Racializing the Good Muslim: Muslim White Adjacency and Black Muslim Activism in South Africa

Rahman, Rhea (2021) Racializing the Good Muslim: Muslim White Adjacency and Black Muslim Activism in South Africa. Religions, 12 (1). p. 58. ISSN 2077-1444

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Abstract

Founded in Birmingham, England in 1984, Islamic Relief is today the world’s largest and most-recognized Western-based Islamically-inspired non-governmental organization. Framed by an analysis of processes of racialization, I argue that Islamic Relief operationalizes not a singular, but multiple Muslim humanitarianisms. I examine what I suggest are competing racial projects of distinct humanitarianisms with regards to HIV and AIDS, health, and wellness. I consider the racial implications of British state-based soft-power interventions that seek to de-radicalize Muslims towards appropriately ‘moderate’ perspectives on gender and sexuality. In South Africa, I argue that Black Muslim staff embrace grassroots efforts aimed towards addressing the material and social conditions of their community, with a focus on economic self-determination and self-sufficiency. I claim that the orientation of these Black Muslim grassroots initiatives denotes a humanitarianism of another kind that challenges the material and ethical implications of a humanitarianism framed within a logic of global white supremacy, and that is conditioned by racial capitalism.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Islamic humanitarianism; Islamophobia; anti-Blackness; white adjacency; HIV and AIDS
Subjects: STM Repository > Social Sciences and Humanities
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 07 May 2024 04:30
Last Modified: 07 May 2024 04:30
URI: http://classical.goforpromo.com/id/eprint/1248

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