Mosques and Imams National Advisory Board | |
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Abbreviation | MINAB |
Motto | Connectivity, Respect & Power Through Self Regulation |
Formation | 27 June 2006 |
Type | advisory and facilitatory body |
Location | London |
Region served | United Kingdom |
Membership | 600+ Mosques and Islamic institutes |
Official languages | English |
Chairman | Maulana Shahid Raza OBE |
Staff | 3 |
Volunteers | 20 |
Website | www.minab.org.uk |
The Mosques and Imams National Advisory Board (MINAB) was launched in 2006 to promote best practice in the British mosques. It is an independent self-regulatory body to build capacity in mosques to help deliver standards. The new body seeks to ensure mosque personnel have a better understanding of British Muslims' needs and address their concerns more effectively. It is an advisory and facilitatory body which is community-led and independent. It works with and represents all Muslim traditions and schools of thought.
It was formally launched on 27th June 2006. Following the launch of the draft constitution and standards in November 2007, there followed a further process of consultation with representatives of mosques, Islamic centres, Imam training institutes, leaders and scholars. The consultation events took place in all the major cities in the UK and this work was undertaken by an interim steering group, composed of representatives from the four founder organisations: Al-Khoei Foundation, British Muslim Forum, Muslim Association of Britain and Muslim Council of Britain.
MINAB now has over six hundred mosques and Islamic institutes as its members. It is a charity registered under the laws of England & Wales with an accountable system of representation.
The MINAB will capacity build mosques through standards. It has five standards:
The process of self certification is that the mosques will self-certify whether they fully meet or partially meet each of the above five standards. The MINAB will then randomly select 50% of the mosques who state that they fully meet the standard to assess how the organisation does so. If the assessment process highlights that the organisation does not meet the standard that it has self certified that it does, the MINAB will then support it through its capacity building programme. The body has been praised by some, like Communities Secretary Hazel Blears. Other have questioned its apparent links with the government. Inayat Bunglawala said: "If MINAB is to stand any chance of gaining legitimacy and making actual progress then it will need to prove that it is free from governmental interference."[1]