Thought for the day
Lovefast 23: Muslim Women 'in their own words'
British Muslim women’s voices in the UK are worthy to be heard as they speak out regarding difficult issues. They’re artists, poets, playwrights, innovators, lawyers, campaigners, women’s advocates. Passionate for the welfare of women and writing as insiders, their voices speak clearly, not shrinking from issues of horror.
Through Novels: Razia, Abda Khan, 2019: …between Zaheer and Aneela, cowering on the cold stone-tiled floor, was a young woman. She was dressed in traditional salwar kameez…covered with stains…tears were running down her face…the girl let out muted sobs. Zaheer raised his hand.
A return the next week under the guise of looking for a lost earring confirms her worst fear: Razia, the young woman in the kitchen, is a domestic slave caught in the international route of bonded slavery.
Stained, Abda Khan, 2016: Time was still. Except for the tick tock, tick tock, tick tock. I was in this moment as though it were frozen. And so was I. I did not stir, but I knew I was drowning. My life as I had known it was slipping away.
Register our Marriage: Some Muslim women and men have started the Register Our Marriage campaign, aimed at reform of the 1949 Marriage Act. Led by Aina Khan, International Family Law Expert, the campaign raises awareness that spouses aren’t protected by English law if they’re in unregistered religious marriages conducted in the UK. The vision is to see a world where all religious marriages are legally registered.