Notes
1 A. Tayob, Islamic Resurgence in South Africa: The Muslim Youth Movement (Cape Town, UCT Press, 1995); A. Tayob, Islam in South Africa: Mosques, Imams and Sermons (Gainsville, University of Florida Press, 1999); and for example G. Vahed, ‘Constructions of Community and Identity among Indians in Colonial Natal, 1860–1910: The Role of the Muharram Festival’, Journal of African History, 43 (2002), pp. 77–93; G. Vahed, ‘Contesting “Orthodoxy”: The Tablighi-Sunni Conflict among South African Muslims in the 1970s and 1980s’, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 23, 2 (October 2003), pp. 313–34; G. Vahed ‘Contesting Indian Islam in KwaZulu-Natal: The Muharram Festival in Durban, 2002’ forthcoming in: P. Kaarsholm and I. Hofmeyr (eds). The Popular and the Public: Cultural Debates and Struggles over Public Space in Modern India, Africa and Europe (Kolkata and London, Seagull Books, 2008).
2 G. Vahed and S. Jeppie, ‘Multiple Communities: Muslims in Post-Apartheid South Africa’, in J. Daniel, R. Southall and J. Lutchman (eds), State of the Nation: South Africa 2004–2005 (Cape Town, HSRC Press, 2005), pp. 252–86.
3 Samadia Sadouni, Minorités religieuses, integrations, transnationalités: les ‘Indiens’ musulmans de Durban, Afrique du Sud (1860–1994) (Bordeaux, Université Montesqieu Bordeaux IV, 2004).
4 See, for example, the News24 report ‘5 Hurt in Durban Attacks’, 23 May 2008, http://www.news24.com/News24/South_Africa/News/0,2-7-1442_2327965,00.html (accessed on 12 August 2008).