Women, often in their early 30s, sought divorce guidance.They valued advice that understood their faith, culture, and language, which they could confidently relay to male family figures. Many gained the confidence to seek divorce or protect their children from harm, with help navigating emotional, spiritual, and legal barriers.
Clients presented with marital discord, often unsure how to reconcile Islamic expectations with UK realities. The advice received helped reframe their right to safety and happiness, and many took steps toward divorce or boundary-setting with family.
2014-2015Many clients - especially women - suffered controlling behaviour or spiritual abuse. Some came from inter-religious marriages, facing opposition from both sides. Our support empowered them to navigate patriarchal structures with wisdom, safety, and legal awareness.
2015-2016A small but growing number of men engaged, yet the majority remained women seeking confidential advice on divorce, abuse, and cultural honour conflicts. Speaking in their native languages, they finally felt heard, not judged.
2016-2017Women continued to seek validation and guidance. Many had suffered in silence under family-imposed religious guilt or cultural duty, often in interfaith or blended families. Our culturally aligned advisors were the first people to tell them: you are allowed to leave.
2017-2018Issues like paranormal trauma, marital intimacy, and polygamy surfaced alongside abuse cases. Our team was often the only service able to engage with these cases sensitively and non-judgmentally, helping clients address both spiritual and emotional harm.
2018-2019We saw a rise in cases from blended families and clients facing language mismatches within marriage. Women described being shut down, isolated, and discredited when speaking out. With our support, they could present culturally grounded advice that gained respect from their male relatives.
2019–2020Many women sought Islamic divorce (khula) from marriages involving control, guilt, and fear. They told us that having our endorsement gave them the courage to confront community elders or husbands. They walked away stronger, clearer, and protected.
2021–2022Younger Muslims began seeking pre-marriage guidance, while older clients returned with parenting and marriage struggles. Women used our advice to negotiate cultural authority — often for the first time.
2022–2023Clients faced multilingual breakdowns, religious doubt, and mental health crises. Speaking in Arabic, Urdu, or Punjabi, they felt understood at last. The advice helped them navigate identity, protect their rights, and even exit toxic homes safely.
2023–2024