Choose Nearest City

  • Calgary
  • Ottawa
  • Edmonton
  • Regina
  • Halifax
  • Saskatoon
  • Hamilton
  • Toronto GTA
  • Kingston
  • Vancouver
  • Kitchener
  • Waterloo
  • London
  • Windsor
  • Montreal
  • Winnipeg
  • Outside of Canada

Choose your city (or nearest city)

  • Calgary
  • Montreal
  • Edmonton
  • Ottawa
  • Regina
  • Saskatoon
  • Halifax
  • Toronto GTA
  • Hamilton
  • Vancouver
  • Kingston
  • Waterloo
  • Kitchener
  • Windsor
  • London
  • Winnipeg
  • Outside of Canada
  • Events
  • Directory
  • PatronsPatrons

Enter your login credentials

Forgot username?

Forgot password?

Remember Me
Register
Facebook Login Google Login
loading
Please wait, logging in...

Register Details

[Form copy_BFRegistration not found!]
Have an account? Login

Forgot Username

[Form forgot_username not found!]

Forgot Password

[Form forgot_password not found!]

How would you like to proceed?

LOG IN / SIGN UP allows you to:
  • Have a record of all events you've been to.
  • Request cancellation if you cannot make it to an event.
  • Post an event of your own.
  • Add your business/organization listing to the online directory.
  • Add an opportunity (job, volunteer, petition, survey, etc.).

Please login to continue

LOG IN / SIGN UP allows you to:
  • Have a record of all events you've been to.
  • Request cancellation if you cannot make it to an event.
  • Post an event of your own.
  • Add your business/organization listing to the online directory.
  • Add an opportunity (job, volunteer, petition, survey, etc.).
Muslim Link is Ottawa Muslims' Online Community Newspaper. The site includes an up-to-date Events Listing and Business and Community Directory for Ottawa Muslims.
.
ML Directory
ML Directory
  • Home
  • Events
    • Ottawa
    • Montreal
    • Toronto GTA
    • Edmonton
    • Calgary
    • Vancouver
    • London
    • Windsor
    • Hamilton
    • Halifax
    • Winnipeg
    • Kingston
    • Kitchener/Waterloo
    • Regina/Saskatoon
    • Event Table
  • Directory
    • Ottawa
    • Montreal
    • Toronto GTA
    • Edmonton
    • Calgary
    • Vancouver
    • London
    • Windsor
    • Hamilton
    • Halifax
    • Winnipeg
    • Kingston
    • Kitchener/Waterloo
    • Regina/Saskatoon
  • News
  • Stories
  • Islamic Finance
  • Classifieds
    • Opportunities
      • Volunteer Opportunities
      • Job Opportunities
      • Crowdfunding
      • Bazaar Vendors Wanted
      • Call for Donations
      • ​​Scholarships / Bursaries
      • ​​Petitions
      • Nominations
      • ​​Call for Participants
      • ​​Call for Submissions
      • Call for Abstracts
      • Grants
      • ​​Surveys
      • ​​Invitation to Dialogue
      • Sponsorships
      • Contests
    • Locations
      • Jumaa Locations
      • Full-Time Islamic Schools
      • Part-Time Islamic Schools
      • Hifz Programs
      • Iftar Locations
      • Taraweeh Prayers
      • I'tikaf Locations
      • Eid Prayers
      • Eid Festival Locations
      • Camps Locations
    • Rentals
      • Add Rental
    • Find a Place
    • Find a Tenant
  • Opportunities
  • Locations
  • Rentals
  • Blog
  • Action Alerts
  • Home
  • Stories
  • Monia Mazigh explores the interconnected stories of Muslim women's lives
Cover of Monia Mazigh's Novel Mirrors & Mirages Cover of Monia Mazigh's Novel Mirrors & Mirages
01
Sep
2014

Monia Mazigh explores the interconnected stories of Muslim women's lives

Written by  Amira Elghawaby
Published in Stories
  • Add to Facebook
  • Like this? Tweet it to your followers!

Mirrors and Mirages a Novel by Monia Mazigh (House of Anansi, 2014; $22.95)

Monia Mazigh's debut novel, Mirrors and Mirages: a Novel, has enriched Canadian literature. 

 

This lyrical work, exploring the lives and motivations of six Muslim women living in Canada, is a testament to the multicultural fabric that continues to influence the country's character and global reputation. 

.

Woven effortlessly throughout the interconnected stories are the scents, flavours, sounds, sights and emotions evoking faraway lands, as well as neighbourhoods just around the corner.

With detailed backdrops, the stories within this novel speak to deep and contemporary themes that will resonate with immigrants, their children and others who come into contact daily with people from all over the world and would appreciate this intimate glimpse into their experiences. 

Though the characters all share the same faith, Islam, they are as different as can be imagined. The stories underscore what many know, but would be forgiven for forgetting -- that Muslim women are as varied as any subset of women, anywhere.

Despite their diversity, they all grapple with similar issues and it is through their struggles that Mazigh explores themes of identity, religious belief and fervour, female empowerment, male presence (or lack thereof), tradition versus modernity and the never-ending search for self and belonging.

There is Emma, a single mother of Tunisian descent whose dreams of family are shattered by a husband whose singular focus on career destroys their relationship. Her faith and culture are a key backdrop, implicitly providing stability and a moral anchor.

Louise, a convert whose Quebecois mother (originally from Chicoutimi), is severely shaken by her daughter's conversion from a life intentionally devoid of the suffocating rituals and expectations of organized religion.

.

"How could you dare sink into the darkness of a religion of people from the desert, people who want to invade us with their incomprehensible ideas, their backward values, their flocks of women and babies?" asks her mother, Alice, who had long ago turned her back on her Catholic upbringing, defying tradition to give birth as an unwed mother.

Lama, a university of Ottawa economics student, longs for her father. He works in glittering Dubai, a land she grew up in, but hardly misses for all its materialistic opulence and show. Her mother, Samia, though, is a typical archetype of the luxury-loving Arab woman who fills her days with socializing, shopping, and gossip.

Finally Sally, a child of Pakistani immigrants, looks for a "pure, unadulterated Islam, an Islam that would make her feel strong and superior." Sally's parents, Ali and Fawzia Hussein, are at a loss to explain their daughter's sudden extremism and rejection of their simple and moderate ways, and as such, are the most sympathetic characters in the novel.

They typify the unfortunate reality of many immigrants upon arrival: rejection. Ali does not have the necessary "Canadian experience" that will add value to his engineering degree, so he must drive a taxi to support the family. Fawzia, keenly aware of potential discrimination, provides her daughter with "the finest clothing, not Pakistani garb but lovely wool, cotton or velvet dresses with 'Peter Pan' collars and ribbon and lace trimmings."

They give Sally everything they can to see her succeed in Canadian society, where they themselves were shut out.

.

This is Mazigh's strength, bringing us into the heads of a disparate group of women, their thoughts and feelings completely believable and authentic. It is as though we are side by side with the characters, wherever they go.

We are there in Dubai, with Emma and an opportunity to break free of the limited paths available to Arab and Muslim divorcees.

We are there with Louise as she experiments with hijab, and figures out the direction of Mecca.

We are there with Lama in the Emirates, remembering the insults of the locals who look down on foreigners, including stateless Palestinians struggling to make a living in oil-rich havens. And, equally, we recognize the hunger and desire for a country where one would be treated better.

"For Lama, immigration to Canada meant the search for a country she could call her own. She wanted to make real friends, build ties with people, and begin to feel at home. Back in the Emirates, everything, from the ostentatious wealth to the superficiality of social life, rang false. Everything, including her relationships with her friends. She felt as though people were watching her every move, scrutinizing her every step, as though she was never appreciated or liked for who she was."

.

Mazigh's deft pen also captures distinctions of class, expertly describing Samia's multi-million dollar home, the lavish shopping and the love of luxury. We also see the modest row houses, their peeling paint and untended gardens, feeling the uncertain hope that can permeate these neglected neighbourhoods.

There is some disappointment in how one of the stories culminates, though perhaps it is an intentional nod to the constant and unfair narrative around Muslims as potential threats. The twist highlights the danger of taking online knowledge at face value, though the thread is left unresolved, unsettling the reader. Fiction mimicking reality?

Mirrors and Mirages is an important book in that it brings new Canadian and immigrant voices and experiences to mainstream readers. These voices are all around us, but are rarely captured in books, film or other artistic endeavours.

It's about time, and hopefully, this is just the beginning.

Monia Mazigh's novel was first released in French as Miroirs et mirages and was a Trillium Book Award finalist.

.

 

This article is reprinted with permission of the author from rabble.ca.

This article was produced exclusively for Muslim Link and should not be copied without prior permission from the site. For permission, please write to info@muslimlink.ca.

Read 18679 times Last modified on Thu, 30 Apr 2015 19:15
Rate this item
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
(1 Vote)
Tagged under
  • Monia Mazigh
  • Muslim Women
  • Muslim Writers
  • Hijab
  • Tunisian Canadian
Amira Elghawaby

Amira Elghawaby

Amira Elghawaby is Muslim Link’s Editorial Advisor. She is providing professional guidance and training to the Muslim Link team and writers. Amira is also developing relevant newspaper and website policies and a style guide. Amira obtained a degree in Journalism and Law from Carleton University in 2001. Since then, she has worked as both a full-time and freelance journalist and editor, writing and producing stories for a variety of media including the Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, CBC-Radio, Rabble and the Middle East Times. She is the History Editor for New Canadian Media. Find her on Twitter @AmiraElghawaby.

Latest from Amira Elghawaby

  • Canada's Special Representative on Combatting Islamophobia Sends Letter to College and University Presidents As School Year Begins Canada's Special Representative on Combatting Islamophobia Sends Letter to College and University Presidents As School Year Begins
  • Statement from the Special Representative on Combatting Islamophobia on the Third Anniversary of the London Family Attack Statement from the Special Representative on Combatting Islamophobia on the Third Anniversary of the London Family Attack
  • Statement by Minister Khera and Special Representative Elghawaby on the International Day to Combat Islamophobia Statement by Minister Khera and Special Representative Elghawaby on the International Day to Combat Islamophobia

Related items

  • Somali Canadian Children's Author Awarded $15,000 from Edmonton Arts Council Somali Canadian Children's Author Awarded $15,000 from Edmonton Arts Council
  • Maliha Jabeen Khan What do you assume about the hijab? at TEDxRegina 2024 Maliha Jabeen Khan What do you assume about the hijab? at TEDxRegina 2024
  • First Hijab-Wearing Muslim Woman Elected to Toronto City Council First Hijab-Wearing Muslim Woman Elected to Toronto City Council
back to top
.
.
.
.
.

Subscribe to Mailing List

Sign up for our free Muslim Link Snapshot and get our events listing and latest articles sent to your inbox weekly.

Please enter a name
Please enter a valid email address
Please enter a city

Ottawa Events
View More Events
Eid Pop-Up Market Featured
Sun, May 25, 2025 11:00am EST/EDT
Bazaars
Ottawa Eagles Wrestling SUMMER Program - 16+ Grappling Program
Wed, May 14, 2025 all day
Courses
Jami Omar Where the Jobs Are? Matching Your Skills to the New World of Work
Wed, May 14, 2025 06:30pm EST/EDT
Educational
Online Event
Victims and Survivors of Crime Week Zoom Workshop
Wed, May 14, 2025 06:30pm EST/EDT
Information Workshops
Ottawa Writers Fest Scene of the Crime with Uzma Jalaluddin and Nita Prose
Wed, May 14, 2025 06:30pm EST/EDT
Educational

Featured Articles

  • GTA Muslims Today Covers the Federal Election through Interviews with Candidates and Communities GTA Muslims Today Covers the Federal Election through Interviews with Candidates and Communities
  • Muslim Canadians Running In The 2025 Federal Election Muslim Canadians Running In The 2025 Federal Election
  • Canadian Council of Imams: Statement Regarding the 2025 Federal Election Canadian Council of Imams: Statement Regarding the 2025 Federal Election

About us

  • About Muslim Link
    Our Team
    About Eye Media
    Contact Us
    Diversity & Inclusion Policy
  • Events & Directory Disclaimer
  • Project: A Muslim History of Ottawa

How To

  • How to Advertise on Muslim Link?
    How to View / Edit Your Advertisement Campaign?
    How to Add a Directory Listing on the Directory?
    How to Claim a Directory Listing?
    How to Add an Event?
    How to Add an Opportunity?
    How to Add a Rental Listing?

Event Listings

  •  - Ottawa
  •  - Toronto GTA
  •  - Montreal
  •  - Edmonton
  •  - Calgary
  •  - Vancouver
  •  - London
  •  - Windsor
  •  - Hamilton
  •  - Kitchener/Waterloo
  •  - Halifax
  •  - Winnipeg
  •  - Kingston
  •  - Regina/Saskatoon

Business & Community Directory

  •  - Ottawa
  •  - Toronto GTA
  •  - Montreal
  •  - Edmonton
  •  - Calgary
  •  - Vancouver
  •  - London
  •  - Windsor
  •  - Hamilton
  •  - Kitchener/Waterloo
  •  - Halifax
  •  - Winnipeg
  •  - Kingston
  •  - Regina/Saskatoon

Advertisers

  • Advertise Online
  • Become a Patron
  • Sponsorships
  • Join Snapshot e-Newsletter
  • Snapshot Publishing Dates

ML Team

  • Writers Workshops
  • Content Policy
  • Staff Payment System
  • Join the team

Social Media

Follow us on our pages!

Facebook Twitter Youtube LinkedIn Pinterest

Copyright © 2025 Muslim Link. All Rights Reserved. All articles, photos, graphics and images on this site remain the copyright of Muslim Link, unless otherwise noted, and should not be copied without prior permission. Designed by Eye Media Solutions
Top
Copyright © Muslim Link. All articles, photos, graphics and images on this site remain the copyright of Muslim Link, unless otherwise noted, and should not be copied without prior permission. 2025 All rights reserved. Custom Design by Youjoomla.com