Two widely-respected experts on Islam in America, Ingrid Mattson and Geneive Abdo, will share the stage at the next public address in the New Hampshire Humanities Council’s two-year Shifting Ground: Religion and Civic Life in America project on Wednesday, April 30 at 7 p.m. at St. Paul’s School in Concord. Abdo will interview Mattson on the experiences of Muslims in America. This event is free and open to the public.
Mattson is the first female and the first convert to Islam to lead the Islamic Society of North America. She is the Director of Islamic Chaplaincy and a Professor at the MacDonald Center for Islamic Studies and Christian-Muslim Relations at the Hartford Seminary in Connecticut and the author of The Story of the Koran. She became an internationally-sought resource on the experiences of Muslim-Americans and Islam in the wake of 9/11.
Abdo is the author of Mecca and Main Street: Muslim Life in America After 9/11. Her 20-year career in journalism centered on coverage of the Middle East and the Islamic world. Abdo was the Iran correspondent for the British newspaper, The Guardian, and a regular contributor to The Economist.
Five Shifting Ground community forums will take place this year, the first two in Nashua and Laconia. Download a registration form. The project will culminate in a November 20 appearance by constitutional scholar and Harvard Law professor Noah Feldman, author of the NY Times best-seller, Divided by God.
Read Mattson's poem, Waterboarding.
Friday, February 15, 2008
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