Belonging, Difference, and Justice: What it Means to be a Citizen

MANY MUSLIMS LIVING in the UK feel uneasy about citizenship. On paper, citizenship is described as equal and inclusive. In reality, it is difficult to attain, expensive, slow, and sometimes insecure. Even after naturalisation, there is a feeling that belonging remains conditional and can be taken away at any time. This feeling is not about … Continue reading Belonging, Difference, and Justice: What it Means to be a Citizen

Islam Commands Unity. The Nation-State Forbids It

RECENT DISCUSSIONS ABOUT a proposed International Stabilisation Force for Gaza have left many Muslims profoundly betrayed. Muslim-majority countries can coordinate when the framework is “regional security.” They can act when the language is diplomatic management. They can unite when told to by a superpower. But invoke the Qur’anic obligation to defend the ummah? Invoke Islamic … Continue reading Islam Commands Unity. The Nation-State Forbids It

Why We Feel Stuck: Insurance, Capitalism, and the Lost Islamic Vision

MANY MUSLIMS LIVING in the West experience a quiet but persistent unease. Perhaps you have felt it yourself: a sense that something is fundamentally misaligned in how we are forced to relate to money, property, and economic life. Islam offers guidance for all aspects of life, including wealth and resources, yet the systems we depend … Continue reading Why We Feel Stuck: Insurance, Capitalism, and the Lost Islamic Vision

Why Shura Is Not Democracy: A Lesson from Ahzab

MADINAH FACED ONE of its most perilous moments. Nearly ten thousand enemy fighters, Quraysh, Ghatafaan, and their allies, surrounded the city, determined to destroy the Muslim community. Hunger gnawed at the believers. Fear pressed on every side. And betrayal struck from within, as Banu Qurayzah broke their treaty, leaving the city exposed. Allah captures the … Continue reading Why Shura Is Not Democracy: A Lesson from Ahzab

What’s in Your Cup?

TO TRULY UNDERSTAND the essence of a person, or perhaps more urgently, to understand the state of our own souls, we must look beyond the surface of daily routine. Imam al-Ghazālī (may Allah have mercy on him) offered a profound analogy for this inward search, inviting us to envision a cup filled to its very … Continue reading What’s in Your Cup?

The Cost of Living Crisis and the Cost of Forgetting Islam as a Way of Life

THE COST-OF-LIVING crisis has now entered its fourth year. I still remember buying a six-pint bottle of milk for around £1.70. Four years on, the same milk costs around £2.50, a 47% increase. That is far beyond any inflation figures routinely quoted by government ministers. We were told it would be temporary. But prices have … Continue reading The Cost of Living Crisis and the Cost of Forgetting Islam as a Way of Life

Taking Small Risks: Courage, Tawakkul, and the Price of Silence

THE SITUATION IN Palestine and other conflict areas in the Muslim world is a moral test for Muslims. Not because the truth is unclear, but because acting upon it carries a cost. Most Muslims care deeply. Many feel grief, anger, and helplessness. Yet day after day, small opportunities to act quietly pass us by. A … Continue reading Taking Small Risks: Courage, Tawakkul, and the Price of Silence