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The white mosque : a memoir Book
Book | First imprint edition. | Catapult, New York : 2023.

  • 1 of 1 Copy Available at Libraries in Niagara Cooperative (Show)
  • 1 of 1 Copy Available at West Lincoln Public Library
  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Place Hold
Branch Call Number Location Holdable? Status
Caistorville 958.708 SAM Nonfiction Copy hold / Volume hold Available
About

"In the late nineteenth century, a group of German-speaking Mennonites traveled from Russia into Central Asia, where their charismatic leader predicted Christ would return. Over a century later, Sofia Samatar joins a tour following their path, fascinated not by the hardships of their journey, but by its aftermath: the establishment of a small Christian village in the Muslim Khanate of Khiva. Named Ak Metchet, 'The White Mosque,' after the Mennonites' whitewashed church, the village lasted for fifty years. In pursuit of this curious history, Samatar discovers a variety of characters whose lives intersect around the ancient Silk Road, from a fifteenth-century astronomer-king, to an intrepid Swiss woman traveler of the 1930s, to the first Uzbek photographer, and explores such topics as Central Asian cinema, Mennonite martyrs, and Samatar's own complex upbringing as the daughter of a Swiss-Mennonite and a Somali-Muslim, raised as a Mennonite of color in America. A secular pilgrimage to a lost village and a near-forgotten history, The White Mosque traces the porous and ever-expanding borders of identity, asking: How do we enter the stories of others? And how, out of the tissue of life, with its weird incidents, buried archives, and startling connections, does a person construct a self?" --book jackets.
Details

  • ISBN: 9781646222032
  • Physical Description: 314 pages : illustrations, map ; 24 cm.print
  • Edition: First imprint edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Catapult, 2023.
  • Formatted Contents Note: Part one: wanderers. Tashkent: a more dazzling vison -- The hunger steppe: to transform the world into signs -- Samarkand: I have set before thee an open door -- Part two: home-ache. Kok Ota: sad comedy att he border -- Bukhara: safely arrive at home -- The desert: the wall is no more, nor those who daubed it -- Part three: the place of refuge. Khiva: all in a pale and ghostly light -- Ak Metchet: the world didn'd end -- Tashkent: a land gleams at us from afar.

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