Unique UCT study looks into unconscious exclusion of the disabled in Muslim communities

University of Cape Town (UCT) PhD graduand Nafisa Mayat, who graduated through the Department of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences in the Faculty of Health Sciences, conducted her doctoral research on disability inclusion and Islam.

University of Cape Town (UCT) PhD graduand Nafisa Mayat, who graduated through the Department of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences in the Faculty of Health Sciences, conducted her doctoral research on disability inclusion and Islam.

Published Apr 3, 2023

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A study into the “unconscious exclusion” of the disabled in the Muslim community has found that people need to take responsibility and make a conscious or collective move towards inclusion.

University of Cape Town (UCT) PhD graduand Nafisa Mayat, who graduated through the Department of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences in the Faculty of Health Sciences, conducted her doctoral research on disability inclusion and Islam.

One of several case studies included in Mayat’s research was Shaheed Moussa’s (name changed for ethical reasons) story.

Mayat said Moussa attended Friday prayers regularly at his local mosque until he became a wheelchair user. After a series of incidents left him feeling dehumanised and invisible, he stopped participating in the afternoon Congregational prayer.

As a Muslim, praying is an obligatory part of daily life. Fridays are considered sacred days for worship, and Shaheed wanted to fulfil this obligation as part of the Muslim community, the Ummah. For Shaheed, it was first the unnavigable, crumbling ramp into the building. Even after he’d approached the trustees for help, it was repaired only after a senior trustee underwent a hip replacement. But even inside, Shaheed’s path was blocked: first by scattered shoes in the ablution area and then by a request not to enter the prayer room. His wheels were considered unclean.

Mayat, who is one of many inspirational UCT graduands who have opted for the road less travelled in their research, said there is very little scholarly work on disability and how it’s enacted in the broad Muslim community, or Ummah.

Mayat wrote in her thesis abstract that religion and spirituality were key to the way many people, including those with disabilities, make sense of the world and their place in that world. However, in most scholarship focusing on disability, religion, as a way of understanding and dealing with disability, is side-lined or absent, she said.

“There was a huge gap in the Muslim community around understanding disability, and broadly within other faith-based organisations, too.

“And even within critical disability studies, religion and spirituality are not part of the mainstream discourse and narrative,” she said.

Mayat said she had also been shaken by general levels of ignorance about disability, even among family and friends. She said there was a growing awareness that she was being called to change that.

In Shaheed’s case, Mayat said he was very aware that his wheelchair had to be clean when entering the mosque. He carried a towel in his backpack to wipe the wheels before entering the prayer room.

“But no one took the time to ask him that. And their lack of knowledge and understanding could have caused a rift.

“I got onto my prayer mat and asked God for guidance. If I didn’t work to change the understanding and perception of disability in my community, I would be as guilty of perpetuating these misconceptions,” she said. “And once I was in it, there was no turning back.”

Mayat’s study sites were Cape Town, Durban and Johannesburg. In each centre, she interviewed a Muslim person with disabilities, their intimate partner, a family member, a priest, and a non-disabled person to get a broad idea of how disability inclusion is enacted in the different spaces and how they saw disability inclusion within the Ummah.

Although hers wasn’t a theological study, Mayat studied and referred to Qur’anic verses and teachings around disability.

“The main thing that emerged is that there is no such thing as discrimination in the Qur’an, no Arabic word that translates disability, nor in the Hadith, the sayings of the Prophet, peace be upon him. It talks about impairments such as blindness and deafness, but in the context of seeing and hearing Islam’s message,” she said.

When she interviewed the priests, they were aware they weren’t doing enough to recognise disability but were very open to change, she said.

“That was positive. In the Qur’an, there is no discrimination around disability, and that needs to be highlighted. The full journey of inclusion means that more needs to be done on their part.

“It got them thinking about how this shift needs to happen, to get people to understand how exclusion happens, how we are not an inclusive community for those with disabilities, and why it’s our responsibility to make that change.”

What emerges is “unconscious exclusion”, a description Mayat uses for most of the interaction.

“It’s something that’s always been there. People are aware of it but need to take responsibility as silence sustains the continuation. There must be a conscious or collective move towards inclusion.”

She said she found the study challenging.

“As a human being and as a Muslim, I experienced many uncomfortable moments in dealing with the exclusion that’s been happening. Some of the participants’ experiences were deep, and their sense of rejection was profound. In Shaheed’s case, the ramp that was created for the older trustee reflected an existing power dynamic he was unable to change.

“His take out was ‘I’m not worth anything’, and the humiliation, the belittling was deep,” said Mayat.

She added that the study required personal reflection.

“I always had to take a step back and question myself and my role and how I may have contributed. One thing that got to me is how much effort is needed from the person with the disability to feel included. The burden is on them.”