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Most helpful customer reviews
7 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
A challenging and informative book,
By
This review is from: The Trouble with Islam Today: A Wake-up Call for Honesty and Change (Paperback)
Among the bravest of the brave are the Muslim women who have chosen to speak out against the the alarming defects of the Muslim faith as currently functioning throughout much of the world. Irshad Manji is one such woman and, in a very real sense, she has taken her life into her own hands given all the numerous threats that pour in upon her. And her attempts to explain The Trouble with Islam Today are a veritable eye opener.As just one example of Islam's malfunctioning Manji cites the case of Abdus Salaam a Noble prize winning physicist from Pakistan. In any normal country he would have been feted but instead of rewarding him with acclaim the Pakistani parliament passed an act taking his citizenship away from him simply because he belonged to the lesser know anti-violence Ahmadi branch of Islam. Manji has gone to immense trouble to examine the Qur'an in great detail and has discovered that the enforced wearing of Chadors, Hijabs and Burkhas by Muslim women is in no sense obligatory for the faithful and is nothing other than an Arab custom gone to extremes. The oppression of women within Islam is just one of the many ways in which Isalam currently falls short of the less oppressive and open minded periods throughout its history. And the preaching of hate is perhaps one of the most disturbing features of the Wahabbi version of Islam which is centred in Saud Arabia. We all know about the word Jihad and the notion of a holy war against infidels but Manji alerts us to another important word within Islam namely Ijtihad which essentially means exercising our right and duty to think and act sensibly. As Manji says, one way in which this freedom of action can be exercised is for more and more Muslim women to enter the world of business which is in no way barred by the Qur'an and she herself has, in a sense, done exactly that.. All in all this is a courageous,challenging and interesting book that deserves to be read as widely as possible since it is a very fountain of fair minded knowledge about Islam in action in today's world.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review) 1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Agree or Not, This is a Voice to be Heard,
By JoAnn Turner - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
I've read this book, been a fan of Irshad Manji's Facebook page for a few years, and followed her career. She's doing what almost no-one else is doing: speaking out as a Muslim about Islam. Islam had a flourishing tradition of thinking, writing, asking questions, interacting with other faiths and societies. It produced a rich, vibrant artistic, musical and written culture. Islamic scholars were crucial in preserving, translating and keeping alive many classic writings from ancient Greece and Rome, and building on that foundation. There has been no fundamental break within Islam between religion and scientific inquiry, as there was in the West. Islam adapted to many cultures and situations across the world, and there are many different expressions of the faith. So, what happened? Why is Islam today so conservative in its interpretations of its own doctrine? And is that the only way for modern Muslims to see themselves and their faith within today's world?Irshad Manji tackles these questions head-on. I respect what she has to say. This is an important book. It needs to be read more widely and discussed, by Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Irshad Manji is a fresh voice, she's thoughtful, articulate, she knows what she's talking about, and she writes and speaks from within the tradition, as she sees it. She has not abandoned Islam for secular Western culture, she inhabits both worlds. She's trying to bring to life the creative, vivid, passionate intellectual tradition that characterized Islam at its height. Can modern Muslims recapture that flexible, brilliant mindset? Read Irshad Manji's book. |
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