Being a practicing Muslim in the West is sometimes challenging, sometimes rewarding and sometimes downright absurd. How do you explain why Eid never falls on the same date each year; why it is that Halal butchers also sell ...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

Being a practicing Muslim in the West is sometimes challenging, sometimes rewarding and sometimes downright absurd. How do you explain why Eid never falls on the same date each year; why it is that Halal butchers also sell teapots and alarm clocks; how do you make clear to the plumber that it's essential the toilet is installed within sitting-arm's reach of the tap?

Zarqa Nawaz has seen and done it all.

And it's not always easy to get things right with the community either: Zarqa tells of being asked to leave the DBW (Dead Body Washing) committee after making unsuitable remarks; of undertaking the momentous trip to Mecca with her husband, without the children, thinking (most incorrectly) that it will also be a nice time to have uninterrupted sex; of doing the unthinkable, and creating Little Mosque on the Prairie, a successful TV sitcom about that very (horrified, then proud) community.

You have to laugh.

Similar Products

Threading My Prayer Rug: One Woman's Journey from Pakistani Muslim to American MuslimIt's Ramadan, Curious GeorgeThe Girl in the Tangerine Scarf: A NovelGolden Domes and Silver Lanterns: A Muslim Book of ColorsHaunted Ground: A NovelMédicis Daughter: A Novel of Marguerite de ValoisOn Care for Our Common Home: The Encyclical Letter Laudato Si'A Sugar Creek Chronicle: Observing Climate Change from a Midwestern Woodland (Bur Oak Book)A Different Kind of Daughter: The Girl Who Hid from the Taliban in Plain Sight