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Educating the Muslims of America
By Yvonne Y. Haddad, Farid Senzai,
and Jane I. Smith
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As the Muslim population in the United States continues to
grow, Islamic schools are springing up across the nation's
landscape. Education, both secular and religious, has always
been of the greatest importance to the Muslim community in
America. Muslims have made it clear that they want their
children to have the best education possible at the same
time that they are learning the essentials of their
faith. Especially since the events of September 11th, many
Americans have become concerned about the teaching going on
behind the walls of these schools. The essays collected in
this volume look behind those walls and discover both
efforts to provide excellent instruction following national
educational standards and attempts to inculcate Islamic
values while protecting students from what are seen as the
dangers of secularism and the compromising values of
American culture. L Muslim parents may choose to send their
children to public schools and provide afternoon or weekend
religious education. In public schools, however, children
often encounter prejudice or take part in the study of
subjects not considered appropriate by Muslim parents. Some
parents may decide on Islamic schools. However they are
still relatively few in number and are often under-supported
both financially and administratively. A small but slowly
growing number of parents elect home schooling for their
children, and gradually resources on the internet and
elsewhere are being developed to help them. Islamic
schooling and home schooling, it is argued, provide the
opportunity to guide children in all aspects of their work
while remaining in an Islamic environment. This volume of
collected essays deals with a wide range of issues
challenging Muslim Americans as they seek a well-rounded
religious education from adolescence to adulthood. Also
explored are college-level education, the kinds of training
being offered by Muslim chaplains in universities,
hospitals, and prisons, and the ways in which Muslims are
educating the American public in the face of hostility and
prejudice. This timely volume is the first dedicated
entirely to the neglected topic of Islamic education in the
United States.
Product Details
ISBN13: 9780195375206ISBN10:
0195375203
hardback, 296 pages
Published by Oxford University Press, 2009
Feb 2009,
Not Yet Published due
Feb 02 2009
Price:
$29.95 (01)
About the Author(s)
Yvonne Y. Haddad
is Professor of the History of Islam and
Christian-Muslim Relations at the Al-Walid bin Talal
Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding, Georgetown
University. Farid Senzai
is Director of Research at ISPU and an Assistant
Professor of Political Science, Santa Clara University
Jane I. Smith is
Associate Dean for Faculty and Academic Affairs, Harvard
Divinity School.
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