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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Non-Christian sacred works & liturgy
Michael Rand's The Evolution of al-Harizi's Tahkemoni investigates
the stages whereby the text of al-Harizi's maqama collection as we
currently know it, on the basis of manuscripts (and the editio
princeps), came into being during al-Harizi's travels in the East
over the course of approximately the last ten years of his life.
The discussion is based on a close examination of the textual
evidence, the investigation of a number of relevant literary
motifs, and a comparison to al-Harizi's model, the Maqamat of
al-Hariri. The book includes a catalogue of fragments of the
Tahkemoni in the Genizah and Firkovitch IIA collections, and some
previously unpublished material that can reasonably be claimed to
belong to a heretofore unattested version of the Tahkemoni.
The author, Dr. Nader Pourhassan, has researched the Koran and the
Bible in depth for the last twenty years. God's Scripture is the
result of his personal disillusionment with Islam as it is
manifested in the modern world. The message of the Koran is
resoundingly simple. We should believe in God, which would
encourage us to love our neighbor. If we do, we will go to Heaven:
"Those who do good to men or women and have faith (in God), we will
give them life, a pure life, and their reward will be greater than
their actions." This message, which is stated clearly over sixty
times in the Koran, has been perverted by those who seek to promote
themselves as spiritual leaders, with appalling results, most
shockingly the attacks on America on September 11, 2001. His
disillusionment grew as he learned about the disparity between the
holy book and Islam as it is practiced today. Now, more than ever,
there is an urgent need for Muslims and non Muslims alike to
understand the truth about Islam, and to return to the original
message of the Prophet Muhammad, and that of Jesus, that humankind
should strive to be good, to love God and one another.
This work offers a seminal research into Arabic translations of the
Pentateuch. It is no exaggeration to speak of this field as a terra
incognita. Biblical versions in Arabic were produced over many
centuries, on the basis of a wide range of source languages
(Hebrew, Syriac, Greek, or Coptic), and in varying contexts. The
textual evidence for this study is exclusively based on a corpus of
about 150 manuscripts, containing the Pentateuch in Arabic or parts
thereof.
The discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls revealed a world of early
Jewish writing larger than the Bible, from multiple versions of
biblical texts to "revealed" books not found in our canon. Despite
this diversity, the way we read Second Temple Jewish literature
remains constrained by two anachronistic categories: a theological
one, "Bible," and a bibliographic one, "book." The Literary
Imagination in Jewish Antiquity suggests ways of thinking about how
Jews understood their own literature before these categories had
emerged. Using familiar sources such as the Psalms, Ben Sira, and
Jubilees, Mroczek tells an unfamiliar story about sacred writing
not bound in a Bible. In many texts, we see an awareness of a vast
tradition of divine writing found in multiple locations only
partially revealed in available scribal collections. Ancient heroes
like David are not simply imagined as scriptural authors, but
multi-dimensional characters who come to be known as great writers
and honored as founders of growing textual traditions. Scribes
recognize the divine origin of texts like the Enoch literature and
other writings revealed to ancient patriarchs, which present
themselves not as derivative of material we now call biblical, but
prior to it. Sacred writing stretches back to the dawn of time, yet
new discoveries are always around the corner. While listening to
the way ancient writers describe their own literature-their own
metaphors and narratives about writing-this book also argues for
greater suppleness in our own scholarly imagination, no longer
bound by modern canonical and bibliographic assumptions.
This volume is a collection of essays on transregional aspects of
Malay-Indonesian Islam and Islamic Studies, based on Peter G.
Riddell's broad interest and expertise. Particular attention is
paid to rare manuscripts, unique inscriptions, Qur'an commentaries
and translations, textbooks, and personal and public archives. This
book invites readers to reconstruct the ways in which
Malay-Indonesian Islam and Islamic studies have been structured.
Contributors are Khairudin Aljunied, Majid Daneshgar, R. Michael
Feener, Annabel Teh Gallop, Mulaika Hijjas, Andrew Peacock, Johanna
Pink, Gregorius Dwi Kuswanta, Michael Laffan, Han Hsien Liew,
Julian Millie, Ervan Nurtawab, Masykur Syafruddin, Edwin P.
Wieringa and Farouk Yahya.
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