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Saudi prince gives UK universities £16Mln
for study of Islam
'Pakistan
Times' UK Bureau
LONDON (UK): Two of UK’s
best known universities are to set share 16 million pounds (US $ 32 million)
in setting up research centres aimed at promoting a better understanding of
Islam.
Cambridge and Edinburgh universities will share endowment from Prince
Alwaleed bin Talal Abdulaziz al-Saud, a member of the Saudi Arabian royal
family and chairman of the Kingdom Foundation, a charitable and
philanthropic foundation set up to alleviate suffering around the world,
reports The Independent.
The daily said both universities, members of the 20-strong Russell Group,
which represents the leading research institutions, will set up study
centres with the aim of fostering better understanding between the Muslim
world and the West.
In Cambridge, the HRH Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Centre of Islamic Studies
will seek to develop a “constructive and critical awareness of the role of
Islam in wider society”. There will be research programmes on Islam in the
UK and Europe and the portrayal of Islam in the media.
Public lectures, conferences and summer schools will be organised to promote
better understanding, with policy makers from both worlds invited to become
visiting fellows at the centre.
At Edinburgh, the Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Centre for the Study of Islam in
the Modern World will aim to concentrate on promoting understanding of the
history of Islamic civilisation and of Muslims in Britain.
Professor Carole Hillenbrand, head of the department of Islamic and Middle
Eastern Studies at Edinburgh, told the daily the centre’s programme would
have “twin emphases on both the past and the present and how they reinforce
and illuminate each other”.
According to the respected daily , in both cases, the universities have a
history of involvement with Islamic studies. In Edinburgh’s case, this dates
back 250 years to its first scholarship in Islamic studies.
The university was recently placed top in the UK for research on Islamic and
Middle Eastern studies. The university has one of the largest concentrations
of expertise in Britain on Islamic studies, bringing together 20 full-time
members of staff.
About 60 undergraduates a year study at Cambridge’s Faculty of Asian and
Middle Eastern Studies. Courses in Islam are also provided to students at
the Faculty of Divinity.
The study of the Middle East and Islam, and its role in the contemporary
world, is a growing element of the Centre for International Studies and
Department of Political Science’s research programmes at the university.● |