LONDON,
August 27, 2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Famed Muslim
scholar Tariq Ramadan is to take up a post at Britain's prestigious
University of Oxford.
St
Antony's College, the most international of the seven graduate
colleges of Oxford, said Ramadan is due to begin a Visiting
Fellowship in October, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Professor
Ramadan is an internationally-recognized scholar," the college
said in a statement issued Friday, August 27.
"He
was named by Time magazine as one of 100 innovators of the 21st
Century for his work on creating an independent European Islam.
"He
was recently appointed to a prestigious chair in Islamic studies in
the University of Notre Dame in the United States."
Ramadan
was unable to take up the position when the Department of Homelands
Security revoked his visa in July 2004.
Over
a dozen US academics protested the decision and the Chicago Tribune
described it as a punishment for his views on Iraq invasion and
Israeli policies.
"St
Antony's college is a forum for free academic exchange on the issues
of our times, and opposes all manifestations of hate speech and
intimidation designed to curb academic freedoms," a college
spokesperson said.
Established
in 1950, the college specializes in international relations,
economics, politics and history of particular parts of the world -
Europe, Russia and the former Soviet states, the Middle East, Africa,
Japan, China, South and South East Asia and Latin America.
Famous
St Antony’s College alumni include Anne Applebaum, a Washington
Post journalist and Pulitzer prize winner; Bridget Kendall, the
BBC diplomatic correspondent, and Thomas Friedman, New York Times
columnist.
Moderate
Ramadan
Many
see Ramadan, 38, as a moderate voice in the Muslim world who could
make a valuable contribution to the debate about Islam.
The
father of four is known for his calls on Muslims in the West to avoid
standing on a defensive line and to present Islam as a universal
message.
Ramadan
publicly condemned the 11 September and is against the taking of
innocent life.
Invited
to a one-day anti-terrorism conference sponsored by London
Metropolitan police, he called on Muslims to condemn the London
terrorist attacks "with the strongest energy".
"Criminals,
no doubt, will continue to kill, but we shall be able to respond to
them by demonstrating that our experience of human brotherhood and
mutual respect is stronger than their message of hate."
On
March 30, the prominent Muslim intellectual called for a moratorium in
the Muslim world on the application of Hudud (prescribed
Islamic penalties).
The
grandson of Hassan Al-Banna, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood in
Egypt, Ramadan currently lives in Geneva.
He
studied philosophy and French literature, having two doctorates, one
in Philosophy, and the other in Islam.
Ramadan
also studied Arabic and Islam in Al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt.
He
held the position of lecturer of Religion and Philosophy at the
University of Fribourg and the College de Saussure, Geneva.