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In a prison cell, over 330 years ago, John Bunyan wrote The Pilgrim's Progress, an allegory that became the most widely distributed book in the world, second only to the Bible. It is the story of a pilgrim named "Christian," who depicts the lifelong struggle of every believer in the journey we call "the Christian life." Unfortunately, life then was a whole different story than life in the 21st century-especially life in the streets! Kai'Ro: the Journey of an Urban Pilgrim recasts Bunyan's timeless and powerful tale in modern language on an urban stage. You will find yourself both spectator and fellow traveler with Kai'Ro as he faces the blistering sarcasm of The House of Mockers, the haunting pain of his past in the Alley of the Shadow of Death, and the amazing gift of insight at the Interpreter's House. With unflinching honesty and courage, Kai'Ro faces the unrelenting obstacles that entangle modern urban youth, including racism, sex, fatherlessness, violence, and hopelessness. You'll be introduced to characters like Pain, Broken, ChurchBoy, Quitter and Phanatik, whose lives are too real to be ignored. Young or old, urban or suburban, you will find parts of yourself and those you know in Kai'Ro: The Journey of an Urban Pilgrim. (207 words) Judah Ben, 31, has been involved with urban youth for over 15 years. His vision for urban ministry was birthed at Wheaton College while he and friends met weekly with youth incarcerated in the Cook County Juvenile Detention Center in Chicago. Upon graduation he returned home to teach at Restoration Academy, an urban Christian School in Birmingham, Alabama that is nurturing faith and restoring hope in an impoverished community. He is currently anadministrator at the school, and he and his wife and three children make their home in the neighborhood.
Dark Obsessions By: Delphine McClelland Skylar was a Montgomery and with that came power and prestige among the wealthy in Charlotte, North Carolina. From the outside looking in, she had it all, the perfect life. For Skylar, being a Montgomery, a socialite, was not who she wanted to be. Skylar was different, she was weird and a bit of a dreamer. For as long as she could remember, she had an obsession with the supernatural world. Vampires were her favorite of all the supernatural creatures and she could not get enough of them. She read almost every book, watched every movie, and even wished they were real because she had dreams of becoming one. On the annual Montgomery Family Vacation, Skylar's world was turned upside down. Her life was further changed the moment she laid eyes on him. He was the most intriguing and striking man that she had ever seen. In one night, he would change Skylar’s world forever. Kairo was in need of a change. After living for over 300 years and always staying one step ahead of the Council of Truth Seekers, a vigilante group whose sole mission in life was to kill all supernaturals. Kairo needed a new scene away from it all. Along his travels, he heard that Charlotte was becoming an epicenter of fun. It was a city full of life and the perfect place for a vampire to hunt without the watchful eye of the Council. From the moment that Kairo stepped foot in Charlotte things were very different for him. The city made every fiber of his being come alive with an energy unlike anything that he had ever known. Kairo would find the source of that energy no matter what it cost him and when he did, his world would change forever.
Wolfhart Heinrichs’ Essays and Articles on Arabic Literature: General Issues, Terms is the first of two volumes that showcase a great number of Heinrichsʼ writings on his central field of research: Arabic literature. This volume specifically looks at poetry and rhetoric, and their indigenous theories and terminologies. Wolfhart Heinrichs (1941-2014) was James Richard Jewett Professor of Arabic at Harvard University. He is remembered as a significant adviser to Fuat Sezginʼs fundamental Geschichte des arabischen Schrifttums; as an editor of and contributor to the Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second edition; and, most importantly, as an author of many independent studies on Arabic literature, many which were groundbreaking in the history of Arabic philology. He is also known for his studies on Semitic linguistics and Islamic jurisprudence. This volume collects relevant bibliographical data, offers an introductory essay on the author by his distinguished student Michael Cooperson (UCLA), and provides a selection of Wolfhart Heinrichs’ essays. The articles in this volume deal with general issues in the field that are central to pre-modern Arab and Islamic culture, and their concepts and terminologies. An index of classical authors, book titles, and technical terms concludes the volume. This volume and the accompanying volume will appeal to students and researchers in the field of Arabic and Islamic Studies, and particularly to those interested in Arabic literature.
Embark on a journey into the spectacular worldbuilding of "Illyadra," the first book of the Archeodon Series—an epic fantasy masterpiece that seamlessly weaves together humor, trauma, and philosophy to navigate the intricate realms of oppression and systems of value. “Illyadra” is set in the realm of Zoë, a divided land that encompasses five distinct countries, each governed by a unique magic system personified in the Archeodon crowns. These crowns bestow their wearers and subjects with the power of influence, ranging from Destruction and Illusion to Alteration, Conjuration, and Restoration. In this enchanting universe, those wielding powerful magic, known as "vuu," reign supreme. Drawing inspiration from the likes of "Avatar: The Last Airbender" for its premise, “Eragon” for style, the Bible Project for theology, and the “Genealogy of Morality” for themes, "Illyadra" introduces a tale that transcends genres. It skillfully crafts a worldview that dances on the edge of convention, whose subtle undertones are an invitation for those who seek novels with Christian themes while remaining unobtrusive to those who don't. Renovia, once the best nation in the world, has collapsed. Siblings Kairo and Aterah are thrust into the future during their escape and lose the crown of restoration in the process. They reemerge generations later, amidst the remnants of their people—a society reduced to a primitive, stone age militia through war and oppression, struggling to survive without vuu in a world that revolves around it. The Sigu Nii, a barbaric society with a bloodlust social hierarchy, learn of Aterah's oracle ability to see the future in her dreams and unleash their most devastating magical forces and steal her away. Fatally injured during the raid, Kairo faces a monumental dilemma—abandon his post and plunge into foreign and hostile lands to save his sister before infection kills him, or else the Sigu Nii will exploit her dreams for Renovia's ultimate destruction. Other life-like characters include: Eidhin, a stuttering young farm boy in a culture that values the façade of knowledge above all else. While devoting his life to a church that pretends to stand for truth, he gets wrapped up in a global conspiracy, brainwashed, and sold into the slave trade system. Ayrah Veligreen, a girl prodigy in the destructive Sigu Nii arts, embarks on a relentless quest to unveil the truth behind her father's execution by the immortal god-king, Ash. And then there's Wesken—a kid with a staff, white hair, and a day-long memory. "Illyadra" masterfully encapsulates a diverse array of timeless story tropes—from evil empires and the echoes of Arthurian legends to the damsel in distress—even though it is a narrative that puts strong female main characters at the forefront. Beneath the surface, "Illyadra" alludes to profound themes of oppression, caste systems, and free will. The story bites deep, evoking both laughter and tears, as it invites readers to go soul searching and think deep about the choices that shape destinies.
Based on the conference "The Arts of the Mamluks in Egypt and Syria" held at SOAS in 2009.
In the cold streets of Detroit, Kairo and Delano learns what it means to keep your Friends Close and your Enemies Closer. Kairo is financially irresponsible, dripped in the finest designer’s money could buy. Until one morning, trouble comes knocking on her door. Her life changes drastically in one blink of the eye, leaving her in a whirl of chaos. She doesn’t know, the enemy is closer than she thinks. This could cost her everything she has, even her own life. Delano on the other hand is someone from Kairo’s past. He is madly in love with her, but the streets keep calling his name. He is faced with a very difficult decision between the Northern and Southern drug cartels. One false move, or wrong choice, could jeopardize everyone else in his life, especially Kairo’s. Just how far is Delano willing to go to protect the people he love? Will Delano be able to leave the street life alone? Once betrayed, things take an unexpected turn and secrets are exposed. Now guns are drawn and pointed in every direction. Will Kairo find out who is against her? Or will it be too late? Someone will not make it out alive. Who will the trigger land on?
Following al-Fārābī’s approach, Ibn Sīnā (d. 428/1037) undertakes a new foundation of the First Philosophy based on his own critical systematisation of the Aristotelian theory of science, yielding the result that metaphysics is only possible as a transcendental science, i.e. that not only the subject-matter of metaphysics and its properties but also the arguments by which the first principles of knowledge are defended must be transcendental. This book provides the first systematic reconstruction of Ibn Sīnā’s concept of metaphysics, and, given the considerable influence his achievement had on the Islamic tradition as well as on scholastic philosophers, it is relevant to the study of the history of metaphysics, Islamic theology (kalām), and Arabic philosophy.
An analytical bibliography that contains 7407 references, covering the Egyptian prehistory (palaeolithic, neolithic and predynastic) as well as the period of the first two dynasties.