More Muslim

More Muslim

More Muslim is a narrative audio documentary series that explores the Muslim experience, with all its messiness. Each episode is a narrative, transhistorical journey into one aspect of the Muslim experience that defined or is being defined by the modern world. This season is a production of Al-Mujadilah Center and Mosque for Women and is focused on covering some of the most interesting stories in the Muslim world through the lived experiences of Muslim women.

Episodios

  1. #10 The Women Who Wash Our Dead

    hace 1 día

    #10 The Women Who Wash Our Dead

    Reporter Rowaida Abdelaziz was 21 the first time she watched a body lowered into a grave. Her cousin, a young mother, died just days before her 33rd birthday. No one knew what to do in that moment of unthinkable grief. All they knew was that someone had to make the arrangements. That's when a woman named Howaida stepped in. This week on the show, reporter Rowaida Abdelaziz travels across New Jersey and Cairo looking for the women who carry out one of the most intimate obligations in Islam: washing the bodies of our dead. What does it take to intertwine your life with death and grief, and run to the aid of people on the worst day of their lives? This is the last episode of Season One of the show! We hope you've enjoyed what you've heard so far and we're already hard at work on Season Two. In the meantime, if you haven't heard the rest of the season yet, go back and start from the beginning. If you liked our show, please share it with a friend, or rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. More about our show at moremuslim.org. Thank you for listening! Credits: Reported by Rowaida Abdelaziz. Produced by Heba Afify. Editing by Salman Ahad Khan. Fact Checking by Heba Elorbany. Original Music and Sound Design by Salman Ahad Khan. Engineering by Joe Plourde. Illustration by Lina Jaradat. Suggested Reading Abdelaziz, Rowaida. "Most Funeral Homes Don't Know How To Bury Muslims. These Women Want To Change That." HuffPost, December 10, 2023. Bakar, Faima. "Why Young Muslim Women Are Learning How To Wash The Dead." HuffPost UK, June 2022. Halevi, Leor. Muhammad’s Grave: Death Rites and the Making of Islamic Society . New York: Columbia University Press, 2007.

    47 min
  2. #7 In Therapy, With SheikhaGPT

    23 abr

    #7 In Therapy, With SheikhaGPT

    When reporter Yassmin Abdel-Magied's friend tells her she's been using ChatGPT as a therapist, Yassmin doesn't know what to think. The chatbot calls her friend "habibti." Gives her Islamic relationship advice. It's helping her reconnect with her faith in ways no human in her life has been able to. But it's also a product built by a tech company with no foundations in Islamic psychology. This week on the show, Reporter Yassmin Abdel-Magied goes down a rabbit hole to try and understand Islam's relationship to mental health and whether AI can ever truly heal us. And she finds a Stanford professor asking herself the same questions. --- EPISODE CREDITS: Reported by Yassmin Abdel-Magied. Produced by Taqwa Sadiq. Edited by Sarah Qari and Salman Ahad Khan. Music by Alexander Overington and Salman Ahad Khan. Sound Design and Engineering by Alexander Overington. Fact-checking by Heba Elorbany. Illustration by Lina Jaradat. Special thanks to Muhammad Faruque, Sidrah Hassan, Merve Nursoy-Demir, Jacki Shoyeb, Ndaa Hassan, Tasneem, and Talia Augustidis. --- This season of More Muslim is powered by Al Mujadilah, a center and mosque for women in Qatar. If you liked our show, please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. A transcript of this episode will be available on our website. More about our show at moremuslim.org. Follow us on Instagram at 'moremuslimshow.' --- Further reading: Awaad, Rania, and Merve Nursoy-Demir. Maristāns and Islāmic Psychology: A Historical Model for Modern Implementation. Abdel-Magied, Yassmin. “Are You Using ChatGPT for Therapy?” Substack, 2025.

    42 min
  3. #6: Cape Malay: The Indonesian Roots of South African Islam

    2 abr

    #6: Cape Malay: The Indonesian Roots of South African Islam

    Growing up, Aina had heard about the transatlantic slave trade that enslaved Africans and took them to the Americas. But on one of her reporting trips, she was shocked to learn that, around the same time, Dutch colonizers were deporting and enslaving Muslims from Indonesia and shipping them thousands of miles... all the way to South Africa. This week, reporter Aina J. Khan takes us to Cape Town and tells the story of the Cape Malay, South Africa's oldest Muslim community. How they used their faith to survive through 400 years of slavery, colonialism, and apartheid. And why, today, they might be facing their most existential threat yet: gentrification. --- EPISODE CREDITS: Reported by Aina J. Khan. Produced by Catherine Boulle and Salman Ahad Khan. Original music and sound design by Salman Ahad Khan. Fact checking by Heba Elorbany. Engineering by Alexander Overington. Illustration by Lina Jaradat. --- This season of More Muslim is powered by Al Mujadilah, a center and mosque for women in Qatar. If you liked our show, please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. A transcript of this episode will be available on our website. More about our show at moremuslim.org. --- Further reading: Baderoon, Gabeba. Regarding Muslims: From Slavery to Post-Apartheid. Johannesburg: Wits University Press, 2014. Jessa, Sirhan, and Jayne M. Rogerson. "Tourism Gentrification in Cape Town's Bo-Kaap: Socio-economic Transformations and Displacement." Bulletin of Geography: Socio-economic Series 69 (2025): 129–143. Williams, Karen. "The Indonesian Anti-Colonial Roots of Islam in South Africa." Media Diversified, August 25, 2016. Dangor, Suleman E. "Shaykh Yusuf of Macassar: Scholar, Sufi, National Hero — Towards Constructing Local Identity and History at the Cape." Kawalu: Journal of Local Culture 1, no. 2 (2014).

    42 min
  4. #5 Hanabneehu: Rebuilding Sudan, One Class at a Time

    19 mar

    #5 Hanabneehu: Rebuilding Sudan, One Class at a Time

    When war broke out in Sudan in April 2023, Dr. Fairouz El Hijzi had to flee her home with her family. Two months later, as a hastily-appointed interim dean of architecture, she faced an impossible choice: give up on her students' futures or attempt to resume classes in the middle of the worst humanitarian crisis in modern history. This is the story of what happened when she and her students decided to keep hope alive and build a new future for Sudan in the midst of the destruction all around them. --- EPISODE CREDITS: Reported by Yassmin Abdel-Magied. Produced by Taqwa Sadiq. Edited by Sarah Qari. Original music, sound design, and engineering by Alexander Overington. Fact checking by Heba Elorbany. English translations voiced by Wa’ad Abu Obeida, Lina Altayib, and Hazim Ali. Special thanks to Ahmed Adm, Prof. Eisa Bashier Mohamad, Muhammad Fathallah, Hafsa Omar, Rawia Farog Khater Muhammad, Lubna Ahmed Hussein, and all the students and teachers who shared their stories. --- This season of More Muslim is powered by Al Mujadilah, a center and mosque for women in Qatar. If you liked our show, please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. A transcript of this episode will be available shortly on our website. More about our show at moremuslim.org. --- Further reading: Amidst war & displacement in Sudan, my aunt won't stop educating | Yassmin Abdel-Magied, The New Arab Learn more about the ongoing crisis in Sudan at Keep Eyes On Sudan.

    36 min
  5. #4 A Recitation Revolution

    6 mar

    #4 A Recitation Revolution

    For most of her life, Maryam believed women couldn’t recite the Qur’an aloud. That a woman’s voice, especially while reciting the Qur’an, is awrah. Something to be hidden. Then, one day in high school, she heard a girl recite in public. Reporter Nadeen Shaker shares the story of Maryam Amir, one woman’s journey to revive her relationship with Islam through the Qur’an. And how it sparked a recitation revolution. --- CREDITS: Reported and produced by Nadeen Shaker. Editing by Anisa Khalifa and Salman Ahad Khan. Additional editing by Sarah Qari. Original music, sound design, and engineering by Alexander Overington. Additional music by Salman Ahad Khan. Fact checking by Heba Elorbany. --- This season of More Muslim is powered by Al Mujadilah, a center and mosque for women in Qatar. If you liked our show, please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. A transcript of this episode will be available shortly on our website. More about our show at moremuslim.org. --- Guests: Maryam Amir, founder of Qariah: The Women Qur'an Reciters App and PhD candidate at International Islamic University Malaysia Dr. Zainab Talha, scholar and Qur'an reciter regarded as the first female to record the entirety of the Qur'an in audio. --- Further reading: Egypt's Forgotten Women Qur'an Reciters | Nadeen Shaker, New Lines Magazine The Quran recitation app bringing women’s voices to the fore | Aysha Khan, Analyst News

    50 min

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More Muslim is a narrative audio documentary series that explores the Muslim experience, with all its messiness. Each episode is a narrative, transhistorical journey into one aspect of the Muslim experience that defined or is being defined by the modern world. This season is a production of Al-Mujadilah Center and Mosque for Women and is focused on covering some of the most interesting stories in the Muslim world through the lived experiences of Muslim women.

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