Sexuality, Gender and Islam - Bibliography Summary Page of:
Quran, Liberation and Pluralism: An Islamic perspective of Interreligious Solidarity
against Oppression
By: Farid Esack (1997)
Link to full article: http://bit.ly/xTXucK
The demise of apartheid in South Africa in the 1980s followed an unprecedented
unity in struggle against oppression from members of different faith traditions.
Determined as South African Muslims were to participate with the rest of the
oppressed in solidarity against apartheid, this brought them into conflict
with interpretations of the Qur'an that denied virtue outside Islam, and left
them searching for a theology that would allow them to both co-operate against
injustice and be true to their faith.
In this challenging account, Farid Esack reflects on key qur'anic passages
used in the context of oppression to rethink the role of Islam in a plural
society. He exposes how traditional interpretations of the Qur'an were used
to legitimize an unjust order, and demonstrates that those very texts used
to support religious intolerance, if interpreted within a contemporary socio-historical
context, support active solidarity with the religious Other for change.
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