Friday, September 03, 2010 | 24 Ramadan 1431  
photographic campaign
Journeying through Oman




Lucy Marryat describes her journey for Altmuslimah:


I am on the roof. The sun is setting and it is prayer time. Young boys in white dishdashas follow their brothers, fathers, and grandfathers to the mosque. The women continue their work, children play, girls laugh, inside, behind closed doors. Prayers begin. Like smoke, the sounds drift through the palm trees creating a sonic opera being both mystical and profound, a synthesis of natural and electronic voices, an echo of my surroundings--part medieval, part 21st century.

This is 2009 and my fourth year in Oman. I am an English teacher, a Canadian/Brit who four years earlier interviewed for a job in a country about which she knew next to nothing. “What do you know about Oman”, a voice from Toronto asked. Well …

It is an impossible question to answer, even now some four years later. Whatever I knew before has been questioned, turned upside down and inside out. It has been thrown in the air and resettled into different forms but still resists a permanent fixing.

In 1970 Oman was a little known country living for the most part in the dark ages. The borders had been closed and tribal warfare and slavery was a fact of daily life in the not so very distant past. Today Oman bears little resemblance to this picture. Now, every child goes to school, most go on to higher education, all have access to health care, and young women are permitted to work.

Yet, the past is still very evident in the present. There is a sense of being in a time warp. I have been documenting this, often only one step ahead of the bulldozers. These pictures are evidence of a way of life in the process of disappearing, a world that has been upset and turned inside out and upside down by modernity. A world thrown up in the air and is resettling into different forms yet still resisting a permanent fixing.

About Altmuslimah's Photographic Campaign:

The purpose of Altmuslimah's visual campaign is to present Muslim men and women multi-dimensionally, figuratively speaking. The collection highlights the literary contributions of empowered Muslim American women; telling portraits of tenacious Muslim females, young and old; warm, loving Muslim men; the purity of spiritual devotion; and the dynamics of positive gender interaction in Islam.

Altmuslimah would also like to help spread the message by offering the embed link to other sites interested in featuring our photos. If you are a blogger or run a web magazine or other website, and are interested in supporting this mission to change the dominant image of Muslim men and women, please contact us at asma.uddin(at)altmuslimah.com.





ZERO COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE

ADD YOUR COMMENT
You must be logged in to leave comments.

Produced in
partnership with

Founder & Editor-In-Chief
Asma T. Uddin

Executive Editor
Zahed Amanullah

Publisher
Shahed Amanullah

Associate Editors
Sarah Jawaid
Anjum Malkana
Zehra Rizavi

Multimedia Editor
Fatima Bahloul

Contributing Editors
Fatemeh Fakhraie
Abbas Jaffer

Events and Publicity
Shazia Riaz

Support Altmuslimah


Search altmuslimah


Subscribe to newsletter and feeds




See more of Altmuslimah's photographic campaign

NISI Fashion (Anisa Noormohamed , April 10, 2010)
Episode Four: Headscarf (Crystal Quallo, March 19, 2010)
Fashion Week: Malaysia (Vincent Thian/AP Photo, November 15, 2009)


News briefs for week of August 23, 2010 - This week, A Bangladesh court ruled that people cannot be forced to wear religious clothing, a youth organization in Massachusetts urges officials for more comprehensive cultural sensitivity training of teachers, Emirati women frequent hair salons less during the month of Ramadan, and the Christian Science Monitor describes the pro-women's rights stance of one of the leaders behind the proposed Islamic center near ground zero. (August 24, 2010) (0 comments)

News briefs for week of August 16, 2010 - This week, the government of Afghanistan releases statistics on alarmingly high suicide attempt rates by Afghan women, and an Islamic theologian recounts his experience on a nudist beach that led to his conversion to Islam. (August 17, 2010) (0 comments)

Ramadan: A wife’s perspective (and a husband’s) - When my husband finally makes his way down the stairs, my frustration abates and he and I sit across from each other and share our early morning meal. We speak intermittently and keep one eye trained on the clock to ensure we finish our food by the time dawn prayers begin. Despite the sparse conversation and the hurried meal, I enjoy the feeling that we are both beginning our obligatory fasts together, as a unit. (August 13, 2010) (1 comment)

News briefs for week of August 9, 2010 - This week in the news, why pregnant women exempt from fasting still fast, Taliban responds to TIME's cover story on Aisha, Satirist claims he is not joking about his plans to open an Islamic gay bar next to Cordoba Mosque, and a young American Muslim man abstains from alcohol and dating for the month of Ramadan. (August 10, 2010) (0 comments)

News briefs for week of August 2, 2010 - Brazil offers asylum to Iranian women sentenced to death by stoning, veiled women pass through Canadian airport checkpoint without being checked, Malaysian reality show crowns its champion imam, and a few British gay Muslims find support from their local imams. (August 3, 2010) (0 comments)

News Briefs for the week of July 24, 2010 - This week, Saudi clerics seek more Muslim maids and say its okay for women to uncover their faces in the presence of burqa bans. Two French women in burqinis were refused entry into a pool, and two Muslim women in England are not allowed onto a public bus. (July 27, 2010) (0 comments)

Intern Icon

Founder & Editor-In-Chief
Asma T. Uddin

Executive Editor
Zahed Amanullah

Publisher
Shahed Amanullah

Associate Editors
Sarah Jawaid
Anjum Malkana
Zehra Rizavi

Multimedia Editor
Fatima Bahloul

Contributing Editors
Fatemeh Fakhraie
Abbas Jaffer
Events and Publicity
Shazia Riaz
Our mission | Our partners| In the news | Contact us | Submit an article | Advertising