One thing that my past few years researching and reading about religion has taught me, is the importance of being open-minded and compassionate – especially when it comes to understanding, rather than discounting, the experiences of those whose religious views may diverge from your own.
Over the last few years, numerous enlightening reads about Queer Muslim experiences have been released, from Samra Habib's “We Have Always Been Here” to the new Saq Bbooks anthology, “This Arab is Queer”, and Leyla Jagiella’s “Among the Eunuchs: A Muslim Transgender Journey" is the latest launch in this diverse realm of publishing.
Leyla is a transgender Muslim woman of Polish ancestry, raised in Germany, who travelled to India and lived among the nation’s “hijra” or “khwajasara” communities. She is a cultural anthropologist, scholar of religion and community activist, and her book is both a memoir and social commentary/historical analysis exploring the history of transgendered communities in Muslim and South Asian history. She spends a lot of time highlighting how “the third gender” was accepted and discussed openly by early Muslim communities and scholars, and how this attitude contrasts greatly with much more conservative “orthodox” viewpoints today.
One of most thought-provoking and personally impactful statements Jagiella makes in the book is, “I now believe that the true Islam is found in the small voices, the oppressed voices, and the disenfranchised voices. It is with the marginalised of history, not with the victorious. That, to me, also includes the many queer voices in Islam that have been erased from history.”
Definitely recommended if you’re looking to broaden your perspectives and read about those religious experiences that don’t always make it into “mainstream” narratives.