Untold: A History of the Wives of Prophet Muhammad
Tamam Kahn, Monkfish, $18.95 paper (188p) ISBN 978-0-9823246-4-6
A practicing Sufi, poet, and speaker, Kahn tells the little known stories of the wives of the Prophet Muhammad in this brief book. Usually ignored or used as salacious fodder, the stories are pieced together by the author, using the few and disparate sources on the lives and personalities of the wives. Kahn also employs the "prosimetrum" technique, which intersperses narrative text with short poems that recreate, in fictional, imagined terms, some event in a particular wife's life. The unorthodox device becomes, as only poetry can, an illustrative window into early Islam and everyday Arabian life 1,400 years ago. Kahn points out that many of Muhammad's reforms were unique for their time and benefited women. Kahn also doesn't shy away from the controversial, acknowledging that Muhammad's marriage to the beautiful Zaynab, the ex-wife of the Prophet's own adopted son, may not have had the purest motivations; she also addresses the practice of veiling. With only a few exceptions, the Prophet mainly married widows, and did so largely to form political alliances. Quite open-minded in his spouses, Muhammad even had converted Jewish wives and had a son (who died as a baby) with an Egyptian Christian woman. Even talking back to the influential Prophet, each of the women influenced Muhammad in her own way. (Sept.)
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Reviewed on: 08/09/2010
Genre: Religion