Rahile Dawut

Listening in on Uyghur Wedding Videos: Piety, Tradition, and Self-fashioning

UYGUR RESEARCH LIBRARY

Listening in on Uyghur Wedding Videos: Piety, Tradition, and Self-fashioning
Authors: Rachel Harris (SOAS, University of London) and Rahile Dawut (Xinjiang University)
Ethnographies of Islam in China. Hawai’i: University of Hawai’i Press (2020).
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Desert Mazar in Context

Rahile Dawut, Xinjiang University, China
Sanjyot Mehendale, University of California, Berkeley, United States
Alexandre Papas, CNRS, Paris, France
In this desert are many evil demons and hot winds; when encountered, then all [travelers] die without exception. There are no flying birds above, no roaming beast below, but everywhere gazing as far as the eye can reach in search of the onward route, it would be impossible to know the way but for dead men’s decaying bones, which show the direction.
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Mazar festivals of the Uyghurs: Music, Islam and the Chinese State

Mazar festivals of the Uyghurs: Music, Islam and the Chinese State

Mazar festivals of the Uyghurs: Music, Islam and the Chinese State
Authors: Rachel Harris & Rahile Dawut
To cite this article: Rachel Harris & Rahile Dawut (2002) Mazar festivals of the Uyghurs: Music, Islam and the Chinese State, British Journal of Ethnomusicology, 11:1, 101-118, DOI: 10.1080/09681220208567330
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/09681220208567330
Published online: 31 May 2008
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Shrine Pilgrimage among the Uighurs

Shrine Pilgrimage among the Uighurs

Shrine Pilgrimage among the Uighurs
Author: Rahile Dawut
Xinjiang University, Urumqi, China
Published: The Silk Road 6/2 (2009): 56-67

The practice of shrine pilgrimage has long been prominent on the global Islamic landscape. Its significance has been noted by many scholars (Hawley 1987; Werbner 2003; Kieckhefer and Bond 1990; Tyson 1997). People across the Islamic world go on pilgrimages to fulfill a wish expressed in the name of a saint or to seek the blessing of a particular shrine…
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