This article examines the chain of events that facilitated an Islamic revival among second-generation Arab-American Muslims. Based upon research in metropolitan Chicago, it argues against trends in the literature that described Western-born Muslims as foreigners, immigrants or, worse, anti-Western. Similarly, it argues against setting their religious experiences solely in a domestic context. The article begins by documenting the lack of religious institutions and practices among immigrant Arab Muslims before the 1990s and the limited religious socialization of their American-born children. These conditions emerged in part from secular trends in the immigrants\u27 homelands. By the 1990s, a period of global Islamic revival, both immigrant an...
This essay discusses the religious upbringing experiences and reflections upon them articulated by 5...
This research explores how young Muslims internalize, understand, and reconcile with competing inter...
This study consists of one 90 minute interview with two current University of Illinois students who ...
This article explores the challenges that immigrant Muslims faced in pre-1965 America in their effor...
This article explores the challenges that immigrant Muslims faced in pre-1965 America in their effor...
This article explores the challenges that immigrant Muslims faced in pre-1965 America in their effor...
This article explores the challenges that immigrant Muslims faced in pre-1965 America in their effor...
The article reviews the status of the highly diverse community of American Muslims, with reference t...
The article reviews the status of the highly diverse community of American Muslims, with reference t...
The article reviews the status of the highly diverse community of American Muslims, with reference t...
The object of this article is to explore how different Muslim groups are responding globalization an...
The object of this article is to explore how different Muslim groups are responding globalization an...
The object of this article is to explore how different Muslim groups are responding globalization an...
The object of this article is to explore how different Muslim groups are responding globalization an...
This Honors Project is a comparative study of mosques in the Midwestern United States and two cities...
This essay discusses the religious upbringing experiences and reflections upon them articulated by 5...
This research explores how young Muslims internalize, understand, and reconcile with competing inter...
This study consists of one 90 minute interview with two current University of Illinois students who ...
This article explores the challenges that immigrant Muslims faced in pre-1965 America in their effor...
This article explores the challenges that immigrant Muslims faced in pre-1965 America in their effor...
This article explores the challenges that immigrant Muslims faced in pre-1965 America in their effor...
This article explores the challenges that immigrant Muslims faced in pre-1965 America in their effor...
The article reviews the status of the highly diverse community of American Muslims, with reference t...
The article reviews the status of the highly diverse community of American Muslims, with reference t...
The article reviews the status of the highly diverse community of American Muslims, with reference t...
The object of this article is to explore how different Muslim groups are responding globalization an...
The object of this article is to explore how different Muslim groups are responding globalization an...
The object of this article is to explore how different Muslim groups are responding globalization an...
The object of this article is to explore how different Muslim groups are responding globalization an...
This Honors Project is a comparative study of mosques in the Midwestern United States and two cities...
This essay discusses the religious upbringing experiences and reflections upon them articulated by 5...
This research explores how young Muslims internalize, understand, and reconcile with competing inter...
This study consists of one 90 minute interview with two current University of Illinois students who ...