Me and the Mosque

Zarqa Nawaz is a Canadian Muslim filmmaker who lives with her family in Regina, Saskatchewan. There are any number of comments that could be inserted at this point. Having spent time on both the Saskatchewan and Manitoba prairies, I note only that Zarqa is developing a television series for the Can...

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Autor principal: Amir Hussain
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: International Institute of Islamic Thought 2006
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:9254228b2a0b4c43ae778f71ecb750752021-12-02T18:18:44ZMe and the Mosque10.35632/ajis.v23i2.16342690-37332690-3741https://doaj.org/article/9254228b2a0b4c43ae778f71ecb750752006-04-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/1634https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3733https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3741 Zarqa Nawaz is a Canadian Muslim filmmaker who lives with her family in Regina, Saskatchewan. There are any number of comments that could be inserted at this point. Having spent time on both the Saskatchewan and Manitoba prairies, I note only that Zarqa is developing a television series for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation entitled “Little Mosque on the Prairie.” She has made two earlier short films, BBQ Muslims and Death Threat. Information about those films, as well as about Zarqa, can be found on her website, Fundamentalist Films, available at www.fundamentalistfilms. com. Me and the Mosque, her first documentary, is distributed by the National Film Board of Canada. The film is directly related to her own concerns as a Muslim woman, namely, as to space available to her in the mosque. The film begins on a light-hearted note (as does her web site, with the tag line of “putting the fun back into fundamentalism”) with Muslim comic Azhar Usman joking about the lack of appropriate space available in mosques for Muslim women. The documentary traverses mosques in Canada and the United States, such including places as Aurora, Illinois; Mississauga, Ontario; Winnipeg, Manitoba; Regina, Saskatchewan; Surrey, British Columbia; and Morgantown, West Virginia. It includes the voices of established scholars, among them Asma Barlas, Umar Abd-Allah, and Aminah McCloud, alongside the newer scholarly voices of Aisha Geissinger, Jasmine Zine, and Itrath Syed. In addition, there is a wide range of interviews with people from the Muslim community, from such activists as Asra Nomani and Aminah Assilmi to such scholars as Abdullah Adhami and Tareq Suwaidan. As mentioned above, the film begins on a humorous note with the comedy of Azhar Usman (of “Allah Made Me Funny” fame). However, what he jokes about, the nice “dungeons” that many people mention when they talk about the basements where some mosques give space to women, is no laughing matter. The film then moves to the mosque in Aurora to begin its discussion of these issues. I would like to think that this is Zarqa’s subtle homage to another Canadian filmmaker, Mike Myers, who bases his fictional character, Wayne Campbell, in Aurora. Zarqa then mentions her upbringing in Toronto and contrasts the mosque that she attended (the Jami’ Mosque) while ... Amir HussainInternational Institute of Islamic ThoughtarticleIslamBP1-253ENAmerican Journal of Islam and Society, Vol 23, Iss 2 (2006)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Islam
BP1-253
spellingShingle Islam
BP1-253
Amir Hussain
Me and the Mosque
description Zarqa Nawaz is a Canadian Muslim filmmaker who lives with her family in Regina, Saskatchewan. There are any number of comments that could be inserted at this point. Having spent time on both the Saskatchewan and Manitoba prairies, I note only that Zarqa is developing a television series for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation entitled “Little Mosque on the Prairie.” She has made two earlier short films, BBQ Muslims and Death Threat. Information about those films, as well as about Zarqa, can be found on her website, Fundamentalist Films, available at www.fundamentalistfilms. com. Me and the Mosque, her first documentary, is distributed by the National Film Board of Canada. The film is directly related to her own concerns as a Muslim woman, namely, as to space available to her in the mosque. The film begins on a light-hearted note (as does her web site, with the tag line of “putting the fun back into fundamentalism”) with Muslim comic Azhar Usman joking about the lack of appropriate space available in mosques for Muslim women. The documentary traverses mosques in Canada and the United States, such including places as Aurora, Illinois; Mississauga, Ontario; Winnipeg, Manitoba; Regina, Saskatchewan; Surrey, British Columbia; and Morgantown, West Virginia. It includes the voices of established scholars, among them Asma Barlas, Umar Abd-Allah, and Aminah McCloud, alongside the newer scholarly voices of Aisha Geissinger, Jasmine Zine, and Itrath Syed. In addition, there is a wide range of interviews with people from the Muslim community, from such activists as Asra Nomani and Aminah Assilmi to such scholars as Abdullah Adhami and Tareq Suwaidan. As mentioned above, the film begins on a humorous note with the comedy of Azhar Usman (of “Allah Made Me Funny” fame). However, what he jokes about, the nice “dungeons” that many people mention when they talk about the basements where some mosques give space to women, is no laughing matter. The film then moves to the mosque in Aurora to begin its discussion of these issues. I would like to think that this is Zarqa’s subtle homage to another Canadian filmmaker, Mike Myers, who bases his fictional character, Wayne Campbell, in Aurora. Zarqa then mentions her upbringing in Toronto and contrasts the mosque that she attended (the Jami’ Mosque) while ...
format article
author Amir Hussain
author_facet Amir Hussain
author_sort Amir Hussain
title Me and the Mosque
title_short Me and the Mosque
title_full Me and the Mosque
title_fullStr Me and the Mosque
title_full_unstemmed Me and the Mosque
title_sort me and the mosque
publisher International Institute of Islamic Thought
publishDate 2006
url https://doaj.org/article/9254228b2a0b4c43ae778f71ecb75075
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