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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Non-Christian religions > Islam
With 1.4 billion practicing Muslims in the world it is necessary
for all to better understand the culture and belief system. In The
Restless Wind and Shifting Sands, author and Islamic scholar Harry
J. Sweeney explains the intricacies and tenets of Islam. The
educational discourse provides insight into the religion practiced
by one out of five people worldwide.
The Restless Wind and Shifting Sands explores the Islamic
culture through a series of fictionalized private conversations
between three friends-Modi, Mani, and Radi-who each represents the
moderate, mainstream, and radical factions. Through their daily
talks, the friends tackle all phases of Muslim life including
arranged marriages, Islamic law, female genital mutilation,
predestination, honor killing, Palestine, shariah, and the
Qur'an.
The men discuss how each belief drives Islamic culture and
relations with non-believers. Filled with a wealth of information,
the exchanges between friends seek to impart a better understanding
of Islam and the challenges it poses for Western civilization.
The Restless Wind and Shifting Sands communicates that the
Islamic religion can contain its fundamentalist elements and work
toward a peaceful future.
This book consists of a series of interrelated chapters analyzing
why Iran, among all countries, has seen so many revolutionary
movements in the past century; the degree to which its religion,
Shi'ism, is revolutionary; and the history of revolutionary and
resistance movements in the modern Muslim world. The author
stresses historical change, such as the change of Twelver Shi'ism
from political quietism to revolutionary opposition, and also
previously unnoticed factors in revolution, such as the multi-urban
character of all Iran's modern revolutions.
The Third Edition of Brill s Encyclopaedia of Islam appears in four
substantial segments each year, both online and in print. The new
scope includes comprehensive coverage of Islam in the twentieth
century and of Muslim minorities all over the world. This Part
2009-3 of the Third Edition of Brill s Encyclopaedia of Islam
contains 100 new articles, reflecting the great diversity of
current scholarship in the fields of Islamic Studies. .
Refine your heart and mind with the wisdom of Islamic
spirituality
"To live a meaningful life one that brings us joy, contentment
and fulfillment we have to do the inner spiritual work of becoming
a more complete human being." from the Introduction
Over the centuries, Islamic sages have gleaned timeless
spiritual insights and practices from sacred texts, meditation and
knowledge of the heart gems that have been passed down from
generation to generation. This book invites you no matter what your
practice may be to access the treasure chest of Islamic
spirituality, particularly Sufism, and use its wealth to strengthen
your own journey.
The riches include guidance drawn from the Qur'an, sayings of
the Prophet Muhammad and Sufi poets such as the thirteenth-century
Rumi on cultivating awareness, intentionality and compassion for
self and others. This book also features entertaining wisdom
teaching stories, especially those of Mulla Nasruddin, Islam s
great comic foil, to expand the mind and heart. It breaks down
barriers to accessing this ancient tradition for modern seekers by
dispelling myths about the Muslim faith concerning gender bias,
inclusivity and appreciation for diversity.
Regardless of where you are on your spiritual journey, you will
find these gems worthy additions to your own treasure chest
within."
In this timely book, Marranci critically surveys the available
theories on Islamic fundamentalism and extremism. Rejecting
essentialism and cultural reductionism, the book suggests that
identity and emotion play an essential role in the phenomenon that
has been called fundamentalism.
This book offers students and scholars an introduction to and
insight into the wealth of historiographies produced in various
Muslim milieus. Four articles deal with the classical period:
archaeology and history in early Islamic Amman; an analysis of
sources dealing with Muwahhid North Africa; al-Maqrizi's
prosopographical production; the rise of early Ottoman
historiography. Three examine sacred history as historiography: in
10th century Fatimid Egypt; in the 16th century Indian Chishti Sufi
milieu; and in the Sino-Muslim Confucian tradition in Qing China.
The final two articles provide fresh approaches to historiography
by respectively looking into the sijils of Ottoman Cairo as
historical sources and by highlighting the regional approach to the
writing of the history of the Indian Ocean. Contributors: Frederic
Bauden, Heather J. Empey, Derryl MacLean, Sami G. Massoud, Murat
Cem Menguc, Reem Meshal, Hyondo Park, Patricia Risso, Shafique N.
Virani and Michael Wood.
This study challenges the conventional image of the tenth-century
Sufi mystic Al-Husayn Ibn Mansur al-Hallag (d. 929) as an
anti-philosophical mystic. Unlike the predominantly theological or
text-historical studies which constitute much of the scholarly
literature on Hallag, this study is completely philosophical in
nature, placing Hallag within the tradition of Graeco-Arabic
philosophy and emphasizing, in a positive light, his continuity
with the pagan Neoplatonism of Plotinus and Proclus.
One of the world's leading authorities on the Islamic world answers the many troubling questions raised in the wake of the September 11 attack
In spite of Islam's long history in Europe and the growing number
of Muslims resident in Europe, little research exists on Muslim
pilgrimage in Europe. This collection of eleven chapters is the
first systematic attempt to fill this lacuna in an emerging
research field. Placing the pilgrims' practices and experiences
centre stage, scholars from history, anthropology, religious
studies, sociology, and art history examine historical and
contemporary hajj and non-hajj pilgrimage to sites outside and
within Europe. Sources include online travelogues, ethnographic
data, biographic information, and material and performative
culture. The interlocutors are European-born Muslims, converts to
Islam, and Muslim migrants to Europe, in addition to people who
identify themselves with other faiths. Most interlocutors reside in
Albania, Bosnia-Hercegovina, Italy, France, the Netherlands, Great
Britain, and Norway. This book identifies four courses of
developments: Muslims resident in Europe continue to travel to
Mecca and Medina, and to visit shrine sites located elsewhere in
the Middle East and North Africa. Secondly, there is a revival of
pilgrimage to old pilgrimage sites in South-eastern Europe.
Thirdly, new Muslim pilgrimage sites and practices are being
established in Western Europe. Fourthly, Muslims visit
long-established Christian pilgrimage sites in Europe. These
practices point to processes of continuity, revitalization, and
innovation in the practice of Muslim pilgrimage in Europe. Linked
to changing sectarian, political, and economic circumstances,
pilgrimage sites are dynamic places of intra-religious as well as
inter-religious conflict and collaboration, while pilgrimage
experiences in multiple ways also transform the individual and
affect the home-community.
For four decades Abraham L. Udovitch has been a leading scholar of
the medieval Islamic world, its economic institutions, social
structures, and legal theory and practice. In pursuing his quest to
understand and explain the complex phenomena that these broad
rubrics entail, he has published widely, collaborated
internationally with other leading scholars of the Middle East and
medieval history, and most saliently for the purposes of this
volume, taught several cohorts of students at Princeton University.
This volume is therefore dedicated to his intellectual legacy from
a uniquely revealing angle: the current work of his former
students. The papers in this volume range chronologically from the
period preceding the rise of Islam in Arabia to the Mamluk era,
geographically from the Western Mediterranean to the Western Indian
Ocean and thematically from the political negotiations of Christian
and Islamic Mediterranean sovereigns to the historiography of
Western Indian Ocean port cities.
Visible Islam in Modern Turkey presents a rich panorama of Islamic
practices in today's Turkey. The authors, one a Muslim and one a
Christian, introduce readers to Turkish Islamic piety and
observances. The book is also a model for Muslims, for it
interprets the foundations of Islam to the modern mind and shows
the relevance of Turkish Islamic practices to modern society.
Packed with data and insights, it appeals to a variety of circles,
both secular and traditional.
Cosmopolitanism, as an intellectual and political project, has
failed. The portrayal of human rights, especially European, as
evidence of cosmopolitanism in practice is misguided. Cosmopolitan
theorists point to the rise of claims-making to the European Court
of Human Rights (ECtHR) among Europe's Muslims to protect their
right to religious freedom, mainly concerning the hijab, as
evidence of cosmopolitan justice. However, the outcomes of such
claims-making show that far from signifying a cosmopolitan moment,
European human rights law has failed Europe's Muslims. Human
Rights, Islam and the Failure of Cosmopolitanism provides an
empirical examination of claims-making and government policy in
Western Europe focusing mainly on developments in the UK, Germany,
France, Italy and the Netherlands. A consideration of public
debates and European law of conduct in the public sphere shows that
cosmopolitan optimism has misjudged the magnitude of the impact
claims-making among Europe's Muslims. To overcome this cul-de-sac,
European Muslims should turn to a new 'politics of rights' to
pursue their right to religious expression. This book is a
theoretically challenging re-evaluation of cosmopolitan arguments
through a rigorous discussion of rights-making claims by Europe's
Muslims to the European Court of Human Rights. It combines
sociological and legal case analysis which advances understanding
of one of the most pressing topical issues of the day.
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