Minarets in the Mountains: A Journey into Muslim Europe

Author: Tharik Hussain
Publisher: Bradt Travel Guides
Year of Publication: 2021
Print Length: 352 pages
Genre: Non-Fiction / Travel Writing or Travelogue or Travel Literature
Area: Eastern and Central Europe, The Balkans, Ottoman Empire, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Albania, Montenegro
Topic: Muslim, The Muslim World, Identity, Islam, Islamophobia, Lived Experience, Culture & Society, Cultural Heritage / Legacy
A magical, eye-opening account of a journey into a Europe that rarely makes the news and is in danger of being erased altogether. Another Europe. A Europe few people believe exists and many wish didn’t. Muslim Europe.
Writer and documentary-maker Tharik Hussain sets off with his wife and young daughters around the Western Balkans, home to the largest indigenous Muslim population in Europe, and explores the regions of Eastern Europe where Islam has shaped places and people for more than half a millennium. Encountering blonde-haired, blue-eyed Muslims, visiting mystical Islamic lodges clinging to the side of mountains, and praying in mosques older than the Sistine Chapel, he paints a picture of a hidden Muslim Europe, a vibrant place with a breathtaking history, spellbinding culture and unique identity.
Minarets in The Mountains, the first non-fiction account by a Muslim writer on this subject, explores the historical roots of the current tide of Islamophobia. Tharik and his family learn lessons about themselves and their own identity as Britons, Europeans, and Muslims. Following in the footsteps of renowned Ottoman traveller Evliya Celebi, they remind us that Europe is as Muslim as it is Christian, Jewish or pagan.
Like William Dalrymple’s In Xanadu, this is a vivid reimagining of a region’s cultural heritage, unveiling forgotten Muslim communities, empires and their rulers; and like Kapka Kassabova’s Border, it is a quest that forces us to consider what makes up our own identities, and more importantly, who decides?
Table of Contents
Introduction: An Intimate Tolerance – Palamartsa, Bulgaria
Part One: Bosnia and Herzegovina
An Ottoman City – Sarajevo
The Bridge Built by Barbarians – Mostar
Mystics and Mountains – Blagaj
The Bloody Bridge on the Drina – Višegrad
Part Two: Serbia and Kosovo
Serbia’s Dirty Little Secret – Rudine and Sjenica
‘A Muslim Town’ – Novi Pazar
Pokémon in Hammams – Novi Pazar
The Grandfather of Muslim Europe – Pristina, Kosovo
An Orthodox Town – Niš
Part Three: North Macedonia
Whose Heritage Is It, Anyway? – Skopje
A Macedonian Imam – Skopje
The Fool’s Tekke – Tetovo
Part Four: Albania
Taken by Albanians – Vlorë
A Beer with a Muslim – Llogara National Park
The Town ‘Addicted to Prayer’ – Gjirokastër
The House the Pasha Built – Gjirokastër
A Fairy-Tale Ottoman Village – Berat
Capitals Old and New – Durrës, Tirana and Krujë
Part Five: Montenegro
Muslim Montenegro – Podgorica
Part Six: Return to Bosnia and Herzegovina
The Effendi’s Library – Foča and Zenica
Coffee with Bosnian Kings – Vranduk and Travnik
Dumped for De Niro – Sarajevo
Back in ‘Jerusalem’ – Sarajevo
Remembrance in Sarajevo – Sarajevo
Glossary
Acknowledgments

Tharik Hussain is an author, travel writer and journalist specialising in Muslim heritage and culture. He is a Fellow at the Royal Geographical Society in London and the Centre of Religion and Heritage at the University of Groningen. Tharik’s book, Minarets in the Mountains: A Journey into Muslim Europe, won the British Guild of Travel Writers’ Adele Evans Award for best travel narrative book of 2022. It was also shortlisted for the 2022 Edward Stanford Travel Book of the Year award; longlisted for the 2021 Baillie Gifford Prize and was amongst the Books of the Year in the New Statesman, Prospect Magazine and the Times Literary Supplement, as well as the Travel Books of the Year in The Washington Post, Suitcase Magazine and Newsweek.
Source: https://www.tharikhussain.co.uk/about
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