March 14, 2013 - SALT LAKE CITY - Tariq Ramadan, one of the world´s
leading Islamic thinkers, will speak at the Salt Lake City Public
Library at 7pm on Wednesday, March 20, in the Main Library Auditorium
(210 East 400 South).
Ramadan, who was named by Time Magazine as one of the 100 most
important innovators of the 21st century, has authored numerous books on
Islamic practice and theology and lectures extensively around the world
on theology, ethics, social justice, ecology
and interfaith and intercultural dialogue.
The renowned scholar was involved in a six-year civil liberties battle
after his United States work visa was revoked under the "ideological
provision exclusion" of the USA PATRIOT Act. Ramadan had accepted a
tenured position at the University of Notre Dame,
which he was unable to fulfill. In 2010, Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton lifted the ban that prohibited Ramadan's travel to the United
States.
Professor Ramadan´s lecture will explore the challenges facing North
Africa and the Middle East as they look to create new, more open
societies after the Arab Spring. In particular, he will highlight the
role Islam can play as a reference in this critical moment
in the evolution of the Arab world and possible ways in which Islamic
principles and goals can be rethought.
A reception and book signing will follow the event.
Ramadan is a Professor of Contemporary Islamic Studies at Oxford
University. He has been named in the 100 top global thinkers by Foreign Policy Magazine and by Time Magazine as one of the top 100 innovators of the 21st Century.
This lecture is funded by the Telemachus Foundation, Friends of the City
Library, The Barbara and Norman Tanner Center for Nonviolent Human
Advocacy at the University of Utah and Westminster College. Additional
support is provided by the Gandhi Alliance for
Peace, the Middle East Center at the University of Utah, Peace and
Justice Studies at Utah Valley University, Peaceful Uprising, Utahns for
Just Peace in the Holy Land and the Wasatch Coalition for Peace and
Justice.
No comments:
Post a Comment