The (London) Times “is running a series on Muslims in the UK”:http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,7-1192019,00.html . Not profound stuff, but a useful antidote to the demonization that prevails in parts of the blogosphere. Unsurprisingly, it turns out that young Muslims have views about sex and alcohol (among other things) that resemble in important respects the views that many young Catholics have about contraception.[1]
fn1. The article is freely accessible from within the UK, but may require registration from elsewhere. My information about whether those attempting to access from elsewhere need to subscribe varies.
{ 14 comments }
todd. 07.27.04 at 4:58 pm
In the US, I get “The area you wish to access is behind registration.”
Ophelia Benson 07.27.04 at 6:58 pm
Yeah, in the US I always get the requirement for paid subscription.
peter ramus 07.27.04 at 7:52 pm
For the registration–averse, Bugmenot.com may be of some use.
Andrew Brown 07.27.04 at 8:11 pm
They want, I think, money as well as registration. Stupid greedy bastards.
Ophelia Benson 07.27.04 at 9:24 pm
Yuptheydo.
mike 07.27.04 at 10:08 pm
You can find both articles at
timescoverstory.blogspot.com
Anthony 07.27.04 at 10:31 pm
Not profound stuff, but a useful antidote to the demonization that prevails in parts of the blogosphere.
Do you mean the demonization of extremists Chris? Because most of the British Blogosphere (Blogoslice?) I have seen makes a clear distinction between the extremists and the wider Islamic community.
Chris Bertram 07.27.04 at 10:49 pm
Anthony, I had in mind some of the wilder fantasies (sometimes fuelled by Mark Steyn columns and the like) that one sees in the American blogosphere. Of course, we Brits are far too sensible not to make that distinction. ;)
Jonathan Edelstein 07.28.04 at 12:51 am
I also got the registration screen. Fortunately, I have Lexis, so I can cheat.
The articles are interesting, particularly the part about how some of the British seminaries are creating an organic Western Islam. With the Muslim College admitting women, there will apparently be female imams in the near future, and the synthesis of theology, secular studies and practical counseling is reminiscent of Western seminaries (or government seminaries in Tunisia). I sense a Reform Islam in the works.
ChrisPer 07.28.04 at 2:32 am
Pity we don’t have antidote articles for the demonisation of white male gun owners in the UK and Australia.
Andrew Brown 07.28.04 at 7:41 am
I will try and dig out the series on Muslims that Paul Vallely and I did for the Independent in 1996 or thereabouts. We were finding people talking about an indigenous British Islam then, too.
harry 07.28.04 at 2:29 pm
I dunno about Australia, but I thought there weren’t any white male gun owners in the UK.
thabet 07.28.04 at 5:23 pm
Tsk. And here I was thinking “Muslims in the UK” comprised more than middle-class Arabs, completing a liberal education at a London university.
“Liberal” attitudes among Muslims regarding alcohol are hardly that “shocking”. See Ibn Battuta’s travels, or Ottoman and Mughal history, as well as early Islamic legal literature (especially of the Hanafis). In English, see Enc. of Islam (II) under the entries “khamr” and “masharubat”.
Jonathan Edelstein 07.28.04 at 10:05 pm
“Liberal†attitudes among Muslims regarding alcohol are hardly that “shockingâ€. See Ibn Battuta’s travels, or Ottoman and Mughal history, as well as early Islamic legal literature (especially of the Hanafis).
Not to mention classical Persian poetry, including at least a quarter of the verses of the Rubaiyat.
Comments on this entry are closed.