RT Article T1 Belonging to Quebec and English Canada as Muslims: The Perspectives of the Highly Educated Uyghur Immigrants JF Journal of Muslim minority affairs VO 41 IS 2 SP 281 OP 298 A1 Mahmut, Dilmurat LA English PB Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group YR 2021 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1767226659 AB Following the rise of Islamophobia, Muslims in the West have been experiencing increasingly challenging identity dilemmas. Canada is not an exception. This article, at the intersection of Critical Race Theory and post-colonial perspectives, analyzes the narratives of 13 highly educated Uyghur Muslim immigrants living in Quebec and some English provinces of Canada. Their stories show that many of them have become subject to multiple identity dilemmas common to other Muslim diaspora groups, while also facing some challenges unique to their own background. This article further highlights the Uyghur’s experiences through a new angle: they all appear to have developed an us/Muslim immigrant vs. them/white Canadians’ dichotomy. In the province of Quebec, their narratives reveal “oppositional consciousness” against the dominant white Quebecers, which is quite political, while in English provinces they may see their Muslim identity more as “oppositional culture” against the white English Canadians, which is much less political. K1 oppositional consciousness K1 oppositional culture K1 subaltern identity K1 Islamophobia K1 Race K1 Post-colonialism K1 Muslim Identity K1 highly educated/skilled Uyghur immigrants K1 Canadian identity DO 10.1080/13602004.2021.1947586