Sunday, 14 October 2018

Meet Generation M: the young, affluent Muslims changing the world

Burkinis, misery memoirs and people on camels: the caricatures of Islam don’t leave much room for modernity. The author of a new book argues that this image is absurd – and that a new demographic is about to flex its economic muscles.

Young Muslims are proud of their faith, enthusiastic consumers, dynamic, engaged and creative, says Shelina Janmohamed, author of Young Muslims Changing the World.

They say you shouldn’t judge a book by its cover, but in this case they’re wrong. In the foreground is a young woman with fuchsia lipstick, Jackie O-style sunglasses and a colourful headscarf. Behind her is a young man, with a hip, trimmed beard, headphones jammed in his ears and one hand casually resting in his pocket.

The cover of Generation M:
Young Muslims Changing the World
by Shelina Janmohamed

They are part of Generation M, and the eponymous book, subtitled Young Muslims Changing the World, is the first detailed portrait of this influential constituency of the world’s fastest growing religion. According to author Shelina Janmohamed, they are proud of their faith, enthusiastic consumers, dynamic, engaged, creative and demanding. And the change they will bring about won’t depend on the benevolence of others: instead, the Muslim pound, like the pink pound before it, will force soft cultural change by means of hard economics.


To demonstrate all that, the cover image was crucial. “When you’re talking about Muslims in particular, but actually people of religion in general, the images you get are really quite depressing,” she says over coffee and baklava in her garden in the outer suburbs of London. “But I think this really captures it. It’s bold, it’s vibrant, the woman’s got so much attitude. They are exactly the kind of people I’m writing about.”

Janmohamed recalls going into a bookshop some years ago. “They had this display of books about Muslims, and it was all misery memoirs of women in veils with cast-down eyes who’d been kidnapped and sold, and people riding on camels in faraway deserts,” she says.



“But young Muslims are crying out for a voice to say this is not what we’re like, we do ordinary things like everyone else, and we have interesting things to say – particularly when the conversation is about Muslims.” There are precious few mainstream publications about the experience of being a young Muslim, beyond politics and theology, she says.


Generation M are the Muslim millennials, the global generation born in the past 30 years, but with a twist. Unlike their Christian counterparts in the US and western Europe, most of whom are turning their backs on organised religion, Generation M has “one over-riding characteristic, which is that they believe that being faithful and living a modern life go hand in hand, and there is absolutely no contradiction between the two,” says Janmohamed.

In the book, she writes: “Their faith affects everything, and they want the world to know it. This is what sets them apart from their non-Muslim peers. It’s the single factor that will shape them and a world that they are determined should cater to their needs … They are a tech-savvy, self-empowered, youthful group who believe that their identity encompasses both faith and modernity.”

Working in Bahrain ‘opened my eyes to the global
experience of being Muslim,’ says Janmohamed.
The demographics depict an extraordinary trajectory. In 2010, there were 1.6 billion Muslims in the world, a figure forecast to grow by 73% in the next four decades – more than double the general rate of growth. By 2050, according to the Pew Research Center, there will be 2.8 billion Muslims globally, more than a quarter of the world’s population.

Of the 11 countries expected to join the world’s largest economies this century, six have overwhelmingly Muslim populations and two have big Muslim minorities. By 2050, India will have the largest Muslim population in the world, at an estimated 311 million, although they will still be a minority among the country’s vast numbers. Muslim minorities in Britain, Europe and North America are young, affluent and growing. One-third of all Muslims are under the age of 15, and two-thirds under 30.

The Muslim middle class is expected to triple to 900 million by 2030, driving consumption as well as social and political change. Their spending power is enormous: the most recent State of the Global Islamic Economy Report forecasts the halal food and lifestyle industry to be worth $2.6tn by the end of this decade, and Islamic finance is on a similar trajectory. Muslim travel could be worth $233bn. In 2014, Muslim fashion was estimated to be worth $230bn, and $54bn was spent on Muslim cosmetics.

“Through their sheer numbers, their growing middle-class stature, the shift of economic and political power towards the Middle East and Asia, home to most of the world’s Muslims, through the Muslim minorities that act as influential and well-connected leaders, by the inspirational force of their faith and their refusal to accept the status quo, Generation M are determined to make change. And what a change it’s going to be,” writes Janmohamed.

She charts the beginnings of this change. The demand for halal (permitted) products has been the impetus for growth in a range of businesses, such as food, fashion, cosmetics and travel. Among dozens of entrepreneurs cited in the book are the Radwan family, who started an organic halal farm in Oxfordshire; the producers of non-alcoholic beer – a sector that grew 80% in the five years to 2012, according to the Economist; Shazia Saleem, who launched ieat, a range of halal ready-meals including shepherd’s pie and lasagne, which are now sold at Asda, Sainsbury’s and Tesco; and “a whole new Muslim fashion industry”, incorporating online retailers, video bloggers, catwalk shows and haute couture.

But Generation M, according to the book, wants to go beyond halal to tayyab, which roughly translates as “ethical and wholesome”. They want the entire supply chain of production and consumption to have integrity. “Resources must be properly respected, workers in primary industries must not be exploited. Sustainability and renewability are part of the Islamic idea of ‘stewardship of the Earth’, which Generation M eco-Muslims … are championing.”

According to Janmohamed, this Muslim millennial generation has been shaped by two monumental factors. One is the events of the past 15 years, since 9/11, and the global response to Islamic extremism and terrorism; the other is the internet, described in the book as “the glue that binds [Generation M] together and creates the critical mass that turns them into a globally influential force”.

The internet has also, she tells me, “given space for [traditionally] marginalised voices within the community – younger Muslims and women – to express their views”.

Lutfi Radwan with his family on his organic halal farm near Oxford.
Among those views are frustration and resentment at being defined by their hijabs or being told they are oppressed by their faith. Janmohamed quotes Azra, 20: “I’m a young Muslim woman. I am not oppressed by my hijab, I’m liberated by it. If you don’t understand that, that’s completely fine, you don’t need to … The emotion you’re seeing in my eyes is not a plea to ‘help me’ but one for you to take your self-righteous bullshit and shove it up your arse.”

Rather than being downtrodden and subjugated, Muslim women are experiencing increasing empowerment in education, employment, public life, marriage and childbearing, says Janmohamed. “If we were to pick a face that captures the global pace of change, it would most likely be a Muslim woman – she is part of the largest population, in nations where change is happening fastest, and in the segment where change is most potent. In short, Muslim women are where it’s happening.”

Although beyond the cusp of Generation M at 42, Janmohamed in many ways embodies the young Muslim woman she describes.

She was born in London to immigrant parents who arrived in the UK with a suitcase and £75 in cash, and she went to a school at which there were few non-white faces. “Religion was important in our family – I remember my parents praying and fasting, going to the mosque was extremely regular; the Muslim community they were part of was the foundation of the family’s social life. But at school, I spent my time hiding my hennaed hands, not telling people I was eating curry at home, being very shy about being Muslim.”

Only when she went to Oxford did she start to wear a headscarf. “I found university a liberating experience. I got to explore who I was, and part of that was my Muslim identity, which had been very suppressed at school.”

After university, she joined a graduate trainee scheme in marketing, and later spent a year working in Bahrain, which “opened my eyes to the global experience of being Muslim”. She returned to the UK shortly before 9/11, and following the London bombings in July 2005, began writing a blog “talking about what it’s like to be British and Muslim and a woman. It felt like that conversation, about someone who straddles different heritages and feels comfortable in all of them, just wasn’t being heard.”

The blog led to a book, Love in a Headscarf, published in 2009, about her 10-year quest for love via the route of a traditional arranged marriage. Janmohamed was headhunted to help launch Ogilvy Noor, a division of advertising and marketing agency Ogilvy & Mather, which advises brands on engaging with Muslim consumers.

Ogilvy hired her when she was eight months pregnant with her first child, and Generation M was largely written during her second pregnancy and since the birth of her younger daughter 18 months ago. In the book’s dedication, Janmohamed writes: “To my girls. Because you can do anything. Take it from Mummy.”

Generation M, she says, has high aspirations. “They want to be astronauts, you’ve got fencers at the Olympics and ice skaters going to the Winter Olympics, female air crew for Brunei airways – these are young people who are really battling the fact that they have aspirations that should be unfettered versus a reality that is trying to confine them to a particular box.”

A catwalk show at the Saverah expo in London this year –
a fashion, lifestyle and networking event billed as
Muslim women’s ‘ultimate day out’.
But, she acknowledges, not all young Muslims are Generation M. Inclusion does not depend on disposable income or level of education, but sharing the characteristics of faith and modernity. “Their counterparts might be called the Traditionalists … more socially conservative, believing in maintaining harmony, more deference to authority and, as their name suggests, trying to hold firmly on to what they see as the good elements of family, community and tradition,” she writes.

And a few young Muslims, of course, become radicalised, hijacking Islam for violent extremism and hatred, the polar opposite of Generation M.

I ask her who the book is aimed at. One of her goals was to offer a platform for Generation M, she replies, “for people to have their voices heard”. “So there’s a recognition of their own identity, a consolidation of who they are, how they talk to one another.”

Then, she adds: “There’s a conversation for the wider Muslim community to have, to understand some of the dynamics that are happening within it, some of the challenges young Muslims are facing and how they can be resolved.”

But the book is also – and perhaps mainly – for a wider audience. “People who work in business, politics, culture, development. The UK [Muslim] population is just shy of 3 million, the European population is 50 million and growing, there’s a worldwide population of 1.6 billion. I think anyone who’s quite serious about understanding what’s happening around the world has something to gain.”

And the marketing executive in Janmohamed wants global brands and multinational corporations to wake up to the power of the Muslim pound, dollar, rupee, rupiah or euro. “Brands have been a little bit over-cautious,” she says, pointing out that business is not immune to prevailing tropes and stereotypes. “It seems to be a really radical idea that Muslims actually buy stuff. Muslims are saying: ‘Hello, we’ve got lots of money to spend, we’re young, we’re cool, please can you deal with us in the same way you deal with everyone else?’”

• Generation M: Young Muslims Changing the World by Shelina Janmohamed is published 6 September by IB Taurus.

Taken from HERE.

5 comments:

  1. One prominent person that should be put into discussion when it comes to Muslims that are changing the world is Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani girl who literally took a bullet to strive for the better education for women of her country. She was brave enough to go up against the Pakistan Taliban, which made her the youngest, and also the first Pakistani to win the Nobel Peace Prize. She already attended several notable universities around the world to give lectures about the importance of education, gender equality, so on and so forth; she is currently studying at Oxford University. Malala was designated the Messenger of Peace at the United Nations at the age of 16, the youngest ever appointed person for such role. As an advocate for education, women’s rights, and equality, she is the personification of willpower, bravery, and strength. Malala’s desire for universal education and optimistic worldview despite her struggles are a testament to how one’s personal character and inner strength can transform any situation for the positive; the Taliban’s attempt to silence her only served to amplify her voice and her message. Her extraordinary accomplishments contrast with her youthful age- her maturity makes it easy to forget that Malala, before becoming a worldwide symbol for equality, was just a model student with an extraordinary drive.

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  2. I think what will Generation M refer to in Indonesia is what some of us might know as “Pemuda Hijrah”. Hijrah is by definition the act of movement, taken from the mass exodus of Prophet Muhammad and his followers from Mecca to Medina during the persecution on Muslims during his first years as a Prophet. This can also be perceived symbolically as a movement to a better life, and for Muslims, a better life means a better and stronger faith on Islam itself, both as a faith and a way of life. The Muslim youth in Indonesia has always been a major pressure and interest group ever since the colonial era, with strong basis in Islamic boarding school and their ability to mobilize quickly. Nowadays, numerous Muslim youth in Indonesia are significantly affecting others with their Islamic worldview, which originated from its very teachings that covers every aspect of life. This is further popularized with several highly popular Ustadz (religious lecturer) that has been racking up the attention of Muslim youths. One very popular business model that is on its to popularity, or is probably an actually popular business model, is the Halal Industry, which is being widely promoted in Indonesia and the world. It is very likely that Indonesian Muslim youths will contribute to the world, be it economically, politically, or any other aspects.

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  3. The term of generation M is a bit unfamiliar to my ear; yet, by definition of it I have feel similar changes happening around myself. I suppose the evolving generation M is caused by the ever increasing numbers of Muslim which are educated, not necessarily educated abroad though. By the tone of the writings it can be inferred that Islam has been a restriction in modernization in the past; yet, as a Muslim myself I would say Islam has never been obstruction to progress. Islam is almost always closely tied with cultural backgrounds of wherever it is being practiced. For the past decades if not centuries, the world views on Islam has been narrowly interpreted as middle-eastern or north-African; and I suppose most of the stereotype about Muslims are derived from middle-eastern and north-African culture. By this statement I do mean that perhaps that it is not an entire Muslim generation that are shifting for the better; but, it is rather middle-eastern and north-African generation that are changing.

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  4. The role of women in Muslim society has changed significantly through the years. Their position has varied with changing social, economic, and political situation. It looks like, these days, Muslim women are constantly at the centre of debates about oppression, liberation, and general criticism both within and outside the Muslim community in many countries. As tiring as it feels sometimes to be constantly criticized and misunderstood, sometimes the only way to break all those invisible barriers of prejudice isn’t to just talk about it but to stand out and make a change. My personal favorite would be Zaha Hadid. She was the first woman to receive the Pritzker Architecture Prize, in 2004. She received the UK's most prestigious architectural award, the Stirling Prize, in 2010 and 2011. In 2012, she was made a Dame by Elizabeth II for services to architecture, and in 2015 she became the first and only woman to be awarded the Royal Gold Medal from the Royal Institute of British Architects. (from the wikipedia)

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  5. Muslims used to be the most advanced people from the 8th century until 14th century. It is called the Islamic Golden Age. Muslims in that era was the most pious of all time according to our great Prophet Muhammad. They lived a balance life of religion and science and they were really open minded to foreign idea. When Europe was in a dark age and knowledge was dominated by religious dogma, the Muslims preserved the lost knowledge of the Ancient Greek and Rome and some scholars expanded it significantly. Knowledge of medicine, mathematics, and chemistry was improved by Muslims like Avicenna, Al-Khawarizmi, Al-Kindi. Baghdad’s House of Wisdom has thousands of books until it sacked by the Mongols and ever since then, Muslims are slowly declining and never reached back its status. The emergence of educated generation M could bring back the Muslims to its former glory and change world’s opinion of Muslims as good people and bring the end to Islamophobia in the west.

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