Abstract

A taboo is an activity that is forbidden or sacred based on religious beliefs or morals. Taboos are usually culturally specific. That which may be discussed or done in one culture (incest, abortion, out of wedlock pregnancy, forced marriage, same-sex-marriage, legalizing drugs, etc.) may be highly taboo in another culture. Arab and Islamic societies are strongly religious in their values, while in comparison most Western countries are almost always more secular, and hence religion is represented as a barrier that seems to hamper the integration and inclusion of Muslim minorities into Western societies, an element that poses a challenge to the Western lifestyle and may even encourage the legitimacy of public Islamophobic discourses. So, to what extent do Muslim immigrants carry their cultural practices with them, including taboos, and to what extent do they integrate into Western countries, where civic laws have replaced religious sanctions when taboos are broken? The knowledge of taboos and the ability to deal with them is one of the keys to successful integration as a two-way process between Muslim immigrants and the receiving society.

Highlights

  • Immigrants have taken along their faiths and practices and adapted them to living in their host societies (Saunders et al 2016)

  • Muslims would offer Islamophobic discourse the opportunity to characterize them as outsiders and self-segregating, and as a result the problem of non-integration is seen to rest with Muslims themselves (Zempi and Chakraborti 2014)

  • The first section of this paper provides a comparison between Muslim and Western taboo topics and how they are reflected in daily life in Muslim and Western societies

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Summary

Abdelaziz Bouchara

ISLAMOPHOBIA STUDIES JOURNAL VOLUME 6, NO. 2 Fall 2021, PP. 228–246. Published by: Islamophobia Research and Documentation Project, Center for Race and Gender, University of California, Berkeley. They are not the expression of the editorial or advisory board and staff. Either expressed or implied, is made of the accuracy of the material in this journal, and ISJ cannot accept any legal responsibility or liability for any errors or omissions that may be made. The reader must make his or her own evaluation of the accuracy and appropriateness of those materials. Taboos as a Cultural Cleavage Between Muslim Immigrants and Secular Western Publics: Bridging the Gaps by Viewing Integration as a Two-Way

INTRODUCTION
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
Full Text
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