Current Happenings


Michael Muhammad Knight, whose book Blue Eyed Devil was reviewed in Parabola’s “The New World” issue, has been getting a lot of press lately. In addition to his latest works, Impossible Man and Osama Van Halen, Knight has been working with Eye Steel Films on a documentary about the taqwacore movement, which he had a heavy hand in (un)defining.

Knight is most famous for his first book, The Taqwacores, which was a work of fiction chronicling the lives of a handful of Muslim punks living in typical punk squalor. What for Knight might have been an attempt to create a world where he could feel at home being both a punk and a Muslim, quickly revealed an already existing world of real-life punks of Muslim background.

Before the book was officially published Knight had been selling/handing out stapled photocopies of the book in mosque parking lots. The book circulated with a bit of a cult following and soon enough Muslim punk kids were contacting Knight to alert him to their existence. Thus a movement was born (or more appropriately, given a name): “Taqwacore.” “Taqwa” is Arabic roughly translated as God Consciouness. “–core” is what any self-respecting punk places on the end of any and every hybrid manifestation of hardcore music (grindcore, queercore, Krishnacore, et al).

The most recent trailer for the Taqwacore documentary can be found here. Enjoy!

After “Breakfast with Henry Ford” by James Opie (PARABOLA Winter ’08)

Why is being interrupted so jarring? Looking out my office window I see people walking. They are moving. Walking forward. Those who are standing are swaying just a little. Why is it that the stopping of movement has such an effect on us humans where bumping into someone’s shoulder, even with a polite “sorry,” is an irritation?

Anyone who has practiced some form of meditation has probably been told to “still the mind” or “cease the flow of thoughts.” Even meditation practices that shy away from commands to “quiet the mind” still at least suggest an interruption in mental chatter. The call to mental stillness is ubiquitous in spiritual communities and yet, for some of us (most of us?) being told, subtly coaxed, or gently lead into stillness is an act that is as simple as balancing on the head of a pin.
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