Posts in Dual Degree
Kayvan Seyedin

Kayvan Seyedin is a first-generation Iranian-American from San Diego, CA and born and raised in Milwaukee, WI. He graduated summa cum laude with Department Honors in Ethnic Studies from the University of California, San Diego. His thesis focused on the recent recirculation and pedagogical mobilization of Iranian-French artist Marjane Satrapi's autobiographical film Persepolis (2007) in the aftermath of Iran's 2022 women-led uprisings. Deploying an anti-Orientalist and anti-Islamophobic framework, his research examines the knowledges codified in Persepolis about Iranian women, men, and post-revolutionary Iran in particular, and Muslim women, men, and collectivities more generally, as well as the discursive effects produced by the film's treatment as an ethnographic work. 

Kayvan's research interests are deeply informed by his Iranian-American background and Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution. He is specifically interested in exploring self-representations produced by Iranian women filmmakers in post-revolutionary Iranian cinema in order to understand how women's identities are simultaneously negotiated and resist hegemonic discourses about Muslim women's oppression. Kayvan's broader research interests include the emergence of Shia liberation theology, political Islam, and manifestations of Islamic modernity in post-revolutionary Iran. 

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Usman Khan

Usman Khan is a Queer, Muslim, Pakistani-Canadian graduate from York University, Toronto. His undergraduate degree was a Specialized Honours BA in History where he focused on the intersection between the Middle East, religion, and gender and sexuality studies.

Motivated by his own experiences and observations of Queer Muslims and South Asian youth, Usman aspires to become a historical scholar, contributing to and expanding youth access to research in these areas. He combines rigorous research and theoretical background with his personal perspective as both an outsider and insider to the cultures he explores. With a northern Pakistani background and Canadian upbringing, Usman brings a unique skill set in languages such as English, Hindi, Urdu, and Punjabi, while further intending to soon include Farsi.

Usman's focus is on the region between Kabul and Delhi, specifically examining how Islam influenced gender and sexual norms during the later Delhi Sultanate and early Mughal Empire from the 14th to the 17th centuries.

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Safiyyah El-Gamal

Safi is from Weddington, NC and recently graduated from Davidson College. She spent many memorable hours with the Religious and Arab Studies departments, discussing pre-modern mysticism interacting with modern consciousness. Her undergraduate thesis thus utilized Ibn Arabi’s Futuhat al-Makiyya as a method of identifying the spiritual flattening in Osama bin Laden’s transcripts. 

Safi has studied Arabic with Qasid, Middlebury, and HDS. Further, her travels to Morocco taught the art of not only calligraphy but also daarija and old medina bartering. Returning to Rabat with the Pulitzer Center, she reported on the story of youth’s mystic and social culture in a new lingual age. In the next couple years, Safi hopes to continue research on mystic thought in a modern political context as a FLAS fellow in the dual MA program.

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Margaret Sawyer

Margaret Sawyer graduated from the University of New Hampshire with a degree in Spanish and International Affairs and a minor in Arabic. During her time at UNH, she interned for the Department of State, where she co-managed an interactive platform for the US Embassy in Libya’s External Office. In her undergraduate thesis, Margaret explored how the Spanish tourism industry frames the country’s Islamic heritage, focusing particularly on Andalusia. As an MA candidate for the Columbia/Aga Khan dual degree in Islamic Studies and Muslim Cultures, she seeks to understand how politics and religion shape cultural and heritage preservation in the Middle East.

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Herman Lim Bin Adam Lim

Herman Lim Bin Adam Lim is the recipient of the Aga Khan Fellowship for the Columbia/Aga Khan Dual MA Program in Islamic Studies and Muslim Cultures. He is particularly interested in the multiple expressions of Muslimness across the Indian Ocean, and the connections engendered between its littoral regions throughout time. He focuses primarily on Southeast Asia, stressing its importance as an integral (rather than peripheral) region in the wider conversation on the Muslim World.

Prior to this program, Herman received his MA in Asian Studies from the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, where he studied the construction of Muslim identity in Malaya and Singapore in the realm of film, literature, and ephemera in the twentieth century, under his advisor Dr. Barbara Watson Andaya. He intends to explore pre-modern and early modern expressions of Muslimness, especially in relation to Sufism and the occult sciences, during his time at Columbia and the Aga Khan University.

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Sofia Leathers

Sofie Leathers, from Delray Beach, Florida, is pursuing a career in Arabic language education with a research focus in Islamic science and philosophy. She is an MA candidate for the Columbia/Aga Khan dual degree in Islamic Studies and Muslim Cultures. In her undergraduate thesis at Middlebury College, Sofie produced an original translation of a sample of a 10th-century, occult-scientific agronomical text. In her current position as a scholar-intern at Roots Academy in Rabat, Sofie designs educational programming, including a Sufism-themed trip around Morocco and a workshop series on higher education in the U.S. For two years, she has facilitated virtual English classes for students in rural Morocco with Yallah Al-Quds, an English-Arabic linguistic and cultural exchange platform she helped launch.

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Muhammed Khaleel

Muhammed Khaleel, from Calicut, South India, is an MA candidate for the Columbia/Aga Khan dual degree in Islamic Studies and Muslim Cultures. He holds a BA in Arabic Language and Literature from the University of Calicut. He has also completed an undergraduate degree in Islamic Studies from Jamia Madeenathunnoor, Calicut, where he was trained in the Shāfi’ī and Asha’rī Islamic texts. He has also worked as a research assistant at Malaibar Foundation for Research and Development, Calicut, where he gained hands-on experience in Muslim manuscripts from Malabar, further deepening his knowledge and expertise in the field. His areas of interest include Occult sciences, Manuscript cultures, history of science, food history, and Cultural Anthropology.

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Alaa Qarooni

Alaa Qarooni is a Bahraini MA candidate for the Columbia/Aga Khan dual degree in Islamic Studies and Muslim Cultures. He first moved to the United States from Bahrain to pursue a bachelors degree in electrical engineering, but quickly found himself drawn to exploring the educational streamline taken by Arab youth in the gulf as they navigate the complicated dynamics of postcolonial, oil-rich Arab states, a streamline which he believes he himself is a product of. His interests deal with the disconnect between the hegemonic cultural imaginary of the state and the grim reality of youth on the ground. What do standard talking points like ‘economic development’ and ‘building for a knowledge economy’ mean when faced with a near future of economic recession and environmental catastrophe? How do youth conceptualize ‘the future’ when so-called modernization efforts are undertaken without their interests in mind? How does our understanding of Islam in the Middle East, as scholars, evolve when we consider the role of education and youth in constructing it, historically and contemporaneously? Alaa hopes to develop his expertise in order to attribute greater value to youth culture in academic discourse on Islam and the Middle East.

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Alae El Ouazzani

Alae El Ouazzani is an architect born and raised in Morocco, and a graduate of the Ecole Spéciale d’Architecture of Paris (ESA) in France. Her main research interest revolves around Pre-Islamic influences on North African Contemporary Architecture with a focus on the impact of the colonial period. In exploring this thesis, Alae aims to develop a more expansive understanding of North African heritage beyond the prism of orientalism and other Eurocentric biases. Past research projects include examining the urban history of Moroccan cities, taking into consideration the impact of popular beliefs in urban morphologies. During her field work she traced and documented the evolution of historical sites in Rabat, such as Sidi Yabouri Saint Evora cemetery, home to handcrafted stonework, on the deserted tombs of the first inhabitants of the city. The research revealed her life-long commitment to become a researcher in the field of historic preservation, hoping to have an impact on the becoming of cities in emerging countries such as her own, Morocco. Language is an important part in the way she approaches research, asare the way Arabic, French, English, and Spanish shapes her work and her sensory exploration of spaces and temporalities.

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Yusuf Umrethwala

Yusuf Umrethwala is an MA candidate in the dual degree program in Islamic Studies and Muslim Cultures at Columbia University and Aga Khan University (London). He pursued his undergraduate and graduate studies at Aljamea-tus-Saifiyah in Surat, India, with a major in Arabic literature (ʾAdab), and went on to lecture and research at the same university.

His past research interests include the expression of emotional intensity and visceral imagery by the use of lingual derivations in the poems of Ṭayyībī-Ismaʿīlī Laureates of Yemen in the 13th century. In a more recent project, his research focused on the study of the trans-national socio-religious migratory history of his community, the Dawoodi Bohras starting from the early 19th century to the present day, his findings on which were recently self-published in a book entitled Travel and You Shall Prosper: The History of Migrations of the Dawoodi Bohras. This book covers the migratory history of the Dawoodi Bohras to over 40 countries from India across 9 geographical regions with a detailed account of the early migrants and community developments. Since nothing of this kind was previously documented, his work mostly relied on oral histories and ethnographic research, and is also complemented with a rich collection of old images and archives, each of which tells and complements the vivid history of migrations. He hopes to deepen his research and use his Master's experience to enrich and publish this work. He has also studied and written on the iconography of an old wooden artifact belonging to the Western Fatimid Palace in Cairo

With his past research experiences in the history and literature of the Fatimid dynasty, he was always amazed by the significance of geniza documents in complementing the existing scholarship from a bottom-up approach and providing an evidentiary basis for the social history of the period. For the past two years, he has been working as a research assistant at the Princeton Geniza lab where he works primarily on Arabic script documents coupled with his limited and growing Judaeo-Arabic experience. He is currently working on updating the DIMME database. He is presently a visiting scholar at Princeton University's Near Eastern Studies Department where he is writing his dissertation on Fatimid petitions under the supervision of Professor Marina Rustow. To know more about his research, contact him at ymu2101@columbia.edu.

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Cimone Firdaus Rajan

Cimone Rajan, a 23-year old full-time singer and songwriter, graduated from Berklee College of Music in 2019 with a songwriting degree and music technology minor. Her interest in Islamic Studies grew progressively while she was at Berklee after participating in the Berklee Study Abroad Program in Valencia, Spain. After experiencing the rich cultural impact of the medieval Muslim world on Spanish and Mediterranean art and culture, Cimone decided to tailor her songwriting degree towards the exploration of Muslim culture, along with her own heritage as a Middle Eastern and Pakistani-Canadian. This pursuit eventually led to her upcoming debut EP (album), “after the rain”; a sonic blend of RnB and Sufi sounds. During the dual-degree MA program at Columbia and the ISMC, Cimone plans to work at the intersection of Muslim art and culture and women of the Muslim world, to better understand and study the underpinnings of their historical influences in shaping modern culture globally. She is excited to continue exploring the connection between Islam and the arts, with a hope to introducea new narrative as a Muslim artist in the western music industry.


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Rabiea Ashraf

Rabiea Ashraf is a twenty-two-year-old Muslim-American, born in Pakistan. She graduated from Randolph College in Lynchburg, VA with majors in Psychology and Religious Studies and minors in math and comparative politics. She has a long-standing interest in how religion shapes people’s understanding of contemporary issues, in ways both positive and negative. One of her personal and professional goals is to investigate the ways in which Islam can be reinterpreted and utilized to help provide educational opportunities for women and minorities in Muslim-majority countries. Her experience studying Islam at Randolph College encouraged her to delve deeper into the subject and she is particularly interested in examining the inclusive nature of Islam.

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Fareah Fysudeen

Fareah Fysudeen is an MA candidate for the Columbia and Aga Khan University dual degree in Islamic Studies and Muslim Cultures. She holds a BA in Philosophy and English with Creative Writing sub-concentration from the University of Michigan.

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Bridget Drager

Bridget Drager has a background in global cultural studies with an emphasis in the Middle East. Her current research is on Sufi music from Afghanistan, tracing how these musical practices have been impacted by different political movements from the 1970s to the present day. Her research explores musical adaptations due to Afghan experiences of exile in Western Europe, and ongoing debates in Islamic understandings about the permissibility of music, especially as a form of devotion. 


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George Beck

George comes to the dual degree program between Columbia and the Aga Khan Institute after having completed his juris Doctor at the St. John’s University School of Law. During his time at St. John’s, his coursework focused on private and public international law, cross border transactions, and national security. A portion of his scholarly writing requirement discussing the status of the international legal framework governing the Mekong River Basin was published in the first quarter 2020 edition of Benedict’s Maritime Bulletin. In addition to his academic work, George was a Teaching Assistant for the St. Johns’ Transnational Legal Practice Program, whose purpose is to instruct non-U.S. legal practitioners and students in the nuances of legal practice across borders. Before attending law school, George graduated with a B.A. in History with dual minors in French and Economics, with honors, from Fairleigh Dickinson University College at Florham. His undergraduate thesis explored the development and crystallization of Shari’ah commercial law, and how this process differed from the development of commercial law in Europe.

George's research interests relate to understanding political and diplomatic structures in the Persianate Islamic world, and how these affected the development of transboundary activities during the pre-modern period. He is also interested in understanding how historical patterns can serve as an analogy for modern economic development and integration.

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Sumaiya Zama

Sumaiya Zama is an MA candidate for the Columbia and Aga Khan University dual degree in Islamic Studies and Muslim Cultures. She holds a BA from the University of Massachusetts in Boston in Political Science with minors in Africana Studies and Human Rights. As the youngest board member of the Praxis Project, a support intermediary organization serving communities of color, Sumaiya has dedicated both her free time and professional work to improving the material conditions of her community. Her interests include reading Islamic texts as liberation theology and learning from scholars in the field so that she may further develop its theory and praxis. Her academic interests are sparked by her background in youth work, civil rights, and community organizing, through which she explores how Muslim Americans, particularly young Muslim women, deploy the Islamic tradition to respond to life under a surveillance state.

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Shireen Zaineb

Shireen Zaineb is an MA candidate for the Columbia University and Aga Khan Institute dual-degree program in Islamic Studies and Muslim Cultures. She graduated from Macalester College in 2020, where she studied International Studies with a focus in Political Science, as well as Media & Cultural Studies. With a strong passion for archival exploration, she is dedicated to shedding light on the past to inform a more informed present and future. 

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