Manchester, Leeds and Birmingham - were interviewed as part of the inquiry, which is expected to be published next month.
During its investigation the organisation - the British arm of a longestablished US think-tank - received a number of complaints about imams who had turned a blind eye to cases of domestic violence, many of whom are followers of Wahabbism, a puritanical interpretation of the Koran espoused by Osama bin Laden.
There have also been similar complaints about clerics from the Tablighi Jamaat movement, which is accused of radicalising young British Muslims with its orthodox teachings.
The organisation's international director, the Muslim scholar Irfan al-Alawi, told The Times that he would be forwarding the names of the imams to the Home Office, which has promised to investigate the allegations. He called for them to be stripped of any government grants that they may be receiving. He is also seeking legal advice about exposing the imams at public lectures and forums throughout the country.
“I have to make sure that I don't end up with a lawsuit on my hands but at the same time expose what is going on in the community,” he said.
Yousif al-Khoei, spokesman for the Mosques and Imams National Advisory Board (Minab) - a government approved body set up to improve the standards among British imams - admitted that some clerics condoned domestic violence although he said it was a “minority practice”.
He insisted the problem was to do with specific cultural beliefs rather than religious ideology, but said that the board was determined to tackle the problem by promoting “proper Islamic guidelines in the public arena”.
However, he gave warning against the idea of publicly identifying imams, saying that would risk turning them into “martyrs” within their own community.
“Instead, we should encourage women to seek advice from proper imams,” he said.
While the number of domestic violence cases has almost doubled in the last three years, according to the Crown Prosecution Service, the figures fail to reflect the physical abuse cases within the Muslim community.
Such cases, on which there is no data because they are largely unreported, are driven by cultural and religious beliefs instead of alcohol and drug abuse, said Shahien Taj, director of the Henna Foundation, which deals with honour crimes and domestic abuse victims.
Ms Taj, who is a member of the Government's Muslim Women's Advisory Group, said women were reluctant to come forward about the abuse they experienced because they were “groomed and brainwashed” into becoming interdependent on their direct families and not encouraged to take their complaints to the outside world.
Dr al-Alawi said there were cultural and religious reasons why some imams would not want to raise the issue of domestic violence in the mosque. “A lot of women who are brought from foreign countries to join their spouse here, firstly they cannot speak English and the imam is very reluctant to have a conversation with a woman because they feel there is a barrier and the woman should not be approachable to the man.
“There's a lot of sexual abuse as well, which is apparently considered taboo for Muslims to talk about, whereby husbands are forcing themselves on women after they had been out with other women - rape case,” he said.
Sheikh Irfan Chishti, director of the Light of Islam Academy and a former member of Tony Blair's Preventing Extremism Together taskforce, said there was “religious justification” among some imams for the abuse and subjugation of women.
He said female victims were in many cases afraid of seeking help because they feared retribution and being accused of tarnishing or disobeying Islam.
“Women don't speak up and if they do speak up they can get battered,” Sheikh Chishti said.
“Some men are brought up to believe that because they are superior therefore inadvertently or by default women are inferior and therefore submissive.”
He said that female Muslims needed to be empowered by moderate community leaders and the younger generation should be encouraged to condemn and report domestic violence.
Sheik Chishti also said young and British-raised community members should be encouraged to take over mosque committees. “You will not have change in the mosque until you change the culture of the leadership.”
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Ron
There is a petition on the downing street web site http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/shariastop/
re the civil issue
sunny, Sheffield, United Kingdom
Now that Sharia is the law for Muslims in civil cases that include divorce and spousal abuse less and less will come to light.
ron, topsham,
Joan Moira Peters: I absolutely agree. Incidentally, for the record, I am an Agnostic, so I don't have any particular axe to grind other than not believing in fairy stories.
John, Bexhill on Sea, UK
There is domestic abuse regardless of faith or belief. But the point is that it is being deliberately hushed up in some Muslim communities in the name of religion. And the Archbish of Canterbury thinks Sharia law could operate here, thus giving these imams the platform to hush it up.
Davep, Crieff, Scotland
"...tales of women being raped, burnt by cigarettes and lashed with belts by their husbands, who believe it is their religious right to mistreat them."
In this country?!?
Tikhon Savrasov, London, UK
Abuse statistics ARE public with other people, that is the point Joan. The Muslim community is often viciously insular and conducted along barbaric cultural lines, much as this reports states. Alongside this, what we need is greater exposure on how they breed Muslim terrorism in their own community.
Joe, Manchester,
Publicly Denounced for turning a blind eye to Rape and Burning Eh!, Then what ? Will they then be told that if they keep it up that the bogey man will get them?. Life in Gordon s Britain.
Peter, Vancouver BC., Canada
Yes Joan and of those living under the Christian faith in Arab countries, oh I forgot it's illegal with a penalty of public abuse. Hay ho long live the Labour multicultural experiment. Cant infringe on their religious rights to beat, burn and rape their women, or flog boys with bladed whips. What a beautiful religion, coming your way ..
Mark, London,
Oooooohhh! Denounced, gosh next they'll have their trouser leg rolled up and get slapped.
Rob Bain, Derby,
Joan Peters - How dare you imply that your own Christian countrymen indulge in these appaling practices of some of the muslim population. Your comments are typical of the people who will allow these rapes and beatings to continue rather than force muslims to live in a civilised manner.
Richard Brady, Kiev, Ukraine
So much for multiculturalism.
Why come to this country when you constantly break the law with an alien country's religious bigotry?
...and then this country picks up the bill for injured foreigners' legal and humanitarian costs.
Bah, humbug.
Annie, Bath, UK
Ms Peters,
As the saying sort of goes: Has your husband stopped beating you yet? The point is that Islam is routinely used by men as an excuse to beat, burn and rape women. In the UK, that if you do that, you should go to jail. It's the law. Why any UK woman submits to Islam beats me!
No. 6, London,
Pakistanis must decide, either be Muslims or otherwise. One of the main reason of Islam's revealation was to protect women from abuse by men. But Pakistanis do whatever Islam forbids. So what's wrong with Pakistanis ? Why have they become the Godfathers of every wrong deed in the world ?
Safiullah Tazib, London, UK
Too late the rot has set in! Give then an inch and they take a yard! We wanted "enrichment " and now we have it.
mark, Leeds,
If any statistics are to be published on domestic abuse within the Muslim population, statistics should also be made available on domestic abuse within the secularized population and also within the Christian and other relgious populations, in
order to allow for a more informed appraisal.
Joan Moira Peters, Whangarei UK Citizen, temp o/seas in New Zealand