LOC18:00
15:00 GMT
By Nawab Khan
Ghent, BELGIUM, Dec 22 (KUNA) -- The Islamic Development and Research
Academy in the city of Ghent (60 kms from Brussels) Saturday night organised a
ceremony to mark a quarter century in the teaching of Quran and Islamic
education.
The director of the Academy, Ibrahim Letoush told KUNA that the academy,
founded in 1989, is considered to be one of the most important institutions in
the teaching of the Quran not only in Belgium but also on the European level.
"It is a great day for me because my 17-year old son Anas today has become
an Hafiz (one who memorizes the whole Quran)" he said.
The ceremony in particular honoured Mustfa Al Diwani from Morocco who is
engaged in teaching the Quran since 1975 earlier in France and now in the
Academy in Ghent.
Up to 15 young boys and girls who are now huffaz (memorized the whole
Quran) were also awarded prizes including a trip for pilgrimage to Mecca. The
youngest one is 15 years old. Another two hundred are now learning the Quran
at the Academy.
Letoush said they were all born and brought up in Belgium and can now
become Imams or scholars. He noted that it is very difficult to find Imams
and scholars who were raised in Belgium and understand the Belgian and
European context.
"But what we saw here today is that it is possible to train and educate
Imams who are born and brought up in Belgium," he said.
Letoush stressed that "all of them are going at the same time to Belgian
schools and are doing good in their studies. They are combining the two
studies and the two disciplines," he said.
"Most of our young Muslims who take the extreme path know hardly anything
about the Quran. If you ask them how much of the Quran you memorized, they
will say perhaps a few surahs (chapters) and their understanding of the Quran
is not correct," he said.
"We have to invest in our generation. The only way is to teach the correct
understanding of the Quran," he added.
There are about 25,000 Muslims mainly from rom Morocco living in Ghent. An
estimated 600,000 Muslims live all over Belgium.
Dr. Tijani Boualaouali, Director of academic affairs at the Academy, is
from Morocco and studied Arabic language and literature before moving to
Netherlands where he lived for 15 years and then he moved to Belgium.
He studied also religion and theology in the university in Amsterdam.
Tijani who was also a poet told KUNA that they are also training teachers
of Arabic language. The Academy also issues cerficates for Halal
products.
"When I moved to Europe I found that the situation is not in need of a
poet but to serve the cause of Muslims in the West. From there my journey in
the service of Islam began," said Tijani who has written about ten books on
integration of Muslims in western societies, women in Islam, education,
dialogue with non-Muslims, Islamophobia, etc.
He said the first generation migrants who came to Europe from countries
like Morocco in the 60s and 70s played a major role in preserving the faith
by building mosques and Islamic centres all over Europe.
He said that Moroccans are leading the Muslim world in memorizing the Quran.
There are 429,000 students learning the Quran in Morocco in 29,000 centres
around the country in the traditional Moroccan way, he noted. (end)
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KUNA 221800 Dec 13NNNN