Saturday, December 31, 2005

"Saudi prince donates millions to universities for study of Islam"



"Saudi prince donates millions to universities for study of Islam"
by Caryle Murphy ("Washington Post," December 13, 2005)

Washington, USA - A prominent Saudi businessman said Monday that he is donating $20 million each to Georgetown and Harvard universities for the study of Islam and the Muslim world as part of his philanthropic efforts to promote interfaith understanding.
Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal, a member of the Saudi royal family, said in a telephone interview from the Saudi capital of Riyadh that he also has donated $15 million to establish the Middle East's first two centers for American studies, at universities in Beirut and Cairo.
"As you know, since the 9/11 events, the image of Islam has been tarnished in the West,'' said Alwaleed, who is chairman of the Riyadh-based Kingdom Holding Co. and has extensive business holdings in Europe and the United States.
He said his gifts to Georgetown and Harvard will be used ``to teach about the Islamic world to the United States,'' and the new programs at American University in Beirut and American University in Cairo will ``teach the Arab world about the American situation.''
The $20 million gift to Georgetown is the second-largest ever received by the Jesuit-run university, school officials said.
``We are deeply honored by Prince Alwaleed's generosity,'' said a statement from Georgetown President John DeGioia, who met Alwaleed on Nov. 7 in a Paris hotel to sign documents formalizing the donation.
Alwaleed, a grandson of the Saudi kingdom's founder, King Abdel Aziz, tried to give $10 million to the Twin Towers Fund shortly after the terrorist attacks of September 2001. But then-New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani rejected the donation after the prince said in a news release that the United States needed to ``re-examine its policies in the Middle East and adopt a more balanced stance towards the Palestinian cause.''
Asked about the controversy over his New York gift, Alwaleed replied that ``this is behind us and now we are working for the present and the future. . . . My love and admiration to the United States was never diminished.''

"The Mid-East's beleaguered Christians"

"The Mid-East's beleaguered Christians"
by Roger Hardy ("BBC News," December 16, 2005)

Cairo, Egypt - In the Egyptian city of Alexandria, a crowd of Muslim demonstrators tries to storm a Coptic church to protest at a play about a Muslim campaign to convert Christians. In Iraq, the Christian middle class is emigrating in droves, fearful of the daily violence and the hostility it now encounters from Islamists.
In Saudi Arabia, churches and other places of non-Muslim worship are banned, and foreign workers who try to hold secret Christian services are jailed, flogged and often deported. In the land of its birth, Christianity is in sad decline as the pressures of life under Israeli occupation and the growth of militant Islam push Palestinian Christians from Jerusalem and the West Bank.

Few issues are so sensitive as the position of Christians in the Middle East. Some Christian Arabs seek to minimise the difficulties they face, either to avoid trouble or to present themselves in a patriotic light.

At the other extreme, some outsiders - for example, in the United States - exaggerate the plight of Middle East Christians, depicting them as wholly marginalised and on the verge of extinction.

A varied picture
There is no agreed figure for the number of Christians in the region.
Robert Betts, an American expert on the subject, reckons there are at most 10 million. The largest number are in Egypt (perhaps six million). Lebanon and Syria each have over a million, with smaller communities in Iraq, Jordan, Israel, the Palestinian territories, Turkey and Iran. There are also several million Christians in southern Sudan (though not strictly part of the Middle East).

Under pressure

Middle East Christians have deep roots. And, for the most part, Muslims and Christians have long lived in peaceful coexistence. But a number of factors are stirring up tension.
In Iraq, the rise of both Sunni and Shia Islamism, especially since the US-led invasion in 2003 and the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, has helped generate a new climate of sectarianism. Well-to-do Christians are among those who have been targeted for robberies and kidnappings.

In both Sunni and Shia areas, Christian women are forced to cover their heads. Scores of doctors and other professionals have fled abroad. One Iraqi Christian businessman told the BBC: "Christians started to leave in Saddam's time because of the oppression. Now they are leaving for a new reason - fear of religious persecution."

He estimates there are only half a million Christian Iraqis left in the country.
Holy Land blues
Throughout the region, secularism is in retreat and religious politics on the rise. In the current climate, says the Lebanese journalist Hazem Saghieh, "being anti-Christian is a way of showing what a good Muslim you are".

"Christian-Muslim tensions are generally localised and intermittent," says Professor Betts.
"Egypt is the exception where there is constant tension - resentment by the Copts at being excluded from any position of power and resentment by Muslims of the Copts' clannishness and generally higher standard of living."
In Jerusalem and the West Bank, Christian and Muslim Arabs have lived side by side for centuries. Christians were always active in the Palestinian national movement and today one of the best-known Palestinian voices is that of Hanan Ashrawi, a Christian academic and human-rights activist.
But the rigours of life under Israeli occupation - and the rise of the militant Islamic groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad - have made many Palestinian Christians fearful. Those with the means to do so have packed their bags and left for Europe or North America or elsewhere. Once 15% of the Palestinian population in Israel and the West Bank, today Christians make up only 4%.

Evangelical zeal
For Middle East Christians, the role of outsiders is sometimes problematic.
"The 'old churches' which work in Jerusalem and the West Bank (Orthodox, Catholic, Lutheran and Anglican) have a Palestinian flock and so tend to be pro-Palestinian," says Victoria Clark, author of Holy Fire, a book about the role of Western Christendom in the Holy Land.
In contrast, she says, the American evangelical churches, relative newcomers on the scene, are ardent supporters of Israel and Israel's retention of the occupied territories. Though they have made few converts in the Middle East, the evangelical churches are an influential part of President Bush's political constituency in the United States.

In the current climate in the region, no-one wants to be tarred with the American brush. "I am a nationalistic Iraqi," declares one doctor proudly. "But since the US-led invasion, other Iraqis call me a stooge because I'm a Christian."

"Court tells Pakistani sisters who embraced Islam to meet parents"

"Court tells Pakistani sisters who embraced Islam to meet parents"
("IANS," December 16, 2005)

Islamabad, Pakistan - The Pakistan Supreme Court Friday directed three Hindu sisters who converted to Islam to meet their parents after their father filed a petition saying his daughters were forced to marry Muslim men and were not allowed to meet him.

Sanu Umra, the father of the three women, had filed the application in the apex court alleging that his daughters had been abducted and forcibly converted to Islam. However, the women - Reema, 21, Usha, 19, and Reema, 17 - who appeared in the court clad in shawls - said they had changed their religion by choice and were not forced by anyone to convert to Islam. The three women have changed their names to Nida, Anum and Afshan.

The Supreme Court bench headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry and comprising judges Javed Buttar and Tassadaq Hussain Jillani ordered the Karachi police chief to keep the girls in the Edhi Home till further orders and said that their parents should be allowed to meet them.
The women initially said they did not want to meet their parents but on the instance of the court, agreed to meet them at Edhi Home, a centre for homeless women run by the Abdul Sattar Edhi Welfare Trust.
"We have left our home and religion by ourselves and no one forced us into this...we used to listen to Islamic programmes on television and decided to convert to Islam," Reema told the court.

She said that since they feared opposition from their family, they kept their conversion a secret and sought the help of a man named Suleman who, with the help of his two colleagues, took them to Jamiat-ul-Uloom Islamia at Binori town near Karachi, where they are studying and living.
The women told media they had converted to Islam at Jamiat-ul-Uloom Islamia before Ghulam Haider Chunarh, a justice of peace of the government of Sindh province.
Asked if they were going to marry these men, none of the women responded.
The chief justice directed that the parents and relatives of the women be allowed to meet them freely. He said a change of religion did not imply that parents could be ignored and asked the women to respect their family members.
The court also directed police to submit weekly reports about the welfare and arrangements for protection of the women.
However, Raja Hussain, lawyer for their father, said the women had already been forced to marry the three men. He alleged that the women were kidnapped and harassed by the men.
Earlier, their father had lodged a complaint with Karachi police that the three men named Abid, Suleman and Jehanzaib kidnapped his daughters and forced them to convert to Islam. He also alleged his daughters were being kept by the men in a madrassa or seminary.
The alleged kidnappers, who were presented in the court handcuffed, were freed on the court's orders after the women said the men had only helped them and had not kidnapped them.
The Supreme Court also took notice of an application by the Supreme Court Bar Association chief that said some groups were forcing non-Muslims to embrace Islam.
The chief justice said the court would take up this matter in the next hearing.

"Court tells Pakistani sisters who embraced Islam to meet parents"

"Court tells Pakistani sisters who embraced Islam to meet parents"
("IANS," December 16, 2005)

Islamabad, Pakistan - The Pakistan Supreme Court Friday directed three Hindu sisters who converted to Islam to meet their parents after their father filed a petition saying his daughters were forced to marry Muslim men and were not allowed to meet him.

Sanu Umra, the father of the three women, had filed the application in the apex court alleging that his daughters had been abducted and forcibly converted to Islam. However, the women - Reema, 21, Usha, 19, and Reema, 17 - who appeared in the court clad in shawls - said they had changed their religion by choice and were not forced by anyone to convert to Islam. The three women have changed their names to Nida, Anum and Afshan.

The Supreme Court bench headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry and comprising judges Javed Buttar and Tassadaq Hussain Jillani ordered the Karachi police chief to keep the girls in the Edhi Home till further orders and said that their parents should be allowed to meet them.
The women initially said they did not want to meet their parents but on the instance of the court, agreed to meet them at Edhi Home, a centre for homeless women run by the Abdul Sattar Edhi Welfare Trust.
"We have left our home and religion by ourselves and no one forced us into this...we used to listen to Islamic programmes on television and decided to convert to Islam," Reema told the court.

She said that since they feared opposition from their family, they kept their conversion a secret and sought the help of a man named Suleman who, with the help of his two colleagues, took them to Jamiat-ul-Uloom Islamia at Binori town near Karachi, where they are studying and living.
The women told media they had converted to Islam at Jamiat-ul-Uloom Islamia before Ghulam Haider Chunarh, a justice of peace of the government of Sindh province.
Asked if they were going to marry these men, none of the women responded.
The chief justice directed that the parents and relatives of the women be allowed to meet them freely. He said a change of religion did not imply that parents could be ignored and asked the women to respect their family members.
The court also directed police to submit weekly reports about the welfare and arrangements for protection of the women.
However, Raja Hussain, lawyer for their father, said the women had already been forced to marry the three men. He alleged that the women were kidnapped and harassed by the men.
Earlier, their father had lodged a complaint with Karachi police that the three men named Abid, Suleman and Jehanzaib kidnapped his daughters and forced them to convert to Islam. He also alleged his daughters were being kept by the men in a madrassa or seminary.
The alleged kidnappers, who were presented in the court handcuffed, were freed on the court's orders after the women said the men had only helped them and had not kidnapped them.
The Supreme Court also took notice of an application by the Supreme Court Bar Association chief that said some groups were forcing non-Muslims to embrace Islam.
The chief justice said the court would take up this matter in the next hearing.