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Home > Yusuf al-Qaradawi


 

Yusuf al-Qaradawi( Arabic:يوسف القرضاوي) (born September 9, 1926) is a modern Muslim scholar known for his facilitative opinions.

Qaradawi was born in Egypt, and attended the Al-Azhar Theological Seminary before moving to Qatar. His father died when he was 2, and so he was taken care of by his uncle. His parents urged him to either run a grocery store or to become a carpenter. Instead he memorized the entire Qur'an by age ten. Qaradawi followed Hasan al-Banna during his youth and was imprisoned first under the monarchy in 1949, then three times after the Tyrant and the Scholar are poetic Islamic plays expressing a message through theme. Other works such as Fiqh-al-Zakat (Laws of the Obligatory Charity) are Islamic law treatises which go into percise details. Qaradawi is a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, and has turned down offers to be the Muslim Brotherhood leader various times. Qaradawi is the head of the European Council for Fatwa and Research.

1 Qaradawi's popularity

Qaradawi has a show on Al-Jazeera called "Sharia in the Life" in which he tackles very controversial questions. Some of these questions include oral sex, being drafted into the army, and the fate of Palestinian suicide bombers. Qaradawi's vision is said to be one of moderate Islam. Qaradawi has frequently quoted the hadith of the Prophet Muhammed saying "Extremism destroyed those before you".

On the other hand, others consider him as a dark force of hard Islamism. They claim Qaradawi opposes the legitimate authority of the United Nations, and approves of killing non-Muslim civilians as soon as Muslims have "reasons to believe he cooperates with forces as 'the Jews' or US military". The Economist descried Qaradawi as one of the two main personalities in conservative Islam: "Mr Qaradawi's opinion tallies with that of more radical Muslims.". 'Sermons that resound with the clash of civilisations", 13 Febr 2003.

Qaradawi is very popular with his tapes and videos available as far away as Indonesia and Malaysia. Azzam Tammimi of the Institute of Islamic Political Thought in London has said "If Sheik Qaradawi gives a fatwa, that fatwa will be heeded tomorrow in hundreds of places around the world."

2 Qaradawi between moderate and conservative (or reactionary) Islam

Qaradawi has been attacked by all sides of the Islamic ideology spectrum for his vision of "moderate" Islam. Qaradawi during elections in 2002 in Bahrain, released a fatwa allowing women, especially those past their child-bearing years, as candidates in municipal elections. A Saudi scholar quickly responded that this was illegal under his interpretation of Islamic law.

Qaradawi also urged the Taliban to reconsider its decision to tear down the Buddha statues in Afghanistan in 2001. He was quickly criticized for supporting "idol worship".

Qaradawi's vision of moderate Islam is one that in his own words "seeks balance between intellect and the heart, between religion and the world, between spirituality and materialism and between individualism and the group."

3 Opinions on Qaradawi

Some Wahhabi and SalafiNote recently created a version that basically was just an extract from one historical text. I have reverted to the version that had evolved over time and saved the alternative version at Salafi/Temp. A Salafi (Arabic lit. early muslim , from the Arabic w Muslims claim Qaradawi is a heretic, deviated scholar, and wicked jurist because of his easier more facilitative opinions. Most Wahhabis and Salafis see Qaradawi's teachings as too lax.

Some mainstream Sunni scholars such as Sidi Faraz Rabbani respect Qaradawi and his opinions but find them to be unreliable.

The general consensus of Sunni Muslims strongly respect the opinion of Yusuf al-Qaradawi, this is especially true of American Muslims.



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