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Once a year Muslims from around the world-representing a vast range
of ethnicities, incomes, ages, and attitudes-perform the Hajj
(pilgrimage) and converge in the holy city of Mecca in Saudi
Arabia. Now, the global diversity of Muslims at the Hajj is almost
repliacted in the United States: new immigrants, Muslims whose
families have been here for generations, and converts are coming
together, seeing what unites them and what issues they face
together. Project MAPS (Muslims in the American Public Square)
began in 1999 to provide much-needed information on this
understudied and immensely diverse group of six million Americans.
This first volume emerging from the project, Muslims' Place in the
American Public Square, shows where the American Muslim community
fits into the American religious and civic landscape both before
and after 9/11. Renowned scholars contribute theoretical, legal,
historical, and sociological perspectives on how Muslims function
in both their own institutions and others. For classes in religion
or the social sciences, or for anyone interested in this
increasingly significant community, Muslims' Place in the American
Public Square provides a current, balanced introduction.
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