Saliha

Robin Yassin-Kassab extolls the virtue of translations, Ebrahim Moosa explores the virtues of the Prophet, Ziauddin Sardar recalls the virtuous life and untimely death of his wife Saliha, Abdelwahab El-Affendi attempts to sort out virtue and vice in knowledge, Colin Tudge suggests a set of bedrock virtues will save the planet and the rest of us, Gordon Steffey outlines three departures on anger, Jinmei Yuan illustrates the ways Confucius shows how to live a virtuous life, Jeremey Henzell-Thomas wrestles with virtuous words, Aamer Hussain reflets on the life of Muhammadi Begum the pioneering nineteenth century Urdu writer on female virtues, Naomi Foyle is moved by the struggles of the Irish singer and songwriter Shuhada Sadaqat (Sinead O’Commor), Liam Mayo gets a haircut form a senior citizen, C Scott Jordan returns to a memorable dinner with Saliha, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown remembers her virtuous mother, and our critique of ten virtues generated by ChatGPT.

Also in this issue: Zain Sardar dissects philosophy’s pathologies, James Brooks watches a film about Arab Spring, Yuri Prasad reads a major history of blacks in Britain, Mansur Ali studies commentaries on hadith, Safia Latif’s enchanting paintings, a short story by Gwen Burnyeat, and poems by Farid Bitar and the legendry Italian film director Pier Paolo Pasolini.

In this issue

  • Finding Khidir Painting
    Art

    Visual Sensations

    My work explores the relationship between religion and modernity. Many of my paintings draw conceptually on the social and cultural phenomena…

    Safia Latif
  • a close up of an electronic device with a red light
    Issue 48 Saliha

    Scott Jordan’s Ten AI Generated Virtues

    Heaven forbid, one day the phrase ‘ask ChatGPT’ could be as colloquial as ‘google it!’ Only time will tell. For now, AI remains an enigma. Certainly…

    C Scott Jordan
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