Dr. Godlas is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Religion at the University of Georgia. He is the director of
the UGA Virtual
Center for Interdisciplinary Studies of the Islamic World (VCISIW)
and is the Co-Director of the UGA-Morocco Maymester program.
At UGA he teaches Islamic Studies and Arabic courses (and
sometimes Persian and Ottoman Turkish) as well as a survey
course on the world's religions. Dr. Godlas is on the steering
committee for the UGA
Center for Asian Studies, and he is
also a member of the
Linguistics faculty,
the
Medieval Studies Program, and the
African Studies Program.
A native-born
Californian, Dr. Godlas received his M.A. (1983) and Ph.D.
(1991) in Near Eastern Studies (specializing in Islamic
Studies) from the University of California at Berkeley, under
the supervision of Prof. Hamid Algar. Dr. Godlas, however,
began his career in higher education by studying for and
receiving his B.S. in Ecological Psychology from the
University of California at Davis in 1972. He then trained in
Gestalt Therapy at the Gestalt Institute of San Francisco from
1973-74 and studied at the SAT Institute under the direction
of Dr. Claudio Naranjo in 1974. Subsequently, Dr. Godlas
traveled to the Islamic world, studying Persian literature at
the University of Tehran from 1974-1976, advanced Arabic as a
fellow at the Center for Arabic Study Abroad (CASA) in Cairo
in 1983-84, and advanced Turkish as a fellow at Bosporus
University in 1984. He has taught at the University of Georgia
since 1991.
Dr. Godlas has
conducted extensive research in manuscript libraries in Egypt,
Morocco, and Turkey. His areas of research include Qur'anic
commentary (tafsir), hadith, Islamic mysticism (also known as
Sufism) and consciousness transformation, and the relationship
between Islam, modernism, and postmodernism. The Islamic texts
that he studies are primarily in Arabic, Persian, and Turkish.
A final area of his research is the development of a
disciplinary framework for the study of religion.
His
professional experience includes being on the editorial boards
of both Fons Vitae press and the journal,
Sufi Illuminations,
and being a member of the steering committee of the Study
of Mysticism and Study of Islam sections of the
American Academy of Religion. Dr. Godlas was granted a
National Endowment to the Humanities fellowship for the study
of mysticism with Professor Huston Smith in 1993. In the
Summer of 1997, Dr. Godlas received a Fulbright-Hayes
fellowship for study in
Uzbekistan (link fixed 20 August,
2005). Dr. Godlas is most well-known for his
Islamic Studies
and
Sufism websites, which are the
foremost comprehensive academic websites for the study of
Islam and Sufism on the entire worldwide web. His recently
developed webpage
Muslims, Islam,
and the Iraq War is the only
thorough treatment of the relationship between Muslims and the
Iraq war. In April 2002 his Islamic Studies website was one of
five nominees for a Webby award in the category of
spirituality. (The Webbys are the equivalent of the Oscars for
websites.) Among his competitors was the website of the
Vatican!
Dr Godlas
was among the five well-known figures chosen by Beliefnet, the
leading commercial interfaith website, to be interviewed about
the best picture nominations for the Oscars in 2002. See
Dr. Godlas' comments about Moulin Rouge.
Most
recently, in January 2003, Dr. Godlas was chosen by the US
Department of State and the Emir of Kano to give two
presentations on Islam for a bilateral conference in Kano
(Northern Nigeria) on US and Northern Nigerian relations.
Dr.
Godlas has delivered numerous lectures in the US on
understanding Islam and related issues for organizations such
as CNN, the UGA Institute for Continuing Judicial Education,
College of Charleston, Georgia Southwestern State University,
Athens Council for Continuing Education of the Elderly, and
many churches of different denominations. Recently, he
delivered three lectures as the 2004 DeLamotte Lecturer at
Shorter College in Rome, GA. He has also lectured
internationally, delivering papers and invited presentations
in Turkey, Iran, Morocco, Uzbekistan, and Nigeria, and by
digital video to Senegal. In UGA's Georgia Magazine (Decemember,
2003)
a recent
article discussed Dr. Godlas' life and work.
It was based on a lengthier
biographical article on Dr. Godlas
that traces the intellectual journey of his life titled
"Surrendering to God" by Philip Lee Williams (UGA Franklin
College Chronicle, Fall 2003).
Recent Publications:
1. "Surrender: Its Significance for Today and in the Qur'an
Commentary of Ruzbihan al-Baqli," in
Beacon of Knowledge: Essays in Honor of Seyyed Hossein Nasr,
ed. by Mohammad Faghoory, 2003.
2. Editor of Remembrance:
Proceedings of the First Annual International Milad an-Nabi
Conference. Chicago: 1995. This can be ordered from Dr. A.
Mirza at NFIE.
3. "Hadith and the Qudsiya of
Khwajah Muhammad Parsa," in Remembrance. Chicago: 1995,
50-73.
4. "The Naqshbandi Lineage of
Shaykh Ma'sum Naqshbandi (al-Kurdi)," in Remembrance.
Chicago: 1995, 91-96.
5. "Psychology and
Self-Transformation in the (Arabic) Sufi Qur'an Commentary of
Ruzbihan al-Baqli('Ara'is al-bayan),"Sufi
Illuminations, 1(1996) 31-62. This journal can be ordered
from Dr. A. Mirza at
NFIE.
6. "A Commentary on 'What is
Tasawwuf?'-An Anonymous Persian Poem," Sufi Illuminations,
1(1996) 63-80.
7. "Rifa'iya," in The Oxford
Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World, ed. by John
Esposito (New York: Oxford, 1995) 437-439.
8. "Ni'matallahiya," in The
Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World, ed. by
John Esposito, (New York: Oxford, 1995) 252-53.
Currently
Dr. Godlas is translating and editing Ruzbihan al-Baqli's
encyclopedic esoteric Sufi Qur'anic commentary, 'Ara'is al-bayan
(The Brides of the Qur'an). The translation is currently under
contract and when finished will number roughly 3,000 pages.