A COMMUNITY OF MANY WORLDS: Arab Americans in New York City
Museum of the City of New York, . . Syracuse Univ., $29.95 (304pp) ISBN 978-0-8156-0739-7
Published in conjunction with an exhibit at the Museum of the City of New York, this collection of 17 essays ranges from the personal to the academic and covers a wide array of topics, such as Arabic poetry, immigration patterns, community formation and the sustaining of cultural traditions. A big challenge, writes curator Kathleen Benson in her preface, "was encompassing the great heterogeneity of 'Arab New York' ", given the multitude of immigrant nationalities that fall under that rubric. This collection does a fine job documenting and elucidating the diverse abundance of Arabic cultural manifestations that reflect historic precedents, and are contributing toward hybridized world views. Gregory Orfela's "My Mother's Zither" places Arab-American poetry in a specific U.S. tradition (Kahlil Gibran was influenced by Stephen Crane) and discusses the political content of work by new poets. "The Syrian Jews of Brooklyn" by Walter P. Zinner profoundly challenges preconceived ideas of identity in its discussion of the complex social and religious practices of a small group whose religion and ethnicity seem, to many, to be at odds with one another. Jerrilynn Dodd's "NY-MASJID: The Mosques of New York" notes the interplay of architecture and religious observance; in a country that often conflates Muslim "style" and belief, imams repeatedly tell her, "in prayer all external concerns must vanish." The pieces are often personal and include multiple reminiscences of growing up Arab-American, yet strike a clear and instructive balance with sound scholarship and intellectual inquiry.
Reviewed on: 06/24/2002
Genre: Nonfiction