What is the autobiography of Omar ibn Said?

Omar ibn Said (1770-1863), a Muslim scholar, was captured in West Africa and sold into slavery in America, where he spent over half a century enslaved to a prominent North Carolina family. He left behind a small collection of documents in Arabic that have remained poorly understood to this day. This presentation, based on the first critical edition of Omar’s Arabic writings, analyzes the longest of these documents , his 1831 “Autobiography.” Why did he announce twice, at the beginning of this document, "I cannot write my life"? What is the significance of his quotations from Islamic theological and mystical texts, which have escaped notice until now? These and other questions will be addressed, as part of a major reassessment of this important witness to the presence of Islam and Arabic at the beginning of Americas history.
Date:
Wed January 18th 2023, 5:00pm
Speakers:
Carl Ernst: Professor Emeritus & William R. Kenan, Jr., Distinguished Professor; Co-Director, UNC Center for Middle East and Islamic Studies; Associate Professor of the Practice of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Duke University
Mbaye Lo: Associate Professor of the Practice of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Duke University
Event Sponsor
Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies
Center for African Studies
Department of Religious Studies
Stanford Global Studies Division
African & African American Studies
Website Link
islamicstudies.stanford.edu/e...

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