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12 - Islamic Education and the ‘Diaspora’: Religious Schooling for Senegalese Migrants’ Children

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 May 2021

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Summary

For my doctoral research, I spent the best part of the year 2011 on fieldwork in Kano in northern Nigeria, trying to find out how young boys experience their enrolment in Qur’ānic schools there. A major challenge was to make the children open up to me and talk. Wider norms on the appropriate behaviour for juniors encourage children to be bashful and demure in the presence of adults. Collecting data on children's opinions required me to be patient, to have as unobtrusive a presence as possible, to learn from observing, and to find research formats that allowed my research participants to talk to each other rather than to me, for example by conducting tape-recorded ‘radio interviews’ among each other in my absence.

The situation I encountered in Dakar, Senegal, where I studied Islamic schools receiving children from the Senegalese ‘diaspora’ between 2014 and 2016 – including many children born and raised in the United States – could hardly have been more different. Here, the ten-year-olds scrambled to be ‘selected’ for an interview, talked a mile a minute, and were upset when I told them it was time to return to class as we had already overstayed the time their teacher had granted us. Here the challenge was not to make children talk, but rather to find a breathing pause in their word flow to slip in my questions. ‘Five Americans are tantamount to forty Senegalese children!’ one of the teachers confided to me, exhausted after a day's work of trying to tame the buoyant crowd. Profound cultural differences between children raised in a West African setting and youngsters having grown up in Western contexts had implications not only for me as a researcher, but also for the teachers dealing with them every day in class.

About a third of the students in the school described here (IQRA Bilingual Academy) are children from the Senegalese diaspora, mostly from the United States, but also from France, Italy, and Belgium. The rest of the student body is made up of Senegalese middle- and upper-class children as well as children of other nationalities whose parents work in Dakar as diplomats.

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Islamic Scholarship in Africa
New Directions and Global Contexts
, pp. 281 - 299
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2021

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