There's a lot here to celebrate, especially your open-minded celebration of the ways in which most if not all cultures have made 'foreign imports' like Islam responsive to their home-grown views of what makes a good life. I have been a nominal muslim since my twenties when I married a muslim (long since dead of cancer). Because it was th…
There's a lot here to celebrate, especially your open-minded celebration of the ways in which most if not all cultures have made 'foreign imports' like Islam responsive to their home-grown views of what makes a good life. I have been a nominal muslim since my twenties when I married a muslim (long since dead of cancer). Because it was then considered necessary to convert I said 'yes' when the mullah asked something in Arabic during our wedding, and presto, I joined the other billion plus muslims worldwide. And thought nothing of it, but over the years, intrigued by the art, the poetry, the music and the sense of the sacred inherent in the faith I began to study it in depth. And it's nothing like the heavily Saudi-influenced version of it in most places. Rather than being the Islamic version of Christian Fundamentalism it's an easy and accessible faith to embrace, and even the hijab (which I personally never wear) can be worn with flair, as evidenced by the ways they rock it in cities like London. And Central Asia, which has long enjoyed commerce with India btw, developed a Sufi interpretation of the faith that is now practiced all across Europe, in Asia, in Australia and the US, not to mention in those middle eastern countries less repressive than Iran and Saudi Arabia. So kudos for the inspiring travelogue. I hope more folks begin to travel to the region to see for themselves what 'different,' non-Anglo cultures have come up with by just being themselves.
There's a lot here to celebrate, especially your open-minded celebration of the ways in which most if not all cultures have made 'foreign imports' like Islam responsive to their home-grown views of what makes a good life. I have been a nominal muslim since my twenties when I married a muslim (long since dead of cancer). Because it was then considered necessary to convert I said 'yes' when the mullah asked something in Arabic during our wedding, and presto, I joined the other billion plus muslims worldwide. And thought nothing of it, but over the years, intrigued by the art, the poetry, the music and the sense of the sacred inherent in the faith I began to study it in depth. And it's nothing like the heavily Saudi-influenced version of it in most places. Rather than being the Islamic version of Christian Fundamentalism it's an easy and accessible faith to embrace, and even the hijab (which I personally never wear) can be worn with flair, as evidenced by the ways they rock it in cities like London. And Central Asia, which has long enjoyed commerce with India btw, developed a Sufi interpretation of the faith that is now practiced all across Europe, in Asia, in Australia and the US, not to mention in those middle eastern countries less repressive than Iran and Saudi Arabia. So kudos for the inspiring travelogue. I hope more folks begin to travel to the region to see for themselves what 'different,' non-Anglo cultures have come up with by just being themselves.