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Ramadan
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Ramadan is the ninth month of the Islamic lunar calendar, observed by Muslims worldwide as a period of fasting, prayer, reflection, and community. Students encounter this topic across religious studies, history, sociology, and world civilizations courses, where it serves as a meaningful entry point into Islamic theology and practice. Its academic interest lies in how a single ritual observance connects personal faith to broader questions of identity, law, and interfaith relations. Essays on Ramadan often situate the practice within the wider history of the Islamic faith and its development across diverse cultures and political contexts.

The papers archived here approach Ramadan and related Islamic themes from several angles. Comparative analysis is especially common, with essays examining Islam alongside Judeo-Christian beliefs, or placing Muslim practice in dialogue with traditions such as Judaism and Catholicism. Historical and civilizational frameworks appear as well, situating Islamic observance within Middle Eastern civilization and the early development of the faith. Some papers take a political or policy angle, connecting Islamic identity to contemporary issues such as governance, interfaith charters, and international relations.

A strong essay on Ramadan begins with a focused thesis that moves beyond basic description toward an analytical claim — about its theological significance, its social functions, or its role in a comparative religious argument. Evidence drawn from primary religious texts, historical accounts, or documented scholarly frameworks carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating Ramadan as a monolithic practice without acknowledging the diversity of observance across different Muslim communities and regional contexts.

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Paper Masters
Middle East Civilization I (His
The Umayyad, Abbasid, and early Middle Periods of Islamic history were some of the greatest in its history marked by significant technological and cultural progress. Known as the Golden Age of Islam, most Middle…
Paper Undergraduate
Turkey EU in December 1999
In December 1999 at the Helsinki European Council, Turkey became a candidate country for EU membership. The prospect of Turkey joining the EU is one of the most ambitious -- and contentious -- moves that the Union has…
Paper Doctorate
Historical background of the Islamic faith
Islamaphobia is one of the most catching illnesses of nowadays and on the rise. However, Islamaphobia is caused by an erogenous impression of Islam where people make the mistake of mixing up Islamists with Moslems. Moslems, according to the way I see it, are the true practitioners of historical Islam that had developed throughout the generations but stayed close to religion. Islamism, on the other hand, is a politicized Islam that attempts to constrain the Islam of the Koran to a contemporary political agenda. Knowing more about historic Islam and the underpinnings of the Islamic faith can help us make a distinction between Islamism and between Islam or between Islamists and Moslems.
Paper Undergraduate
Leadership in Shia Islam, Orthodox
Some religions, such as certain sects of Protestantism, have a relatively unstructured leadership. However, three major religions, that of Orthodox Judaism, Roman Catholicism and Shiite Islam, have highly organized…
Paper Undergraduate
Interfaith in Recent Year There
In recent year there has been a concerted effort to bring together people who have different faiths and religious backgrounds. Much of this interest in other faiths was spawned, particularly in the west by the terrorist…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Food and eating behaviors
Every country on planet earth has its unique culture and traditions. The people living in these countries have different lifestyles and so their food and eating behavior differs and sets it apart from others.
Paper Masters
alms giving in islam
Zakat is compulsory in some countries but voluntary in most. To that end, the Public Interest Research Advocacy Center (PIRAC) (2005) discovered that in Indonesia at least the highest amount of donations proceed from the educated professional class. To that end, and in order to trace the habits of giving of this class, the following essay mentions an interesting study that was conducted in Indonesia regarding the giving habits of professors and lecturers in an Islamic university. It proceeds to details the results of that study and concludes by suggesting that the study would be effectively paralleled by a corollary one on an institution in America – or in some other Western country that has a sizable Islamic population. The essay finally concludes by pointing out the contributions of such a study to Islamic research on the subject of zakat.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Catholicism and Islam: A Comparison/Contrast
As a major branch of Christianity, Roman Catholicism dates back to around 312 A.D. when the Roman Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity and gave up all of his Roman pagan beliefs based on polytheism or the…
Paper Undergraduate
Expedia Is a Holding Company
Expedia is a holding company that operates a number of travel-related Internet properties, including Expedia.com and global variants, Hotwire.com, TripAdvisor and others. Expedia began as a unit of Microsoft, conducting…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Critique of Islam as a mosaic not monolith
In his work "Islam: A Mosaic, Not a Monolith," Vartan Gregorian explores the history and beliefs of Islam in an attempt to dissect the current tension between the Western and Muslim worlds.