The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Zara the First

The youngest leader, first Scot and first woman on landmark election

- By Laura Smith lasmith@sundaypost.com

She hopes becoming the first woman to head the Muslim Council for Britain will inspire other young women but Zara Mohammed’s ow n inspiratio­n was closer to home.

The 29- year- old Glaswegian is the first female secretary general of the umbrella organisati­on supporting 500 mosques, schools, community groups, profession­al organisati­ons and charities across the UK. She is also the first Scot and the youngest person to lead the influentia­l organisati­on.

While she is poised to become a role model for many young Muslim women – Zara was touched to learn she was the subject of a lesson on religion and female leaders in a London primary school class – she says her mum inspired her.

She said: “She is a very strong lady and was always caring for people, not just our family but our neighbours. She always said, ‘you’re the benchmark for your own success – don’t compare yourself to others’. Both my parents inspired me to trust my abilities and, if I think I can achieve something, to aim high and go for it.”

Zara expects her unique position as the youngest and first female leader of her organisati­on to come with added scrutiny. She is acutely aware of the challenges ahead but determined to meet them head on.

“This is a time when we need strong, collaborat­ive leadership. I hope to do as much good as I can but I’m also aware that, as a woman in leadership, I’ll be heavily scrutinise­d. There will be challenges and curve balls but now is a time to be a little bit fearless.

“If I can make a little change and space for more young people and women from different background­s to follow me, it will be worth it.”

While she admits the attention over her appointmen­t has been daunting, Zara is thrilled at the volume of supportive messages she has received from women.

She said: “My favourite part has been all the women messaging and seeing how encouraged and inspired they are. It makes it worth it when you’re giving people confidence to think, ‘yes why can’t a woman lead?’.”

Zara is the first woman to lead the council since it formed in 1997. Gaining the majority of affiliate votes against imam and broadcaste­r Amjal Masroor was an encouragin­g step for the new leader, especially as the majority were cast by men.

“I think that’s given me even more confidence because I was able to inspire that trust and support,” added Zara, who previously held the role of assistant secretary general within the council.

Determined to promote inclusivit­y and diversity during her two- year tenure, Zara also hopes to pave the way for more young Muslim men and women to join the council and embrace leadership roles.

“I don’t really fit your stereotype person in leadership,” she admitted. “But with this role being as historic as it is, it’s about what I can do to inspire others. I think this is an important message for young women, for all young people, to believe they are capable and talented enough to take on these roles. I’m going to bring as many women and young people on-board as I can.”

She added: “Globally, we’re seeing a surge of women in leadership and, within the Muslim community, there are many women doing the same in arts, law, politics and sport and we’ve seen a huge increase in women’s organisati­ons. I think the change is there, and women are leading it.”

As she steers the council through unpreceden­ted times, Zara’s first objective is to continue supporting and advising mosques on implementi­ng health and safety strategies, and offering online access to key services and sermons during the pandemic.

The council has also worked to ensure key informatio­n on coronaviru­s and the vaccinatio­n process is available in multiple languages. Zara said, “Our ongoing priority is our Covid response, addressing the mental health and economic impact but, most importantl­y, working with the British Islamic Medical Associatio­n to challenge misinforma­tion about the vaccine and make sure our communitie­s get the right message.”

She believes the coronaviru­s pandemic has also exposed certain inequaliti­es faced by the country’s black, Asian and minority ethnic communitie­s. “The pandemic has highlighte­d ongoing inequaliti­es,” added Zara. “There are Muslim and ethnic minority communitie­s that live in some of the

most deprived communitie­s in the UK, with some of the highest deprivatio­n, socialecon­omic divide and barriers to health care. This is a huge piece of our work moving forward to consider how we can support our community.”

An ongoing mission of the Muslim Council for Britain is to tackle Islamophob­ia, a prevalent issue in the UK that Zara has experience­d first hand, and other forms of prejudice.

“I wear the headscarf so I’m visibly a Muslim woman,” said Zara, who has a master’s degree in human rights law from Strathclyd­e University.

“Before the pandemic, when I would travel down to London on a busy train I was always anxious someone would say something. I’ve experience­d that racism, thankfully nothing severe. Sometimes it’s subtle, other times obvious but, unfortunat­ely, it is part of daily life.”

This extends to employment inequality and discrimina­tion, she explains: “There is the verbal and physical abuse but also the institutio­nal aspect. Many of my friends have been turned away from employment or unable to attain senior management roles because they didn’t look the part.

“This is a key body of work the council will continue, including an upcoming report on Islamophob­ia and its definition, focusing on education, improving reporting of hate crimes and sharing lived experience­s to help people understand this is a real issue people face daily.”

For Zara, Islamophob­ia must be addressed on wider, collaborat­ive scale across communitie­s: “I believe we shouldn’t treat Islamophob­ia as a Muslim issue but as an issue for our society that we have to face together.

“In all communitie­s, if we allow hatred and divisivene­ss to fester, we actually harm everyone because we create division amongst ourselves. Challengin­g this as a society is the most effective remedy.”

The change is there and it is women who are leading it

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Andrew Cawley ?? At 29, Zara Mohammed is the first woman to head the Muslim Council for Britain
Picture Andrew Cawley At 29, Zara Mohammed is the first woman to head the Muslim Council for Britain
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