What can we do about these incidents?
"The mother of a girl allegedly raped when she was 13 by an imam at a mosque today said she thought a change in her daughter's behaviour was "just a mood swing".
The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, had not known of the allegations against Manzoor Hussain and put her teenage daughter's mood change down to her age.
Hussain, 42, of Ashley Street, St Paul's, Bristol, denies 11 counts of indecent assault and one charge of rape against the girl between July 1996 and March 1997."
full story here.
I would imagine there are a lot of hidden incidents like this in our communities and we are not prepared to take the appropriate action when such incidents come about. As a community we are more concerned with the shame and attention incidents like this will bring on us and we sweep it under that carpet hoping that the problem will go away. I have heard of cases where people have shown inappropriate behaviour towards children and mosque committees have just told the person concerned to move on when what they should be doing is reporting allegations to the police and have the matter dealt with there and then. There should be no room for such behaviour in our communities. When something like the above happens this is what brings shame upon us a community. If the case had been dealt with when it first occured it would not have got to the stage where a young girl's life has been ruined and the word "Imam" becomes sullied by the behaviour of a single person.
Mosques up and down the country do not have proper recruitment procedures, people are employed through recommendation by people, no vetting or interview is conducted, no reference are sought and no police checks are made. When people are employed in our mosques inevitably they will come into contact with children and our children need to be protected from such unscrupulous people.
Unless our committees are more professional and driven by what is right and best for the community rather than personal prestige and gain there will be more incidents like this coming to light, the shame is in not dealing with these problems.
www.masud.co.uk
"The mother of a girl allegedly raped when she was 13 by an imam at a mosque today said she thought a change in her daughter's behaviour was "just a mood swing".
The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, had not known of the allegations against Manzoor Hussain and put her teenage daughter's mood change down to her age.
Hussain, 42, of Ashley Street, St Paul's, Bristol, denies 11 counts of indecent assault and one charge of rape against the girl between July 1996 and March 1997."
full story here.
I would imagine there are a lot of hidden incidents like this in our communities and we are not prepared to take the appropriate action when such incidents come about. As a community we are more concerned with the shame and attention incidents like this will bring on us and we sweep it under that carpet hoping that the problem will go away. I have heard of cases where people have shown inappropriate behaviour towards children and mosque committees have just told the person concerned to move on when what they should be doing is reporting allegations to the police and have the matter dealt with there and then. There should be no room for such behaviour in our communities. When something like the above happens this is what brings shame upon us a community. If the case had been dealt with when it first occured it would not have got to the stage where a young girl's life has been ruined and the word "Imam" becomes sullied by the behaviour of a single person.
Mosques up and down the country do not have proper recruitment procedures, people are employed through recommendation by people, no vetting or interview is conducted, no reference are sought and no police checks are made. When people are employed in our mosques inevitably they will come into contact with children and our children need to be protected from such unscrupulous people.
Unless our committees are more professional and driven by what is right and best for the community rather than personal prestige and gain there will be more incidents like this coming to light, the shame is in not dealing with these problems.
www.masud.co.uk

