Abstract

ABSTRACT Religious leaders have become a vital part of public health projects in developing countries like Tanzania. Development organisations seek them as implementers who can provide access to populations and amplify their messages. Yet, at least in Tanzania, the type of religious leaders (viongozi wa dini in Kiswahili) sought by these public health projects rarely exists in rural areas. Therefore, projects have to construct them through training programmes. The making of rural Muslim religious figures into project implementers entails ‘misrecognition,’ a process where their existing roles and identities as healers, marriage counsellors, and Quran teachers are pushed to the margins for the priorities of public health development organisations. Viongozi wa dini involved in health projects rarely correct their misrecognition, and at times capitalise on it. This dynamic suggests misrecognition can offer a productive space of various possibilities for rural Muslim religious figures.

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