Women's mosques
Women's mosques (Chinese: [清真]女寺; pinyin: [Qīngzhēn] nǚ sì) have existed in China for several hundred years.[1] They can be found in the Chinese provinces of Henan, Shanxi and Hebei.[2] Some countries beyond China also have women-only mosques, but they are rare.
In China, separate women-only mosques were built by the Muslim communities there. This is in contrast to Muslim communities outside China, where usually men and women will use the same mosque, with gender-segregated washing and prayer rooms. At the end of the Ming dynasty and early Qing dynasty, Hui women had begun to form their own mosques.[3] The oldest surviving nǚsì in China, is Wangjia Hutong Women's Mosque of Kaifeng, which dates to 1820.[4]
For religious reasons, Hui communities had started to cultivate more theological learning among the women. As a result, a portion of the female Muslims who had experienced a religious education, gradually incorporated Islamic observances into their daily religious activities, and this produced the establishment of women's mosques.[5]
By the 20th century, there were separate places of worship as women-only mosques. They are a special form of the sacred building, either as a separate institution or mosque attached to an existing larger mosque. Their managers are women, wives of the imam of a larger mosque. The commonly used title for it is Shiniang (师娘).[6]
Female imams are referred to as ahong.[4]
List of selected women-only mosques
Women's mosques in China
- Beidajie Nusi, Zhengzhou (Henan)[7][8]
- Beixiajie Nusi, Zhengzhou
- Minzhulu Nusi, Zhengzhou
- Xishilipu Nusi, Zhengzhou
- Jiangfanglu Nusi, Xi'an[9] (Shaanxi)
- Qian Xinchengdao Nusi (Hohhot Nüsi), Hohhot (Inner Mongolia)
- Hexi Nusi, Zhoukou (Henan)
- Tiedanjie Nüsi, Kaifeng (Henan). In Kaifeng, there are 16 women's mosques
- Botou Qingzhen Nüsi, Botou, Cangzhou City (Hebei)
- Beijing (Women's mosque, jap.)
- Xiaotaoyuan Mosque, Shanghai
Women's mosques outside China
Asia
Africa
Europe
North America
- The Women's Mosque of America, Los Angeles, California. The first women's mosque in the United States opened in 2015, located in a multifaith cultural center in the Pico-Union district.[17]
Bibliography
- (English) Maria Jaschok: "Religious Women in a Chinese City: Ordering the past, recovering the future - Notes from fieldwork in the central Chinese province of Henan". February 2005. QEH Working Paper Series - QEHWPS125 (Working Paper Number 124)
- (English) Maria Jaschok, Jingjun Shui: The History of Women's Mosques in Chinese Islam. Richmond, Surrey: Curzon Press, 2000 (the Chinese edition's title was: Zhongguo Qingzhen nüsi shi 中国清真女寺史 (水镜君/ (英)玛利亚•雅绍克), ISBN 978-7-108-01699-7; cf. preview)
- (English) Ping-Chun Hsiung, Maria Jaschok, Cecilia Nathansen Milwertz: Chinese women organizing: cadres, feminists, Muslims, queers
- (English) Jaschok, Maria & Shui Jingjun, 'Restoring history to women, restoring women to history: reconstructing the evolution of Qingzhen Nüsi (women's mosques) in China's Islam', Pakistan Journal of Women's Studies: Alam-e-Niswan 10 (2003) 2, 153-173
- (French) Elisabeth Allés: "Des oulémas femmes : le cas des mosquées féminines en Chine", Revue du monde musulman et de la Méditerranée, Année 1999, Volume 85, Numéro 85-86, pp. 215–236
- (French) icampus.ucl.ac.be "Les minorités musulmanes en Chine" ("Les mosquées féminines")
See also
External links
- (English) For the Hui, Women Imams and Women's Mosques (China)
- (English) China: Female Imams a tradition in Chinese mosques
- (English) China's nu Ahong
- (French) Mosquées féminines (Qingzhen nusi)
- (Chinese) Qingzhen nüsi zai Xuanwu Shouliu hutong 39 hao
- (Chinese) Yisilanjiao baiyi
References
- ↑ Maria Jaschok: "Religious Women in a Chinese City: Ordering the past, recovering the future - Notes from fieldwork in the central Chinese province of Henan". QEH Working Paper Series - QEHWPS125, S.8
- ↑ icampus.ucl.ac.be "Les minorités musulmanes en Chine" ("Les mosquées féminines") (gefunden am 1. April 2010)
- ↑ vgl. chinalink.de: Die chinesische Frau (gefunden am 1. April 2010)
- 1 2 NPR
- ↑ cnki.com.cn: Beijing lishi shang de Qingzhen nüsi (gefunden am 1. April 2010)
- ↑ vgl. "Weibliche Imame", Quelle: Jaschok, Maria and Jingju Shui, S. 287-292, Übersetzung aus dem Englischen: C. Schneider (gefunden am 1. April 2010) and Ingrid Mattson: "Can a Woman be an Imam?" - macdonald.hartsem.edu (gefunden am 1. April 2010)
- ↑ Zhengzhou zählt nach algerie-dz.com: "Mosquées féminines" ("Qingzhen nusi") 18 Männermoscheen und 7 Frauenmoscheen.
- ↑ Google Maps
- ↑ vgl. flickr.com: A Women's Mosque in Xian (gefunden am 1. April 2010)
- ↑ moritzleuenberger.net und sambuh.com: "Abu'l Faiz Khan Mosque (1720)" (gefunden am 1. April); vgl. den Artikel Naqshbandi.
- ↑ deutsche-welle.de: Erste Moschee für Frauen in Kabul (gefunden am 1. April 2010)
- ↑ haumaldives.wordpress.com: Aid to women’s mosques terminated and women Imam’s left jobless, as if the deprivations the MDP government of Mohamed Nasheed cause is not enough. (gefunden am 1. April) - Siehe auch Islam auf den Malediven (en)
- ↑ giga-hamburg.de (gefunden am 1. April 2010)
- ↑ unesco.org (gefunden am 1. April)
- ↑ welt.de: "Frauenmoschee für niederländische Feministen" (gefunden am 1. April 2010)
- ↑ loccum.de: "Wie geht der Dialog weiter?" (gefunden am 1. April 2010) & dmk-berlin.de: "Moscheen und Gebetsräume in Berlin" (gefunden am 1. April 2010)
- ↑ Tamara Audi, "Feeling Unwelcome at Mosques, 2 Women Start Their Own in L.A. New Entity Believed to Be the First of Its Kind in the U.S." The Wall Street Journal, January 30, 2015.