Affiliation:
1. The Alwaleed Centre for the Study of Islam in the Contemporary World, Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9LD, UK
Abstract
The mainstream literature on the religiosity of Muslims in Europe often homogenises this diverse minority. This article diverges by focusing on a less visible ethno-religious minority within the Muslim population, specifically examining how Hazara Shia Muslim migrants from Afghanistan, resettled in the UK, live and organise Islam in everyday contexts. Addressing this gap, the research highlights the intersectionality of religion, ethnicity, and migration in reconfiguring religious practice. Grounded in the intersectional and lived religion approaches, this study contends that the religiosity of this Muslim minority undergoes a dynamic shift entwined with agency and adaptation in the new secular and plural context, becoming more individualised, privatised, and elective. Employing an ethnographic design, data are collected through semi-structured and key informant interviews, as well as participant observation, over 18 months of fieldwork across various council areas in Scotland. The findings illustrate reconfiguration, adaptation, and innovation in everyday Islam among this intersectional Muslim minority, identifying three main themes: the adaptation and reconfiguration of religious practices and rituals, the renegotiation of authoritative sources, and the navigation of intersectional identities and belonging since resettlement in the UK.
Reference73 articles.
1. After 9/11: British South Asian Muslims, Islamophobia, Multiculturalism, and the State;Abbas;American Journal of Islam and Society,2004
2. Reconfiguring Religious Identities;Abbas;British Journal of Sociology of Education,2018
3. Islamophobia as Racialised Biopolitics in the United Kingdom;Abbas;Philosophy & Social Criticism,2020
4. Ammerman, Nancy T. (2007). Everyday Religion: Observing Modern Religious Lives, Oxford University Press.
5. Ammerman, Nancy Tatom (2021). Studying Lived Religion: Contexts and Practices, New York Unviersity Press.