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Edip Yuksel

    Edip Yuksel is an American-Turkish-Kurdish author and activist whose work delves into a profound reform of Islam. His writings often explore a rational and monotheistic interpretation of the Quran, challenging traditional doctrines and seeking a path toward peaceful understanding. Yuksel's work is characterized by its intellectual approach and its endeavor to purify Islamic thought from dogma and extremism. Readers encounter him as a thinker unafraid to ask fundamental questions and seek truth through critical thinking and logic.

    Quran: A Reformist Translation
    Nineteen: God's signature in nature and scripture
    Manifesto for Islamic reform
    • Manifesto for Islamic reform

      • 132 pages
      • 5 hours of reading
      4.3(36)Add rating

      Yuksel reintroduces the actual message of the Quran. He removes the accumulated layers of man-made dogmas and traditions that have attached themselves to the text.

      Manifesto for Islamic reform
    • Code 19 was hidden in the 74th chapter of the Quran and discovered by the author's colleague, Dr. Rashad Khalifa, an Egyptian-American biochemist, in 1974. The code suggests a "Copernican revolution" in theology of religions. Instead of Krishna-centered, Jesus-centered, or Muhammad-centered religions, people must turn to the original center, to the God-centered model.

      Nineteen: God's signature in nature and scripture
    • Quran: A Reformist Translation

      • 520 pages
      • 19 hours of reading

      The Reformist Translation of the Quran offers a non-sexist and non-sectarian understanding of the divine text that explicitly rejects the authority of the clergy to determine the likely meaning of disputed passages and uses logic and the language of the Quran itself as the ultimate authority in determining likely meanings.

      Quran: A Reformist Translation