Courses from Egypt’s Al-Azhar University Heading to Denmark

Danish Muslims will no longer have to visit Cairo to immerse their minds in the curriculum of Al-Azhar University, frequently cited as the center of learning in Sunni Islam. The classes are coming to them:

Well-educated Danish Muslims will soon be able to take Islamic university-level courses in law, economics, and international relations here in the country, reports Berlingske Tidende newspaper.

The Islamic Faith Society will begin offering graduate courses in conjunction with the Al-Azhar University in Cairo, one of the most renowned religious and intellectual institutions in the Muslim world.

The new venture intends to “confront misconceptions about Islam and explain the true Islam to the European society.” One imagines this to be yet another response to the row over cartoons of Mohammed published by a Danish newspaper in September 2005.

But what kind of education will these students receive? For insight into the worldview that characterizes Al-Azhar, one must begin with Muhammad Sayyed Tantawi, the university’s grand sheikh. In the 1970s Tantawi penned a 700-page tome that rationalizes Muslim Jew-hatred. More recently, he has praised suicide bombings of civilians and called for the beheading of anyone who insults the holy books or prophets of monotheistic faiths.

As for the curriculum of Al-Azhar, one former student — who was expelled and arrested for his publications on a reformist website — has written that the university promotes “things that contradict reason and incite to violence against people of other beliefs.” A liberal professor at Cairo University has likewise criticized the school for employing the texts of “extremist sheikhs":

What kind of way of thinking are we teaching our next generation, that it has the right to attack other countries in order to convert them to Islam or to [make them] pay jizya, and that if they don’t — we will annihilate them down to the very last one?

Which brings us to an even more troubling question: will they teach this same way of thinking to Muslims in Denmark?
David J. Rusin investigates and combats nonviolent radical Islam in the United States and other Western countries for Islamist Watch. His research has highlighted the dangers posed by Islamist-leaning individuals with government security clearances, debunked the myth that American Muslims are more likely than other minorities to suffer hate crimes, and tracked the progress of Philadelphia’s “black Muslim enclave.” He has been the curator of Islamist Watch’s extensive news archive for more than half a decade and previously served as the project’s director. Prior to joining the Forum, Mr. Rusin worked as an astrophysicist. He also spent two years as the Philadelphia editor at PJ Media
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