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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian religions
"Ashrei Mi SheBa L'Chan V'Talmudo B'Yado"
("Fortunate is he who comes here, and his learning is in his
hand.")
Though he has no formal rabbinical training, Ephraim Sobol began
teaching a weekly "parsha" class in his community. In two years
time, the class grew as his students shared their excitement. He
began writing "Two Minutes of Torah" a weekly Dvar Torah e-mail
based on his class. These emails took on lives of their own, and
soon they were a much-sought-after read. Appealing to audiences
with a broad spectrum of knowledge, "Two Minutes of Torah" offers
original and concise insights into the "parsha." To help students
connect with the lessons, he has woven many of his real-world
experiences into his essays.
Using a folksy and inviting manner, Sobol provides a fresh, deep
insights into an ancient text.
This title offers an insight into key contemporary global issues
relating to the lives and experiences of young Muslims. Many Muslim
societies, regardless of location, are displaying a 'youth bulge',
where more than half their populations are under the age of 25. An
increasingly globalized western culture is rapidly eroding
'traditional' ideas about society, from the family to the state. At
the same time, there is a view that rampant materialism is creating
a culture of spiritual emptiness in which demoralization and
pessimism easily find root. For young Muslims these challenges may
be compounded by a growing sense of alienation as they face
competing ideologies and divergent lifestyles. Muslim youth are
often idealized as the 'future of Islam' or stigmatized as
rebelling against their parental values and suffering 'identity
crises'. These experiences can produce both positive and negative
reactions, from intellectual engagement and increasing spiritual
maturity to emotional rejectionism, narrow identity politics and
violent extremism. This book addresses many of the central issues
currently facing young Muslims in both localized and globalized
contexts through engaging with the work of academics, youth work
practitioners and those working in non-governmental organizations
and civic institutions.
![Ocean of Life (Hardcover): Luisa Blumenthal, Alicia Ali](//media.loot.co.za/images/x80/147129202545179215.jpg) |
Ocean of Life
(Hardcover)
Luisa Blumenthal, Alicia Ali
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R785
R660
Discovery Miles 6 600
Save R125 (16%)
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The role of human sacrifice in the ancient Mediterranean world and
its implications continue to be topics that fire the popular
imagination and engender scholarly discussion and controversy. This
volume aims to advance the discussion by providing balanced and
judicious treatments of the various facets of these topics from a
cross-disciplinary and cross-cultural perspective. It provides
nuanced examinations of ancient ritual, exploring the various
meanings that human sacrifice held for antiquity, and examines its
varied repercussions up into the modern world. The book explores
evidence to shed new light on the origins of the rite, to whom
these sacrifices were offered, and by whom they were performed. It
presents fresh insights into the social and religious meanings of
this practice in its varied biblical landscape and ancient
contexts, and demonstrates how human sacrifice has captured the
imagination of later writers who have employed it in diverse
cultural and theological discourses to convey their own views and
ideologies. It provides valuable perspectives for understanding key
cultural, theological and ideological dimensions, such as the
sacrifice of Christ, scapegoating, self-sacrifice and martyrdom in
post-biblical and modern times.
Margarete Susman was among the great Jewish women philosophers of
the twentieth century, and largely unknown to many today. This book
presents, for the first time in English, six of her important
essays along with an introduction about her life and work.
Carefully selected and edited by Elisa Klapheck, these essays give
the English-speaking reader a taste of Susman's religious-political
mode of thought, her originality, and her importance as Jewish
thinker. Susman's writing on exile, return, and the revolutionary
impact of Judaism on humanity, illuminate enhance our understanding
of other Jewish philosophers of her time: Martin Buber, Franz
Rosenzweig, and Ernst Bloch (all of them her friends). Her work is
in particularly fitting company when read alongside Jewish
religious-political and political thinkers such as Bertha
Pappenheim, Hannah Arendt, Simone Weil, and Gertrud Stein.
Initially a poet, Susman became a follower of the Jewish
Renaissance movement, secular Messianism, and the German Revolution
of 1918. This collection of essays shows how Susman's work speaks
not only to her own time between the two World Wars but to the
present day.
What can we know about ourselves and the world through the sense of
touch and what are the epistemic limits of touch? Scepticism claims
that there is always something that slips through the
epistemologist's grasp. A Touch of Doubt explores the significance
of touch for the history of philosophical scepticism as well as for
scepticism as an embodied form of subversive political, religious,
and artistic practice. Drawing on the tradition of scepticism
within nineteenth- and twentieth-century continental philosophy and
psychoanalysis, this volume discusses how the sense of touch
uncovers contradictions within our knowledge of ourselves and the
world. It questions 1) what we can know through touch, 2) what we
can know about touch itself, and 3) how our experience of touching
the other and ourselves throws us into a state of doubt. This
volume is intended for students and scholars who wish to reconsider
the experience of touching in intersections of philosophy,
religion, art, and social and political practice.
This book explores how to utilize Buddhism in psychotherapy and how
Buddhism itself acts as a form of psychotherapy, using Buddhism
practices as a lens for universal truth and wisdom rather than as
aspects of a religion. Based on the author's over 30 years of study
and practice with early Buddhism and his experiences of Buddhism
with his patients, the book outlines a new form of psychotherapy
incorporating three Buddhist principles: the properties of the body
and mind, the principle of world's movement, and living with
wisdom. This technique provides a unique perspective on mental
health and offers new approaches for clinicians and researchers to
effectively addressing mental health and well-being.
Long popular in Arabic, as well as Swahili and Malay, this classic
text offers a complete guide to Muslim devotions, prayers and
practical ethics. There are many books in English which present
Sufi doctrine, but few which can be used as practical travel guides
along the Path. Originally written in Classical Arabic, the
aptly-named Book of Assistance is today in widespread use among
Sufi teachers in Arabia, Indonesia and East Africa. The author,
Imam al-Haddad (d. 1720), lived at Tarim in the Hadramaut valley
between the Yemen and Oman, and is widely held to have been the
"spiritual renewer" of the twelfth Islamic century. He spent most
of his life in Kenya and Saudi Arabia where he taught Islamic
jurisprudence and classical Sufism according to the order (tariqa)
of the BaAlawi sayids.
An introduction to the ways in which ordinary Muslim Americans
practice their faith. Muslims have always been part of the United
States, but very little is known about how Muslim Americans
practice their religion. How do they pray? What's it like to go on
pilgrimage to Mecca? What rituals accompany the birth of a child, a
wedding, or the death of a loved one? What holidays do Muslims
celebrate and what charities do they support? How do they learn
about the Qur'an? The Practice of Islam in America introduces
readers to the way Islam is lived in the United States, offering
vivid portraits of Muslim American life passages, ethical actions,
religious holidays, prayer, pilgrimage, and other religious
activities. It takes readers into homes, religious congregations,
schools, workplaces, cemeteries, restaurants-and all the way to
Mecca-to understand the diverse religious practices of Muslim
Americans. Going beyond a theoretical discussion of what Muslims
are supposed to do, this volume focuses on what they actually do.
As the volume reveals, their religious practices are shaped by
their racial and ethnic identity, their gender and sexual
orientation, and their sectarian identity, among other social
factors. Readers gain practical information about Islamic religion
while also coming to understand how the day-to-day realities of
American life shape Muslim American practice.
This title presents an analysis of 'messianism' in Continental
philosophy, using a case study of Levinas to uncover its underlying
philosophical intelligibility. There is no greater testament to
Emmanuel Levinas' reputation as an enigmatic thinker than in his
mediations on eschatology and its relevance for contemporary
thought. Levinas has come to be seen as a principle representative
in Continental philosophy - alongside the likes of Heidegger,
Benjamin, Adorno and Zizek - of a certain philosophical messianism,
differing from its religious counterpart in being formulated
apparently without appeal to any dogmatic content. To date,
however, Levinas' messianism has not received the same detailed
attention as other aspects of his wide ranging ethical vision.
Terence Holden attempts to redress this imbalance, tracing the
evolution of the messianic idea across Levinas' career, emphasising
the transformations or indeed displacements which this idea
undergoes in taking on philosophical intelligibility. He suggests
that, in order to crack the enigma which this idea represents, we
must consider not only the Jewish tradition from which Levinas
draws inspiration, but also Nietzsche, who ostensibly would
represent the greatest rival to the messianic idea in the history
of philosophy, with his notion of the 'parody' of messianism. This
groundbreaking series offers original reflections on theory and
method in the study of religions, and demonstrates new approaches
to the way religious traditions are studied and presented. Studies
published under its auspices look to clarify the role and place of
Religious Studies in the academy, but not in a purely theoretical
manner. Each study will demonstrate its theoretical aspects by
applying them to the actual study of religions, often in the form
of frontier research.
Over the past three decades, scholars, government analysts and
terrorism experts have examined the relationship between Islam and
politics. But specialists have tended to limit their analysis to a
specific country or focus. Few works have provided a geographically
comprehensive, in-depth analysis. Since 9/11, another wave of
literature on political Islam and global terrorism has appeared,
much of it superficial and sensationalist. This situation
underscores the need for a comprehensive, analytical, and in-depth
examination of Islam and politics in the post-9/11 era and in an
increasingly globalizing world. The Oxford Handbook of Islam and
Politics, with contributions from prominent scholars and
specialists, provides a comprehensive analysis of what we know and
where we are in the study of political Islam. It enables scholars,
students, and policymakers to understand the interaction of Islam
and politics and the multiple and diverse roles of Islamic
movements, as well as issues of authoritarianism and
democratization, religious extremism and terrorism regionally and
globally.
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