Itemize Books In Favor Of The Road to Mecca

Original Title: The Road to Mecca
ISBN: 1887752374 (ISBN13: 9781887752374)
Edition Language: English URL http://muhammad-asad.com/Road-to-Mecca.pdf
Download Free Books The Road to Mecca  Full Version
The Road to Mecca Paperback | Pages: 375 pages
Rating: 4.45 | 4190 Users | 545 Reviews

Representaion As Books The Road to Mecca

There are enough reviews by other people, which does the justice to the book. Yet I just want to add that Leopold Weis/Muhammad Asad's life is the testimony to one thing: Can a modern/secular mind find it way into Islam and appreciate its truth? And if so how is this possible? As I was born in and raised into a Muslim society, I took it for granted that Islam was the true calling of God. Yet after I have started studyin social sciences and Western society, the question above has become increasingly pressing for me. Because the answer to this question would help me decide whether Islam was really universal in its essence or I was living a truth-regime. Esed's experience is the perfect testimony of the modern reason finding its way into Islam and at the same time reconstructing the message and significance of Islam for the modern Muslim. It helps us understand the relevance of Quranic message for Modernity. Finally I'd like to say that vividness of the experiences in the book occasionally made me cry; something I experience so rarely. Towards the end, the cry "Lebbeyk!" was echoing in my own heart.

List Out Of Books The Road to Mecca

Title:The Road to Mecca
Author:Muhammad Asad
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 375 pages
Published:January 1st 2000 by Fons Vitae (first published 1954)
Categories:Religion. Islam. Nonfiction. Biography. History

Rating Out Of Books The Road to Mecca
Ratings: 4.45 From 4190 Users | 545 Reviews

Appraise Out Of Books The Road to Mecca
[ Some takeaways from Road To Mecca ]The book talks about the journey of an Austrian who's a Jew to Islam. The bulk of the book is during the period between 1900-1932 and he talked about various incidents, ideas, thoughts and events; ranging from philosophy of religions, the loss of the soul among Europeans due to materialistic inclination, Wahabbi, Shia, Islam itself, Grand Sanusi Order, to politics and social issues.Some of the things he touched:-I) That Islam does not separate the body and

An extraordinary and beautiful account of the search for the human soul that is universal in its messages across all religions, and even beyond religion.

This is one of the best books I have ever read!The book describes the writer's journey from skepticism to Islam. While interestingly describing his travels from Europe to the different countries in the middle east, the writer describes the shifts in his way of viewing the world and the way his thoughts grew wiser and wiser. The writer explains the differences between the materialistic Europe in the post-WWI era and compares it with the spontaneous Arabia of that time.The writer describes Arabs

It is difficult to write a review of this book. I think I have read it ten times sometimes starting again as soon as i finish. I found it that enjoyable.I could tell you that I felt my life experience had been enriched after each read, when normally, people have to live to acquire a life experience.At times this book transported me to the vast openness of the desert and I could feel, hear and taste that life. I could feel the cool sand against the back of my head as I lay looking up at the black

Wow where do I begin,I ventured into reading this thinking it'll be a sensational, jaw dropping, soul-rending, emotionally appealing, revert story. It's not. It reads more like a historical account of the Arab world and the impact it made on someone who visits it as a foreigner only to identify himself as one of them. Muhammad Asad is very poetic at certain places especially when describing the scenery or backdrop to give a vivid mental picture of what his surroundings must be like. Similarly he

This book reads like a Hollywood script ! I'm really surprised there hasn't been a movie based on this yet, his storytelling is captivating and deeply reflective, highly recommend!

One of the best autobiographies I've ever read. It's one of those books which you don't read but actually live. Asad wrote this book to tell his journey of transmutation from Leopold(his old name, representing his Jewish life) to Asad(his new name, showing his Muslim life) . This journey includes his adventures in the Middle East, his understanding of local cultures and most importantly, the religion transcending personal territories and becoming a part of cultural, social, political and