June 1, 2007
ISLAM MEANS WHAT WE SAY IT DOES:
A Growing Demand for the Rare American Imam (NEIL MacFARQUHAR, 6/01/07, NY Times)
Prayer leaders, or imams, in the United States have long arrived from overseas, forced to negotiate a foreign culture along with their congregation. Older immigrants usually overlook the fact that it is an uneasy fit, particularly since imported sheiks rarely speak English. They welcome a flavor of home.But as the first generation of American-born Muslims begins graduating from college in significant numbers, with a swelling tide behind them, some congregations are beginning to seek native imams who can talk about religious and social issues that seem relevant to young people, like dating and drugs. On an even more practical level, they want an imam who can advise them on day-to-day American matters like how to set up a 401(k) plan to funnel the charitable donations known as zakat, which Islam mandates.
“The problem is that you have a young generation whose own experience has nothing to do with where its parents came from,” said Hatem Bazian, a lecturer in the Near Eastern studies department at the University of California, Berkeley, who surveys Muslim communities.
But the underlying quandary is that American imams are hard to find, though there are a few nascent training programs. These days, many of the men leading prayers across the United States on any given Friday are volunteers, doctors or engineers who know a bit more about the Koran than everyone else. Scholars point out that one of the great strengths of Islam, particularly the Sunni version, is that there is no official hierarchy.
When the Pope is a Tocquevillian, it's safe to say that greater institutional structure wouldn't protect Islam from Reformation by America. Posted by Orrin Judd at June 1, 2007 11:29 AM
he headline and closing remark have the right idea, but we souldn't say that sort of thing aloud. The frog isn't supposed to know it's being cooked.
Posted by: Lou Gots at June 2, 2007 8:51 AM