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The House of Islam

Page 33

by Ed Husain

shukr (gratitude) here

  Siffin, battle of here

  Sikhs here, here, here

  el-Sisi, Abdel Fattah here

  Six Day War here

  slavery here, here

  Smith, Adam here

  socialism here, here, here, here

  Socrates here, here

  Solomon, King here

  South Korea here

  Soviet Union here, here

  Subki, Imam here, here

  Suez Canal here, here

  Sufism (Sufis) here, here, here, here, here and corruption here

  eclecticism here

  influence on Mughal court here

  influence on Muslim Brotherhood here

  influence on political elites here

  origin of the term here

  Salafi hostility to here, here, here, here

  suicide missions here, here, here, here, here, here, here

  Sunnis and Arab–Israeli conflict here

  and ‘closure of the gate of ijtihad’ here

  customs and beliefs here

  and jihad here

  need to expel jihadis here

  Sunni–Shi‘a schism here

  Sykes–Picot Agreement here

  al-Tabari, Imam here

  al-Tahawi, Imam Abu Ja’far here

  Taj Mahal here, here, here, here

  Takfir here, here, here, here, here

  Taliban here, here, here, here

  Tamil Tigers here

  Taqlid (imitation) here

  Taqwim Jalali (Muslim calendar) here

  Tarawih (prayer) here

  Tarkan here

  Taseer, Salman here

  tawhid (‘oneness of God’), here, here, here

  Taziya (passion plays) here

  Tel el-Kebir, battle of here

  al-Thawri, Sufyan Imam here

  theft, punishment of here

  al-Tijani, Ahmed here

  Thirty Years War here

  thymos here, here

  Tipu Sultan here

  Touba (Senegal) here, here

  Treaty of Hudaybiyyah here

  Treaty of Sèvres here

  Trump, Donald here

  Tunisia Arab Spring here, here

  centre-right politics here, here

  US embassy attack here

  and women’s rights here, here

  Turkey abortion rate here

  anti-Semitism here

  and Arab–Israeli conflict here

  attitudes to apostasy here

  centre-right politics here, here

  education system here

  everyday dress here

  literacy here

  scrutiny of Hadiths here

  and Syrian refugees here

  and women’s rights here, here, here

  ulama (scholars) here, here, here, here, here, here, here

  Umayyad Mosque (Damascus) here, here, here, here

  Umm Ayman here

  Umm Kulthum here

  United Nations here, here

  Urabi Pasha here

  Uthman, Caliph here, here, here, here

  Van Gogh, Theo here

  Victoria, Queen here

  Vienna, siege of here, here

  Voltaire here, here, here, here Mahomet here, here

  Wahdat al-Wujood (‘Oneness of Being’), here

  al-Wahhab, Mohamed ibn Abd here, here, here

  Wahhabism, see Salafism

  Wahshi (spearman) here

  Wajhullah (‘Face of God’), here

  al-wala wa al-bara (loyalty and disavowal) here

  Walad, Baha’uddin here

  Waraqah bin Nawfal here

  water here

  Welby, Archbishop Justin here

  Well of Zamzam here

  Wellington, Duke of here

  Westernisation here

  Westminster Abbey here

  Wilayat al-Faqih (Rule of the Cleric) here

  Wilberforce, William here

  women here, here, here, here, here aurah (‘private parts’), here

  bare-breasted here

  and dress here

  and education here, here

  girl babies here, here

  and sharia here

  and Western influences here

  World Trade Center bombing (1993) here

  Wren, Sir Christopher here

  yaqeen (certainty) here, here, here

  Yazid, Caliph here, here

  Young Turks here

  Yusufzai, Malala here

  al-Zahrawi, Abd al-Hamid here

  Zakah (alms-giving) here

  Zarruq, Sidi Ahmad here, here, here

  al-Zawahiri, Ayman here, here, here

  zawiyas (shrines and gathering places) here, here

  Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahyan, Sheikh here

  Zeinab, Lady here

  Zureiq, Constantin here

  A Note on the Author

  Ed Husain is the bestselling author of The Islamist, a memoir of his time inside radical Islamism. Having rejected extremism, he now advises governments and political leaders on Islam. He is a senior fellow at Civitas: Institute for the Study of Civil Society in London, and a global fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Centre in Washington DC. He was a senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) in New York for five years and co-founded Quilliam, the world’s first counter-extremism think tank, in Britain. He has written for the New York Times, the Telegraph and the Financial Times, and has appeared on CNN, the BBC and others. He lives in London.

  @Ed_Husain

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  First published in Great Britain 2018

  First published in the United States 2018

  Copyright © Ed Husain, 2018

  For legal purposes the Acknowledgements constitute an extension of this copyright page.

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  ISBN: HB: 978-1-63286-639-4; eBook: 978-1-63286-641-7

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

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