Review
It is unambiguously a book about "living Islam", Islam as an unfinished product, of experiencing and experimenting. -- Al-Qalam, December 2000
The interest for nonMuslims is simple -- a spiritual travelogue opening windows to a ritual that few are privy to. -- Mail & Guardian -- January 12 2001
This is a Hajj account we need many more of, an honest assessment of an experience shared by millions worldwide. -- Michael Wolfe - Author of: The Hadj: An American's Pilgrimage to Mecca and One Thousand Roads to Mecca
The interest for nonMuslims is simple -- a spiritual travelogue opening windows to a ritual that few are privy to. -- Mail & Guardian -- January 12 2001
This is a Hajj account we need many more of, an honest assessment of an experience shared by millions worldwide. -- Michael Wolfe - Author of: The Hadj: An American's Pilgrimage to Mecca and One Thousand Roads to Mecca
Product Description
This is a unique book, actually groundbreaking in the field of Islamic studies. It is, on its surface, a personal story of a South African couple making their first pilgrimage to Makkah (Hajj) together. The authors are highly intelligent, well educated, slightly sarcastic, but very devout in a way that resonates with the faith of other young people throughout the world. But this book is more than the musings of young professionals on the meaning of a traditional ritual. The authors are South African activists struggling against apartheid and its aftermath. At the same time, Shamima and Na'eem grapple with gender and authority issues within Islam, especially as these issues question their social activism. Their book is therefore a focused story of Muslims committed to social reform and seeking to reconcile their activism with their deeply traditional faith. The story is made all the more poignant knowing that the trip is both the vehicle of spiritual discovery and the couple's last trip together. Shamima died a few months later, leaving Na'eem to bring up their two young sons and make sense of their journey(s) together. There have been several books published recently on the Islamic pilgrimage: F.E. Peters, The Hajj: The Muslims' Pilgrimage to Mecca and the Holy Places (Princeton, 1994); I.R. Netton, Seek Knowledge: Thought and Travel in the House of Islam (Curzon, 1966); and most recently, Michael Wolfe, ed., One Thousand Roads to Mecca (Grove, 1997). None of these, however, has the accessibility and personal appeal that Na'eem and Shamima have achieved in their Journey of Discovery. More importantly, none has incorporated the meaning of the pilgrimage into the spiritual and social landscape of Muslim life in the contemporary world, as theirs has. This book is easy to read, yet highly charged intellectually and emotionally, making it a good choice for undergraduate classroom discussion. It is also attractive to a non-specialist readership.
(Introduction written by Tamara Sonn of The College of William and Mary)




