Hisham_Kabbani

Hisham Kabbani

Hisham Kabbani

American Sufi scholar


Muhammad Hisham Kabbani (born 28 January 1945) is a Lebanese-American Sunni Sufi Muslim scholar belonging to the Naqsbandi Sufi Order. Kabbani has counseled and advised Muslim leaders to build community resilience against violent extremism.[1] In 2012, the Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre named him on The 500 Most Influential Muslims.[2] His notable students include the world-famous boxer Muhammad Ali and former Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

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Biography

Shaykh Kabbani was born in Beirut, Lebanon.

On the order of Shaykh Nazim, Shaykh Kabbani relocated to the United States in 1990[3] where he has developed over a dozen Sufi centers focused on Islamic spirituality and cultural enrichment.[citation needed]

He is also the founder and chairman of the Islamic Supreme Council of America (ISCA), a non-profit, non-governmental educational organization dedicated to teaching personal moral excellence. ISCA has spearheaded a number of peace initiatives, hosted notable conferences, actively engages in inter-religious dialogue, and promotes traditional and moderate Islamic views.[citation needed][citation needed]

Shaykh Muhammad Hisham Kabbani is married to Hajjah Naziha Adil,[4] a descendant of Muhammad, through her paternal and maternal lineages, which includes Shaykh Abdul Qadir Gilani and globally renowned poet Jalaluddin Rumi. Hajjah Naziha is the eldest child of Shaykh Muhammad Nazim Adil (d. 2014), and Hajjah Amina bint Ayesha (d. 2004), a shaykha and Islamic scholar who wrote extensively on lives of the prophets, whose family escaped religious persecution in Tatarstan, Russia.

Activities

For more than twenty years, Shaykh Hisham and Hajjah Naziha have advanced Shaykh Nazim's legacy by directing various emergency disaster relief and humanitarian aid projects in Somalia (famine relief), Banda Aceh, Indonesia (orphan assistance and student scholarships); NWFP, Pakistan (earthquake relief); Kabul, Afghanistan (modern medical equipment and winter clothing); and Kahramanmaras, Turkey (earthquake relief).[5] The Hajjah Naziha Charities are the natural evolution of their past work to advance those outreach projects dearest to Shaykh Nazim's heart.[6][7]

Kabbani also a member of the Elijah Interfaith Institute Board of World Religious Leaders.[8] Shaykh Hisham Kabbani has held meetings with numerous world leaders and has been a key speaker at various conferences, such as the World Economic Forum.

Fatwas

In 2011. Shaykh Kabbani and Homayra Ziad (Islamic Studies, Trinity College, CT), wrote a fatwa using Quranic exegesis, a review of hadith, and linguistic analysis to determine that the Quran does not condone domestic violence. According to the authors of the fatwa, the broader message of the Qur'an is the promotion of harmony and affection between husband and wife so that they may develop amongst themselves a sacred bond of love and mercy.[9]

Shaykh Kabbani has also written a fatwa on the principles of jihad, which was translated into Arabic and distributed by the US military in Iraq.[10]

Controversy and criticism

In 1999, Shaykh Kabbani came into conflict with various Muslim groups including the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), and the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA) after he stated that 80 percent of mosques are being run by "extremist ideologies".[11] Muslim organizations responded harshly, stating that Kabbani's remarks "could have a profoundly negative impact on ordinary American Muslims".[12][13] Shaykh Kabbani plunged into further controversy when he accused Muslims who advise the United States about Islam as being "extremists themselves".[13] When asked during a conference whether he would name the Islamic groups he believed were "extremist", Kabbani answered, "after the program".[13] When subsequently confronted with the question during the end of the discussion, Kabbani refused to answer.[13] In a joint statement pertaining to Shaykh Kabbani's accusations, several Muslim groups said that "Shaykh Kabbani has put the entire American Muslim community under unjustified suspicion. In effect, Shaykh Kabbani is telling government officials that the majority of American Muslims pose a danger to our society."[13]

Kabbani (left) with Shaykh Nazim (far right) in prayer at an Islamic conference in 1996.

In his remarks at the State Department that year, Shaykh Kabbani had claimed that 80 percent of the Muslim American population have been introduced to extremist ideology.[11] Shaykh Kabbani claimed the figure was based on his interviews with religious clerics, educators, community members and young Muslims in 114 mosques in the US over an eight-year period (1991–1999). [14] Although the "80%" figure has been widely cited by public officials, and has been repeated by several other reports,[15][16][17][18] a fact check by the Washington Post concluded the statistic has not been confirmed by a quantitative, peer-reviewed study or any other type of evidence.[19]

In his 1999 State Department speech, Shaykh Kabbani claimed that while the majority of Muslim Americans have been exposed to violent extremist ideologies, "not all of them agree with it." Later in the question and answer session he reiterated that the majority of the Muslim community which is "peace loving and tolerant" does not support extremism.[11] In a 2000 interview with the Middle East Quarterly, he clarified his position that "the problem of extremism is not confined to the Muslim community... Extremism is an unwillingness to accept any viewpoint but one's own... Ideological extremism can result in an act of violence when an individual pursues his ideas to such an extreme that he thinks only his ideas are correct and must therefore be enforced on everyone else."[20]

In 2001 and 2002 Shaykh Kabbani was recognized as one of the few Muslim scholars at that time to have warned of the threat of violent extremism.[21][22]

In the April 2016 issue of Dabiq Magazine, Salafism-Wahhabism terrorist group the so-called Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant declared him a murtad (or apostate).[23]

Published works


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References

  1. Di Stefano Pironti, Alexandra (January 4, 2013). "Mystical Islam Deters Fundamentalism". Inter Press Service. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  2. "The World's 500 Most Influential Muslims, 2012". The Muslim 500. Retrieved 18 December 2012.[permanent dead link]
  3. "A Sufi Muslim Takes on Wahhabism". December 12, 2004. Islamic Supreme Council of America. Retrieved 20 March 2014.
  4. "hajjah-naziha-adil". Hajjah-naziha-adil (21). May 2019. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  5. "Sufilive Charities". May 2023. Retrieved 23 April 2023. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. "Hajjah Naziha Charity, UK". Hajjah Naziha (20). May 2019. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  7. "Hajjah Naziha Charitable Society". 23 April 2023. Retrieved 23 April 2023. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. "The Prohibition of Domestic Violence". WORDE. Archived from the original on 16 June 2013. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  9. "Our WORDE Issue Number 7". Our WORDE (7). December 2011. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  10. Curtiss, Richard (April–May 1999). "Dispute Between U.S. Muslim Groups Goes Public". Washington Report on Middle East Affairs: 71, 101.
  11. Goodstein, Laurie (28 October 2001). "Muslim Leader Who Was Once Labeled an Alarmist Is Suddenly a Sage". New York Times. Retrieved 16 January 2013.
  12. Mordechai, Kedar (June 2011). "Shari'a and Violence in American Mosques". Middle East Quarterly.
  13. Ahmad, Akbar (2010). Journey Into America. Washington DC: Brookings. pp. 5, 254.
  14. Ottaway, David (19 August 2004). "US Eyes Money Trails of Saudi-Backed Charities". The Washington Post.
  15. Kessler, Glen (15 March 2011). "Peter King's claim about radical Muslim imams: Is it true?". The Washington Post.
  16. Goodstein, Laurie (28 October 2001). "Muslim Leader Who Was Once Labeled an Alarmist Is Suddenly a Sage". New York Times.
  17. "Kill the Imams of the West" (PDF). Dabiq 1437 Rajab (April - May 2016) (14). Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant: 15. Retrieved 2016-04-30. Other Sūfī leaders in the West are no different, if not worse in some respects; like Hisham Kabbani, ...
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