Islam – A Short History
Author – Karen Armstrong
Genre – History, Religion
Islam. You can love it or have a strong distaste for it, but you simply can’t ignore it. The extreme antagonism of its critics is matched only by the extreme faith of its 1.6 bn believers.
24% of the world believes in Islam. That’s one in every four people, making it the second largest religion after Christianity. In 50 of the 196 countries, muslims are in majority. And Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world with its percentage of world population having doubled in the last century.
For non-believers, Islam’s popular imagination is often of an extreme faith that promotes terrorism, authoritarian government, female oppression, and civil war. However, Karen Armstrong, a former Catholic nun and an expert in comparative religion, suggests that the modern fundamentalist strain might not be the real Islam. And the western world may be thoroughly misplaced in its judgement on Islam.
Interesting recap Nishant, I think the key tenet for the book is derived from the final section where Armstrong moves out of her history mode and provides a profound analysis of the contemporary Muslim situation in the West. They would like to participate in the modern world whilst remaining faithful to the central tenets of their own religious understanding. This is not always compatible and a myriad of issues combine to make a thoughtful solution quite difficult to implement.
I enjoyed the first and the last part the most. Those were really insightful and very informative.