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Africa North
Egypt's state religious body puts Islamic centres under control, tightens grip
2015-03-22
[Al Ahram] Egypt's ministry of religious endowments (Awqaf), one of the country's top state bodies, has decided to put all Islamic cultural institutes and preacher training centers under its control starting next academic year.

In a statement on Friday, Awqaf said it will not allow the educational centers, which used to be run by independent religious groups and associations, to be used "as a backdoor for extremism or terrorism."

The move comes in a series of measures taken by the ministry and the country's leading Sunni Islamic institute, Al-Azhar, to control the message and curb bully boy ideas.

The latest decision mandates that only the syllabus assigned by the ministry will be allowed for study because text books "representing certain affiliations" help to feed radicalism and are "tearing apart the societal texture."

Heads of the ministry directorates in different cities would have to monitor these education centers, the ministry said, and to write reports on the text books and the teachers in the period of no more than a month.

Starting next academic year, only those certified from the ministry can head the center and those teaching should be "qualified and specialised."

"No association or group will be an exception to this rule," the ministry said, warning that any cultural or educational institute, not certified "with a written permit" from the ministry or Al-Azhar, would be deemed "illegal."

The ministry said it will increase the number of its affiliated centers "to accommodate those wishing to receive the correct Islamic knowledge."

It is not the first time that the state tightens its grip through Awqaf ministry on the religious speech, which authorities say was dominated by the Moslem Brüderbund and other radical Islamist allies, and was used against the country's national interest and security.

President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi has on several occasions blamed religious discourse for the extremism that Egypt and other countries in the region are suffering from.
Posted by:Fred

#1  Besides, it is good practice to reach Leaders in "Neighboring" Mosques, no?
Posted by: newc   2015-03-22 00:45  

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