The World of Associations
          In the course of their settlement in the West, Muslims have passed 
            through several stages in the creation of associations. In the first 
            period, it was a question of gathering together either on the basis 
            of common origin (by creating organizations for people coming from 
            the same country) or, more often with the aim of carrying out a project 
            such as the establishment of a mosque. These were the two axes that 
            most attracted new arrivals. Slowly, new kinds of structures came 
            into being, more oriented toward education, social work, and more 
            specialized activities (e.g. for young people, students, women) or 
            toward Muslim representation at local and national levels.
          These organizations are essential, and they must remain present and 
            active in Western countries because they help to normalize the presence 
            of Muslims in the West. However, it is important, at least in those 
            countries where the Muslim presence is the most long-standing, to 
            consider embarking on a new phase in the type of organizations invented 
            and founded by Western Muslims.  This 
            third stage of associational structures for Muslims should 
            make it possible for them to create new organizations that, while 
            complementing what is already being done in the field, will be set 
            up around shared values, social projects, and causes and will not 
            be based simply on the Muslim identity of its founders. 
            These will not be partnerships with other associations but, taking 
            one step further, will represent shared commitments within one association. 
          
          This type of involvement is more complex on the ethical level because, 
            in a situation where we are not "among our own," we must 
            sometimes face situations or behaviour that are not in harmony with 
            our values or codes of conduct. By making time for dialogue and explanation, 
            by defining clearly the boundaries of commitment, it is possible to 
            find areas of agreement.
          Many Muslims, still unsure of their identity and of what people think 
            of them, are afraid of going too far in this direction, but in the 
            end this is the direction in which the Islamic association landscape 
            in the West is bound to evolve - Muslim citizens distributed among 
            cultural networks, working in specialized "Islamic associations," 
            and ultimately participating in bodies that unite those with pluralistic 
            beliefs and common values. In the end, this is the universal dimension 
            of Islam, integrating pluralism and human diversity.