This article examines how an alumnus-researcher achieves and ethically sustains ethnographic access to a Deobandī dār al-ʿulūm in contemporary Britain. Challenging models that frame access primarily as a matter of verbal negotiation or formal gatekeeping, it argues that access is often conferred through embodied ethics—moral alignment, vocational congruence, and relational presence. Drawing on fourteen months of insider ethnography, the article introduces the concept of the Quiet Power of Presence to describe how companionship (ṣuḥba), imitation (tashabbuh), and immersion within the maslak generate trust and legitimacy before methodological performance. Situating this dynamic within theories of habitus, insider ethnography, and Islamic pedagogical traditions, the study shows that knowledge, authority, and ethical formation are transmitted relationally rather than solely textually. It further challenges reductive portrayals of British madrasas as insular or epistemically rigid by documenting the practical integration of dīn and dunyā knowledge. The article contributes empirically by foregrounding the lived lifeworlds of British ʿulamāʾ and methodologically by theorising embodied presence as a critical but underexamined condition of access in religious ethnography.
Haroon Ebrahim Sidat (Thu,) studied this question.