Kimberly T. Wortmann is an assistant professor and a scholar of religion at Wake Forest University in North Carolina. Her research and writing are centered around transnational Muslim communities, religious institutions, and Swahili-speaking societies in East Africa and the Arab Gulf region.
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Acknowledgments Note on Transliteration Acronyms Introduction 1. Ibadhi Identity and Intra-Muslim Relations in Postrevolution Zanzibar 2. Building a Righteous Muslim Society 3. Ibadhi Schools and Their Transnational Networks 4. Ibadhi Students and Teachers between Tanzania and Algeria 5. Ibadhi Migrations, Religion, and Commerce in the Lake Region 6. Gendered Righteousness: Ibadhi Women and Their Local Networks Conclusion Glossary Bibliography List of Interviews Index
"Wortmann delivers a well-researched and comprehensive examination of Istiqaama, the Ibadi faith-based organization in Tanzania that grew in the 1980s and 90s to support local Muslims, re-establish ties with Oman, and in many ways reinvent what it means to be an Ibadi in postcolonial East Africa. Navigating the memory of the 1964 revolution, Wortmann provides a highly nuanced picture of the tensions that can appear as a result of Tanzania's colonial past with Oman as well as the careful work of Tanzanian Ibadis as they reconstruct their tradition. Through Wortmann's work, we witness the newest phase of Ibadism in East Africa."-Adam Gaiser, author of Shurat Legends, Ibadi Identities: Martyrdom, Asceticism, and the Making of an Early Islamic Community

