Rethinking the Ben Ali diary : multiple contexts and Muslim slaves

This paper explores the reasons why Bilali Mohammed, a Muslim slave who lived on Sapelo Island produced his Arabic document, known as the Ben Mi diary. Although several scholars have studied the document, they have remained silent on why Bilali was literate and why he produced this work. Since the B...

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Main Author: Syed, Amir
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/14720
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-147202018-01-05T17:23:52Z Rethinking the Ben Ali diary : multiple contexts and Muslim slaves Syed, Amir This paper explores the reasons why Bilali Mohammed, a Muslim slave who lived on Sapelo Island produced his Arabic document, known as the Ben Mi diary. Although several scholars have studied the document, they have remained silent on why Bilali was literate and why he produced this work. Since the Ben Au diary deals with Islamic ritual, this paper argues that in order to understand the text it must be intimately connected to Bilali’s life in West Africa, and, more specifically, to the spread of religious school during a period of Islamic revival in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. One of the central concerns of this paper is to raise questions about Muslim slave identity, resistance and literacy. It seeks to situate the discussion about the Ben Ali diary in the larger context of African American and American history. While the paper explores the literature on Muslim slaves, it also explores why the historical narratives that scholars produce about America’s past silence Islam. Finally, it investigates issues around power and narrativity, and suggests that Islam has been present in the New World since the onset of European colonialism. Consequently, it argues that present-day discourse about the foreignness and “dangers” of Islam in the West, make little sense, and are only legitimized by a complete disregard of this Muslim past. Arts, Faculty of History, Department of Graduate 2009-11-09T22:19:06Z 2009-11-09T22:19:06Z 2009 2009-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/14720 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 1086033 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
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language English
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description This paper explores the reasons why Bilali Mohammed, a Muslim slave who lived on Sapelo Island produced his Arabic document, known as the Ben Mi diary. Although several scholars have studied the document, they have remained silent on why Bilali was literate and why he produced this work. Since the Ben Au diary deals with Islamic ritual, this paper argues that in order to understand the text it must be intimately connected to Bilali’s life in West Africa, and, more specifically, to the spread of religious school during a period of Islamic revival in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. One of the central concerns of this paper is to raise questions about Muslim slave identity, resistance and literacy. It seeks to situate the discussion about the Ben Ali diary in the larger context of African American and American history. While the paper explores the literature on Muslim slaves, it also explores why the historical narratives that scholars produce about America’s past silence Islam. Finally, it investigates issues around power and narrativity, and suggests that Islam has been present in the New World since the onset of European colonialism. Consequently, it argues that present-day discourse about the foreignness and “dangers” of Islam in the West, make little sense, and are only legitimized by a complete disregard of this Muslim past. === Arts, Faculty of === History, Department of === Graduate
author Syed, Amir
spellingShingle Syed, Amir
Rethinking the Ben Ali diary : multiple contexts and Muslim slaves
author_facet Syed, Amir
author_sort Syed, Amir
title Rethinking the Ben Ali diary : multiple contexts and Muslim slaves
title_short Rethinking the Ben Ali diary : multiple contexts and Muslim slaves
title_full Rethinking the Ben Ali diary : multiple contexts and Muslim slaves
title_fullStr Rethinking the Ben Ali diary : multiple contexts and Muslim slaves
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking the Ben Ali diary : multiple contexts and Muslim slaves
title_sort rethinking the ben ali diary : multiple contexts and muslim slaves
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/14720
work_keys_str_mv AT syedamir rethinkingthebenalidiarymultiplecontextsandmuslimslaves
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