"The Mother Is a School" Muslim Mothers and their Religio-Educative Roles
Abstract
Based on my 2014 master’s ethnographic study, this article examines how my research question changed from “What role does Muslim mothering play in Islamic education?” to “How do Muslim mothers of the GTA imagine their religio-educative roles?” I examine how the seemingly empowering adage “the mother is a school” is actually a burdensome ideology. I locate spiritual growth in the interplay of remembrance, forgetfulness, and repentance, which are indisputable parts of the discursive backdrop against which my participants imagine what it is to be Muslim. Using found poems constructed from interviews with participant mothers, I use the themes of time and translation to highlight their overwhelming feelings of failure to mother adequately. Along with the mothers’ feelings of failure, I identify their moments of fleeting success as the important work of translating impersonal religious knowledge into personal experiences that are meaningful to their children. To move beyond the school metaphor, I offer “poetic spaces”—the spaces where my participants navigate creative and transformative relationships with a discursive tradition that is largely produced without them. Including myself as a Muslim mother, I identify my own poetic space as a site for resistance and look forward to creating alternative metaphors to reimagine mothering in the context of Islam.
Downloads
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
All intellectual property in relation to material included on this site belongs to the Motherhood Initiative for Research and Community Involvement (MIRCI). All material on this site is protected by Canadian and international copyright and other intellectual property laws. Users may not do anything which interferes with or breaches those laws or the intellectual property rights in the material. All materials on the Motherhood Initiative for Research and Community Involvement (MIRCI) are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, sale, distribution, display or exploitation of the information, in any form or by any means, or its storage in a retrieval system, whether in whole or in part, without the express written permission of the Motherhood Initiative for Research and Community Involvement (MIRCI) is prohibited. Please contact us for permission to reproduce any of our materials. This site may include third party content which is subject to that third party's terms and conditions of use.