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Wednesday November 18, 2009

Categories: Read This

Voting open for the Brass Crescent Awards!

It's time to once again cast your vote for the Islamsphere's best and brightest - the polls are now open in the 6th Anual Brass Crescent Awards for the Islamic Blogsphere!

This year we were a little delayed with the voting phase, partly because I had an unexpected trip in October and then partly because of the tragedy at Fort Hood, which rightly dominated the attention of the blogsphere as a whole, but the Islamsphere in particular.

However, we are now ready to go, and you can vote until Nov. 27th at the official site, BrassCrescent.org, so what are you waiting for?

The categories this year include two new ones- BEST RETIRED BLOG and BEST TWEETER - and they have fantastic nominees. So check it out and vote!

For more details and updates on the Awards, follow the BCA on twitter (@brasscrescent) or join the FaceBook page!

Also - if you're a UK resident, take note a this great promotion by altmuslim.com - an opportunity to score free tickets to the IMAX film "Journey to Mecca". But please don't forget to vote first!

Thursday November 5, 2009

Categories: Dour Mullah, Read This

"collateral shahadat" - too good, yaar

This is absolutely brilliant -

As we already know, only Muslims are human beings. This is also an indisputable fact. So, when good Muslims meet non-Muslims, it is their duty to convert the latter. This way they are actually helping non-Muslims become human. If they convert, well and good. If not, they should be taken to task at once. Or better, bombed! After all, we believe in humanity.

(...) They should be bombed because it's okay to bomb non-humans. However, humans (Muslims), who might also die in such an attack need not worry. Along with the bomber they too will go to heaven. This is called collateral shahadat.

by blogger Nadeem Paracha. Satire aside, this probably is how Al Qaeda actually thinks.

(There's more where that came from)

Wednesday October 14, 2009

talking turkish tolerance: links delight

Further to my friend Joshua Trevino's previous essay on religious tolerance in Turkey, there's a related piece in the Washington Times which also provides more detail on how state secularism is driving Christian faiths to extinction and suppressing Islamic identity - provoking an Islamist backlash. Also worth reading is another essay by Josh which compares Turkey to Malaysia. I think Turkey is schizophrenic in a fundamental way regarding its identity, which is why it merits so much analysis. We Talk Turkey (ahem) quite a bit over at Talk Islam for precisely that reason.

Tuesday October 6, 2009

the economic Stimulus: behind the curtain

Ryan Lizza has a superb profile of Larry Summers, President Obama's brilliant economic adviser, in The New Yorker. Lizza is one of my favorite political writers and he uses the profile on Summers as a backdrop for the larger story of how the major economic decisions in the Obama Administration have been made. In a nutshell, Obama's economic team is comprised on incredibly brilliant people with a lot of ideas - and they disagree vociferously. The end result has been policies that have been run through the wringer in terms of skepticism and evaluation, ensuring that the risks of potential disaster were well-understood and the practical constraints preventing idealistic action were also abided by in favor of gettings omething rather than nothing done.

The size of the economic stimulus is an excellent example. Republicans have long argued that the stimulus shoudl have been smaller, and more heavily reliant on tax cuts. Liberal economists like Paul Krugman meanwhile have argued that the stimulus was too small. So how did the Obama team decide how big to make it?

The most important question facing Obama that day was how large the stimulus should be. Since the election, as the economy continued to worsen, the consensus among economists kept rising. A hundred-billion-dollar stimulus had seemed prudent earlier in the year. Congress now appeared receptive to something on the order of five hundred billion. Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel laureate, was calling for a trillion. Romer had run simulations of the effects of stimulus packages of varying sizes: six hundred billion dollars, eight hundred billion dollars, and $1.2 trillion. The best estimate for the output gap was some two trillion dollars over 2009 and 2010. Because of the multiplier effect, filling that gap didn't require two trillion dollars of government spending, but Romer's analysis, deeply informed by her work on the Depression, suggested that the package should probably be more than $1.2 trillion. The memo to Obama, however, detailed only two packages: a five-hundred-and-fifty-billion-dollar stimulus and an eight-hundred-and-ninety-billion-dollar stimulus. Summers did not include Romer's $1.2-trillion projection. The memo argued that the stimulus should not be used to fill the entire output gap; rather, it was "an insurance package against catastrophic failure." At the meeting, according to one participant, "there was no serious discussion to going above a trillion dollars."

There were sound arguments why the $1.2-trillion figure was too high. First, Emanuel and the legislative-affairs team thought that it would be impossible to move legislation of that size, and dismissed the idea out of hand. Congress was "a big constraint," Axelrod said. "If we asked for $1.2 trillion, it probably would have created such a case of sticker shock that the system would have locked up there." He pointed east, toward Capitol Hill. "And the world was watching us, the market was watching us. If we failed to produce a stimulus bill, that in and of itself could have had deleterious effects."
There was also a mechanical argument against a stimulus of that size. Peter Orszag, who was celebrating his fortieth birthday that day, said that, while the argument for a bigger stimulus was sound theoretically, there were limits to how much money the government could practically spend in the near future.

Summers brought a third argument to the debate, one that echoed his advice to Bill Clinton sixteen years earlier, when his Administration was facing persistent budget deficits that Summers believed were suppressing economic growth. He, like Romer, was guided by an understanding that in financial crises the risk of doing too little is greater than doing too much. He believed that filling the output gap through deficit spending was important, but that a package that was too large could potentially shift fears from the current crisis to the long-term budget deficit, which would have an unwelcome effect on the bond market. In the end, Summers made the case for the eight-hundred-and-ninety-billion-dollar option.

When the meeting broke up, after four hours of discussion, interrupted only briefly when the President brought out a cake and led the group in singing "Happy Birthday" to Orszag, there was still indecision about how big a stimulus Obama would recommend to Congress. Summers, Romer, Geithner, Orszag, Emanuel, and Jason Furman huddled in the corner to lock down the number. Emanuel made the final call: six hundred and seventy-five to seven hundred and seventy-five billion dollars, with the understanding that, as the bill made its way through Congress, it was more likely to grow than to shrink. The final legislation was for seven hundred and eighty-seven billion dollars.

"A lot of my research has been figuring out what policymakers did, why they did it," Romer told me. "I have a whole new level of sympathy. Until you've experienced it, you don't realize how hard it is. It's humbling."

Later in the article, Lizza explains the similar internal dissent and discussion that preceded the Obama Administration's decision about the future of the auto industry (again, with Summers providing a key skeptical role). As any PhD student who has had to defend their dissertation can tell you, a severly critical and rigorous environment always leads to better, more robust ideas. Larry Summers plays a key role in bringing that intellecctual and pragmatic rigorousness to the Obama White House. for As one of the other economic advisers (Austan Goolsbee, whose opinion was overridden by Summers in the debate) told Lizza for the article, "History has not been kind to Administrations where everybody agreed with each other and all they ever had to say was, Good idea, boss."

The whole article is well-worth a read (I admit I skipped over some of the childhood biographical bits, though). I think that the ending paragraph is worth excerpting, though:

So far, none of the worst fears of those who believed that the stimulus was too small or that nationalization was the only option or that taking over car companies would destroy the fabric of capitalism have materialized. Indeed, several private forecasters have credited the stimulus with blunting the impact of the recession-it probably added around three points to the G.D.P. last quarter-and the banking system has dramatically stabilized since the stress tests were completed. But competence has its limits as a source of inspiration. Paul Krugman said, "The stimulus helped, but the question is, 'Is that enough?' " With unemployment at around ten per cent and still on an upward trajectory, the Administration is left arguing not that jobs are being created but that without Obama's policies things would be worse. It's not a very pithy slogan. And, undoubtedly, the huge government interventions laid the groundwork for the political backlash against Obama that was unleashed this past August and which has jeopardized his larger agenda on health care, global warming, and financial regulation. Obama and his team have pulled the economy back from the abyss, but they will get credit only when it has been rebuilt.

And for that, we need more than just 10 months, but more on the order of 5 years, to really know for sure.

Saturday September 26, 2009

Categories: Read This

The 6th Annual Brass Crescent Awards

in partnership with Shahed Amanullah of altmuslim.com, I am pleased to announce that the 6th Annual Brass Crescent Awards are now underway!

What are the Brass Crescent Awards? They are named for the Story of the City of Brass in the Thousand and One Nights. Today, the Islamsphere is forging a new synthesis of Islam and modernity, and is the intellectual heir to the traditions of philosophy and learning that was once the hallmark of Islamic civilization - a heritage scarcely recognizable today in the Islamic world after a century's ravages of colonialism, tyrants, and religious fundamentalism. We believe that Islam transcends history, and we are forging history anew for tomorrow's Islam. These awards are a means to honor ourselves and celebrate our nascent community, and promote its growth.
The categories this year are as follows:

BEST BLOG: This category honors the most indispensable, Muslim-authored blog there is. Period.

BEST WRITER: Who is the most stimulating, insightful, and philosophically wise among us? This category is intended to highlight a blogger who may not post daily, but when they do post, they really make an impact.

BEST NON-MUSLIM BLOG: Which blog writen by a non-Muslim is most respectful of Islam and seeks genuine dialogue with Muslims?

BEST BLOG DESIGN: Which blog has the most aesthetically pleasing site design, appealing to the eye, evoking Islamic themes, and/or facilitating debate and discussion?

BEST POST OR SERIES: Which single post or group of posts in the Islamsphere was the most original and important, above all the others?

BEST FEMALE BLOG: The woman's voice in Islam is equal to the man's, and in the Islamsphere we seek to make sure the female perspective is highlighted and given its rightful due. Which Muslim woman's blog has done the most to explore the role that women play within Islam and society?

BEST NEW BLOG: Which blog is a true diamond in the rough, one that everyone should be reading but who most just haven't heard of (yet)?

BEST GROUP BLOG: Which multiple group blog in the Islamsphere has the best diversity of writers and the most interesting debate on Muslim issues?

BEST HUMOR BLOG: Which blog gets their point across by using humor in the most effective way?

BEST MIDDLE EAST/AFRICAN, EUROPEAN, SOUTH ASIAN, AND ASIAN BLOGGERS: The Islamsphere is truly a global phenomenon. In Iraq, despite the chaos and uncertainty, there is a sea change of free speech and expression, the vanguard of which are blogs. There are also bloggers in India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Afghanistan, Palestine, Jordan, and most other countries that host Muslims, all of whom have their own perspectives on faith, culture, and politics.

and one new category for this year,

BEST RETIRED BLOG: What blog or blogger, now retired or on extended hiatus, do still remember fondly and most wish were still with us? This is a way to honor those blogs of yesteryear that remain part of our history, and our memories, whether their archives remain or not.

The nominations phase is now underway, so head over and start nominating your favorite blogs now!

Note, that the Awards methodology is slightly different this year:

1. Nomination phase (until Fri Oct 23). Anyone with a valid email address may nominate blogs to appropriate categories. Note that blogs may only be nominated once per category. We also encourage you to nominate your own blog!

2. Voting phase (Mon Nov 2 to Fri Nov 20).

3. Winners will be announced on Eid ul-Adha (around November 27th).

Please start nominating, and spread the word!

Wednesday September 16, 2009

Categories: Read This

A letter to President Bush about torture

Andrew Sullivan has written a lengthy letter to President Bush that calls upon him to acknowledge his role in authorizing torture. It's a masterpiece and lays out the case against torture in President Bush's own words, and makes a...

Thursday July 23, 2009

Categories: Read This

American Muslims Call on Chinese Govt' to Protect Religious Freedom

The following is a press release issued by a group of muslim Americans regarding the oppression of the Uyghur in China. I am a signatory to the release and the forthcoming petition. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE July 23, 2009 Media...

Thursday July 23, 2009

Categories: Read This

A Million Bullets

At Read Islam, Conrad reviews A Million Bullets: The Story of the British in Afghanistan by James Fergusson. Here's Conrad's introduction: This is the first major account on the British operations in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan to be...

Friday July 17, 2009

Categories: Read This

China blogging suffers a blow

Tim Johnson is leaving McClatchy's China Rises blog. Tim shares some personal highlights: In my day job, writing news stories for McClatchy, I've been incredibly fortunate to travel nearly everywhere in China. As I look at the map, I...

Tuesday June 16, 2009

Categories: Expressions, Read This

thoughts and prayers for the Hassaballa family

Hesham Hassaballa, who writes for Beliefnet and was a guest author here on City of Brass, has suffered a tremendous personal tragedy: June 7 will forever be burned in my memory. June 7 became my personal 9/11. I played...

Monday June 15, 2009

Categories: Read This

Iran Election: The Green Revolution will be Twittered

The events in Iran over the weekend have been dramatic and surreal. This is literally history in the making, and the course of the decades ahead turns on the actions of the men and women in the streets of...

Tuesday June 9, 2009

Categories: Read This

international attitudes towards abortion

My friend Razib, writing as David Hume at the Secular Right blog, has looked at the data on international attitudes towards abortion and made some intriguing observations, notably: 1) It is clear that religion correlate with opposition to abortion...

Saturday June 6, 2009

Categories: Purple Politics, Read This

moving beyond pro-life and pro-choice in the abortion debate

Lets get my personal opinion out of the way: I am generally in suppoort of Roe vs Wade because I think it does a good job of providing a simple, algorithmic solution to the messy lack of moral and...

Friday May 29, 2009

Categories: Read This

the God of the philosophers

At Talk Islam, Willow asks, (of my atheist friend Razib) [how] would you boil down the idea of the 'god of the philosophers' in layman's terms? And explain how, in theory, this god is ideologically and functionally different from...

Wednesday May 27, 2009

Categories: Read This

the two Michaels: Totten and Yon

Michael Totten and Michael Yon are two independent journalists who travel to Iraq, Afghanistan, and other Middle East hot spots (notably Lebanon) on their own dime, embed with the military, and strike out on their own with local guides, They...

Sunday May 24, 2009

Categories: Islamerica, Read This

Interview with Shahed Amanullah at Washington Post

The Washington Post has a fantastic profile and interview of my friend Shahed Amanullah, founder of altmuslim.com and my partner in running the anual Brass Crescent Awards for the Islamic Blogsphere. I particularly liked these two answers: Eight years...

Saturday May 23, 2009

discourse on the nature of doubt

In the context of a critique of President Obama for his speech at Notre Dame, Daniel Larison engages in a theologic examination of the nature of doubt, invoking the doubt of the apostle Thomas. In response, E.D. Kain at...

Friday May 15, 2009

Categories: Read This

an appeal on behalf of the people of Swat

The following is an urgent appeal for donations on behalf of the refugees of the Swat Valley, by Zeenat Ahmed, of the Center for Dialogue, Peace and Action (CDPA). Mrs. Ahmed is a well-known Pakistani activist whose family has...

Monday May 11, 2009

Categories: Dour Mullah, Read This

Pope Benedict XVI succumbs to dhimmitude

This image is going to blow a lot of jafi's minds. After all, we are supposed to Fear the Scarf! And also anything crescent-shaped. Or even colored green. It's all about Shari'a!On a more serious note, Hussein Rashid discusses...

Thursday May 7, 2009

Categories: Nation-Building, Read This

Obama and Africa policy

Africa always seems to get less attention than it deserves, which is remarkable given how enormous it is, in terms of sheer geography and population. I bitterly complained earlier how muslims worldwide favor injustices by Jews on muslims in...

Tuesday May 5, 2009

Categories: Read This

the misogyny of the Ummah

I often find fault with the way in which Yasmin Alibhai-Brown makes her arguments in the pages of the Independent, but I have to concede that on the merits, her main arguments are usually sound. Her latest essay is a...

Saturday May 2, 2009

Categories: Read This

Pakistan's constitutional Islamism

Ali Eteraz has a lengthy, lucid article on the root of Pakistan's problem - namely, that it's 1973 constitution has made it an Islamist state rather than a democratic one. Eteraz provides a lengthy historical background and context for how...

Wednesday April 29, 2009

Categories: Read This

AIRlift on May 1st

My friend, the writer G. Willow Wilson, is the author of the comic book series AIR which has been getting rave reviews and recognition. But AIR is more than a book, it's also a cause! I'll let Willow explain: Whacky...

Wednesday April 29, 2009

Categories: Read This

Islamic finance and magical money

This is a great article in the London Review of Books about Islamic finance, in the context of the global banking crisis. I found this excerpt particularly insightful: One of the central differences between the Islamic and conventional approaches to finance...

Thursday April 16, 2009

Categories: Read This

Dubai, city of the Pharoah, will fall

Johann Hari has a landmark essay in The Independent "The Dark Side of Dubai" that lays bare the facade of the glittering city of Dubai, peeling away the illusion of modernity and freedom to reveal a shocking substrate of slavery...

Wednesday April 15, 2009

debating apostasy and capital punishment

As occurs regularly, a fantastic discussion has been unfolding at Talk Islam, initially about the comments by the Harvard muslim chaplain on the matter of the death penalty for apostasy. The story begins with a private email from the chaplain,...

Thursday April 2, 2009

Categories: Read This

World Autism Awareness Day

Today is World Autism Awareness Day:On December 18, 2007, the United Nations General Assembly adopted resolution 62/139, tabled by the State of Qatar, which declares April 2 as World Autism Awareness Day (WAAD) in perpetuity. Her Highness Sheikha Mozah Bint...

Tuesday March 17, 2009

Categories: Read This

no moderate muslims

a classic short story by Ali Eteraz. It begins, The Great J.A.F.I (Just another Frothing Islamophobe) stepped through the door and said he was looking for Ali Eteraz. Somewhere in the world some murderers who called themselves Muslims had done...

Thursday March 12, 2009

Categories: Read This

Global warming is a muslim issue, too

A new paper about relative humidity in the upper atmosphere is making the rounds of global-warming skeptic blogs. I'm not a climate scientist,  but my own scientific training does give me the tools to at least read a paper's abstract...

Thursday February 19, 2009

Categories: Read This

American Muslims Call for Swift Action Against Domestic Violence

The following is a press release written today by a group of muslim bloggers, journalists, and media people including myself. The idea is to coordinate the friday khutbas (sermons) in as many American mosques as possible this week to focus...

Tuesday February 17, 2009

Categories: Read This

Muslim & S. Asian Women's Groups Condemn Beheading of Aasiya Hassan

This is a joint press release by Turning Point for Women and Families and the Domestic Harmony Foundation regarding the brutal murder of Aasiya Hassan last Thursday in Buffalo, NY. Below that is a press release from the Peaceful Families...

Monday February 9, 2009

Categories: Read This

Amazon's new Kindle 2 is iPhone sexy

Today Amazon.com has officially announced the second-generation Kindle ebook-reader, and it looks amazing.The original version was pretty clunky-looking, which didn't stop Amazon from selling (by some estimates) over half a million of them. The selling point was really how easy...

Wednesday February 4, 2009

Categories: Read This

Muslimah Media Watch

I'd like to highlight one of the essential blogs in the Islamsphere - Muslim Media Watch (MMW). It's a group weblog that tracks issues related to women and Islam, and features a broad stable of writers. One of the MMW...

Wednesday January 21, 2009

Categories: Islamerica, Read This

Willow on American Islam

My friend (and accomplished writer) G. Willow Wilson spent several years living in Cairo after converting to Islam. In her Journal at Talk Islam she relates her observations about the differences in how Islam is lived in breathed in Cairo...

Wednesday January 21, 2009

Categories: Read This

WhiteHouse.gov: open government

Change came to the virtual White House as well as the physical one yesterday - WhiteHouse.gov has re-launched in true Obama fashion by featuring a blog as its centerpiece and promises to publish legislation and executive orders online for the...

Saturday January 17, 2009

Categories: Read This

Good news in the Islamic world, 2008

It is easy to focus on the negative, but sometimes it is important to remind ourselves of the good news for a change. To that end, Juan Cole has compiled a list of ten good news stories from the Islamic...

Saturday January 17, 2009

Categories: Read This

The inauguration: a secular Hajj

My friend Ali Eteraz calls the Inauguration a "secular hajj" for America:The theological comparison isn't far-fetched. Emerson, Whitman, Dewey, and Rorty all suggested that politics is America's civil religion. This makes the constitution the country's holy text. The division of...

Friday January 16, 2009

Categories: Read This

The Judeo-Christian debate

My friend Razib has started an interesting debate on the meaning and value of the concept, "Judeo-Christian" - his initial post attracted a vigorous discussion, a response from Ross Douthat at The Atlantic, and lively discussion at Talk Islam. Frankly...

Tuesday December 23, 2008

Categories: Read This

5th Annual Brass Crescent Awards Winners

On behalf of both altmuslim.com and City of Brass, we'd like to thank the nearly 1000 people who voted in the Fifth Annual Brass Crescent Awards. Voting was very close in most categories, and we would like to be the...

Monday December 22, 2008

Categories: Read This

Happy Chanukah! Hanukkah mubarak!

Regardless of how you pronounce it, חג חנכה שמח !My friend Ron Coleman has a great links roundup in honor of the occasion at his blog, Likelihood of Confusion. Also, the Wikipedia entry is a great reference about this holiday...

Tuesday December 16, 2008

mubarak! hajjis come home - including a Congressman

The hajjis have begun to arrive home. Among them were Rep. Keith Ellison, the first muslim elected to Congress and now the first US elected official to have ever performed Hajj. The Democrat from Minnesota's 5th Congressional District traveled to...

Monday December 15, 2008

Categories: Read This

Jean Charles de Menezes - murdered by the State

Thabet exposes the elephant in the room regarding the murder of Jean Charles de Menezes by British police a few years ago:Which leads to me to a point not even the most harshest critic of the establishment has raised yet....

Wednesday December 10, 2008

Eid ul Adha mubarak - عید مبارک

Eid is by tradition a happy affair, but in India it is muted this year, in the wake of the Mumbai attacks. In addition to forgoing the slaughter of cows for the sacrifice (out of respect for the sentiments of...

Friday December 5, 2008

the Day of Arafat: renewal

Today is the Day of Arafat, where the pilgrims arrive and engage in prayer while standing and facing towards the sun. Then in the evening they will depart for muzdalifah in time for Eid ul Adha the next day.The Day...

Wednesday December 3, 2008

Categories: Read This

Brass Crescent Awards - Voting Phase

The voting phase for the Brass Crescent Awards has now begun (though a bit later than expected). We have some really great blogs for you all to vote on, so head over and make your choices!As it says on the...

Thursday November 20, 2008

Categories: Read This

Planet Islam

I am pleased to announce the launch of Planet Islam, an aggregator of posts from blogs from around the Islamsphere, including muslim blogs as well as non-muslim ones that post on issues related to Islam and muslims. Planet Islam is...

Monday November 17, 2008

Categories: Read This

Oxford Islamic Studies Online: What is Shari'a?

One of the singular best references about Islam, in all its complexity and diversity and nuance, is an online and free collection of essays and reference articles: Oxford Islamic Studies Online. It builds on the classical Oxford Encyclopedia of Islam,...

Tuesday November 4, 2008

Categories: Read This

Beliefnet.com exit poll

If you haven't already done so, please do take Beliefnet's exit poll - and chime in here on comments with how you voted and why, if you like....

Monday November 3, 2008

Categories: Read This

Refuting Obsession: Jews on First

As I noted in my statement on free speech, the best answer to bad speech is not to restrict speech, but more speech. In other words, refute it, don't silence it. This is why in my coverage of the Obsession...

Thursday October 30, 2008

Categories: Read This

Talk Islam

Earlier this year, a number of muslim bloggers including myself came together to found Talk Islam, a group blog project that is rapidly becoming the central nexus of the Islamic blogsphere. Over two dozen of the best-known muslim bloggers, writers,...

Wednesday October 29, 2008

Categories: Islamerica, Read This

Review of Obsession by David Shasha

Richard Silverstein has posted a review of the Islamophobic hate-film Obsession on his blog, written by David Shasha, one of the leaders of the American Sephardic Jewish community. It's a powerful indictment, beginning with a list of basic facts about...

Saturday October 25, 2008

Categories: Purple Politics, Read This

Barack Obama is a US citizen

I've previously addressed the "non-citizen smear", but as a public service here is a summary for the benefit of anyone who may still doubt the eligibility of Barack Obama for President according to the Constitution:the Obama campaign has already...

Saturday October 4, 2008

Categories: Read This

Nominations open for Brass Crescent Awards

Just a reminder - the Nominations phase for the Brass Crescent Awards are now underway. Head over to brasscrescent.org to nominate your favorite blogs in any of the following categories:BEST BLOG: This category honors the most indispensable, Muslim-authored blog there...

Thursday October 2, 2008

Categories: Read This

5th Annual Brass Crescent Awards

in partnership with Shahed Amanullah of altmuslim.com, I am pleased to announce that the 5th Annual Brass Crescent Awards are now underway!What are the Brass Crescent Awards? They are named for the Story of the City of Brass in the...

Wednesday October 1, 2008

Categories: Read This

Eid al-Fitr Mubarak redux

Via the On Faith blog at the Washington Post, behold the Empire State Building lit green for Eid last night: Daisy Khan, executive of the ASMA foundation, writes movingly of what seeing the emblematic skyscraper lit in commemoration of the holiday...

Tuesday September 30, 2008

Categories: Expressions, Read This

Eid Eid Eid and more

I must hasten to point out that not everyone is celebrating Eid today - many muslims are abiding by the sightings which indicate Eid is tomorrow. One of my favorite bloggers, Mr. Moo, offers his take on the opacity of...

Sunday September 7, 2008

Categories: Read This

French hijab ban

I linked this earlier, but it's worth highlighting again - this article at Islam Online about the French hijab ban is a fantastic retrospective and absolutely required reading on the topic. ...

Tuesday September 2, 2008

Categories: Read This

Ramadan for all

Ramadan mubarak to everyone! (and I do mean, everyone)A roundup of Ramadan reactions from around the Islamsphere (aka the Brass Crescent):Mr. Moo observes that preparing for Ramadan usually involves DATCWDWTDWWAFSWDRAS (no, I'm not spoiling that one for you. Go look...

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About City of Brass

City of Brass by Aziz Poonawalla approaches issues from the perspective of a Muslim of the West. Aziz, a member of the Dawoodi Bohra Muslim community, has been blogging since early 2003. His other major Islamsphere projects include the group weblog Talk Islam and the annual Brass Crescent Awards. Aziz currently resides near Madison, WI with his wife and children.

Blogroll


  • Planet Islam - aggregator of RSS feeds from all over the Islamsphere
  • Talk Islam - group weblog and central nexus of the Islamsphere's most popular bloggers
  • Islam in China - by Wang Daiyu, about Islam in the far East
  • Tariq Nelson - Islam and politics from the African American muslim perspective
  • An Indian Muslim - by indscribe, about Islam in India and the Subcontinent
  • 'Aqoul - group weblog for analysis and commentary about the Middle East/North Africa (MENA)
  • Chapati Mystery - by sepoy, "started out wondering what T. E. Lawrence and Bhagat Singh would talk about, over dinner"
  • Mr. Moo - by Musab Bora, a UK-based muslim who has a hilarious sense of humor.
  • Crossroads Arabia - by John Burgess, about the politics and culture of Saudi Arabia, with an emphasis on human rights.
  • Eunomia - by Daniel Larison, pragmatic conservative political punditry and comment
  • Dean's World - group weblog founded by Dean Esmay, "defending the liberal tradition in history, science, and philosophy."

Guest writers


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visits since 12-11-08

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