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Being Muslim: A Practical Guide

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Being Muslim: A Practical Guide

Some books are written for scholars, and some are written for the person who simply needs to know how to pray, what to believe, and where to begin. Being Muslim: A Practical Guide by Asad Tarsin belongs firmly to the second kind, and it does that work with real care. It assumes no prior background at all, which makes it a natural fit whether you are new to Islam entirely or were raised in it and never quite got the fundamentals laid out plainly.

Inside, the manual covers the essentials of belief, prayer, fasting, and devotional life in clear, practical terms, the kind of grounding a person actually reaches for when trying to live the religion day to day rather than simply study it. Unfamiliar Arabic terms are explained both in the text and in a glossary at the back, so nothing is assumed and nothing is left unexplained.

This 2015 first edition from Sandala runs 288 pages, sized for steady reference rather than a single sitting. Imam Zaid Shakir has spoken of it as an immeasurable service to Muslims and other faith communities, and it has found an audience among new Muslims, longtime Muslims, and those born into the faith who are working toward something deeper. It is, in short, a dependable starting point and a book worth keeping close at hand.

$5.93

Original: $16.95

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Being Muslim: A Practical Guide

$16.95

$5.93

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Some books are written for scholars, and some are written for the person who simply needs to know how to pray, what to believe, and where to begin. Being Muslim: A Practical Guide by Asad Tarsin belongs firmly to the second kind, and it does that work with real care. It assumes no prior background at all, which makes it a natural fit whether you are new to Islam entirely or were raised in it and never quite got the fundamentals laid out plainly.

Inside, the manual covers the essentials of belief, prayer, fasting, and devotional life in clear, practical terms, the kind of grounding a person actually reaches for when trying to live the religion day to day rather than simply study it. Unfamiliar Arabic terms are explained both in the text and in a glossary at the back, so nothing is assumed and nothing is left unexplained.

This 2015 first edition from Sandala runs 288 pages, sized for steady reference rather than a single sitting. Imam Zaid Shakir has spoken of it as an immeasurable service to Muslims and other faith communities, and it has found an audience among new Muslims, longtime Muslims, and those born into the faith who are working toward something deeper. It is, in short, a dependable starting point and a book worth keeping close at hand.