Yunus Yakoub Islam (born 1963) is a UK-based Muslim, short story writer, blogger, poet, and cyber-activist. Born Julian Hoare, he changed his surname to Anderson in 1982, prior to marrying his then girlfriend, Julie Harte. He discovered anarchism in the 1980s through the works of the punk band Crass, but later distanced himself from the anti-religious punk scene to explore academic learning, eventually converting to Islam in 1991. He now describes his politics as "postcolonial anarcho-pacifist" and is the author of the Muslim Anarchist Charter. Yakoub has written for the Muslim World Book Review, Q-News, Alt.Muslim and Muslim Wake Up. He is an erratic correspondent to national newspapers, and his letters have been published in The Times, The Guardian and Sunday Telegraph. He campaigns against Islamophobia in both traditional and contemporary media, and is the author of "The Voyage in: Second Life Islamophobia", in S Sayyid & Abdoolkarim Vakil (Editors) (Hurst and Co, 2010). Yakoub's son and youngest child was diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder in 1995. In 2002, Yakoub resigned his post as an SEN Teacher (autism) in order to become his son's primary care-giver. He is currently writing a series of Muslim Steampunk short stories provisional entitled The Muslim Age of Steam. The stories aim to provide a platform for his Muslim Anarchist standpoint, and combine premodern Islamicate Science, futuristic science fiction, and Victorian steampunk themes. Since 2004, Yakoub Islam has owned and managed a multi-purpose website currently known as The Tasneem Project. From 2006, this website has incorporated a microsite devoted to raising awareness about Islamophobia in the media, called The Daily Terror. In March 2010, research carried out by David Stevens of Nottingham University on behalf of the Home Office Research Information and Communications Unit (RICU) identified The Daily Terror as one of the top 10 "pro-Islamic" British blogs - despite The Daily Terror not being regarded as a blog anywhere outside David Steven's research, and one blog was authored by US-based American politics professor.
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