春水堂视频

May 1, 2020

What does it mean to be a young Muslim in Canada?

Social Work research finds that Muslim youth have a more flexible relationship with their religion than their parents do
Canadian Muslim youth
Canadian Muslim youth

It鈥檚 kind of like an identity tug of war. On one hand, Muslim youth strive to be respectful of the religion and culture they were raised with. On the other hand, as Canadians, they face pressure to fit into Canadian society, which often has decidedly different values and expectations. The tensions between these two identities can create real issues and a feeling of disconnection for many Muslim youth in Canada.

A new, SSHRC-funded, nationwide research project is looking more closely at these tensions as well as how Muslim youth reconcile their conflicting identities. 鈥淲e are looking addressing these tensions and feelings of disconnectedness,鈥 says Faculty of Social Work researcher Dr. Aamir Jamal, PhD, who is leading the project. 鈥淲e鈥檙e exploring factors that contribute to 鈥 and hinder 鈥 the development of a meaningful and stable youth identity.鈥

Jamal and co-investigator Dr. Clive Baldwin, PhD, from St. Thomas 春水堂视频, explore these themes through interviews with first- and second-generation Muslim youth from several metropolitan areas in Canada including Calgary, Vancouver and Toronto. Jamal says his research looks at participants鈥 personal histories as immigrants and the differences in being Muslim in their home country or in Canada 鈥 essentially looking to understand what it means to be a Muslim youth in Canada.

Aamir Jamal

Aamir Jamal

Kloie Picot

鈥淥ur research goals include exploring avenues and strategies of prevention and disengagement,鈥 explains Jamal, 鈥渢hat stakeholders such as the Muslim community and Islamic scholars see as most promising in safeguarding Canadian security, building resiliency, and promoting positive youth development.鈥

Emphasis on mental health, spirituality, faith and self-discovery

The initial research, which is also supported by most major Canadian Muslim associations, suggests profound differences in the way Muslim youth in Canada construct their identities compared to their parents鈥 generation. Jamal says the youths place an emphasis on mental health, spirituality and faith, as well as self-discovery. This underlies a perspective that seems more pliable than traditional perspectives.聽

Jamal says when Canadian youth were asked about differences between 鈥渢heir鈥 Islam and the Islam of their parents or youth in traditional Muslim countries, they said, 鈥淭he difference is why,鈥 says Jamal. 鈥淢any youth told us, 鈥極ur Islam allows us to ask why, and finds answers through Islamic scholarship in context of our era鈥 鈥 while their parents or cousins in Muslim majority nations just follow the faith.鈥

Jamal hopes the collaborative research will inform those with the power to really influence the lives of Muslim youth.

鈥淭he findings,鈥 he says, 鈥渨ill be used to develop a conceptual framework for positive youth development that will be incorporated into policy and practice by many religious and faith-based organizations working with youth.鈥

The innovative national study is already receiving attention from around the world, and the project will likely extend to become an international study.

聽鈥淲e鈥檝e already received great interest from other scholars in Muslim majority countries including Turkey, Malaysia and Pakistan. We鈥檙e looking forward to a comparative analysis of various youth identities. It鈥檚 really a very valuable and exciting project to work on.鈥