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American Imam

From Pop Stardom to Prison Abolition

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Imam Taymullah Abdur-Rahman's incredible life story weaves the contemporary Black American experience with the Black Muslim American experience and emphasizes the role of interreligious dialogue in the fight for abolition and justice.

By the time he was twelve, Taymullah Abdur-Rahman (born Tyrone Sutton) was a rising pop star, recruited as part of the R&B group Perfect Gentlemen, with a top-ten hit, national teen magazine covers, and an appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show. However, after his music career peaked, Abdur-Rahman found himself back home, with little to show for his success. He quickly became a teen father struggling to survive in Roxbury, MA. Seeing Islam as a way out of his hard-scrabble environment, he happily converted. Soon he was working in a maximum-security prison as a Muslim chaplain, where he became zealously focused on saving souls instead of understanding the outside forces that bring men to prison.

Later, in his work as the first paid Muslim chaplain at Harvard, Abdur-Rahman began to seek counsel outside of Islam, engaging with Jewish and Christian mentors who opened his eyes to the gifts of interreligious dialogue and helped lead him to what he was truly seeking: enlightenment. With this new framework, he returned to working with prisoners and clearly saw the cyclical effects of systemic racism that keep Black and brown people locked up and without support in America today. A sweeping narrative, American Imam voices the contemporary concerns of Black Muslim Americans in the shadow of El Hajj Malik El Shabazz, in the aftermath of 9/11, and in light of the fights for social justice and prison abolition. Abdur-Rahman's story sounds an indelible rallying cry for understanding across race, religion, and cultural divides.

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    • Booklist

      January 1, 2024
      The road to religious enlightenment came with many twists and turns for Abdur-Rahman, who was born Tyrone Sutton in Roxbury, Massachusetts. His youth was spent carousing with older siblings and friends, and at 12, after his older brother got him into performing, the author was asked to join the R&B group, Perfect Gentlemen. A meteoric rise commenced, followed by a fall from fame, and by the mid-to-late 1990s, Abdur-Rahman was slinging drugs. An epiphany at 24 years old led the author to Islam. Since 1999, Abdur-Rahman has served as a spiritual advisor in prisons, a professor, and an activist as he continues to walk a path of knowledge and understanding. American Imam details the author's incredible journey and spiritual transformation and offers a candid and unflinching view into Abdur-Rahman's rise, fall, and life-altering religious conversion. This spiritual memoir is not to be overlooked.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2024
      The faith journey of a leader in the American Muslim community. In this unrestrained memoir, Abdur-Rahman critically examines both himself and the society in which he grew up. "I was raised in Roxbury," he writes, "a small ghetto section of Boston where drugs and violence had left all of us deeply affected during the 1980s and 1990s." When he was 13, his life drastically changed. Then named Tyrone Sutton, he was chosen out of a rap talent show to lead a trio called The Perfect Gentlemen. Enjoying modest recording successes of their own, the group went on tour with New Kids on the Block. Suddenly, the author was awash in stardom and wealth that he was not emotionally prepared to handle. As the group's fame faded, he found himself back in Roxbury, dealing again with poverty, crime, and despair. Recognizing his own failings, however, he underwent a moment of repentance in his mid-20s, which soon led to his official conversion to Islam. But life as a Muslim was also challenging, as the author learned how to control his desires and how to face his preexisting anger and prejudices and confront and grow from his past experiences. Eventually becoming an imam, Abdur-Rahman would go on to be a prison chaplain, as well as a chaplain at Northeastern and Harvard, where he was "the first paid Muslim chaplain." These roles led to opportunities as a public speaker, media figure, and activist. The author's urgent tone is occasionally confrontational; race and class figure prominently throughout, and his emotions regarding these subjects are decidedly raw. Though some readers may wish the author had thoroughly fleshed out his thoughts on society's weaknesses, he has many intriguing things to say about religion and self-discovery. Thought-provoking, self-effacing, and at times blunt--a life story not yet complete.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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