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Since the Second World War, there has been a significant migration
of Muslims to countries in the Western world. Muslims in Non-Muslim
Land traces the process by which these migrants arrived in Western
Europe - in particular Britain - and explains how the community
developed its faith identity through three particular stances:
assimilation, isolation and integration. The findings argue that
the assumption that Islam causes Muslims to isolate from the
indigenous population and form a 'state within a state' is false
and that Islamic Law actually gives Muslims confidence and the
ability to integrate within the wider society. The theological view
that all non-Muslim lands are dar alarb (domain of war) is
challenged, and the study shows that the traditional interpretive
model of Islamic Law inherently possesses the flexibility and
applicability to take into consideration minority-status of Muslims
in Britain. Muslims in Non-Muslim Land focuses on Islamic Law as
interpreted by the anafi Law school and highlights in detail the
multi-pronged and robust nature of its legal theory and subsequent
application. What is ground-breaking about Muslims in Non-Muslim
Lands is that it illustrates the ability of anafi Law to deal with
contemporary issues in a wide range of subjects. It also provides
Muslims with ways of Islamically resolving medical, financial and
political concerns. The study concludes that Islamic Law can
facilitate the integration of Muslim minorities within secular
societies while allowing them to still remain true to their faith.
Since the Second World War, there has been a significant migration
of Muslims to countries in the Western world. Muslims in Non-Muslim
Land traces the process by which these migrants arrived in Western
Europe - in particular Britain - and explains how the community
developed its faith identity through three particular stances:
assimilation, isolation and integration. The findings argue that
the assumption that Islam causes Muslims to isolate from the
indigenous population and form a 'state within a state' is false
and that Islamic Law actually gives Muslims confidence and the
ability to integrate within the wider society. The theological view
that all non-Muslim lands are dar al-arb (domain of war) is
challenged, and the study shows that the traditional interpretive
model of Islamic Law inherently possesses the flexibility and
applicability to take into consideration minority-status of Muslims
in Britain. Muslims in Non-Muslim Land focuses on Islamic Law as
interpreted by the anafi Law school and highlights in detail the
multi-pronged and robust nature of its legal theory and subsequent
application. What is ground-breaking about Muslims in Non-Muslim
Lands is that it illustrates the ability of &anafi Law to deal
with contemporary issues in a wide range of subjects. It also
provides Muslims with ways of Islamically resolving medical,
financial and political concerns. The study concludes that Islamic
Law can facilitate the integration of Muslim minorities within
secular societies while allowing them to still remain true to their
faith.
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