Amr Khaled’s TV preaching has made him Islam’s answer to Billy Graham – and he’s mounting a direct attack on the terror camps of Yemen
Aden, Yemen
There’s a new weapon in the war on terror, ladies and gentlemen. Never mind drones and spies, surgical strikes and covert ops, they’re old hat. There’s a time and a place for them, of course, and we must thank our spooks and soldiers for helping to keep us safe, for foiling plots and knocking off the odd wayward beardie in distant deserts and freezing mountain passes. But that’s not really draining the swamp.
For those of us who would prefer not to live under sharia law; for those of us who like drinking and dancing and freely consorting with the other sex; freedom of expression, democracy and Test Match Special and all the other accoutrements, however decadent, of the West, there is good news to report. It turns out we have a supremely sleek new armament in the arsenal, it’s home-grown within the Islamic world, is long-term and sustainable, doesn’t cost squillions, has nothing to do with foreign infidels or armies and it — or rather he — has just stepped on to the battlefield in Yemen. Al-Qa’eda, prepare to meet your nemesis. He is the telemufti.
Amr Khaled, to give him his proper name, is a hugely popular preacher man from Egypt. He’s Islam’s answer to Billy Graham and rapidly becoming famous throughout the world. His website, amrkhaled.net, is an institution from Morocco to Oman. In a 2008 poll to determine the world’s top public intellectual, in which more than 500,000 voted, Khaled came in sixth. The New York Times has called him ‘the world’s most famous and influential Muslim television preacher’. We should also call him a godsend: a Muslim celebrity who is a proponent of inter-faith dialogue and who urges hundreds of thousands of young Muslims, who might otherwise be swayed by Osama, to rub along peacefully with the West.
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Herbert Thornton
January 3rd, 2011 7:18pm Report this commentThis sounds like wishful thinking.
Unless he has quite exceptionally effective protection from assassination the odds are that he will soon be disposed of by a suicide bomber.
katty kins
January 4th, 2011 6:47pm Report this commentHMMMMM....sounds like a front to recruit more moderates who will then probably be converted...It doesn't quell my anxiety ,it infact sends shivers down my spine...we need to stop blindly thinking that you MUST BE MUSLIM to challenge extremeism and start doing so on a daily bases ourselves..
Elliot Miller
January 6th, 2011 2:18pm Report this commentContrary to what the other two readers have posted, this man and his movement sound like exactly what the world has needed for a long, long time. I just wish Marozzi had not opened his article describing Khaled as the decadent (“drinking and dancing and freely consorting with the opposite sex”) West's newest and best weapon in its war against radical Islam. That is exactly how radical Islam would seek to portray him in order to discredit him, and they now can point to a Western journalist's confirmation of that premise. In fact, Khaled is acting independently of us and that perception must be preserved if he is to succeed
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