Dr. Sulayman Nyang
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Sulayman Nyang teaches at Howard University
in Washington, D.C. where he serves as Professor of
African Studies. From 1975 to 1978 he served as Deputy
Ambassador and Head of Chancery of the Gambia Embassy
in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. |
Following his diplomatic stint, he immigrated to the United
States and returned to academic life at Howard University,
where he later assumed the position of department chair
from 1986 to 1993.He also serves as co-director of Muslims
in the American Public Square, a research project funded
by The Pew Charitable Trusts.
Professor Nyang has served as consultant to several national
and international agencies. He has served on the boards of
the African Studies Association, the American Council for
the Study of Islamic Societies and the Association of Muslim
Social Scientists. He is listed on the editorial boards of
several national and international scholarly journals. He
has lectured on college campuses in Africa, Asia, Europe and
the Americas.
Professor Nyang has written extensively on Islamic, African
and Middle Eastern affairs. His latest book, Islam in America,
is scheduled to appear this fall. His best known works are
Islam, Christianity and African Identity (1984), A Line in
the Sand: Saudi Arabia’s Role in the Gulf War (1995),
co-authored with Evan Heindricks, and Religious Plurality
in Africa, co-edited with Jacob Olupona. Professor Nyang has
also contributed over a dozen chapters in books edited by
colleagues writing on Islamic, African and Middle Eastern
subjects. His numerous scholarly pieces have appeared in African,
American, European and Asian journals.