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LEADER 00000cam  22000004a 4500 
001    ocn132582024 
003    OCoLC 
005    20090518010001.0 
008    070507t20082008nyu      b    001 0 eng   
010      2007018968 
015    GBA776847|2bnb 
016 7  014015571|2Uk 
020    9780231139564|qcloth|qalkaline paper 
020    023113956X|qcloth|qalkaline paper 
024 8  40015375944 
035    (OCoLC)132582024 
040    DLC|beng|cDLC|dBAKER|dBTCTA|dYDXCP|dUKM|dC#P|dSTJ|dYUS
       |dKEC|dIG#|dCBC|dEDK 
042    pcc 
043    n-us--- 
049    STJJ 
050 00 E184.M88|bC65 2008 
082 00 973.088/297|222 
245 04 The Columbia sourcebook of Muslims in the United States /
       |cEdward E. Curtis IV, editor. 
246 30 Sourcebook of Muslims in the United States 
264  1 New York :|bColumbia University Press,|c[2008] 
264  4 |c©2008 
300    xvii, 452 pages ;|c25 cm 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    unmediated|bn|2rdamedia 
338    volume|bnc|2rdacarrier 
504    Includes bibliographical references (pages [433]- 436) and
       index. 
505 0  Introduction to an American Muslim panorama -- Part 1:  
       Whispers And Echoes: American Muslims Before World War I -
       - 1:  Autobiography of Omar ibn Sayyid (1831) / Omar ibn 
       Sayyid -- 2:  Islam in America (1893) / Mohammed Alexander
       Russell Webb -- 3:  Islam in the Western Soudan" (1902) / 
       Edward Wilmot Blyden -- 4:  Ancient Arabic order of the 
       nobles of the mystic shrine (1903, revised 1916) / George 
       L Root -- 5:  WPA interviews with Mary Juma and Mike 
       Abdallah (1939) -- Part 2:  Contact And Divergence: 
       Immigrant And African American Muslims From World War I To
       1965 -- 1:  America: 1910-1912" (c 1925) / Pir Inayat Khan
       -- 2:  I am a Moslem" (1921), "true salvation of the 
       'American Negroes': the real solution of the Negro 
       question" (1923), "Crescent or cross: a Negro may aspire 
       to any position under Islam without discrimination" (1923),
       and "Living Flora-and dead" (1924) / Moslem sunrise -- 3: 
       Holy Koran of the Moorish Science Temple (1927) / Noble 
       Drew Ali -- 4:  Al-Islam: the religion of humanity (1950) 
       / Shaikh Daoud Ahmed Faisal -- 5:  Our prophet, Muhammad" 
       (1959) / Imam Vehby Isma'il -- 6:  Arab Moslems in the 
       United States (1966) / Abdo Elkholy -- 7:  God, ain't you 
       for everybody?" from down these mean streets (1967) / Piri
       Thomas -- 8:  What the Muslims want" and "what the Muslims
       believe," from message to the blackman in America (1965) /
       Elijah Muhammad -- 9:  Malcolm X, interview with Al-
       Muslimoon (1965) -- Part 3:  American Islam After 1965: 
       Racial, Ethnic, And Religious Diversities -- 1:  Inner 
       Qur'an," from Islam and World Peace (1987) / Muhammad 
       Raheem Bawa Muhaiyaddeen -- 2:  Historic Atlanta address" 
       (1978) / W D Mohammed -- 3:  Nation of Gods and earths, 
       "what we teach," "allah," and "supreme mathematics" (1992)
       -- Prologue to spiritual discourse: learning with an 
       Islamic master (1993) / Frances Trix -- 5:  Million man 
       march address (1995) / Minister Louis Farrakhan -- 6:  
       Struggling to surrender: some impressions of an American 
       convert to Islam (1995) / Jeffrey Lang -- 7:  Finding the 
       straight path: a conversation with Mohsen and Lila Amen 
       about faith, life, and family in Dearborn," in Arab 
       Detroit: from margin to mainstream (2000) / Sally Howell -
       - 8:  Our stories: a leap of faith," in Latina Magazine 
       (2004) / Damarys Ocana -- 9:  Matrimonials (2005) / 
       Islamic Horizons-- 10:  Standing alone in Mecca: an 
       American woman's struggle for the soul of Islam (2005) / 
       Asra Q Nomani -- Part 4:  Women, Gender, And Sexuality In 
       American Islam -- 1:  From Abu Dhabi to America, in a 
       border passage: from Cairo to America-a woman's journey 
       (2000) / Leila Ahmed -- 2:  Daughters of another path: 
       experiences of American women choosing Islam (1996) / 
       Carol L Anway -- 3:  Interview in American Jihad: Islam 
       after Malcolm X (1993) / Tarajee Abdur-Rahim -- 4:  
       American Muslims: the new generation (2000) / Asma Gull 
       Hasan -- 5:  Introduction to Muslim women's rights," in 
       windows of faith: Muslim women scholar-activists in North 
       America (2002) / Azizah al-Hibri -- 6:  Qur'an and woman: 
       rereading the sacred text from a woman's perspective 
       (1999) / Amina Wadud -- 7:  On the edge of belonging, in 
       living Islam outloud: American Muslim women speak (2005) /
       Khalida Saed -- 8:  Examination of the issue of female 
       prayer leadership (2005) / Imam Zaid Shakir -- 9:  Islamic
       Jurisprudence, 'Civil' Disobedience, and Woman-Led Prayer 
       (2005) / Laury Silvers -- 10:  Can a woman be an Imam? 
       debating form and function in Muslim women's leadership 
       (2005) / Ingrid Mattson -- 
505 0  Part 5:  American Muslim Politics And Civic Engagement 
       After 9/11 -- 1:  Status of Muslim civil rights in the 
       United States (2005) / Council of American-Islamic 
       relations -- 2:  American Muslim charities: easy targets 
       in the war on terror," in Pace Law Review (2005) / Laila 
       Al-Marayati -- 3:  United States of America v. Earnest 
       James Ujaama (2002) -- 4:  Fatwa against terrorism (2005) 
       / Fiqh council of North America -- 5:  Being Muslim, being
       American after 9/11," in taking back Islam: American 
       Muslims reclaim their faith (2002) / Omid Safi -- 6:  
       Yaphett El-Amin for [Missouri] Senate District 4 (2006) --
       7:  Islam and the challenge of democracy (2003) / Khaled 
       Abou El Fadl -- 8:  Islamic movement in America-why?" in 
       Muslims and Islamization in North America: problems and 
       prospects (1999) / Shamim A Siddiqui -- 9:  New guide to 
       Muslim interfaith dialogue (2006) / American Islamic 
       congress -- 10:  Challenges of resettlement and adaptation
       of Muslim refugees," in Muslim refugees in the United 
       States: a guide for service providers (2003) / Patricia S 
       Maloof and Fariyal Ross-Sherriff -- Part 6:  American 
       Muslim Spirituality And Religious Life -- 1:  Hajj in a 
       Wheelchair, Azizah Magazine (2002) / Betty Hasan Amin -- 2
       :  Who Is God? in Qur'an for Children (1995) / Abdul Rauf 
       -- 3:  Women Called To The Path of Rumi: the way of the 
       whirling dervish (2001) / Shakina Reinhertz -- 4:  Daily 
       prayer (Du'a) of Shi'a Isma'ili Muslims" (2001) / Tazim R 
       Kassam -- 5:  Question of faith for Muslim inmates (1999) 
       / Aminah McCloud and Frederick Thaufeer al-Deen -- 6:  
       Online advice about Muslim youth (2004 and 2005) / Suhail 
       Mulla -- 7:  Islamic medical ethics: the IMANA perspective
       (2005) / Islamic medical association of North America 
       (IMANA) -- 8:  Introduction to LARIBA financing (1998) / 
       Yahia Abdul-Rahman and Abdullah S Tug -- 9:  Culture of 
       terrorism," from Insomnia (2004) / Capital D -- 10:  
       Introduction to purification of the heart (2004) / Hamza 
       Yusuf -- Acknowledgments -- Glossary of Islamic terms -- 
       Further reading -- Index. 
520    From the Publisher: Since September 11, 2001, Muslims in 
       the United States have become the subject of genuine 
       curiosity and compassion as well as increased government 
       surveillance and harassment.  Who are these Muslims?  What
       is their history, and where do they come from?  Do they 
       share a common culture?  Do they vary in their beliefs?  
       Bringing together an unusually personal collection of 
       essays and documents from an incredibly diverse group of 
       Americans who call themselves Muslims, Edward E. Curtis 
       "finds Islam" in the American experience from colonial 
       times to the present.  Sampling from speeches, interviews,
       editorials, stories, song lyrics, articles, 
       autobiographies, blogs, and other sources, Curtis presents
       a patchwork narrative of Muslims from different ethnic and
       class backgrounds, religious orientations, and political 
       affiliations.  He begins with a history of Muslims in the 
       United States, featuring the voices of an enslaved African
       Muslim, a Syrian Muslim sodbuster, and a South Asian 
       mystic-musician, along with the words of such well-known 
       Muslims as Malcolm X.  Then he follows with an examination
       of such contemporary issues as Islam and gender, the 
       involvement of Muslims in American politics, and emerging 
       forms of Islamic spirituality.  In constructing his 
       history, Curtis draws on the work of Muslim feminists, 
       social conservatives, interfaith activists, missionaries, 
       and politicians, as well as Muslim rappers and legal 
       experts.  He also includes records from the large-scale 
       migrations of the 1880s; racial, ethnic, and religious 
       trends of the 1960s; writings from second-generation and 
       African American Muslims; and discussions of Islam in the 
       public square.  With this highly informed, real-life 
       portrait, Curtis provides a crucial corrective to the 
       rhetoric of suspicion and fear surrounding current 
       discussions of Muslims in the United States and emphasizes
       Muslims' continuing impact on American society and 
       culture. 
650  0 Muslims|zUnited States|xHistory|vSources. 
650  0 Muslims|zUnited States|xSocial conditions|vSources. 
650  0 Islam|zUnited States|xHistory|vSources. 
651  0 United States|xEthnic relations|vSources. 
651  0 United States|xReligion|vSources. 
651  0 United States|xReligious life and customs|vSources. 
700 1  Curtis, Edward E.,|cIV,|d1970- 
856 41 |3Table of contents only|uhttp://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/
       ecip0718/2007018968.html 
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938    Ingram|bINGR|n9780231139564 
994    02|bSTJ 
Location Call No. Status
 Manchester, Main Library - Non Fiction  973.088 COLUMBIA    Check Shelf
 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Standard Shelving Location  973.088 C726C    Check Shelf