All-women’s Islamic choir smashes gender taboos in Egypt | Music

Nema Fathi says her female choir group is determined to challenge deep-rooted taboos about women singing religious songs in public.

The words of the Islamic hymns being rehearsed in a small studio just outside Cairo are well known among Egyptian Muslims, but they have never sounded so different. Here, they are being sung by women.

Songs in praise of God and Islam’s Prophet Mohammad are a common religious custom in Egypt and the Middle East, but they are almost always performed by men and boys.

The members of Al Hur, Egypt’s first all-female Muslim recitation choir, are determined to change that – challenging deep-rooted taboos about women singing in public or reciting from the Quran in the socially conservative country.

“Having women in the Muslim religious chanting field not only breaks social stereotypes about female chanters. It also gives a new, distinctive style to an art that has long been dominated by only men,” said Al Hur founder Nema Fathi, 26.

Sitting on chairs in the wood-panelled studio during a recent rehearsal, seven young women and girls scanned the lyrics on their mobile phones before closing their eyes and belting out the hymns, accompanied by a piano and drums.

‘Widespread attacks’

Fathi practices a religious musical form known as “inshad”, or chanting, in which religious sayings and praise for God and the Prophet Mohammed are sung.

While the practice has both secular and religious uses in the Middle East, nasheeds are almost always sung by men, while women who perform music or sing publicly are often viewed as promiscuous.

That makes female performers even more taboo, and Fathi said she faced repeated criticism since she launched Al Hur in 2017 after connecting with other women and girls who wanted to follow their passion for the musical form.

“Since the choir’s founding, we’ve faced widespread attacks by some leading Muslim chanting figures who discouraged us from taking this step,” she said.

“Some told us that the voice of a woman is dishonourable. ‘How can girls sing religious songs?’ they said. But we challenged ourselves to make this band a success,” Fathi added.

A shortage of time and money has also weighed on the choir’s ambitions.

Fathi pays about 500 Egyptian pounds ($32) an hour to hire the studio, where she offers free weekly rehearsals lasting between three to five hours.

Still, choir members have to pay for transport to attend rehearsals and about 50 concerts over the last four years.

That has worn down membership from 30 to only 10 at present.

“Most of them got married and started to take care of their families,” said Fathi, adding that the women’s husbands had not supported their membership of the group.

‘Unique flavour’

But despite the difficulties they face, Al Hur’s members are determined to keep going.

Some of the younger women come to practice accompanied by their mothers, who listened with evident pride at the recent rehearsal, where conductor Ahmed Galal was the only man in the studio.

Fathi struggled to find a female conductor for the choir and Galal offered to coach them for free.

Sondos Medhat, who at 14 is the group’s youngest member, attended the practice with her mother, Amira, who shrugged off the notion that only men should perform nasheeds.

“On the contrary, historically Muslim women have been part of the chanting and recitation field. Also, they’re giving a special and unique flavour to the art, very different from that presented by men,” the 45-year-old told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The group is busy rehearsing for a religious music festival next month and is also working on a remixed nasheed about the Prophet Mohammad to be released on video-sharing site YouTube later this year.

Fathi said she hopes one day to open her own singing school, despite the financial and bureaucratic hurdles.

“It has always been a dream for me to establish an academy to teach new generations of girls religious songs – an academy that can give feminine rhymes to Muslim chanting.”

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