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From Jews to Muslims

Twentieth-Century Converts to Islam
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From Jews to Muslims: Twentieth-Century Converts to Islam tells the stories of twentieth century Jewish intellectuals and activists and their various and complex reasons for converting to the Islamic faith. Some were motivated by religious reasons, others by political considerations. The book focuses on the work of late nineteenth century European Jewish scholars of Arabic and Islam. These scholars evinced a deep interest in Islam, but did not leave Judaism for the 'sister' religion that so fascinated them. Their work examined Jewish-Muslim parallels and differences, and they brought forth the idea that the Convivencia, the imagined Golden Age of Muslim-Jewish intellectual and artistic cooperation, could serve as a model for contemporary inter-religious relations. In the twentieth century a new tendency emerged, that of Jews in Europe, the US, and Israel who left Judaism to become Muslims. Zionism, the political movement whose aim was to establish a Jewish state in Palestine struck each of these converts as deeply problematic. Each of them rejected the Biblical idea of Jews as a chosen people, and by becoming Muslim, these converts understood that they were joining a tolerant universalist religion that rejected what they saw as 'Jewish particularism.' Whether the geopolitical events of the twentieth century confirmed, complicated, or refuted their aspirations will be revealed in this book's compelling narratives.
Shalom Goldman is professor of religion at Middlebury College.
From Jews to Muslims: Twentieth-Century Converts to Islam sheds important light on dilemmas and choices that Jews confronted in the twentieth century. These include intellectual and spiritual reactions to Zionism and Israel, which led several outstanding individuals to convert to Islam. A few of them became important voices in the Muslim world. Shalom Goldman should be commended for a unique scholarly achievement. The book makes for a fascinating reading while it offers brilliant insights into the dynamics of conversion in the late Modern Era that no historian has made yet. This is a highly important and timely study and I highly recommend it. --Yaakov Ariel, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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