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HIJRAH (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   178042


Journey from france to france: the spiritual moves of muslim youth from marseille / Evers, Cecile   Journal Article
Evers, Cecile Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Based on long-term ethnographic research with youth who were born to North, West, and East African families in northern Marseille, this article explores the common experience of alienation that practicing Muslims from Marseille report as they endeavor to live piously in their hometown, together with the mobility-oriented strategies they have devised to achieve belonging. Following these Muslim-Marseillais young adults longitudinally, it emerges that some relied on physical migration away from France (religiously conceived as hijrah) as a means of remaining pious and finding belonging. Others, meanwhile, navigated towards pious personhood and finding home in ways that still involved movement but transpired within France. Significantly, individuals who have chosen to remain in France carve out pious belonging by engaging in domestic movements to particular places in France, by pursuing occupational mobility, and by making advantageous use of prestigious linguistic registers like Standard French and Modern Standard Arabic. As such, the article suggests that hijrah is but one—and the most transnational—among various kinds of movement to which young Muslim-Marseillais turn as they grapple with discrimination, seek to improve themselves, and ascertain how best to belong.
Key Words Language  Social Mobility  Belonging  Hijrah  Spiritual Geography  Islam in France 
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2
ID:   156155


Talking to foreign fighters: insights into the motivations for hijrah to Syria and Iraq / Amarasingam, Amarnath; Dawson, Lorne L   Journal Article
Dawson, Lorne L Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Little of the discussion of foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq is informed by primary data derived from talking with the foreign fighters. This article reports some initial findings from interviews with twenty foreign fighters in Syria. The findings are compared with three other recent studies of European foreign fighters, and aspiring fighters, based on some primary data. While those studies emphasize the role of low social and economic prospects in motivating the choice to go, this study found little evidence of such factors, and alternatively argues more attention should be given to existential concerns and the role of religiosity. Consideration is also given to the methodological challenges posed by using of terrorists' accounts of their motivations.
Key Words Foreign fighters  Syria and Iraq  Hijrah 
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