Asiya (lavenderdecaflatte)

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I’d meant it. He is not a radical. Or rather, not their kind of radical. His radicalism is of entirely another caliber. He’s an extremist quietist, calling on Muslims to turn away from politics and to leave behind the frameworks of thought popularized by Islamists in recent centuries. Akram’s call for an apolitical Islam unpicked the conditioning of a generation of Muslims, raised on the works of Abu l’Ala Maududi and Sayyid Qutb and their nineteenth-century forerunners. These ideologues aimed to make Islam relevant to the sociopolitical struggles facing Muslims coping with modernity. Their ...more
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Asiya (lavenderdecaflatte)
This is such an insane stance I’m so sorry
If the Oceans Were Ink: An Unlikely Friendship and a Journey to the Heart of the Quran
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