The Last of the Lascars
Yemeni Muslims in Britain 1836-2012
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- $0.99
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- $0.99
Publisher Description
"Dr. Seddon has contributed an important and fascinating chapter to the modern history of Britain."—David Waines, emeritus professor of Islamic Studies, Lancaster University, UK
Originally arriving as imperial oriental sailors and later as postcolonial labor migrants, Yemeni Muslims have lived in British ports and industrial cities from the mid-nineteenth century. They married local British wives, established a network of "Arab-only" boarding houses and cafes, and built Britain's first mosques and religious communities.
Mohammed Siddique Seddon is lecturer in religious and Islamic studies at the department of theology and religious studies, University of Chester, England.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Seddon, a professor of Islamic and religious studies at the University of Chester, U.K., surveys the little-known history of the oldest Muslim community in Britain, which was formed by Yemeni migrants, primarily sailors, in the 19th century. The book is well-researched and comprehensive in scope, charting the economic and cultural pressures on the migrants and their fluctuating legal, economic, and social status in both Yemen and Britain. Much of this history, however, is largely a retread of previous sources, and certain facts get repeated in its complicated organizational scheme. There is value in its original interviews with British Muslim residents and its focus on the past thirty years; the chapters focused on such issues as assimilation and identity formation, the lives of children of mixed British-Yemeni marriages, and the spread of Sufism among the British Yemeni community are highlights. Readers already familiar with the basics of Yemeni and British history may want to skim, but for others this will be a useful if brief introduction to issues of race, colonialism, immigration, and Islam in Britain.