Religion, Heritage, and Identity in Tanzania’s Omani-Ibadi Community

Mon, 03 Nov, 2025 at 12:00 pm

Ingraham Hall, Room 206, Madison, WI 53706, United States | Madison

Middle East Studies Program - UW Madison
Publisher/HostMiddle East Studies Program - UW Madison
Religion, Heritage, and Identity in Tanzania\u2019s Omani-Ibadi Community
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Dr. Kimberly Wortmann is an assistant professor in the Department for the Study of Religions, and she is a faculty member of the African Studies (AFS) and Middle East and South Asia Studies (MESA) programs at Wake Forest University.
As a scholar trained in Islamic and African Studies, she is interested in transregional networks of knowledge exchange, transmission, and production between East Africa and the Persian Gulf. Her current research focuses on networks of Islamic schools and charities in Zanzibar, Tanzania, and Oman run by Ibadhis, a Muslim minority community. Wortmann’s research relies extensively on Swahili and Arabic and she has lived and studied in Uganda, Yemen, and Kenya.
Wortmann is currently working on a book manuscript tentatively titled "Society of the Righteous: Transnational Ibadhi Muslim Networks and Educational Reform in East Africa". She has recently published “Daʻwa at the Sultan’s Mosque: An Example of Ibādī Women’s Activism in Muscat,” in Local and Global Ibadi Identities.
Cosponsored by the Religious Studies Program.
This event is free and open to the public.
A vegetarian Middle Eastern lunch will be provided.
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Ingraham Hall, Room 206, Madison, WI 53706, United States

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