抖阴APP导航

Oct. 17, 2025

Leading with hope: Canadian Muslim youth build a national network for healing and change

Research project evolves into a youth-led, community-grounded national movement for change, empowerment, and healing
Youth panellist Rawda Al-Zaim.
National Symposium on Canadian Muslim Youth panellist Rawda Al-Zaim. Mert Alag枚z

On Sept. 21, more than 170 participants gathered in Surrey, B.C., for the second National Symposium on Canadian Muslim Youth: Identity and Well-being, an event that advanced scholarship and community dialogue while helping build Vancouver as another regional hub in an emerging nationwide network for youth empowerment, policy advocacy and collective healing.

Hosted by the University of Calgary鈥檚 in collaboration with the the (ICNA), the symposium drew youth, scholars, health professionals, policymakers and civic leaders into an urgent conversation on Muslim youth mental health, identity and belonging. 

The Vancouver event was part of a national series supported by a project led by Dr. Aamir Jamal, PhD'13, whose long-term research into Muslim youth well-being is fuelling a new kind of social infrastructure: a national community of practice. The project is funded by the .

鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just a symposium, it鈥檚 a movement. We鈥檙e building spaces across the country where youth, policymakers and practitioners can come together, not just to identify challenges, but to celebrate the hope, resilience and leadership that Muslim youth bring to Canada."

Dr. Aamir Jamal

Policy panel at Vancouver Symposium

The impactful policy panel included elected officials, policymakers and community leaders.

Mert Alag枚z

Creating local hubs for national impact

Fittingly, Muslim youth are the driving force behind this series, which is being led by 抖阴APP导航 students Sarah Abuali and Abdul Al-Shawwa, BSc'22, who also organized the inaugural event in the series last November in Calgary.  

Abuali and Al-Shawwa worked closely with youth organizations like ICNA鈥檚 Young Muslims group to put together every aspect of the successful Vancouver symposium.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e not just participating, they鈥檙e leading,鈥 says Jamal. 鈥淭hese youth are making decisions, inviting speakers, running panels. I always tell them, 鈥業鈥檓 just your assistant!鈥欌

This localized leadership is key to Jamal鈥檚 broader vision. 鈥淓ach city has a unique context, and these gatherings help surface regional nuances while contributing to a shared national dialogue,鈥 he says. 

In Vancouver, for example, the event saw heightened engagement from elected officials, including MPs and MLAs from across the political spectrum. A letter of support from B.C. Premier David Eby praised the symposium鈥檚 contributions to diversity and inclusion. 

Bridging policy and practice

An opening keynote address by former journalist Amira Elghawaby, Canada鈥檚 Special Representative on Combatting Islamophobia, set the tone for the event. In her remarks, Elghawaby emphasized the importance of tackling systemic barriers, fostering equitable institutions and amplifying the voices of Muslim youth in shaping Canada鈥檚 future.

These themes resonated throughout the day, including a multi-sector policy panel moderated by Haroon Ghaffar, director of Media and Community Relations for the Province of British Columbia. The wide-ranging discussion included elected officials, civic leaders and grassroots advocates including Amna Shah, Sukh Dhaliwal, Bryan Tepper (MLA for Surrey-Panorama), Linda Annis (Surrey city councillor and mayoral candidate), Muhammad Asad Gondal (president of the BC Muslim Association) and political commentator Haroon Khan.

Their conversation explored how Muslim youth perspectives can help shape equitable, inclusive policy frameworks, particularly around mental health, education and anti-racism. 

Youth participants at the event were not passive observers; they directly challenged panellists with questions about systemic barriers, political accountability and how to embed Muslim voices into policymaking structures.

鈥淭his is where change really begins,鈥 says Jamal. 鈥淲hen youth are at the table with decision makers, asking hard questions and offering ideas, that鈥檚 when you start to see systems shift.鈥

The presence of these high-level leaders also signalled these conversations are no longer niche and are becoming part of a broader reckoning with Canada鈥檚 social fabric and future. By embedding youth-led research and lived experience into these dialogues, the symposium is seeding a more responsive and inclusive policy environment.

Abdul Al-Shawwa and Sarah Abouali present an award to Nadia Hussain

Nadia Hussain, right, receives an award from 抖阴APP导航 students and symposium organizers Abdul Al-Shawwa and Sarah Abouali.

Mert Alag枚z

Youth leading the conversation

A highlight of the Vancouver symposium was a youth-led panel moderated by ICNA youth co-ordinator Daniyal Usmani. Young leaders spoke candidly about their experiences navigating cultural identity, Islamophobia and mental health, which generated powerful insights that resonated throughout the event.

鈥淢uslim youth are living in a unique moment,鈥 says Jamal. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e navigating global conflicts, rising Islamophobia and systemic barriers. At the same time, they鈥檙e incredibly future focused. Our study found that their sense of belonging to Canada was actually stronger than the national average. 

"They are contributing to this country not only through their struggles, but through their strength.鈥

This tension between pain and pride is what the symposium series seeks to illuminate. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not just documenting suffering,鈥 Jamal says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e advocating for holistic approaches to mental health that include Islamic spirituality, and we鈥檙e building models of youth engagement that are scalable across the country.鈥

A vision for the future

Jamal and the Muslim Youth organizers are already working with groups to host similar events in Toronto and Manitoba, with other locations already in the planning stages.

As each city hosts its own event, the ripple effects are tangible: stronger local organizations, deeper connections between sectors, and youth who see themselves not as subjects of research, but as architects of change.

In the future, Jamal envisions the creation of a central hub to support this work, a national centre for Muslim youth mental health, based out of 抖阴APP导航's Faculty of Social Work.

鈥淲hat we鈥檙e witnessing is really the birth of a national movement, one that鈥檚 being built from the ground up by the very people it鈥檚 meant to serve,鈥 says Jamal.


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