HOW DID VICTORIAN MUSLIMS CELEBRATE CHRISTMAS?
The Liverpool Muslim Institute was founded by the Liverpudlian William 'Abdullah' Quilliam [Courtesy: Abdullah Quilliam Society] |
A Victorian terrace house was feverish with activity.
The soft glow of candlelight emanating from 8 Brougham Terrace revealed
men and women busily putting up decorations and preparing food for the big
celebration ahead, Christmas Day.
In one corner, a familiar Victorian scene of a woman playing the piano
and directing hymn rehearsals, the singers' voices muted by the howling of a
bitter northeasterly wind as it rattled the thin panes of glass.
This was Britain's first mosque and Muslim community preparing for
their very first Christmas Day.
At 8am, having led the tiny congregation in the early morning prayer,
the Imam finally opened the mosque doors.
Imam William Henry "Abdullah" Quilliam founded the mosque
after embracing Islam in 1887, aged 31 years old.
He was greeted by more than 100 of the city's poor, who had been
invited to enjoy a charitable Christmas breakfast inside what locals called
"Islam Church".
As the group of recent converts served the paupers a hearty meal of
"sandwiches, bread and meat, seedloaf, bunloaf, bread and butter, tea and
coffee," the music began.
Hymns praising the birth of the Prophet Isa, or Jesus, rung out through
the venue. By evening, numbers swelled. Word had got around, and the Muslims
offered a "substantial tea" and small musical concert to the
visitors.
William Quilliam converted to Islam in 1887 and founded Britain's first mosque [Liverpool Records Office] |
The entertainment began with "mesmeric performances" by two
young Muslims before "some delightful airs upon the zither, the fairy
bells and the mandolin" by one Miss Warren.
This reminds us there was an earlier generation of Muslims, looking to spread the word of Islam through finding points in common rather than things to argue aboutTIMOTHY WINTER, MUSLIM SCHOLAR
The finale was a "magic lantern" show and photo series from
the imam's recent tour across distant Muslim lands.
These descriptions of Victorian Muslims at Christmas were taken from
the pages of The Crescent, the country's first Muslim newspaper.
It was published by the Liverpool Moslem Institute between 1893 and
1907 and was recently made available online by the Abdullah Quilliam Society -
which is based at the historic mosque - in partnership with the British
Library.
"This reminds us there was an earlier generation of Muslims,
looking to spread the word of Islam through finding points in common rather
than things to argue about," said Timothy Winter, a prominent British
Muslim scholar.
Winter, the dean of Cambridge Muslim College and lecturer in Islamic
Studies at the Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge, converted to Islam
in 1979. He has worked extensively with the archives.
A group photo of members of the Liverpool Muslim Institute in 1905 [Courtesy: Abdullah Quilliam Society] |
The Christmas scenes, described in every January issue of The Crescent,
may come as a surprise.
Winter said the festivities demonstrated a willingness to appropriate
local traditions, something that was easier because the group had grown up with
them.
"They possessed a spirit of openness and hospitality and were more
concerned with God and truth and conveying the word [as opposed to] boundary
issues and questions of identity and difference," Winter told Al Jazeera.
The Victorian Muslims were not celebrating Christmas in the Christian
sense, said Humayun Ansari, professor and author of The Infidel Within: Muslims
in Britain since 1800.
The mosque in Liverpool is still used for prayers and Islamic classes [Courtesy: Abdullah Quilliam Society] |
They simply wanted to reach out to the community.
In doing so, Ansari said, Quilliam and the early British Muslims were
"indigenising" their Muslim identities.
"What Quilliam is doing in these early examples is trying to
communicate that Islam is more familiar to the Christians of Britain then they
think. He is trying to show that it is not something foreign and alien, but
part of the Abrahamic tradition," Ansari told Al Jazeera.
"These early British Muslims were taking elements of British
indigenous culture deemed acceptable within the Islamic framework and marrying
them with their religious identities. In doing so, they offer a roadmap and
blueprint for what an indigenous British Muslim identity might look like
today."
In addition to the mosque, the Muslims of Liverpool founded a school,
orphanage and a museum.
At school, students were taught a curriculum that integrated Islam with
mainstream British education, including music classes.
They took part in literary and debating events titled A night with
Charles Dickens, Oliver Cromwell and Ancient Britons.
In the playground, boys played football and cricket.
The Crescent newspaper, edited by Quilliam, regularly published inspiring quotes of notable Brits such as Shakespeare and Lord Tennyson.
Critics said Tesco should not have featured Muslims in its Christmas advertising campaign because the holiday is a Christian celebration [Screenshot from Tesco's advert] |
The Crescent newspaper, edited by Quilliam, regularly published inspiring quotes of notable Brits such as Shakespeare and Lord Tennyson.
Quilliam's role and influence were such that he was given the title of
Sheikh Ul Islam of Britain by the Ottomans, and when he left Liverpool in 1908,
it seems his community disbanded too.
Today, there are more than 2.5 million Muslims in Britain and, unlike
Quilliam's community, they hail from a multitude of ethnic and cultural
backgrounds and observe Islam differently.
"The Victorian Muslims were a small community, almost exclusively
white English," said Sadiya Ahmed, founder of Everyday Muslim - an organisation
which preserves Britain's Muslim heritage.
"Today, we have Muslims in Britain whose families have come from
all over the world as well as those who are ethnically English, and this
inevitably means they approach Christmas in a number of ways," she told Al
Jazeera.
The issue recently came to the fore when Tesco, a supermarket brand,
released its festive advertising campaign featuring a Muslim family celebrating
Christmas.
Critics threatened to boycott the company because they saw Islam as
incompatible with Christmas.
However, others welcome the advert as embracing multiculturalism.
"Some [Muslims] will completely shun it as a Christian festival,
believing it has nothing to do with Islam," said Ahmed.
"Others will embrace it as a secular British tradition, putting up
trees, exchanging presents and eating a halal turkey on Christmas Day. And then
there will be those viewing it as a celebration of the birth of an important
prophet of Islam.
"Britain's Muslim community is far more diverse today than it was
when Quilliam was alive, and this is why their views on Christmas are equally
diverse."
News source :Al Jazeera
News source :Al Jazeera
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