ABSTRACT

Muna Saleh recounts one story fragment that shows the importance of attending to the diversity of experiences within what is too often seen as a single story of women within the Muslim faith. In her proposal, Muna makes visible some of the uncertainties that lived in the times where she imagined her study. Muna, in her research proposal, imagined conversations between herself and the daughters, and herself and the mothers within the study. Naming her study a multiperspectival study signified to Muna that she proposed to bring different perspectives to the substantive area of study. It was important for Muna to be wakeful to the stories that Zahra and Ayesha lived in relation to each other in the inquiry. Laying Muna's stories alongside the authors' experiences with the youth in the arts club helps them see that living in ways that call forth uncertainty and not knowing are dimensions of relational ethics.