Tuesday, July 31, 2018
Monday, July 30, 2018
Sunday, July 29, 2018
Saturday, July 28, 2018
Friday, July 27, 2018
Thursday, July 26, 2018
AP History: De-Europeanize the Curriculum
How and in what way was did the Mongols, the Mali Empire, West African empires, Chinese dynasties, and Islamic caliphates crucially contribute to the modern world?
The attempt is to diminish the European contribution. Which is more crucial to governance, gender relations, constitutions, liberty, human rights? Clearly the Western European tradition is crucial; the non-West is instructive to know but did not contribute to modern banking, the economic system, the nation-state nor liberty.
more-criticism-ap-world-history-timeline
Wednesday, July 25, 2018
Ian Hunter, Overend Watts, Mott The Hoople

The Californian band The Phantoms featuring my fellow Ian Hunter / Mott The Hoople fan and friend, Victor Penalosa, has a new album out with his band The Phantoms. One of the songs featured is called 'The Ballad Of Overend Watts' dedicated to the enigmatic MTH band member



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhEiAz5H57I&app=desktop
The attached are links to a great review of The Phantoms' new album. Any comparisons to the Paul Collins' Beat and The Plimsouls sounds great to me



http://www.uberrock.co.uk/cd-reviews/27 ... cords.html
And where the album can be ordered if anyone is so inclined.
https://rumbarrecords.bandcamp.com/album/the-phantoms
Of course Overend Watts was immortalised previously in another song by Tom Guerra's band, Mambo Sons, a few years ago now.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9R-eyw3eHAU
I know MTH has been mentioned in a few songs over the years. I'm not aware of any direct references to Ian Hunter?? Does anyone know of any?
Tuesday, July 24, 2018
Monday, July 23, 2018
Obama’s Worse Than Watergate
FBI FISA
Sunday, July 22, 2018
Saturday, July 21, 2018
Friday, July 20, 2018
Why Don't Feminists Fight Islamism?
Why Don't Feminists Fight Islamism?
Ayaan Hirsi Ali (Dutch), born Ayaan Hirsi Magan, on 13 November 1969) is a Dutch-American activist, author, and former politician of Somali origin. She is a leading opponent of female genital mutilation, and calls for a reformation of Islam. She is supportive of women's rights and is an atheist. Her latest book was released in 2015 and is called: Heretic: Why Islam Needs a Reformation Now.
Ayaan has been a vocal critic of Islam. In 2004, she collaborated on a short movie with Theo van Gogh, entitled Submission, the English rendering of the word "Islam", a film about the oppression of women under Islam. The documentary sparked controversy, which resulted in death threats against the two and the eventual assassination of Van Gogh later that year by Mohammed Bouyeri, a second-generation migrant from Morocco.
Hirsi Ali emigrated to the United States, where she was a fellow of the American Enterprise Institute.[10] She founded the women’s rights organization the AHA Foundation.[11] She became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 2013 and that year was made a fellow at the Kennedy Government School at Harvard University and a member of The Future of Diplomacy Project at the Belfer Center.[12][13]
Thursday, July 19, 2018
Wednesday, July 18, 2018
Tuesday, July 17, 2018
Monday, July 16, 2018
Sunday, July 15, 2018
Saturday, July 14, 2018
RESOURCES FOR FURTHER STUDY:
- Asani, Ali S., Abdel-Malek, Kamal, and Schimmel, Annemarie. Celebrating Muḥammad : Images of the Prophet in Popular Muslim Poetry. Columbia, S.C.: U of South Carolina, 1995.
- Brown, Jonathan. Hadith : Muhammad's Legacy in the Medieval and Modern World. Oxford: Oneworld, 2009. Sections found here.
- Schimmel, Annemarie. And Muhammad Is His Messenger : The Veneration of the Prophet in Islamic Piety. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina, 1985.
- Lings, Martin., and Islamic Texts Society. Muhammad : His Life Based on the Earliest Sources. Rev. ed. London: Islamic Texts Society, 1991
- Daftary, Farhad. “Diversity in Islam: Communities of Interpretation”, in The Muslim Almanac (Gale Research Inc, Detroit, MI: 1996), pp.161-173, ed. A. Nanji.
- Nasr, Seyyed Hossein. “Sunnism and Shiism", in Ideals and Realities of Islam. New York: Praeger, 1967, pp. 147-178.
- "The Prophet Muhammad Was Once Glorified In Art", radio segment from WBUR's Here & Now, a National Public Radio production, 16 Jan 2015.
The Qur’an: God’s Names and the Prophet Muhammad
Prepared By: Khalil Andani (Harvard University)In the below diagram with accompanying explanation, you are able to see the overlapping names and attributes given to God and the Prophet within the Quran. Given this overlap, one can see why the Prophet Muhammad possessed interpretative authority of the Quran, and why his actions and teachings recorded in the ḥadīth literature became formative of Islamic practice, whether that be Islamic law or Islamic mysticism, or anything in between. The names shared in common between the Prophet and God may also explain the many and various forms of Prophetic devotion found throughout varying geographical and historical contexts.
- God is al-Raḥmān (The Merciful) and Prophet Muḥammad is raḥmah (mercy) (21:107)
- God is al-Raḥīm (The Beneficent) and Prophet Muḥammad is raḥīm (9:128)
- God is al-Ra’ūf (The Kind) and Prophet Muḥammad is ra’ūf (9:128)
- God is al-Karim (The Generous) and Prophet Muḥammad is karīm (69:40; 81:19-21)
- God is al-Nūr (The Light) and Prophet Muḥammad is nūr from God (5:15) and radiant lamp (sirāj munīr) (33:46)
- God is al-Ḥalīm (The Forbearing) and Prophet Muḥammad is halīm (11:75)
- God is al-Qawiy (The Strong) and Prophet Muḥammad is dhū al-quwwah (possessor of power) (81:20-21)
- God is al-‘Ālim (the Knower) and Prophet Muḥammad is the teacher (mu‘allim) of knowledge (62:2; 3:164; 2:151)
- God is al-Ṣabūr (The Patient) and Prophets are ṣabūr (patient) (38:16, 46:34)
- God is al-Shahīd (The Witness) and Prophet is shahīd (witness) of humankind (2:143, 33:46; 4:41)
- God is al-Walī (The Guardian) and Prophet Muḥammad is the walī of the Believers (5:55)
- God is al-Ghaffar (The Forgiver) and Prophet Muḥammad intercedes for people’s forgiveness (4:64, 63:5, 60:12)
- God is al-‘Afū (The Pardoner) and Prophet Muḥammad pardons the Believers (5:13; 3:159; 7:199)
- God is al-Hādī (The Guide) and Prophet Muḥammad guides to the Straight Path (45:25)
- God is al-‘Aẓīm (The Great) and Prophet Muḥammad’s character is ‘aẓīm (68:4)
- God is al-Ḥakam (The Judge) and Prophet Muḥammad is the judge of the Believers (4:65; 4:105; 24:51; 33:36)
- God is al-Mubayyin (The Clarifier) (5:75, 24:58) and Prophet Muḥammad makes things clear (5:15; 5:19; 16:44)
- God is al-Mutahhir (The Purifier) (4:49; 33:33) and Prophet Muḥammad purifies the believers (9:103)
- God is al-Mawlā (The Master) and Prophet Muḥammad holds awlā (authority) over the Believers (33:6)
- God is al-Muḥyī (The Giver of Life) and Prophet Muḥammad summons the believers to life (8:24).
- God recites His Signs (2:252; 3:108) and the Prophet Muḥammad recites His Signs (2:151).
- God sends Ṣalawāt (blessings) and Prophet Muḥammad sends ṣalawāt (blessings) (9:103)
- God receives ṣadaqah (9:104) when Prophet Muḥammad receives ṣadaqah (9:103; 58:12)
- God brings people from darkness to Light (2:257) and Prophet Muḥammad brings people to Light (14:1; 14:5 65:11) He who gives their allegiance (bay‘ah) to Prophet Muḥammad has given their allegiance to God (48:10)
- God commands right & forbids wrong (66:6) and Prophet Muḥammad commands lawful & forbids wrong (7:157) He who obeys the Prophet Muḥammad, obeys God (4:80; 4:64)
- When Prophet Muḥammad threw stones, it was actually God who threw (8:17)

Friday, July 13, 2018
CULTURAL REPRESENTATIONS OF THE PROPHET
http://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2015/01/16/quran-prophet-images
Thursday, July 12, 2018
LEARNING SUMMARY
Wednesday, July 11, 2018
DISCUSSION: THE DIVERSITY OF ATTITUDES TOWARDS THE PROPHET
- You have now read about a significant diversity of approaches to understanding the Prophet Muhammad and his legacy. Please reflect on these differences and consider their significance for the interpretation of the Quran.
- This course is entitled "Islam Through Its Scriptures." In general, we have been considering the Islamic "scripture" to be the Quran. How, then, may the ḥadīth literature be considered Islamic scripture, as well? How may it not be considered scripture, based on what you have read?
US President Trump Smack Down Before NATO Summit: 'Germany is totally controlled by Russia'
Trump Attacks Russia & Germany
US President Donald Trump launched a scathing attack on German support for one of Europe's most contentious energy developments, saying Germany is “totally controlled” by Russia. Speaking in Brussels, Belgium on the first leg of his European trip, the U.S. president said a flurry of oil and gas deals had given Moscow far too much influence over the continent’s largest economy. In particular, he singled out the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project as being especially "inappropriate." “Germany is totally controlled by Russia … They will be getting between 60 and 70 percent of their energy from Russia and a new pipeline, and you tell me if that is appropriate because I think it's not,” Trump said, before criticizing Berlin's failure to significantly increase defense spending. Trump was speaking at a breakfast meeting with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg.
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
READING: IMAGES OF THE PROPHET IN POPULAR MUSLIM POETRY
The selection below is from Celebrating Muhammad: Images of the Prophet in Popular Muslim Poetry, by Ali Asani and Kamal Abdel-Malek. In this book, Asani and Abdel-Malek bring translations and analyses of the many and various poems dedicated to the Prophet Muhammad. Oftentimes, expressions of devotion to the Prophet constitute some of the primary public practices of societies of Muslims. Even though there have been reservations and objections to Prophetic veneration (some groups label this practice excessive at best, and prohibited at worse), just as many groups, if not more, have considered devotion to the Prophet to be the natural consequence of viewing him as model and guide, and as "the best of humankind."
Please read the prologue (1-9) and introduction (which is by Annemarie Schimmel, 10-15) of Celebrating Muhammad: Images of the Prophet in Popular Muslim Poetry, by Ali Asani and Kamal Abdel-Malek. (i.e., pp. 1-15)
http://sites.la.utexas.edu/mhc/files/2009/10/asani-celebrating_muhammad.pdf
Monday, July 9, 2018
DISCUSSION: EARLY SHI'A QURAN COMMENTARY
Write your answers to the following questions on the course discussion board:
- Based on his commentaries, how does the Shi'a Imam al-Baqir understand the meaning of leadership in the Qur'an?
- How is Imam al-Baqir's tafsir different from Sunni Muslim tafsir or other commentaries of the Qur'an that you have read?
Sunday, July 8, 2018
READING: EARLY SHI'A QURAN COMMENTARY (TAFSIR)
Prepared by Khalil Andani (Harvard University), based on Early Shi‘i Thought by Arzina R. Lalani (London, New York: I.B. Tauris in association with The Institute of Ismaili Studies, 2000).
“Muslim exegetes have, over the years, entertained contradictory views on this verse. Some believe it refers to ‘Ali who, while kneeling in prayer, once threw his ring to a beggar who stood asking for alms… Commenting on the verse, al-Baqir categorically maintains that it was revealed at the time when the Messenger was with a group of Jews, amongst whom ‘Abd Allah b. al-Salam was present. As soon as the verse was revealed, the Messenger got up and walked towards the mosque where he met a beggar. Inquiring if anyone had given him anything, the beggar pointed to a man who was still praying. The man was ‘Ali.” (Arzina Lalani, Early Shi‘i Thought, 59)
“Explaining the message, al-Baqir said that, just as the Messenger had elucidated the details regarding the verses on prayer, alms giving, fasting, and pilgrimage, so too he was expected to expound on the walayah that was revealed in the aforementioned verse 5:55. But when asked to do this in practice, the Messenger felt extremely uneasy, fearing that people would apostatize. As his reluctance continued, God repeated the command in verse 5:67… Al-Baqir continues that the Messenger, upon receiving this verse, carried out God’s command and endorsed the walayah or imamate of ‘Ali b. Abi Talib at Ghadir Khumm.” (Arzina Lalani, Early Shi‘i Thought, 61)
“Al-Baqir’s commentary on this verse is that the ulu al-amr are the imams from the family of Muhammad… Using this verse to reassert the position of the Imams, al-Baqir maintains that obedience to them is incumbent as God made them ‘the people of knowledge’ and enable them to extract that knowledge.” (Arzina Lalani, Early Shi‘i Thought, 63-64)
Those who are firmly rooted in knowledge (rasikhun fi’l-‘ilm) are the Commander of the Faithful (‘Ali ibn Abi Talib) and the Imams after him.”- Imam Ja‘far al-Sadiq, (al-Kulayni, Usul al-Kafi, Kitab al-Hujjah, Chapter 22, Hadith No. 1 & 3)
God has made the imams, according to al-Baqir’s interpretation of verse 2:143, an ummah wasat so that they might be God’s witnesses to His creatures. His definition of a ‘great kingdom conferred upon the family of Ibrahim’ (4:54) is that God made from among them leaders whose obedience was equal to the obedience of God and whose disobedience was equal to the disobedience of God. How, argues al-Baqir, could people accept this position for the family of Ibrahim and deny it to the family of Muhammad.” (Arzina Lalani, Early Shi‘i Thought, 65)
Saturday, July 7, 2018
READING: HADITH AND ITS TERMINOLOGY
This section's reading is from Chapter One of Jonathan Brown's Hadith: Muhammad's Legacy in the Medieval and Modern World. In this selection, Brown gives a broad overview of the meaning and import of the ḥadīth (pl. aḥādīth), or the traditions and narratives of and about the Prophet Muhammad. He notes that the Quran is not the only source for Islamic law, mysticism, theology, philosophy, popular practice, etc.; the collection of ḥadīth complement the Quran in informing the multifarious doctrines and practices of the Islamic religious tradition, within which are found communities of interpretation that may in fact contradict one another.
In this respect, Brown offers us a more detailed explication of the ḥadīth literature, how they function in societies of Muslims across historical time and geographical space, and the various components of a given ḥadīth. You will also gain a deeper understanding of the paramount role of the Prophet in the formation of the Muslim self.
Read Chapter One of Jonathan Brown's Hadith: Muhammad's Legacy in the Medieval and Modern World, entitled "The Prophet's Words Then and Now: Hadith and its Terminology". (You can skip the section, 'The Contents of this Book'.)
https://www.scribd.com/read/248822808/Hadith-Muhammad-s-Legacy-in-the-Medieval-and-Modern-World
Note that you are encouraged to draw on this reading for the two discussions that follow. There is a lot of content in it, so we suggest you read it carefully and take some notes.
Friday, July 6, 2018
Video: The Diversity of Approaches to the Prophet
Video: The Diversity of Approaches to the Prophet
On several occasions, the Quran speaks of the importance
of following the Prophet Muhammad.
One verse declares, "Indeed, you have in the messenger
of God a beautiful example."
Another verse states that "whoever obeys the messenger, obeys God."
A third verse asked the Prophet to declare, "If you love God, follow me.
And God will love you and forgive you your sins."
Muslims of diverse identities have exerted a great deal of effort
to understand the authentic message of the Prophet
Muhammad, whom they regard as the exemplar of the ideal way to live.
There are two important genres of Islamic scholarship
that deal specifically with the Prophet Muhammad.
First, there is the sira, or the biography of the Prophet, which
you have already encountered in Day 2.
Second, there is the hadith, which refers to the collected reports
of the sayings and actions of Mohammed.
The hadith play an extremely important role
in many aspects of Islamic thought and culture
as they provide guidance for all aspects of Muslim life.
They are also particularly important for interpreting the Quran
as the Prophet Muhammad is understood to have had the deepest knowledge
of the scripture of any human being.
As a messenger of revelation, he is seen as embodying the message.
Hence, his wife A’isha is reported to have said,
‘His characteristics are the characteristics of the Quran,’
and ‘He was a walking Quran.’
But soon after the hadith began to be collected
towards the end of the eighth century of the common era,
scholars realized that many hadith were being fabricated
to serve personal and political ends.
Thus, it was necessary to develop a method of validating and corroborating
the authenticity of each hadith on the basis of its transmitters.
You will learn about this method in the reading that follows.
However, this account of the hadith sciences,
which is based on the perspective of Sunni Islam,
is somewhat complicated when we consider other interpretations of Islam.
For most Shi‘i Muslims, the words and actions of their Imams
are of equal validity to the words and actions of the Prophet.
This is because they believe the Imams, who are descendants of the Prophet
through his daughter Fatima, are the infallible guardians
and interpreters of revelation.
Indeed, the Shi‘i refer to these Imams as "the speaking Quran."
Shi‘i hadith collections, therefore, include
sayings of the Imams in addition to sayings of the Prophet.
Furthermore, the ways in which Shi‘i scholars authenticate their hadith
are a little different from the Sunni hadith sciences.
Finally, sira and hadith are by no means the only way
that the message of the Prophet Muhammad is present within Islamic communities.
Praise of the Prophet and the family of the Prophet
play a crucial role in the devotional life
of the majority of Muslims the world over, albeit in different forms.
Based on the teachings of the Quran, most Muslims, whether Sunni or Shi‘i,
regard the Prophet as an intercessor.
Those Muslims who are mystically inclined
place special emphasis on cultivating a relationship with the living
presence of the Prophet through individuals
who are spiritually connected with him.
Video
Thursday, July 5, 2018
DISCUSSION: THE QUR'AN AND PROPHECY
- What is the function of a prophet/apostle-messenger according to these passages?
- Do you see a fundamental difference between the portrayal of the Prophet Muhammad and the portrayal of other prophets and apostle-messengers in these verses?
- Make a list of the functions of the Prophet Muhammad that the Quran describes. When you have finished you can consult the more extensive list compiled by Khalil Andani, a member of our teaching staff, below.
Wednesday, July 4, 2018
READING: QURANIC VERSES ON THE PROPHET MUHAMMAD
Now that you have read several Quranic verses discussing prophecy in general, you are in a better position to understand the way Muhammad is addressed and portrayed in the Quran. As you will see in the selected verses below, sometimes the Quran addresses Muhammad in the second person (you/thee), and sometimes it describes him in the third person. You may wish to think about whether the depictions of the Prophet Muhammad differ from the depictions of other prophets you have encountered so far. You may also wish to make a list of the diverse functions, roles and qualities that the Quran attributes to Muhammad in the verses below.
All translations are by Muhammad Asad unless otherwise noted.
And thus have We inspired in thee (Muhammad) a Spirit of Our command. Thou knewest not what the Scripture was, nor what the Faith. But We have made it a light whereby We guide whom We will of Our bondmen. And lo! thou verily dost guide unto a right path,
And know, O believers, that] Muhammad is not the father of any one of your men, but is God's Apostle and the Seal of all Prophets. And God has indeed full knowledge of everything.
45 [And as for thee,] O Prophet - behold, We have sent thee as a witness [to the truth], and as a herald of glad tidings and a warner, 46 and as one who summons [all men] to God by His leave, and as a light-giving beacon.
Verily, God and His angels bless the Prophet: [hence,] O you who have attained to faith, bless him and give yourselves up [to his guidance] in utter self-surrender!
Even as We have sent unto you an apostle from among yourselves to convey unto you Our messages, and to cause you to grow in purity, and to impart unto you revelation and wisdom, and to teach you that which you knew not:
Behold, all who pledge their allegiance to thee [the Prophet] pledge their allegiance to God: the hand of God is over their hands Hence, he who breaks his oath, breaks it only to his own hurt; whereas he who remains true to what he has pledged unto God, on him will He bestow a reward supreme.
80 Whoso obeyeth the Messenger hath obeyed Allah, and whoso turneth away: We have not sent thee as a warder over them.
64 For We have never sent any Apostle save that he should be heeded by God's leave. If, then, after having sinned against themselves, they would but come round to thee [the Prophet] and ask God to forgive them - with the Apostle, too, praying that they be forgiven - they would assuredly find that God is an acceptor of repentance, a dispenser of grace. 65 But nay, by thy Sustainer! They do not [really] believe unless they make thee [O Prophet] a judge of all on which they disagree among themselves, and then find in their hearts no bar to an acceptance of thy decision and give themselves up [to it] in utter self-surrender
102 And [there are] others - [people who] have become conscious of their sinning after having done righteous deeds side by side with evil ones; [and] it may well be that God will accept their repentance: for, verily, God is much-forgiving, a dispenser' of grace.
103 [Hence, O Prophet,] accept that [part] of their possessions which is offered for the sake of God, so that thou mayest cleanse them thereby and cause them to grow in purity, and pray for them: behold, thy prayer will be [a source of] comfort to them-for God is all-hearing, all-knowing.
And thou (standest) on an exalted standard of character.
We sent thee [O Prophet] not, but as a Mercy for all creatures.
Indeed, there has come unto you [O mankind] an Apostle from among yourselves: heavily weighs - upon him [the thought] that you might suffer [in the life to come]; full of concern for you [is he, and] full of compassion and mercy towards the believers
Verily, in the Apostle of God you have a good example for everyone who looks forward [with hope and awe] to God and the Last Day, and remembers God unceasingly.
Tuesday, July 3, 2018
READING: PROPHECY IN THE QUR'AN
86 and so We admitted them unto Our grace: behold, they were among the righteous!
87 AND [remember] him of the great fish - when he went off in wrath, thinking that We had no power over him! But then he cried out in the deep darkness [of his distress]: "There is no deity save You! Limitless are You in Your glory! Verily, I have done wrong!"
88 And so We responded unto him and delivered him from [his] distress: for thus do We deliver all who have faith.
85 and [upon] Zachariah, and John, and Jesus, and Elijah: every one of them was of the righteous;86 and [upon] Ishmael, and Elisha, and Jonah, and Lot. And every one of them did We favour above other people;
87 and [We exalted likewise] some of their forefathers and - their offspring and their brethren: We elected them [all], and guided them onto a straight way.
124 When their brother Hud said unto them: "Will you not be conscious of God?
125 Behold, I am an apostle [sent by Him] to you, [and therefore] worthy of your trust:
126 be, then, conscious of God, and pay heed unto me!
127 And no reward whatever do I ask of you for it: my reward rests with none but the Sustainer of all the worlds."
Monday, July 2, 2018
Day 4
Welcome to Day 4 of Islam Through its Scriptures.
As we saw in the story of Joseph, the prophets who preceded Muhammad
played a crucial role in the Quran.
From the Quranic perspective, humankind has a shared history.
This is the history of God's communication
with humanity through prophets, extending in a chain from Adam
down to the prophet Muhammad.
According to the Quran, God has sent a prophet to every people,
to every culture.
The prophet Muhammad is reported to have said
that the total number of his prophets was 124,000.
The Quran calls upon its listeners to affirm the truth of all these prophets.
Although each prophet lived in a particular time and place,
and manifested a specific relationship with God,
the Quran describes their messages as being fundamentally the same.
From a Quranic perspective, a Muslim is not
just someone who belongs to the community of Muhammad.
Rather, the Quran uses the word Muslim to indicate anyone
who has submitted to the will of God.
In this sense, all prophets and their followers are Muslim.
This is not to say that understandings of these prophets are the same.
For example, the Quranic depiction of Jesus
is different from the understanding of Jesus held by most Christians today.
The Quran warns against equating Jesus with God himself.
Yet in the Quran, Jesus is nonetheless a word of God, born of the Virgin Mary,
and one of the many prophets sent to humanity.
Today, we look at how the Quran depicts the prophets.
They are warners and givers of good tidings to humanity,
as well as guides to how we should live our lives in accordance
with God's will.
It is not surprising that the Quran gives special attention
to the prophet Muhammad.
We will therefore consider the depiction of Muhammad in the Quran
and explore similarities and differences with its depiction
of the prophets who preceded him.
In thinking about the prophet Muhammad, we introduce another fundamental aspect
of our course, namely that the Quran cannot be properly understood
in isolation.
It has to be read in light of the many contexts in which it
has been interpreted.
In this regard, the figure of Muhammad is crucial.
His sayings and actions are the most important complement
that Muslims have used to understand the divine message in the Quran.
Although all Muslims revere the prophet Muhammad,
they have understood him in diverse ways.
These diverse understandings have impacted
the ways different Muslim communities have interpreted
the Quran across time and place.
As you read the verses that follow, keep in mind
that they can be understood differently depending
on many other aspects of Muslim thought and culture.
We will gradually explore these aspects as the course develops.