A Different Sort of Radical Muslim
ICC Note:
A very encouraging article about the radical version of Islam coming out of Morocco.
A Different Sort of Radical Muslim
Ahmed Abaddi is helping Muslims to understand the West.
For the full article, go to National Review
A Muslim leader made the rounds in Washington last week offering a radically different vision.
Topping his agenda were religious classes to teach Imams the history and virtues of the West, and dramatic new initiatives to build ties to Rabbis and evangelical Christians.
Were Dr. Ahmed Abaddi merely a soft-spoken, gentle-mannered professor of comparative religion in his native Morocco , his views would certainly be welcome, but not particularly newsworthy.
However, Abaddi is actually in a position of some influence. As Morocco s Director of Islamic Affairs and senior advisor to King Mohammed VI, he is responsible for overseeing his countrys 33,000 mosques. And hes not just talking about a new approach to Muslim relations with the West. At the direction, and with the blessing, of his King, Abaddi has already taken a number of concreteand controversialsteps.
Abaddi recounted to House and Senate leaders, Bush administration officials, journalists, and business leaders the changes he and his colleagues have brought about in recent years:
They embarked upon a campaign of interviews, speeches, and sermons that condemn al Qaedas teachings and violence. They helped mobilize more than one million Moroccans to take to the streets of Casablanca in May 2003 to denounce radical Islamic terrorisma march in which 1,000 Moroccan Jews openly participated and were warmly embraced by the Muslim community.
They launched a theological training program for Imams to teach them how to promote moderation within Islam, to teach them more about Western history and the importance of Christianity and Judaism to Western social and political development, and to help them identify and oppose extremist forces and trends within Islam. Participants take 32 hours of instruction per week for a full year. The first class of 210 just graduated, and included 55 women.
They helped organize the World Congress of Rabbis and Imams for Peace in Brussels (January 2005) and Seville (March 2006) where some 150 Muslim and Jewish leaders sit beard to beard to explore common ground, denounce extremists, and write declarations of peace.
They launched an initiative to build a bridge of friendship to evangelical Christians in the U.S., including on-going dialogues with Richard Cizik of the National Association of Evangelicals, Rob Schenck of the National Clergy Council, and Josh McDowell of Campus Crusade for Christ, among others. Abaddi and his colleagues have also invited pastors and evangelical business leaders to Morocco for conferences and high-level inter-faith talks, and have even helped organize a series of concerts in Marrakesh where Christian and Muslim rock bands perform together for thousands of Moroccan young people.