New Religious Leadership among Muslims in Europe

Authors

  • Thijl Sunier VU University Amsterdam

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jasr.v24i3.275

Keywords:

Islam, Europe, migrants, leadership, public sphere

Abstract

This article addresses the recent emergence of new forms of religious leadership among Muslims in Europe, by elaborating the nexus between mass-mediated forms of religion, the contemporary ‘unsettling of religious authority’ among Muslims in Europe, and the shifts in the position of Islam in European societies. The changes in forms of religious leadership, and the rise of new religious constituencies facilitated and conditioned by the spread of modern mass media have been addressed extensively. However, with respect to Islam in Europe there is a remarkable lack of insight into shifts that have taken place in the last decade. Until roughly the first half of the 1990s ‘traditional’ religious leaders and spokespersons were firmly embedded in the organizational landscape set up by Muslim immigrants in Europe. New types of Islamic leadership that have emerged since are hardly tied anymore to these ‘traditional’ constituencies and structures. A shift has taken place from representative religious leadership to a more performative style of leadership. An increasing number of leaders operate at the inter-section of mediatized stardom, public opinion, (political) leadership, and religious innovator. They address a public rather than a ‘natural’ rank-and-file. Following insights from studies on media and religion, I argue that new media technologies and mass-mediated consumerism are not only instrumental in the emergence of these new religious expressions; these new leaders are themselves part of a process of religious renewal. At the same time I argue against the idea that mass media, globalization and in general modernity have caused an irreversible process of religious individualization (so-called ‘copy-paste’ religion). A thorough analysis of shifts in styles and sources of religious leadership among Muslims shows that there is a process of the ‘redressing’ of religious authority taking place. This is especially relevant in an era where there is an increasing obsession with radicalism.

Author Biography

  • Thijl Sunier, VU University Amsterdam
    Thijl Sunier anthropologist, holds the VISOR chair of ‘Islam in European Societies’ at the VU University Amsterdam. He is head of the anthropological department at the same university. He conducted research on inter-ethnic relations, Turkish youth and Turkish Islamic organisations in the Netherlands, comparative research among Turkish youth in France, Germany, Great Britain and the Netherlands, and international comparative research on nation building and multiculturalism in France and The Netherlands. Presently he is conducting research on transnational Islamic movements, religious leadership, and nationbuilding and Islam in Europe. He is chairman of the board of the Inter academic School for Islam Studies in the Netherlands (NISIS), and chairman of the board of the Dutch Anthropological Association (ABV).

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Published

2011-12-28

How to Cite

Sunier, T. (2011). New Religious Leadership among Muslims in Europe. Journal for the Academic Study of Religion, 24(3), 275-296. https://doi.org/10.1558/jasr.v24i3.275

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