Islam

A New Religious Vehicle for Aboriginal Self-Empowerment in Australia?

Authors

  • Helena Onnudottir University of Western Sydney
  • Adam Possamai Associate Professor in Sociology and Acting Director for the Centre of the Study of Contemporary Muslim Societies
  • Bryan Turner The Director of the Centre for the Study of Contemporary Muslim Societies, also Professor of Social and Political Thought in the School of Humanities and Languages at UWS

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/ijsnr.v1i1.49

Keywords:

Religious Studies, Sociology, Australian Aboriginies, Aboriginal Muslims, Islam, Conversion

Abstract

The assumption that Islam is a new religious identity among Aboriginal Australians is questioned. The historical evidence demonstrates a well-established connection between Islam and Aboriginal communities through the early migration of Muslims to colonial Australia. This historical framework allows us to criticise the negative construction of the Aboriginal Muslim in the media through the use of statistical information gathered in three Australian censuses (1996, 2001 and 2006). Our conclusion is that the Aboriginal Muslim needs to be understood both in terms of the historical context of colonial Australia and the Aboriginal experience of social and political marginalisation. Their conversion to Islam represents some degree of cultural continuity rather than rupture. Finally the article demonstrates that the sociological and psychological understanding of conversion is underdeveloped and inadequate.

Author Biographies

  • Adam Possamai, Associate Professor in Sociology and Acting Director for the Centre of the Study of Contemporary Muslim Societies

    Adam is the Past President of the Australian Association for the Study of Religions and is the Programme Co-Coordinator for the Research Committee for the Sociology of Religion at the XVII World Congress of Sociology in 2010. In 2002-2007 he was also co-editor of the Australian Religion Studies Review. He is the author of Sociology of Religion for Generations Y and X (2009, Equinox), Religion and Popular Culture: A Hyper-Real Testament (2007, Pater Lang), In Search of New Age (2005, Ashgate), and a book of short stories, Perles Noires (2005, Nuit D'Avril).

  • Bryan Turner, The Director of the Centre for the Study of Contemporary Muslim Societies, also Professor of Social and Political Thought in the School of Humanities and Languages at UWS

    Professor Turner wrote his first book Weber and Islam in 1974 and has since established an international reputation for his work. He has served as Dean of the Faculty of Arts at Deakin University; as Professor of Sociology at the University of Cambridge; and more recently as a Professor in the Asia Institute at the University of Singapore. His latest book 'Muslims in Singapore' has just been published.

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Published

2010-07-29

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Onnudottir, H., Possamai, A., & Turner, B. (2010). Islam: A New Religious Vehicle for Aboriginal Self-Empowerment in Australia?. International Journal for the Study of New Religions, 1(1), 49-73. https://doi.org/10.1558/ijsnr.v1i1.49