The question the following review raises concerns not only Islam
but every religion in the world :  How has the  internet changed
people's perceptions of their faith ?
 
Billy
----------
 
 
 
 
C. S. Monitor
 
My Isl@m 
Based on his own story, popular Islamic blogger Amir Ahmad Nasr  argues 
that the Internet will be for Islam what the printing press was for  
Christianity – a driving force for reform.
By Husna Haq / June 18, 2013 

 
 
The heart and soul of Amir Ahmad Nasr’s My Isl@m? The  Internet.
 
Typically considered by Western audiences a source of radicalization in  
Islamic circles – think terrorist forums, online calls to jihad, recipes for  
homemade explosives – the Internet takes a star turn here as liberator, as 
both  a personal agent of awakening for Afro-Arab blogger Nasr, and an 
incubator of  change in a Muslim world roiled by revolution. Nasr’s journey in “
My Isl@m” is a  testament to his prediction: that the Internet will be for 
Islam what the  printing press was for Christianity – a driving force for 
reform. 
Born in Khartoum, _Sudan_ (http://www.csmonitor.com/tags/topic/Sudan) , and 
raised in Qatar and Malaysia, Nasr enjoys a  relatively orthodox 
upbringing: praying five times a day, shunning the lewd  programming of MTV, 
and in 
school, listening to his teachers rail against the  infidel twin enemies, the 
_USA_ (http://www.csmonitor.com/tags/topic/United+States)   and _Israel_ 
(http://www.csmonitor.com/tags/topic/Israel) . Bored by his IT classes in a 
sleepy Malaysian  university town, Nasr stumbles upon the work of liberal 
Egyptian blogger “The  Big Pharoah.” 
 
_10 best books of June, 2013_ 
(http://www.csmonitor.com/Books/2013/0601/10-best-books-of-June-according-to-The-Christian-Science-Monitor/And-the-Mountai
ns-Echoed-by-Khaled-Hosseini?nav=685947-csm_book_review-promoLink) 
“It was through him that I fell down the rabbit hole and landed in a 
virtual  wonderland,” writes Nasr of the Arab blogosphere, a realm where 
nothing 
was  taboo and the self-described “third culture kid” straddling multiple 
cultural  identities finally felt he belonged. 
Finding no other Sudanese bloggers, Nasr begins his own blog in 2006, “The  
Sudanese Thinker,” and joins a community of like-minded Arab bloggers 
plumbing  the issues churning the Muslim world, from the Danish cartoon 
controversy and  the Israel-Palestine conflict to Wahhabism, suicide bombings, 
and 
the US abuses  at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. Known in his family as the 
child who “thinks  too much,” Nasr rejoices in the intellectual freedom and 
the way the blogosphere  unites Arabs and Muslims from disparate geographic 
regions and religious  persuasions. 
As he blogs and interacts with others in the Arab blogosphere however, Nasr 
 begins to question the teachings of his orthodox upbringing, dissecting 
Islam as  he knows it until his doubts about religion gradually grow into 
disbelief and  Nasr divorces himself from “the suffocating, dark, stinking 
dungeons of  subordinating dogmatism.” 
His personal journey from the comforts of orthodox faith to doubt and  
disbelief are among the strengths of “My Isl@m.” His struggle to hold on to his 
 faith is real and his pain at leaving is palpable, a bitter passage Nasr 
himself  labors to understand and share with his readers, quoting 
Sudanese-born Emory  University law professor Abdullahi An-Na’im, who said “If 
I don’t 
have freedom  to disbelieve, I cannot believe.” 
Yet his story falls flat, and Nasr loses readers – at least this one – 
when  he delves into tedious philosophy lessons, explaining his explorations 
with  metaphysics, mythology, and “the empirical claims of contemplatives.” 
More disappointingly, the revolutions roiling the Arab world, which get top 
 billing in the book’s promotional materials, are relegated to a single 
section  toward the end of the book and read as mere regurgitations of media 
accounts.  Most readers would surely prefer more of Nasr’s insight and 
analysis, especially  considering his unique background, as well as his 
connections 
in the regions  discussed. 
On a personal front however, Nasr shines, breaking the suspense about the  
ultimate fate of his relationship with religion. Struggling to distance 
himself  from an Islam of dogma to one of reason and compassion, he returns to 
faith  during a trip to Turkey, land of the mystic poet Rumi, where 
Westernized  wine-drinking Turks dine peacefully next to their traditional, 
hijab-clad  countrymen. 
In a tender moment, moved by the grandeur of the setting and the  
reverberating rhythmic chant of the Turkish imam who reminds him of his beloved 
 
childhood mosque, Nasr reaffirms his faith under the grand dome of the Sultan  
Ahmed Mosque, or Blue Mosque, in Istanbul, this time as a follower of the  
mystical Sufi practice. 
“My Isl@m” illustrates the explosive power of the Internet among youth 
across  the Muslim world, who through social media and online activism, are 
changing old  social, religious, and political orders. As such, Nasr’s story is 
remarkable in  that it mirrors the personal journeys of millions of youth 
across the region for  whom the Internet has upended traditional notions of 
Islamic belief and  political order, giving way to a Muslim world “reborn,” 
via revolutions personal  and political. 
Husna Haq is a Monitor correspondent.

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