A
group of Muslim clerics connected with Egypt's prestigious Al-Azhar
University have announced the creation of a new satellite channel to
propagate moderate Islam and challenge what it describes as extremist
distortions of the religion.
The announcement comes just ahead of
President Barack Obama's address Thursday to the Muslim world from
Cairo in a speech co-sponsored by Al-Azhar University, Sunni Islam's
premier educational institution.
Sheik Khaled el-Guindy, a member
of Egypt's Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs and a driving force
behind the "Azhari" channel, said the idea is to use the knowledge and
skills of Al-Azhar graduates to combat ignorant interpretations of the
religion.
"Azhari will promote the idea that Islam is a religion
of moderation free from extremism," he told The Associated Press on
Tuesday. "Several satellite channels right now promote a strict
interpretation of Islam and issue incorrect religious opinions that fill
young people with extremist ideas."
There are dozens of Islamic
satellite channels in the Middle East, with many receiving funding from
the conservative oil-rich Gulf and propagating a very conservative form
of the religion.
"Audiences need people that deal in reality and
respect reality and respect changes in the world. These channels don't
present these things. Some of these channels are just ignorant of
reality," said el-Guindy, explaining that graduates of al-Azhar
university are well grounded in subjects outside of religion as well.
Azhari
is set to be launched in mid-August, at the start of the Muslim holy
month of Ramadan and will present a mix of entertainment and educational
programing, including children's cartoons, soap operas and call-in
shows.
The channel will initially be broadcast in English and
Arabic, with plans to expand it to Turkish and Hindi, and will be
viewable from Europe to Southeast Asia.
"The idea is to really
show moderate Islam, not this extreme one that is being utilized by
others," said
Hassan Tatanaki, a Libyan businessman who helped provide
the channel's $2.7 million in initial funding. "Our aim is to be able to
reach not only the Arab Muslims, but the non-Arab Muslims, mainly in
the Far East, the Near East, places like the US and Europe."