
Contents
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Media, Madrasas, and Mullahs Media, Madrasas, and Mullahs
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Vocabularies of Difference Vocabularies of Difference
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Media, Culture, and Politics Media, Culture, and Politics
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Another Perspective Another Perspective
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter examines the negative perceptions of the Western media and government about madrasas. Media and political commentators portray madrasas as malevolent institutions and Muslims as devoid of both comparative and critical value because they adhere to a faith called Islam. Indeed, madrasas fit nicely with attempts to raise the specter of Islam as a dangerous ideology, not a faith, to Western political interests. In America and Europe, the word “madrasa,” along with keywords like “terrorism,” “Islamic fundamentalism,” “suicide bomber,” “Taliban,” and “Bin Laden,” make up the narrative for a clash-of-civilizations rhetoric. Even terms like “Islam,” “mosque,” and “minarets” are now advertised as anti-Western viruses that must be expunged from European societies. This chapter argues that the view of the madrasas as bastions of extremism is at odds with reality, and that Western publics remain uninformed about these orthodox Muslim institutions.
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