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  • aziz 11:53 am on October 7, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Ali Gomaa, , modernity

    Grand Mufti of Egypt, Dr Ali Gomaa, has a guest poost in the WaPo On Faith blog, discussing modernity:

    Reconciling Islam with modernity has been an imperative for Muslims centuries before it became a preoccupation for the West. Islam’s reform movement began at Cairo based Al Azhar in the 19th century.

    While some of the divide between Islam and the West resides in the realm of ideas, it lies mostly in the realm of politics for Muslim countries have also suffered from aggression. Israel’s occupation of Palestine must end. In Iraq and Afghanistan, sovereignty must be restored with the withdrawal of foreign forces.

    President Obama’s historic address to the Muslim World from Cairo was a landmark event that opens the door to a new relationship. We in the Muslim world received it with enthusiasm. Let us look forward to years in which our children can celebrate our differences.

    Our own Willow was the first to have interviewed him, dubbing him the “Show-Me Shaikh”

    (via @Kawdess)

     
  • thabet 4:51 am on October 4, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , modernity, , , , , shabbir akhtar, the satanic verses,

    Shabbir Akhtar is a very interesting figure, though many of you may not have heard of him. Even if you know who he is, you will be hard pressed to find out what he’s been up to for the last decade or so.

    (More …)

     
  • plimfix 6:35 am on June 30, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , modernity,

    “Muslims must confront the twin temptations of seeing the Shariah either as a malleable garb for whatever modernity throws their way, or as a fixed creed of intricately detailed rulings.” Gripping personal/historical essay by Ali A. Allawi, taken from the Chronicle Review, over on Tabsir.

     
  • kaitlin 12:11 pm on March 9, 2009 | 3 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: modernity,

    I like this perspective.

     
  • abunoor 9:34 am on November 12, 2008 | 24 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , modernity, , , ,

    Aziz and Razib have previously discussed whether there is value in using the analogy of Protestants and Catholics to discuss Shi’a/Sunni differences.

    I have to come down on what I think is Razib’s side of that debate, that I don’t find much value in the analogy, although maybe talking about the differences between Protestant and Catholic practices, structures, and beliefs is a way to start talking in general about the ways in which religious traditions can differ using examples with which people may be familiar.

    A much more common post-9/11 attempt to analogize Christian church history with Islam and Muslims is the oft stated call for Islam to have a reformation.  The underlying assumption here is that it was the reformation in Christianity that allowed Christians to adapt successfully to modernity.

    Again, I would have to say that this analogy is not very helpful, except in as much as it opens up the discussion to the various constituent components of the tension between modernity and traditional religion.

    However, I have always found it strange that there was not more discussion making the analogy which actually is useful although of course like any analogy limited.  The different possible approaches for a religious tradition in coming to terms with modernity are most easily understood by looking to the Jewish tradition of Orthodox, Reform, and Conservative approaches as well as all the various twists on those three main distinctions that have developed.

    The most important limitation on the analogy I see is that I think the fact that a Judaism is not a universal or proselytizing religion, but is in fact viewed in modern times as an “ethnic” or “national” group,  perhaps fundamentally changes some dynamics.

    However, and perhaps they know this very well, but I rarely see it articulated, those both within and without Islam that call for “reformation” are not really calling at all for anything like the Protestant reformation of Christianity but are in fact calling for a Reform Islam movement that would resemble Reform Judaism.

    Just one further side note, I know that Shaykh Yasir Qadhi, who I think will be a very important figure in the future intellectual development of Islam in America from one side (the Orthodox or Modern Orthodox one) of this discussion, I know has taken careful note of the intellectual and social evolution of the Jewish community, especially here in America and I know sees many important lessons for the Muslims.  As one symbolic indication of this, he has actively and consciously began adopting the using the term “Orthodox Muslim.”

    I think these concepts open up tons of interesting discussions.  Has anyone seen this analogy discussed in any detail.  Does anyone agree with me about how interesting it is?

     
  • thabet 2:27 am on August 16, 2008 | 5 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , modernity, , ,

    We have forgotten that ties of faith and history have not been overwhelmed by modernity elsewhere, as they have been in America. The world is not a melting pot. Nor is every culture as frivolous and forgetful as ours [...] We shop for church experiences as we shop for everything else folding religion into our consumer culture.

     
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