On a Monday in August 2004, three Muslim girls sat with each
other on the floor of a mosque surrounded by boxes of books. Two
wore traditional Muslim dress, their companion was dressed Western
style, but their intention was the same. They were involved in a
project to distribute almost 2 million dollars worth of books,
DVDs, and videos to over 300 British public libraries. Their aim
was not to convert or proselytize but to educate the public about
their faith and try to offset the negative image of Islam that has
developed since 9/11. Perhaps of more significance was the fact
that the books used for the project were not the 'insider'
literature produced by the mosques, but works of Western academics
that approached their subject in a neutral and informative
manner.
Ron Geaves offers a thematic and experiential exploration of the
Muslim religion and world that shows it is not some homogenous
entity but the dynamic faith you would expect to find in a religion
over fourteen centuries old, consisting of over a billion people
stretching from the USA to China.
Readers of the book require no previous knowledge of the
subject. Chapters are dedicated to individual topics and range from
a look at Western media representation of Islam, through
controversial issues such as martyrdom, "shari'a" law, "jihad," and
the place of women. It examines the ideas of community, Sufism,
fundamentalism and other sects within the faith, and also explains
the source of many of the interpretations of the Prophet Mohammed,
and the importance of the Muslim concept of unity.
By examining the divisions that exist within contemporary Islam,
Geaves makes a special contribution to the ongoing examination of
today's Muslim communities. By offering a way to better understand
this tradition, Geaves helps to counteract the oversimplifications
that seem to dominate popular discourse about Muslims and instead
shows them as participants in a religious tradition that is still
unfolding, struggling to recognize and respect its diversities
while seeking to maintain a unity that all parts of it acknowledge
as central.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!