New Mosque Sparks Discussion on Role of Women in Islam [View all]
By Tamara Audi
LOS ANGELESA womens-only mosque launched here last week and believed to be the first of its kind in the U.S. has sparked a nationwide discussion among Muslims over the role of women in Islam.
Aslam Abdullah, the imam and director of the Islamic Society of Nevada, in Las Vegas, upports the womens mosque and wants to encourage greater attendance among women at his own mosque, 7 miles from the Las Vegas Strip. But he said feelings in his congregationwhich draws between 250 and 500 worshipers for Friday prayersare mixed. Some object to women leading prayer and giving sermons; others worry if womens-only worship catches on elsewhere, it could divide communities along gender lines, he said.
Muslim women have long complained of feeling marginalized at traditional mosques, where they often are separated from the main worship space and dont have much opportunity to engage with the preacher, or imam, after services. Some mosques dont admit women at all; more conservative scholars believe womens prayers are best offered at home.
The womens mosque foundersa comedy writer and a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission lawyersaid they began to feel unwelcome at their home mosques because of the physical separation of men and women. They said they started the Womens Mosque of America to invigorate womens scholarship in Islam and inspire Muslim women to take more active leadership roles in their home mosques.
Hind Makki, a Muslim woman in Chicago who consults with mosques around the country on womens inclusion, said responses across the Muslim community fall roughly into three basic categories: conservatives who say the mosque and all-female Friday prayer is a sin; women and some men who say its awesome and what weve been waiting for; and others who say it raises critical questions about womens experiences inside mosques, and Islamic law.
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http://www.wsj.com/articles/new-mosque-sparks-discussion-on-role-of-women-in-islam-1423156309