August 2005
Ramadan book

Western Muslims and the Future of Islam
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Editorial Reviews:
From Publishers Weekly
Ramadan, named by Time magazine in 2000 as one of the 100 most
important innovators of the coming century, argues that Islam can and should feel at home
in the West. He takes stock of Islamic law and tradition to analyze whether Islam is in
conflict with Western ideals; Ramadan is emphatic that there is no contradiction. He then
spells out several key areas where Islam's universal principles can be "engaged"
in the West, including education, interreligious dialogue, economic resistance and
spirituality. Ramadan raises interesting issues about Islam's inherent critique of
consumerism and its demanding spirituality, which "touches all the dimensions of
life."
Book Description
In a Western world suddenly acutely interested in Islam, one question has been repeatedly
heard above the din: where are the Muslim reformers? With this ambitious volume, Tariq
Ramadan firmly establishes himself as one of Europe's leading thinkers and one of Islam's
most innovative and important voices. As the number of Muslims living in the West grows,
the question of what it means to be a Western Muslim becomes increasingly important to the
futures of both Islam and the West. While the media are focused on radical Islam, Ramadan
claims, a silent revolution is sweeping Islamic communities in the West, as Muslims
actively seek ways to live in harmony with their faith within a Western context. French,
English, German, and American Muslims--women as well as men--are reshaping their religion
into one that is faithful to the principles of Islam, dressed in European and American
cultures, and definitively rooted in Western societies. Ramadan's goal is to create an
independent Western Islam, anchored not in the traditions of Islamic countries but in the
cultural reality of the West. He begins by offering a fresh reading of Islamic sources,
interpreting them for a Western context and demonstrating how a new understanding of
universal Islamic principles can open the door to integration into Western societies. He
then shows how these principles can be put to practical use. Ramadan contends that Muslims
can-indeed must-be faithful to their principles while participating fully in the civic
life of Western secular societies. Grounded in scholarship and bold in its aims, Western
Muslims and the Future of Islam offers a striking vision of a new Muslim identity, one
which rejects once and for all the idea that Islam must be defined in opposition to the
West.
Product Details:
Hardcover: 256 pages
Publisher: Oxford University Press
November 1, 2003
ISBN: 019517111X
August 22, 2005