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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Muslim Islamist Websites, March 29, 2010
By 
William Garrison Jr. (Bellevue, WA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: iMuslims: Rewiring the House of Islam (Islamic Civilization and Muslim Networks) (Paperback)
"iMuslims" by Gary Bunt is very useful for understanding how the internet is impacting how young Muslims receive secular information from non-Islamist websites. The author exposes not only how various Islamic-religious websites provide basic information about Islam to inquiring minds, but also how the internet threatens the Wahabbi-Islamist establishment as Muslim youths and unhappy Muslim husbands gain access to `cybersex' websites that Islamic-moral guardians find objectionable. Muslim women may divorce their husbands upon discovering their husband has been `voyagering' on cybersex websites in search for an additional wife, catching them in other acts of infidelity by seeking a `virtual girlfriend', or posting pornographic photographs of themselves on Muslim dating websites (p. 66-67). The author discusses how Middle Eastern governments attempt to censor websites promoting political reform. The author notes various websites that have published the Quran on-line, and which ones inform a reader whether a surah (chapter) originated in either Mecca or Medina. Even the Egyptian al-Azhar University Library has an English-language website. This book lists various "Holy Warrior Jihad' website addresses, and posts a few militant photographs from them. The author notes how a web-surfer can research behavioral norms from the ahadith that are posted on line. Bunt notes that "diverse gay, lesbian, transgender, and bisexual individuals...who identify themselves as Muslims have had an active presence online" (p. 111). The author discusses "researching [militant] jihadi networks in cyberspace" beginning on page 179, and notes that the U.S. Army at West Point has `The Militant Ideology Atlas' which publishes jihadi writings online, and he notes the MEMRI translation website, too. The author has a 60-page long chapter titled "Militaristic Jihad in Cyberspace" and other 30-page "Digital Jihadi Batlefields" chapter pertaining to Iraq and Palestine resistance-movement websites. A very informative read regarding Islamist cyberspace.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Muslim Islamist Websites, March 29, 2010
By 
William Garrison Jr. (Bellevue, WA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
"iMuslims" by Gary Bunt is very useful for understanding how the internet is impacting how young Muslims receive secular information from non-Islamist websites. The author exposes not only how various Islamic-religious websites provide basic information about Islam to inquiring minds, but also how the internet threatens the Wahabbi-Islamist establishment as Muslim youths and unhappy Muslim husbands gain access to `cybersex' websites that Islamic-moral guardians find objectionable. Muslim women may divorce their husbands upon discovering their husband has been `voyagering' on cybersex websites in search for an additional wife, catching them in other acts of infidelity by seeking a `virtual girlfriend', or posting pornographic photographs of themselves on Muslim dating websites (p. 66-67). The author discusses how Middle Eastern governments attempt to censor websites promoting political reform. The author notes various websites that have published the Quran online, and which ones inform a reader whether a surah (chapter) originated in either Mecca or Medina. Even the Egyptian al-Azhar University Library has an English-language website. This book lists various "Holy Warrior Jihad' website addresses, and posts a few militant photographs from them. The author notes how a web-surfer can research behavioral norms from the ahadith that are posted online. Bunt notes that "diverse gay, lesbian, transgender, and bisexual individuals...who identify themselves as Muslims have had an active presence online" (p. 111). The author discusses "researching [militant] jihadi networks in cyberspace" beginning on page 179, and notes that the U.S. Army at West Point has `The Militant Ideology Atlas' which publishes jihadi writings online, and he notes the MEMRI translation website, too. The author has a 60-page long chapter titled "Militaristic Jihad in Cyberspace" and other 30-page "Digital Jihadi Batlefields" chapter pertaining to Iraq and Palestine resistance-movement websites. A very informative read regarding Islamist cyberspace.
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iMuslims: Rewiring the House of Islam (Islamic Civilization and Muslim Networks)
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