Uniting the Ummah: Strategies to Foster Solidarity with Uyghur Muslims
Published: December 27, 2023 • Updated: July 22, 2024
Authors: Shahd Fulath Khan, Hala Bucheeri, Arzu Gul, and Dr. Dilmurat Mahmut
بِسْمِ اللهِ الرَّحْمٰنِ الرَّحِيْمِ
In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.
Introduction
Vignette
Uyghurs in context
Young [Uyghur] men became the target of hate and terror. A lot of them were pious… They just wanted to follow their faith… But the [Chinese] state began to conflate religious appearance and violent action. Young men became criminalized and began disappearing. Families were shattered in a lot of ways. It had a larger impact than just the person who was detained… [The Chinese government] talked about Islam as a disease—a virus or cancer spreading hate, which needed to be rooted out. In order to build the camp system, you have to dehumanize the population, and thinking of [Uyghur Muslims] as terrorists enabled them to do that.
The importance of religious community post-migration
The ummah: Creating a community of belonging
Reviving the sunnah of active integration
And [also for] those who were settled in Medina and [adopted] the faith before them. They love those who emigrated to them and find not any want in their breasts of what the emigrants were given but give [them] preference over themselves, even though they are in privation. And whoever is protected from the stinginess of his soul—it is those who will be the successful.
O Messenger of Allah! We have not seen a people more willing to sacrifice when having a lot, nor more patient when having a little than the people whom we are staying amongst…
When the emigrants reached Medina, Allah’s Messenger ﷺ established the bond of fraternity (muʾākhā) between ʿAbd al-Raḥmān b. ʿAwf and Saʿad b. al-Rabīʿ. Saʿad said to ʿAbd al-Raḥmān, “I am the richest of all the anṣār, so I want to divide my property (between us), and I have two wives, so see which of the two you like and tell me, so that I may divorce her, and when she finishes her prescribed period (i.e., ʿidda) of post-divorce, then marry her.” ʿAbd al-Raḥmān said, “May Allah bless your family and property for you. Where is your market?” So they showed him the Qaynuqāʿ market. He [went there and] returned with a profit in the form of dried yogurt and butter. He continued going [to the market] until one day he came bearing the traces of a yellow powder. The Prophet ﷺ asked, “What is this?” He replied, “I got married.” The Prophet ﷺ asked, “How much dowry (mahr) did you give her?” He replied, “I gave her a datestone of gold or a gold piece equal to the weight of a date-stone.” [The narrator, Ibrahim, was in doubt as to which was correct.’]
Methods
Sampling
Results
Qualitative findings
I feel unsupported because we want to see [support] from our Muslim community… at least make supplicatory prayers (duʿāʾ) for us, even if they don't raise money financially. Our issue is that we don't [get] mention[ed]... in our Muslim community. Not many people talk about us. They forget to mention us while making duʿāʾs. Our issue is not about a hundred people or a thousand people. Like when there was an attack in New Zealand, the number was 56 people, but we still remember them, mention them, talk about them. But millions of Uyghur are at risk… and losing their Islamic belief… How can you ignore it?
Before the pandemic we used to get together once a week in the Toronto Uyghur mosque. It is also a cultural center. We get together and try to share stories with each other or visit community members personally and spend time with them and share common experiences to relieve ourselves. That is moral support. We pray a lot right now because we are helpless and powerless, and the reaction from the outside world for the challenges we are facing is a great disappointment. So, what do you do? We can’t change the situation, and evil continues. The only thing you can do is talk within your own community who understands and prays and consoles one another. That's the only moral support you get from your own community, or giving more to communities that live in desperate places. Basically, we don't get support from anywhere and are alone with ourselves. A good word is comforting but doesn't solve the problem.
There is no outrage or outcry or anger from the Muslim community in Canada. These reactions came from Malaysia, Indonesia, Bangladesh. There was no reaction from Turkey… the Turkish government does not allow ‘false’ propaganda against China, so even Turkish media [is] filtering out information. Saudi [Arabia is] receiving aid from China through [the] Belt and Road Initiative. [All of this is] basically the totally opposite of what the Holy Qur’an teaches. The Muslim countries are selling out their Uyghur brothers and sisters for money.
The Muslim “Other” and empathy
It was in the making of the New World that Europeans became white, African black, and everyone else yellow, red, or brown. It was in the making of the New World that humans were set apart on the basis of what they looked like, identified solely in contrast to one another, and ranked to form a caste system based on a new concept of race.
Recommendations: Becoming a community of conscience and compassion
1. Unpacking our privilege
Questions | Yes | No |
I am greeted warmly when I enter a Muslim space and am surprised when this does not occur. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
My community is mentioned in communal duʿāʾs on a regular basis. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
I can name at least five Muslim leaders and scholars who are from my ethnocultural/racial background, who are well-known to the broader Muslim community. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
The issues that are most pressing to my community are presented in the Friday sermon. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
I expect that people will know how to pronounce my name and be familiar with where I am from when I enter Muslim spaces. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
I can expect food from my culture to be served at an iftar or other events in the Muslim community and/or mosque. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
When I enter the mosque or another Muslim gathering, people speak to me in their own language and presume I am from their community. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
Muslim community fundraisers regularly support issues that are important to my community. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
When I enter a Muslim space, there are others there who look like me. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
People on the mosque board and other positions of Muslims community leadership speak my mother tongue. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
When I enter a Muslim gathering, other Muslims greet me as one of their own. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
I hear my mother tongue being spoken regularly in the mosque and other Muslim spaces. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
There are multiple translations of the Qur’an and other Islamic works in my mother tongue. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
When there is an Islamic conference, there are speakers who look like me and speak like me. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
When a tragedy occurs in my community, members of the broader Muslim community reach out to me to offer their condolences and duʿāʾs. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
Islamic scholars reference scholars of my peoples in their lectures and writings. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
No Muslim has ever questioned whether or not I am Muslim. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
During Eid or other celebrations within a communal Muslim gathering, I can expect to see others wearing traditional clothing from my culture. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
When a tragedy occurs in my community, whether at home or abroad, I expect that members of the Muslim community will participate in political advocacy, rallies, boycotts, fundraisers, etc. to show their support. | ⬜ | ⬜ |
2. Bridge the empathic divide
3. Get educated
It’s hard to see that the Muslim community is not taking any action. It hurts. When they trust Chinese media more than us, it hurts. I believe that the Muslim community is good in general, but they are not getting the right information. Chinese people produce more than 450 million bots and stuff as misinformation, and fake videos to cheat [the] Muslim community… I want the Muslims here [in the US] to advocate for us here.
4. Get active
- Mobilizing and advocating politically against the Uyghur genocide. Civic engagement through reaching out to your local political representative or joining a rally are powerful ways you can effect change.
- Developing a welcoming program in your mosque so Uyghurs and other marginalized Muslim community members can feel they have a place of belonging. This is one way we can embody the Prophetic model of the anṣār welcoming the muhājirūn into Medina.
- Contacting your mosque board seeking ways to get involved. You can also make sure to vote in a more diverse and representative board every year.
- Fundraising to support the Uyghur brothers and sisters in your community to set up a Uyghur prayer area (musallā) or a dedicated mosque if there is a large community. As one participant shared, “Religious spaces are important. There is no Ugyhur mosque anywhere [in the area I live in]. If the broader Muslim community could support them, that would be useful.”
- Organizing regular community gatherings around Uyghur food, arts, and culture. This can help our Uyghur brothers and sisters feel a sense of belonging and could be as simple as including traditional Uyghur foods in iftar programs at the mosque in Ramadan. The more regular such events are, the more visible the Uyghurs will be to us.
- Facilitating the teaching of Uyghurche, the Uyghur language by securing a free space at the local mosque, community center, or other suitable premises to accommodate the program. This recommendation repeatedly presented itself in our participant interviews,
… support Uyghur kids to learn their own culture, language, and tradition. The [Uyghur] community [in Canada] is [small in number and] not enough… to be sustainable, so Uyghurs will be assimilated and integrated into Canadian culture. [Uyghur] families hope that their children can learn and preserve their language and traditions.
[Rent] is very costly. [The Uyghur] community is small and scattered across the Greater Toronto Area [in Canada]. It is difficult for people to bring their children from [the different corners of the city]... It is a real challenge.
Conclusion
By Him in Whose Hand my soul is! You will not enter jannah until you believe, and you shall not believe until you love one another. May I inform you of something, if you do it, you will love each other? Spread salām amongst yourselves (by saying assalāmu ʿalaikum to one another).
Your life is my life.
You are mine and I am yours.
Your enemy is my enemy.
Your ally is my ally.
O people, your Lord is one and your father is one. There is no virtue of an Arab over a foreigner, nor a foreigner over an Arab, and neither white over black nor black over white, except by righteousness.