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Ramadan is considered to be an important voice in improving relations between Muslims and the west.
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CAIRO,
August 31, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – The British government has named
famed Swiss scholar Tariq Ramadan as one of a government committee set
up to address the underlying causes of terrorism in Britain, a leading
British newspaper reported Wednesday, August 31.
The
academic attended a meeting at the Home Office last week to discuss
extremism among British Muslims as part of the group's work,
well-placed sources told the Guardian.
The
13-member taskforce is comprised of Muslims from community groups,
like Inayat Bunglawala from the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB),
academics and the MP Shahid Malik.
known
as the working group on tackling extremism, the taskforce is part of
the government's response to the July 7 attacks on London, and was
announced by (Prime Minister) Tony Blair. Its 13 members had been
chosen by the Home Office.
The
group will report to the home secretary and prime minister by late
September and make proposals to stop British Muslims turning to
violence, according to the paper.
Right
Person
Ramadan’s
appointment to the committee was hailed as the right person for the
right job and evidence of the government's willingness to stand up to
rightwing tabloids that had savaged the moderate scholar.
"It
sends all the right messages that the government is engaged in a real
search for answers, rather than pandering to kneejerk elements in the
rightwing press and their prejudices," Labour MP Sadiq Khan told
the paper.
"It's
important for the government to listen to people who have scholarly
knowledge of the issues."
One
source with knowledge of the setting up of the group said: "He
[Ramadan] brings understanding of Islam that young people
respect."
Hailed
by the Time magazine hailed him as one of the 21st century's
innovators, Ramadan is considered to be one of the leading Islamic
thinkers and an important voice in improving relations between Muslims
and the west.
He
is to take up a teaching post at Britain's prestigious University of
Oxford.
Invited
to a one-day anti-terrorism conference sponsored by London
Metropolitan police, he has 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."
Ramadan
is scheduled to appear at a Guardian-organized fringe event at the
Labour party conference in Brighton September 28, and has appeared at
past events organized by the Guardian with British Muslim
communities.
The
grandson of Hassan Al-Banna, founder of the Muslim Brotherhood in
Egypt, Ramadan, 38, was born 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.