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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Memory and social identity among Syrian Orthodox Christians

Sato, Noriko January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
2

Uncovered Faith : Examples of Sunni Muslim Beliefs in Adana, Turkey

Alphonce, Maria January 2006 (has links)
<p>This essay is about uncovered women's faith and worship in an urban setting in contemporary Turkey. It researches the possibility of any common factors for uncovered Sunni Muslims' faith and worship as well as what parts of classical Muslim faith they have found negotiable. The essay relates to current literature and research on the topic as well as provides an insider perspective based on interviews with Turkish women.</p>
3

Uncovered Faith : Examples of Sunni Muslim Beliefs in Adana, Turkey

Alphonce, Maria January 2006 (has links)
This essay is about uncovered women's faith and worship in an urban setting in contemporary Turkey. It researches the possibility of any common factors for uncovered Sunni Muslims' faith and worship as well as what parts of classical Muslim faith they have found negotiable. The essay relates to current literature and research on the topic as well as provides an insider perspective based on interviews with Turkish women.
4

Living Islam in Jerusalem : faith, conflict, and the disruption of religious practice

Schmitt, Kenneth Howard January 2017 (has links)
Jerusalem - the third holiest city in Islam - is home to some 300,000 Muslims. But due to Israel’s occupation, they live difficult and disrupted lives. What might it mean for Muslims to practice their faith - on the ground, day by day - in such a conflicted place? One way religion becomes a meaningful category in people’s lives is through ritual. Scholars of Muslim religious practice have been attuned to this insight and observed it in various contexts. But their analyses have often been predicated on an implicit and unquestioned assumption - that people who desire to perform rituals have the means to act on their intention in regular and routine ways. Scholars have also shown that when societies are in rapid transition - be they weakened or threatened - their rituals often evolve with them. In this project, therefore, I ask: what happens in Jerusalem when Muslims live under the existential threat of occupation and their ability to routinely perform religious rituals cannot be assumed? I argue that when rituals are disrupted, Muslims are forced to improvise. Religious rituals - like the performances of skilled jazz musicians - are spontaneous and dynamic but also practiced and deliberate. Rituals are spontaneous in that they respond to the occupation’s disruptions, making physical and discursive adjustments. They are practiced in that Muslims draw from an established repertoire of themes that includes Islam and sacred space, nationalism and resistance, local culture and geography. I term the coalescence of these dynamics the “improvisation thesis” and explore three case studies where specific improvisations have different levels of resonance. The Naqshbandi improvise rituals to make peace, but they are discordant with other established themes; Ramadan rituals have resonance that define specific moments; and the improvisations of the Murabitat are deeply resonant, influencing Muslim rituals throughout the city.
5

České konvertitky k islámu / Czech women who converted to Islam

Davidová, Michaela January 2019 (has links)
This dissertation deals with Czech woman who converted to Islam in the context of the Czech Republic in recent years with an emphasis on changes in society. The thesis deals with the motives of conversion to Islam and individual conversion stories. Partners and family life, veiling and the position of converts in society and in relation to biological family and employment. The whole dissertation is based on qualitative research, namely on semi- structured interviews with respondents and individual chapters contain statements from the informants themselves. The whole research is enriched with an experiment involving wearing hijab. Key words: Islam, Muslim, Muslim, faith, conversion, hijab, veiling, religion, family life, Czech Republic

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