TY - BOOK ID - 3400364 TI - Islamic movements of Europe AU - Peter, Frank AU - Ortega, Rafael PY - 2014 VL - 21 SN - 9781848858442 9781848858459 9780857736734 1848858442 0857736736 1848858450 0857724649 0755611632 PB - London New York, NY New York, NY DB - UniCat KW - Islam and politics KW - Islamophobia KW - Islam et politique KW - Islamophobie KW - Islam KW - 297 <4> KW - #SBIB:316.331H330 KW - #SBIB:316.331H421 KW - #SBIB:39A10 KW - Islam. Mohammedanisme--Europa KW - Godsdienst en politiek: algemeen KW - Morfologie van de godsdiensten: Islam KW - Antropologie: religie, riten, magie, hekserij KW - Islam and politics - Europe KW - Islam - Europe KW - Islamophobia - Europe KW - Islam and politics. KW - Islam. KW - Islamic movements KW - the Muslim Brotherhood KW - Milli Görüs KW - the Jama'at-i Islami KW - Tablighi Jama'at KW - the Wahhabiya KW - Saudi Arabia KW - the Salafist movement KW - Hizb ut-Tahrir KW - Harakat al-Nahda and Islamic movements in Tunisia KW - the Moroccan Islamist movement KW - the Islamic movement in Algeria KW - politics of Islamism KW - Islamic movements in Europe KW - Spain KW - Germany KW - Islamische Gemeinschaft in Deutschland KW - Islamische Zentren KW - German Muslim youth KW - Muslimische Jugend in Deutschland KW - the Union of Islamic Organisation of France KW - the Muslim Asociation of Britain KW - the Union of Islamic Communities and Organisations KW - UCOII KW - Italy KW - the European Council for Fatwa and Research KW - Yusuf al-Qaradawi KW - Islamische Gemeinschaft Milli Görüs KW - IGMG KW - the Caliphate State KW - the Islamic Federation of Belgium KW - FIB KW - the Netherlands KW - Denmark KW - Salafist groups KW - Salafist politics in the Netherlands KW - Salafi doctrine KW - Salafism KW - Salafist-jihadist groups KW - Jihadi movements in the United Kingdom KW - Abu Hamza al-Masri KW - Shari'a KW - Al-Muhajirun KW - Al-Ghuraba' KW - virtual jihadist media KW - laïcité and piety KW - Hizb ut-Tahrir al-Islami KW - Muslim representative bodies KW - Al-'Adl wa-l-Ihsan KW - the Islamic foundation in the United Kingdom KW - Sheikh Abdalqadir al-Murabit KW - Süleymanlis KW - the Süleymanli movement KW - the Muslim Council of Britain KW - pious lay preaching KW - political lobbying KW - German Muslim federations KW - Zentralrat der Muslime in Deutschland KW - Koordinierungsrat der Muslime KW - Islamic guidance and public debates KW - imams KW - chaplains KW - de-radicalisation KW - radicalisation KW - moderation KW - integration KW - the German debate about imams KW - imams in Belgium KW - imams and radicalisation KW - prison and processes of radicalisation KW - Rashid al-Ghannushi KW - Tariq Ramadan KW - Islamic knowledge and education KW - Islam classes KW - Islamic higher education KW - the Islamic University of Rotterdam KW - the Dutch written media KW - Islamic education in Germany KW - Institut für Interreligiöse Pädagogik und Didaktik, Cologne KW - Zentrum für Islamische Frauenförderung und Forschung KW - l'Institut Européen des Sciences Humaines KW - Muslim internet sites in Denmark KW - Muslim free schools in Denmark KW - Federation of Student Islamic Societies KW - FOSIS KW - Muslims at British universities KW - Islamism and Islamophobia KW - Brussels KW - fear KW - otherness KW - radical Islam in France KW - the headscarf affair KW - Islam in German public culture KW - 'Pig Day' KW - tolerance KW - identity and secularism KW - the British National Party KW - anti-Muslim politics KW - the politics of fear UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:3400364 AB - "The fertile land of the five rivers (punj+ab in Persian) has persistently stirred the imagination of its peoples. Its story is the story of invasion. In 326 BCE Alexander the Great marched through the Hindu Kush, conquered the verdant plains now divided between India and Pakistan, and stamped Greek cultural and linguistic influence on the region. Over the centuries the lure of the Punjab attracted further waves of outsiders: Scythians, Sassanians, Huns, Afghans, Turks, Mughals and - closer to our own times - the British. Many savage battles were fought. But at the same time, as different ethnic and religious groups came together and melded, the collective psyche of the Punjab was coloured by vibrant new patterns, new worldviews and new languages. Punjabi poetry is the dynamic result of these cross-cultural encounters. In her rich and diverse anthology, Nikky-Guninder Kaur Singh makes a major contribution to interfaith dialogue and comparative literary studies. Covering the entire spectrum of writers, from the artistic patterns of the first Punjabi poet (Baba Farid, 1173-1265) to feminist author Amrita Pritam (d. 2005), the volume serves as an ideal introduction to the three faiths of Sikhism, Islam and Hinduism. Whether focusing on Sikh gurus or Sufi saints, it boldly illuminates the area's unique character, linguistic rhythms and celebrations, and will have strong appeal to undergraduate students of religion, literature and South Asian studies, as well as general readers."--Bloomsbury publishing. ER -