Muslim Social Workers and Imams’ Recommendations in Marital and Child Custody Cases of Persons with Intellectual or Mental Disability

Author:

Leena Badran1,Arie Rimmerman2

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Welfare, University of Haifa, Haifa 3498838, Israel

2. Richard Crossman Professor of Social Welfare and Social Planning, School of Social Work, University of Haifa, Haifa 3498838, Israel

Abstract

Abstract Arab society in Israel is undergoing modernisation and secularisation. However, its approach to disability and mental illness is still dominated by religious and traditional stereotypes, as well as folk remedies and community practices. The present study examines differences in Muslim social workers and Imams’ recommendations in marriage/divorce and child custody cases of persons with intellectual disabilities (IDs) or mental illness. The study has two goals: (1) To examine differences in recommendations between Imams and Muslim social workers and (2) to explore variables related to their differential recommendations as observed in their responses to vignettes. Quantitative study using vignettes resembling existing Muslim religious (Sharia) court cases. Muslim social workers (138) and Imams (forty-eight) completed a background questionnaire, a religiosity questionnaire and a questionnaire that included twenty-five vignettes constructed by the researcher based on court rulings, adapted for the study. Muslim social workers tended to consider the religious recommendation when the family of person with ID or mental illness was portrayed in the vignette as religious. The same applied to Imams, albeit to a greater extent. The findings call for raising awareness amongst social workers and academics regarding the importance of religion and tradition in formulating professional recommendations.

Funder

The Shalem Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Health (social science)

Reference40 articles.

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3. The Shari’a in Israel: Islamization, israelization and the invented Islamic law;Abou Ramadan;UCLA Journal of Islamic and near Eastern Law,2007

4. The Imam’s role in mental health promotion: A study at 22 mosques in New York City’s Muslim community;Abu-Ras;Journal of Muslim Mental Health,2008

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