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  • Panorama: Diversity in the Muslim World

Panorama: Diversity in the Muslim World

By Alex Stonehill December 6, 2007

In the Winter and Spring of 2006 I set off across Asia with The Common Language Project in hopes of challenging some of the stereotypes about other countries that dominate the mainstream American press. As expected, Islam was an ever-present force in the places we visited, which not only prompted worried emails from family members back home, but also provided us with a chance to learn a lot about the religion firsthand. While we encountered mosques, headscarves and skepticism for American foreign policy in all of the Muslim countries we visited, the similarities stopped there. Stereotypical images of Islam tend to portray a monolithic, homogeneous religion of fundamentalist believers conforming to strict, unified codes of conduct. But I found myself struck by the diversity of believers in Islam, the nuances of their interpretations of the faith and the varying intensity of religion's role in their lives.

Hover your mouse over each image to view captions.

© 2007 The Common Language Project

This photo essay originally appeared in Glimpse Abroad.