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Muhammad Mufaku

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Muhammad Mufaku
Born
Muhammad Mufaku Al Arnaut

1952
Alma mater
Occupation(s)scholar, professor

Muhammad Mufaku Al Arnaut (Arabic: الارناؤوط، محمد موفق،; born 1952) is a Kosovar Albanian Syrian and retired professor of Middle East studies.[1][2][3]

Muhammad Mufaku was born (1952) in Damascus, Syria.[1] He graduated from Damascus University with a degree in Arabic language and literature.[1] Mufaku completed his master's and doctorate degrees in comparative literature and history at Pristina University, Kosovo.[1] Later Mufaku taught at Pristina University and was based in its Department of Oriental Studies until 1987 when he was expelled by the Milošević government of Yugoslavian Serbia.[2][1] In Jordan he became a professor of modern history and taught in a number of its universities like at Yarmouk University in Irbid and later was a lecturer at Al al-Bayt University in Mafrak until his retirement in 2018.[2][4][1] During that time, Mufaku became the director of the House of Wisdom Institute, was a member of the Syrian Arab Academy of Sciences and a member of the Academy of Sciences and Arts of Kosovo.[1] In the late 2010s, Mufaku was also elected by the assembly of the Oriental Studies Institute in Pristina as its director.[1]

Mufaku has written more than 30 books and over 100 articles in the Arabic and Albanian languages.[5] His works have focused on Albanian history, Arab-Albanian relations, Albanian diaspora writings in Arabic and Balkan Islamic subjects.[5][2] Mufaku has authored some pioneering works, due to his ability of researching Balkan and Arabic sources.[3] In parts of the Levant, the Gulf, North Africa and the Muslim areas of the Balkans, Mufaku is recognised for his scholarly works, and in the Arab world he is considered an expert on Islam in the Balkans.[2][6] Some works by Mufaku have aimed to reacquaint Arabic readers with the historical Muslim presence in the Balkans, an area of study often neglected in Middle Eastern academia.[6]

In 2012, Mufaku was decorated with the Medal of Merit by Kosovo's president.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Muhamed Mufaku, drejtor i Institutit të Studimeve Orientale në Prishtinë" [Muhamed Mufaku, director of the Institute of Oriental Studies in Pristina] (in Albanian). Koha. 17 October 2018. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e Norris, Harry Thirlwall (1993). Islam in the Balkans: religion and society between Europe and the Arab world. University of South Carolina Press. p. viii. ISBN 9780872499775.
  3. ^ a b Norris 2007, p. 194.
  4. ^ Norris, Harry Thirlwall (2007). "The Sources of Arabian Folk Tales in the Beliefs and the Identities of Three Muslim Peoples in Eastern Europe". Forum Bosnae (39): 179.
  5. ^ a b Mehdiu, Feti (2017). "Review of: Muhamed Mufaku, Nga historia e shqiptarëve të Egjiptit gjatë shekujve XV-XX, Prishtinë, 2016, fq. 170 (ASHAK)". Gjurmime Albanologjike (47): 295–298.
  6. ^ a b Ginio, Eyal (2010). "Between the Balkan Wars (1912–13) and the 'Third Balkan War' of the 1990s: The memory of the Balkans in Arabic writings". In Singer, Amy; Neumann, Christoph; Somel, Selcuk Aksin (eds.). Untold histories of the Middle East: Recovering voices from the 19th and 20th centuries. Routledge. p. 179. ISBN 9781136926655.