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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Arafat_(journal)
rdf:type
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Arafat (journal)
rdfs:comment
Arafat: A Monthly Critique of Muslim Thought was a monthly periodical founded by Muhammad Asad in Kashmir in 1946. It was named after the plain of Arafat, the level area before the gates of Mecca where pilgrims spend the ninth day of Dhu al-Hijjah in huge camps as part of Hajj. Asad was the editor, publisher and the sole contributor of the periodical. In the words of Asad: "Arafat was a kind of 'journalistic monologue' meant to clarify - as much as might be possible for a single man - the great confusion prevailing in the Muslim community as to the scope and the practical implications of Islamic Law."
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Arafat
dcterms:subject
dbc:Monthly_magazines_published_in_Pakistan dbc:Islamic_magazines dbc:Magazines_published_in_Pakistan dbc:Muhammad_Asad dbc:Magazines_disestablished_in_1947 dbc:Magazines_established_in_1946 dbc:Defunct_magazines_published_in_Pakistan
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dbp:abbreviation
Arafat
dbp:country
dbr:Pakistan
dbp:discipline
dbr:Islamic_Law
dbp:editor
dbr:Muhammad_Asad
dbp:history
1946
dbp:language
dbr:English_language
dbp:oclc
427533470
dbp:publisher
dbr:Muhammad_Asad
dbp:title
Arafat
dbo:abstract
Arafat: A Monthly Critique of Muslim Thought was a monthly periodical founded by Muhammad Asad in Kashmir in 1946. It was named after the plain of Arafat, the level area before the gates of Mecca where pilgrims spend the ninth day of Dhu al-Hijjah in huge camps as part of Hajj. Asad was the editor, publisher and the sole contributor of the periodical. In the words of Asad: "Arafat was a kind of 'journalistic monologue' meant to clarify - as much as might be possible for a single man - the great confusion prevailing in the Muslim community as to the scope and the practical implications of Islamic Law." Arafat was primarily a vehicle for Asad’s ideas and a clarion-call at the critical time of Pakistan Movement, aiming at a fundamental reconstruction of an ordinary Pakistani Muslim's approach to the problem of Shariah. Three months before the partition, he wrote an article under the title “What do we mean by Pakistan?” in which he emphasized the real purpose underlying the future establishment of Pakistan. In another issue, published less than a month before the Independence Day, he penned an essay titled “Towards an Islamic Constitution” which was the first attempt ever made to outline the principles which must be incorporated in the constitution of any state that claims to be ‘Islamic’.
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1947-01-01
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Arafat
dbo:firstPublicationYear
1946-01-01
dbo:oclc
427533470
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dbr:Islamic_Law
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dbr:Pakistan
dbo:editor
dbr:Muhammad_Asad
dbo:language
dbr:English_language
dbo:publisher
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