“Assalamu ʿAlaykum, Can We Add This Sister?”

Author:

ter Laan Nina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Cologne Germany Cologne

Abstract

Abstract This article examines the use of a WhatsApp chat group by Dutch and Belgian Muslim women (born or converted), who are considering or made hijra (religiously inspired migration to a Muslim country) to Morocco. I argue that WhatsApp plays a crucial role in facilitating and narrating these women’s migration by providing a support network and shaping a gendered sense of community and religious belonging. Drawing on theories of religion and gender, migration, and digital media, I conceptualize WhatsApp in the context of hijra to Morocco as a social practice of homemaking that helps alleviate the precarious conditions these women find themselves in. This article also illustrates the complex entanglement of offline and online realities by highlighting how my interlocutors’ interactions in this WhatsApp group foster a trans-local Muslim ‘sisterhood,’ that informs their offline practices and experiences of hijra to Morocco.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Religious studies,Anthropology,Cultural Studies,Gender Studies

Reference59 articles.

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2. Bareither, Christoph. 2019. ‘Doing Emotion through Digital Media: An Ethnographic Perspective on Media Practices and Emotional Affordances’, Ethnologia Europaea 49:1, 7–23.

3. Baumgartner, Christoph. 2019. ‘(Not) Shaking Hands with People of the Opposite Sex: Civility, National Identity, and Accommodation’ in Jonathan Seglow and Andrew Shorten (eds.), Religion and Political Theory: Secularism, Accommodation and the New Challenges of Religious Diversity, London: Rowman and Littlefield International, 119–136.

4. Becker, Carmen. 2013. ‘Learning to Be Authentic. Religious Practices of German and Dutch Muslims Following the Salafiyya in Forums and Chat Rooms’, PhD thesis, Radboud University.

5. Beekers, Daan 2021. Young Muslims and Christians in a Secular Europe: Pursuing Religious Commitment in the Netherlands, London: Bloomsbury.

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