30 Rights of Muslim Women
Autor Daisy Khanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 3 iul 2024
- Author is an authority on Islam, born in Kashmir.
- Khan is a prolific speaker who has lectured at major institutions, including the Council on Foreign Relations, Aspen Institute, Chautauqua Institution, World Economic Forum, and Islamic Society of North America.
- She is a media commentator and an Op-Ed writer who has appeared on CNN, MSNBC, ABC, PBS, and the BBC.
- Recipient of awards and honors including the Eleanor Roosevelt Human Rights Award, Edinburgh Peace Award, Interfaith Center’s Award for Promoting Peace, and Glamour Magazine listed her among the “7 Women You Must Follow on Twitter.”
- Book is written and designed to “arm” Muslim woman against all who would tell them they are lacking in rights that men possess according to Muslim scripture, law, and tradition.
- Book shows how the Quran’s vision refutes the traditional Muslim view, as it recognizes women beyond motherhood: as absolute moral and spiritual equals to men.
- Book’s direct target is English-speaking Muslim women, American Muslim women activists, and young women between 18-65 years old.
Preț: 150.08 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 225
Preț estimativ în valută:
28.72€ • 30.21$ • 23.92£
28.72€ • 30.21$ • 23.92£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 13-27 decembrie
Livrare express 28 noiembrie-04 decembrie pentru 31.10 lei
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781958972335
ISBN-10: 1958972339
Pagini: 350
Dimensiuni: 152 x 228 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Editura: Monkfish Book Publishing Company
ISBN-10: 1958972339
Pagini: 350
Dimensiuni: 152 x 228 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Editura: Monkfish Book Publishing Company
Notă biografică
Daisy Khan is an award-winning speaker, author, activist, commentator, and the founder of Women’s Islamic Initiative in Spirituality and Equality (WISE), the largest global network of Muslim women committed to peacebuilding, gender equality, and human dignity. She has been involved in grassroots efforts combating anti-Muslim bias for twenty-plus years and is renowned as a thought leader on Muslim women’s rights and Islam in America. Her memoir, Born with Wings: The Spiritual Journey of a Muslim Woman, published in 2018 by Random House, depicts her spiritual journey as a modern Muslim woman and her circuitous path to leadership. Khan has lectured at major institutions, like the Council on Foreign Relations, Aspen Institute, Chautauqua Institution, World Economic Forum, Islamic Society of North America, and many others. She is a media commentator and an Op-Ed writer who has appeared on CNN, MSNBC, ABC, PBS, and BBC and is featured in documentaries and publications like TIME, Guardian, Newsweek, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Elle, and many others. Khan was listed among TIME Magazine’s “100 Most Influential” People
Cuprins
Table of Contents—these are the 30 Rights:
The Right to Protection and Promotion of Mind
#1. To civic/political leadership
#2. To education—secular
#3. To career pursuit
#4. To freedom of speech and expression
#5. To testimony and witness
The Right to Your Religion
#6. To fulfill being a trustee (Khalifa) of God on earth
#7. To religious and spiritual leadership
#8. To be jurists and interpreters of Islamic texts
#9. To gain spiritual knowledge
#10. To access religious spaces
The Right to Your Family
#11. To marriage
#12. To be free of forced marriage
#13. To maturely choose marriage
#14. To accept or refuse a polygamous marriage
#15. To divorce
#16. To family planning and reproductive justice
#17. To care for orphans through adoption
#18. To motherhood and womanhood
The Right to Wealth
#19. To inheritance
#20. To financial independence and equal pay
#21. To own property
#22. To freedom of movement
#23. To expression of modesty
#24. To freedom from domestic violence
#25. To safeguarding against female genital mutilation
#26. To protection from rape, sexual assault, and adultery
#27. To safeguarding against child and human trafficking
#28. To good health and hygiene
The Right to Your Dignity
#29. To freedom from gossip, slander, libel, defamation, and to privacy
#30. To be safeguarded against “honor” and targeted killings
The Right to Protection and Promotion of Mind
#1. To civic/political leadership
#2. To education—secular
#3. To career pursuit
#4. To freedom of speech and expression
#5. To testimony and witness
The Right to Your Religion
#6. To fulfill being a trustee (Khalifa) of God on earth
#7. To religious and spiritual leadership
#8. To be jurists and interpreters of Islamic texts
#9. To gain spiritual knowledge
#10. To access religious spaces
The Right to Your Family
#11. To marriage
#12. To be free of forced marriage
#13. To maturely choose marriage
#14. To accept or refuse a polygamous marriage
#15. To divorce
#16. To family planning and reproductive justice
#17. To care for orphans through adoption
#18. To motherhood and womanhood
The Right to Wealth
#19. To inheritance
#20. To financial independence and equal pay
#21. To own property
#22. To freedom of movement
#23. To expression of modesty
#24. To freedom from domestic violence
#25. To safeguarding against female genital mutilation
#26. To protection from rape, sexual assault, and adultery
#27. To safeguarding against child and human trafficking
#28. To good health and hygiene
The Right to Your Dignity
#29. To freedom from gossip, slander, libel, defamation, and to privacy
#30. To be safeguarded against “honor” and targeted killings