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Muslims in Poland and Eastern Europe. Widening the European Discourse on Islam
(Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Warsaw, 2011)
This book aims to fill this gap by describing Muslim communities and their experiences in Central and Eastern Europe, both in countries with marginal Muslim populations, often not exceeding 1% (e.g. Hungary and Lithuania), ...
Literature of the Polish Tatars
(Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Warsaw, 2011)
The literature of Polish Tatars reflects their complicated history. A specific trait of the PolishLithuanianBelarusian Tatar population is their use of Arabic script for the notation of their Slavic language as early as ...
Muslims in Europe: different communities, one discourse? Adding the Central and Eastern European perspective
(Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Warsaw, 2011)
There is an old Polish saying, “każda pliszka swój ogonek chwali”1 meaning that everyone emphasizes their good points. Being a representative of a country of approximately 40 thousand Muslims (for around 38 million citizens) ...
The world of kebab. Arabs and gastronomy in Warsaw
(Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Warsaw, 2011)
This essay is a result of fieldwork carried out by me between April and August 2011 in various restaurants serving Arabic food in Warsaw. It is based on 30 indepth interviews not only with the owners of venues, but also ...
An Alternative Insight into the First Centuries of Islam on the Iberian Peninsula – Problems of Historiographic Sources Concerning the Early Islamic History of Al-Andalus
(Komitet Nauk Orientalistycznych Polskiej Akademii Nauk; Dom Wydawniczy Elipsa, 2012)
The stream of historical revisionism within the Orientalist scholarship has offered in recent years a number of intriguing theories attempting to undermine some of the conventional concepts of the Arab-Muslim early history ...