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Table of Contents and Contributors:
Foreword
Ingrid Mattson
Introduction
Muhammad A. Ali,Omer Bajwa, Sondos Kholaki, and Jaye Starr
A Source of Strength
A CPE student finds his place in a medical team.
Ibrahim J. Long
The Jihad of Self-Realization and Human Growth in Clinical
Pastoral Education
A CPE educator shares how Islam informs his pedagogy and theory of
personality.
Jawad A. Bayat
Finding My Path
A university chaplain shares his discernment process.
Kaiser Aslam
Pastoral Care as an Islamic Tradition & Practice
The director of a chaplaincy degree program shares his journey and
educational philosophy.
Bilal W. Ansari
A Theology of Spiritual Care Inspired by Allah’s
Attributes
A pastoral theology informed by God as The Compassionate, the
Merciful, and the Kind.
Ali R. Candir
Bridging the Interfaith Divide
A corrections chaplain shares experiences navigating the challenges
of sectarianism and explores the role of chaplains in building
informed and inclusive communities.
Muhammad A. Ali
Navigating Identity Politics and Recentering in the
Divine
Campus chaplains share their efforts to redirect students from
identity politics toward knowing oneself.
Amira Quraishi & Ailya Vajid
From Banana Leaves
A healthcare chaplain shares her journey as a female Muslim
chaplain.
Samsiah Abdul-Majid
Mapping the Landscape of Education Chaplaincy
A campus chaplain presents a framework for understanding the
different functions of the role.
Khalil Abdur-Rashid
Open Door, Open Heart
A college chaplain reflects on his various roles through the theme
of the days of the week.
Omer Bajwa
Islam at ‘Alcatraz of the Rockies’
A corrections chaplain shares his experience serving in an American
supermax security facility.
Fiazuddin Shuayb
Creating Space
Drawing from his own journey and work, an imam addresses spiritual
care for queer Muslims.
El-Farouk Khaki
A Call for Pastoral Care in The Mosque
A chaplain describes the potential for chaplaincy and a pastoral
care mindset in mosques.
Joshua Salaam
“Hurt People Hurt People”
A third-space director shares the development of a restorative
justice model for community violations.
Lauren Schreiber
An Immigrant’s Journey to Chaplaincy
A Turkish-trained imam shares his path confronting his own racism
in a corrections setting.
Mustafa Boz
Chaplains: A Voice for the Alienated
A military chaplain explains microaggressions and their impact and
the need for chaplains to be proactive in addressing them.
Ryan Carter
Chaplaincy and Black Muslim Students
A college chaplain presents research about Black Muslim students’
experiences and her recommendations for support.
Nisa Muhammad
And Then We Were One Before The One
An oncology chaplain explores use of self as a ministry tool
relating to her practice of Islam.
Taqwa Surapati
Drawing from the Five Pillars
A healthcare chaplain explores how the fundamental practices of
Islam inform her caregiving.
Sondos Kholaki
Dua: The Heart of Chaplaincy
A chaplain shares his approach to crafting prayer as an act of
pastoral care.
Khalid Latif
Sister Padres
Canada’s first female Muslim military chaplains share their journey
to chaplaincy and what they bring to the profession.
Barbara Lois Helms & Serap Bulsen
Paradise Beneath Her Feet: Chaplaincy in Birthing Spaces
A healthcare chaplain shares how her faith informs her care amidst
birthing hardship.
Jaye Starr
Thank You For Your Service
A military chaplain speaks to the isolation he has experienced as a
Muslim service member.
Jamal Bey
The Kinder Garden: Circles of Remembrance
A healthcare chaplain shares the words of meditation from programs
he leads in hospital.
Kamau M. Ayubbi
Mercy to Self: Preserving the Gift of Empathy in Life's
Winters
A corrections chaplain shares her recovery journey following
professional burnout.
Tricia Pethic
What I Learn From the Prophet
A dying chaplain reflects on the guidance his faith provides for
the journey.
Sohaib N. Sultan
Lasting Grief
A hospice chaplain looks to how Shiʿa teachings inform his
understanding of grief.
Sameer Ali
An Islamic Theology of Pastoral Care
A pastoral caregiver examines her theology of suffering and the
work necessary to uncover one’s inner Light.
Rabia Terri Harris
Skipping Stones
A hospital chaplain wrestles with conflicting medical advice while
accompanying a young international patient.
Azleena Salleh Azhar
Ziyara Spiritual Care
Healthcare chaplains share how they are taking palliative care
education to Muslims around the world.
Kamal Abu-Shamsieh
Afterword
A farewell letter to colleagues.
Sohaib N. Sultan
Muhammad A. Ali graduated from Bayan Islamic Graduate School
with an MDiv in Islamic Chaplaincy and an MA in Islamic Education.
He chaplains in university and prison settings and previously
served as vice president of corrections chaplains for the
Association of Muslim Chaplains.
Omer Bajwa holds a GC in Islamic Chaplaincy from Hartford
Seminary and an MA in Near Eastern Studies with Islamic Studies
concentration from Cornell University. He serves as a chaplain at
Yale University and was a founding board member of the Association
of Muslim Chaplains.
Sondos Kholaki completed her MDiv in Islamic Chaplaincy at
Bayan Islamic Graduate School and serves as a board certified
healthcare and community chaplain and is vice president of
healthcare chaplains for the Association of Muslim Chaplains.
Jaye Starr is a graduate of Hartford Seminary’s Islamic
Chaplaincy Program, an aspiring healthcare chaplain, and membership
chair of the Association of Muslim Chaplains.
“Applause for Mantle of Mercy. This extraordinary compilation of
personal essays provides insight into Muslim chaplains’ experiences
and contributions to the field of chaplaincy in the United States.
Readers gain a glimpse of the foundational Islamic principles and
values that undergird the writers’ ministry and leadership within
the diverse institutions they serve. Mantle of Mercy is a must-have
resource for theological schools, Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE)
Centers, and students pursuing a career in chaplaincy.”
-Chaplain Tahara Akmal, MA, BCC, ACPE Certified
Educator
“Mantle of Mercy fills an important void within the emerging body
of research and writing about the field of chaplaincy. While
chaplaincy may be unfamiliar to many Muslims, the writers in this
volume generously engage with both the educational formation
processes and spiritual practices of chaplaincy while thoroughly
and authentically integrating them with the Islamic faith. Careful,
scholarly attention is paid throughout the text to the core
principles of Islam, demonstrating through story and reflection how
a chaplaincy is an ideal form of practice for the faithful Muslim
leader. The result is a beautiful witness to the many ways that
Islamic chaplaincy embodies the kind of compassion that is at the
heart of professional spiritual care. This text is an incredible
resource to chaplaincy educators, professional chaplains, and those
Muslims seeking to serve as professional spiritual care
providers.” -Trace Haythorn, PhD, executive director CEO,
Association for Clinical Pastoral Education (ACPE)
“Islamic chaplaincy, a relatively new field of inquiry and
practice, has been skillfully outlined in this first volume of its
kind, Mantle of Mercy. The editors have done a wonderful job in
assembling a chorus of diverse voices of practitioners from the
field. Critical perspectives from chaplains serving in
universities, the healthcare sector, the military, and
underrepresented communities provide fascinating insight into the
world of fostering human souls. In a world where cynicism,
distrust, and division have impaired our collective ability to
engage with one another, this volume offers a reprieve, and perhaps
even a way forward to reacquaint ourselves with our inherent
humanity.” -Shaykh Dr. Walead Mosaad, Chair and Resident
Scholar, Sabeel Community
“In this superbly curated collection of essays, trailblazing Muslim
chaplains provide intimate portraits of their professional lives
and how they arrived at their vocational calling; how they create
healing spaces through the Prophetic example; and how they provide
pastoral care by drawing upon Islamic theology. As readers
amble into this garden of stories, they will surely feel the hearts
of these chaplains speaking to their own. And by taking in the
vista, they will come to recognize the value Islamic chaplaincy
adds within hospitals, prisons, college campuses, the armed forces,
and, indeed, even within mosques and third spaces.” -Aasim I.
Padela, MD, MSc, chairperson and director of the Initiative on
Islam Medicine, and professor of emergency medicine, Bioethics, and
the Medical Humanities at the Medical College of Wisconsin
“I really loved this book. Muslim chaplains do amazing work for
religious identity, pastoral care, and civic pluralism. This volume
captures the complexity and range of such work remarkably
well.” -Eboo Patel, author of Acts of Faith and president of
Interfaith Youth Core
“In the last few decades, Muslim chaplains have emerged as a
profoundly important model of spiritual accompaniment. Mantle
of Mercy brings together most of the leading Muslim chaplains in
North America who bring a tradition-centered approach to healing in
their various settings. The chapters are as spiritually rich as
they are accessible. It is lovely to see how they advance the
concept of healing and care beyond the Western obsession with
‘self’-care to the heart-community-Divine level. Particularly
poignant and bittersweet are the chapter and the farewell from the
departed and much beloved Imam Sohaib N. Sultan. I commend
Ali, Bajwa, Kholaki, and Starr for this urgently needed volume and
enthusiastically recommend this book to all who work with the
Muslim community and in pastoral care in the context of
universities, hospitals, and beyond.” -Omid Safi, PhD,
professor of Islamic Studies at Duke and director of Illuminated
Courses and Tours
“Ali, Bajwa, Kholaki, and Starr have created a watershed moment
with the publication of Mantle of Mercy. By assembling North
America’s leading lights in Islamic chaplaincy, the editorial team
has provided an essential resource not just for Muslim chaplains
but for all spiritual care providers who are rightly attentive to
contemporary spiritual and religious diversity. Students,
educators, and chaplains in the field will benefit from Mantle of
Mercy. This essential addition to the literature makes it
definitely clear that North American spiritual care cannot develop
further without taking Islamic chaplaincy into much greater
account.” -Michael Skaggs, PhD, director of programs,
Chaplaincy Innovation Lab
“This is an important and much-needed scholarly contribution to the
literature on chaplaincy in general and, more specifically, Islamic
chaplaincy. It gives insight into how far the field has come and
how Islam is establishing itself into the fabric of North American
life in such a beautiful way. The contributors and the topics they
write beautifully demonstrate how diverse the Islamic tradition is
and how interesting and wonderful such diversity can be. This
compilation is a moving and inspiring book and a must-have for
anyone interested in chaplaincy, pastoral care, the healing arts,
Islam, Islam in North America, and many other related
fields.” -Carrie M. York, PhD, president, The Alkaram
Institute “Mantle of Mercy provides a unique discussion on
how Muslim Americans face life’s challenges, how they have much to
offer many Americans, and how their religion can fit into American
society. The writers’ enthusiasm and security in their faith will
inspire many readers to consider a vocation in chaplaincy. For
those already in chaplaincy, it provides essential information on
the complexities and challenges that are unique to
Islam.” -Journal of
Pastoral Care and Counseling
“This collection of personal stories, theological reflections, and
case studies conveys the joys and challenges Muslim chaplains face
in the various settings in which they serve….An excellent reference
for many interested in pastoral care and related fields, this
volume will be especially useful to those who are considering
chaplaincy as a career, graduate students of chaplaincy about to
begin Field Education, or Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE)
students and supervisors.”–Journal of Interreligious Studies
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