Szukaj
Wyświetlanie pozycji 11-20 z 123
Michael Mc-Kinley (ed.), The Gulf War: Critical Perspectives, Canberra, 194, 201 pp.
(Katedra Arabistyki i Islamistyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski, 1998)
The review of Michael Mc-Kinley (ed.), The Gulf War: Critical Perspectives, Canberra, 194, 201 pp.
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 ...
La Tunisie musulmane, pays à un riche passé chrétien et un présent tolérant
(Katedra Arabistyki i Islamistyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski, 1996)
En avril 1996 le pape Jean Paul II a effectué une visite officielle en Tunisie. Après le Maroc, la Tunisie a été le deuxième pays de l’Afrique du Nord où s’est rendu le Souverain Pontife. Dans son discours devant le pape, ...
Women in Islam. Tradition and modernity
(Katedra Arabistyki i Islamistyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski, 1995)
It should be stated at the beginning that the contemporary family in the Islamic World is basically patriarchal, characterized by the domination of the father — head of the family—followed by adult male members in accordance ...
Magic and realism of the desert (The prose of Ibrāhīm al-Kawnī)
(Katedra Arabistyki i Islamistyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski, 1995)
Many authors tried to explore the magic of the desert, but it was only the Libyan Ibrāhīm al-Kawnī who was able to introduce it to the literature on a larger scale. He was born in 1948, and began publishing in the 1970’s. ...
Sa‘īda Bint Ḫāṭir al-Fārisī–the water of ice and fire
(Katedra Arabistyki i Islamistyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski, 2002)
The beginnings of Omani women’s literary work go back to the previous century, when the Sultan of Oman and Zanzibar’s daughter Sayyida Sālma Bint Sa‘īd started to write her memoirs, which were published in Berlin in 1886 ...
Critique of Arabic mind–Muḥammad al-Ǧābirī. Rationalistic tendencies in modern Arabic philosophy
(Katedra Arabistyki i Islamistyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski, 2002)
Muḥammad al-Ǧābirī, a contemporary Arabic philosopher, was born in Marocco in 1936. He has been teaching at the University of Muḥammad the 5th in Rabat since 1967. In 1988 he was granted a UNESCO award for developing Arabic ...
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) ...
Flavorings in Context: Spices and Herbs in Medieval Near East
(Komitet Nauk Orientalistycznych Polskiej Akademii Nauk; Dom Wydawniczy Elipsa, 2011)
Throughout history, the approach towards imported spices varied from culture to culture. In medieval and early post-medieval Europe, where spices became an exotic object of temporary desire, they were often used unskillfully ...