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Kiyai Haji Ahmad Dahlan : his life and thoughtIdris, Muhammady. January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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232 |
Muslims, national security and the state in UzbekistanFugère, Charles. January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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233 |
A Preliminary Analysis of the Process of Spiritual Jihad Among U.S. Muslims.Saritoprak, Seyma Nur January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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234 |
Baraka : maraboutism and maraboutage in the francophone Senegalese novel /Boyd-Buggs, Debra January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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235 |
Islam in the European Union: Transnationalism, Youth and the War on Terror.Samad, A. Yunas, Sen, K. 30 September 2009 (has links)
No / This book is about Muslims in Europe and the "War on Terror"--its causes and consequences for European citizenship and exclusion particularly for young people. The rising tide of hostility towards people of Muslim origin is challenged in this collection from a varied and multi national perspective. The book illustrates that Muslims are as diverse a group as those of any other religion; therefore to place all Muslims into one category is wholly unscientific and discriminatory. It shows that there are historical and ideological reasons for viewing Islam as a static, unchanging and regressive force. The chapters illustrate the diversity of societies with Muslim majority populations and challenge the dominant paradigm of what has become to be known since the War on Terror as "Islamophobia."
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236 |
The paradox of patronage politics: Biraderi, representation and political participation amongst British PakistanisAkhtar, Parveen January 2015 (has links)
No
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237 |
Continuing Bonds in Bereaved Pakistani Muslims: Effects of Culture and ReligionSuhail, K., Jamil, N., Oyebode, Jan, Ajmal, M.A. 06 January 2011 (has links)
No / This study explores the bereavement process and continuing bond in Pakistani Muslims with the focus on how culture and religion influence these processes. Ten participants were interviewed and their transcribed interviews were analyzed using a grounded theory approach. Three main domains were identified from the narratives expressed by the participants: death and the process of grieving, continuing the link with the deceased, and influencing agents. The findings indicated that Pakistani Muslims maintained their link with the deceased through cultural and religious rituals, such as performing prayers, reciting holy verses, talking and dreaming about the deceased, doing charity, visiting graves, and arranging communal gatherings. The prime purpose of many of these practices was the forgiveness of the deceased. Grief reactions seemed to be determined by the nature of death, prior relationships with the deceased, reaction of society and gender of the bereaved. Religion provided a strong basis for coping and adjustment of the bereaved, through rationalizing and accepting the death. This study has important implications for counselors and family therapists who can use religious affiliations to reduce the impact of loss and complicated bereavement.This study explores the bereavement process and continuing bond in Pakistani Muslims with the focus on how culture and religion influence these processes. Ten participants were interviewed and their transcribed interviews were analyzed using a grounded theory approach. Three main domains were identified from the narratives expressed by the participants: death and the process of grieving, continuing the link with the deceased, and influencing agents. The findings indicated that Pakistani Muslims maintained their link with the deceased through cultural and religious rituals, such as performing prayers, reciting holy verses, talking and dreaming about the deceased, doing charity, visiting graves, and arranging communal gatherings. The prime purpose of many of these practices was the forgiveness of the deceased. Grief reactions seemed to be determined by the nature of death, prior relationships with the deceased, reaction of society and gender of the bereaved. Religion provided a strong basis for coping and adjustment of the bereaved, through rationalizing and accepting the death. This study has important implications for counselors and family therapists who can use religious affiliations to reduce the impact of loss and complicated bereavement.
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238 |
Ist es Zeit? : der Einfluss der Eschatologie auf die Debatte um die Zeitgemassheit einer Mission unter Muslimen, 1895-1914 / Is the time right? : the influence of eschatology on the debate concerning the timeliness of a mission to Muslims, 1895-1914Drescher, Oliver 11 1900 (has links)
Text in German / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / M.Th. (Missiology)
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239 |
Ist es Zeit? : der Einfluss der Eschatologie auf die Debatte um die Zeitgemassheit einer Mission unter Muslimen, 1895-1914 / Is the time right? : the influence of eschatology on the debate concerning the timeliness of a mission to Muslims, 1895-1914Drescher, Oliver 11 1900 (has links)
Text in German / Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology / M.Th. (Missiology)
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The 21st century new Muslim generation : converts in Britain and GermanyNeumueller, Caroline January 2012 (has links)
The dissertation focuses on the conversion experiences and individual processes of twenty-four native British Muslim converts and fifty-two native German Muslim converts, based on personal interviews and completed questionnaires between 2008 and 2010. It analyses the occurring similarities and differences among British and German Muslim converts, and puts them into relation to basic Islamic requirements of the individual, and in the context of their respective social settings. Accordingly, the primary focus is placed on the changing behavioural norms in the individual process of religious conversion concerning family and mixed-gender relations and the converts’ attitudes towards particularly often sensitive and controversial topics. My empirical research on this phenomenon was guided by many research questions, such as: What has provoked the participants to convert to Islam, and what impact and influence does their conversion have on their (former and primarily) non-Muslim environment? Do Muslim converts tend to distance themselves from their former lifestyles and change their social behavioural patterns, and are the objectives and purposes that they see themselves having in the given society directed to them being: bridge-builders or isolators? The topic of conversion to Islam, particularly within Western non-Muslim societies is a growing research phenomenon. At the same time, there has only been little contribution to the literature that deals with comparative analyses of Muslim converts in different countries. This dissertation is based on the conversion research methods by Wohlrarb-Sahr (1999) and Zebiri (2008), and further concentrates on the acute challenges and personal understandings of Muslim converts regarding cultural, religious, and moral changes, changes in belief and adoption of religious practices as well as social relations. Dissatisfaction with the former faith or given social norms, the appeal of the Muslim tenets, the search for identity and the desire to have a sense of belonging included the participants’ motivation for conversion. Taking the former into consideration enabled the result of providing a personal, lively yet rational insight into the lives of British and German Muslim converts.
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