Yasmin Mogahed

Yasmin Mogahed is a Muslim scholar based in the USA. She is a specialist in spirituality, psychology, and personal development.[1] She completed her B.S. in Psychology at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She also completed a masters in Journalism and Mass Communications from the same university. She writes for Huffington Post and formerly wrote for InFocus News.[2] She is the first Muslim woman to become an instructor at AlMaghrib Institute.[3] Formerly she had been an instructor for the Cardinal Stritch University. She is known internationally for her motivational lectures.[4]

Books

  • Reclaim Your Heart । FB Publishing । ISBN 978-0990387688
  • Love & Happiness: A collection of personal reflections and quotes । FB Publishing । ISBN 978-0998537306
gollark: Do notation is just a nice way to write `>>=`s and lambdas.
gollark: A useful combinator:```haskells :: t1 -> (((t2 -> t2 -> t3 -> t4) -> t2 -> (t2 -> (t2 -> t2 -> t3 -> t4) -> t3) -> t4) -> t1 -> (IO a -> a) -> t5) -> t5s x k = k z x unsafePerformIO```
gollark: servant-generic:```This package has been merged into servant 0.14.1, please use that instead if available.```
gollark: *magic*
gollark: I think that it'd basically create the following lists:0 1 1 21 1 2 3 (shifted ahead by one)and then sum them to1 2 3 5

References

  1. Journal, Wisconsin Muslim (2018-05-04). "Yasmin Mogahed: Love, Happiness, and reflections of walking with the Lord". Wisconsin Muslim Journal. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
  2. "Yasmin Mogahed | HuffPost". www.huffpost.com. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
  3. "Yasmin Mogahed at al-Maghrib Institute". al-Maghrib Institute.
  4. "Author, blogger to speak about Muslim spirituality at Orono mosque". Bangor Daily News. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
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