Shaykh Al-Azhar Recognised as the Most Influential Muslim in The World

‘The Muslim 500’ recognises the Grand Imam, Dr Ahmad al-Tayyeb Shaykh al-Azhar, as the most influential Muslim in the world in latest edition of 2013. President of WAAG UK, Shaykh M I H Pirzada, also recognised amongst the 500 most influential Muslims in the world.

‘The Muslim 500’ introduces a list of the 500 most influential Muslims in the world, researched and published by The Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre based in Amman. It ranks the Top 50, and places the remaining 450 into 13 categories: Scholarly, Political, Administration of Religious Affairs, Preachers and Spiritual Guides, Philanthropy/Charity and Development, Social Issues, Business, Science and Technology, Arts and Culture, Quran Reciters, Media, Celebrities and Sports and Radicals. These people are the movers and shakers of the contemporary Muslim world. Knowing them and their ideas gives a solid foundation for understanding how Muslims’ view themselves.

 

In the recently published 2013 edition, rich tribute has been paid to the Grand Imam, Dr Ahmad al-Tayyeb Shaykh al-Azhar, who has been ranked as the number one most influential Muslim in the world with influence far greater than other scholars, cultural personalities and heads of states. The Muslim 500 honours the 57 years that Dr Ahmad al-Tayyeb has been involved with Al-Azhar University since he began to study in an Al-Azhar affiliated school at the tender age of ten. It also paid rich tribute to Al-Azhar stating that ‘the university is considered the most prominent Islamic educational institution and the foremost centre of Sunni Muslim scholarship worldwide’.

 

The President of the UK Branch of the World Association for Al-Azhar Graduates (WAAG UK), Shaykh Muhammad Imdad Hussain Pirzada, and his long-standing endeavours have also been recognised as he is ranked amongst the 500 most influential Muslims in the world who bears substantial scholarly influence based in the United Kingdom.

 

On behalf of WAAG UK, the Vice President Bakhtyar H Pirzada al-Azhari said, “This publication is of growing importance amongst the Muslims and non-Muslims of the World and is fast becoming a significant reference point. It is a great honour and recognition of the institution of Al-Azhar which spans a millennium as well as the personal grandeur and worth of Dr Ahmad al-Tayyeb, the Shaykh of Al-Azhar, as he is ranked as the most influential Muslim in the world. A great honour also that President of WAAG UK and Founder of Jamia Al-Karam, Shaykh Muhammad Imdad Hussain Pirzada, is also recognised among the 500 most influential Muslims in the world. As a result of this recognition, we pray that may the benefit of Al-Azhar University, Jamia Al-Karam, Dr Ahmad al-Tayyeb and Shaykh Pirzada increase further through their scholarly services and contributions towards Islam.”

 

The publication is available for free download at http://www.themuslim500.com  

 

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Text of the article in The Muslim 500:

 

H.E. PROF. DR SHEIKH AHMAD MUHAMMAD AL-TAYYEB

Grand Sheikh of Al-Azhar University, Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Mosque

 

Sheikh Ahmad Muhammad Al-Tayyeb was appointed as Grand Sheikh of Al-Azhar in March 2010, after the passing of his predecessor; Dr Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi. Al-Tayyeb was formerly the president of the Al-Azhar for seven years and prior to that, served for two years as the most powerful cleric in Egypt as its Grand Mufti.

 

His  scholarly  influence  as  a  leading  intellectual  of Sunni Islam spans the globe. He has served as the dean of the Faculty of Islamic Studies in Aswan, and the theology faculty of the International Islamic University in Pakistan. He has also taught in universities in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

 

Over  the  past  year  of  political  uncertainty  and unrest in Egypt and in particular during the months that  led  up  to  the  Egyptian  armed  forces  deposing Muhammad Morsi as President of Egypt, Al-Tayyeb attempted to mediate between Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood-dominated  government  on  one  hand and opposition political forces on the other. Al-Tayyeb managed by virtue of his personal prestige and the prestige of his office to bring the two sides to participate in a meeting he chaired. It was the only time Morsi and the opposition had sat together and given their mutual intransigence Al-Tayyeb’s attempt at mediation did not succeed. Al-Tayyeb holds his position for life but  despite  his  efforts  to  reconcile  an  increasingly polarised  political  arena,  the  Muslim  Brotherhood-dominated Student Union of Al-Azhar transformed a food poisoning episode on the secular campus, into an attempt to force Al-Tayyeb from his position. But all sectors of Egyptian society aside from the Muslim Brotherhood rallied in defence of Al-Tayyeb, and the incident  was  a  factor  in  deepening  fear  of  Muslim Brotherhood rule throughout Egyptian society.

 

When the Egyptian armed forces overthrew Morsi and  his  cabinet,  Al-Tayyeb  appeared  the  following day alongside the Coptic Patriarch and other leading figures with the head of the Armed Forces General Al-Sisi.  With  his  presence  and  in  his  brief  remarks he effectively became a ‘king-maker’, but weeks later when the armed forces moved with brutality against a  massive  Muslim  Brotherhood  sit-in,  Al-Tayyeb declared his disapproval of the bloodshed. These two seemingly contradictory public expressions following the coup in fact reflect Al-Tayyeb’s principled position.

 

But  even  before  any  of  these  events,  Al-Tayyeb was  the  object  of  Muslim  Brotherhood  hostility precisely because of his defence of traditional Islam, including its spiritual (Sufi) dimension, in the face of the Muslim Brotherhood’s effort to transform Islam from a religion into a power-seeking religious ideology.

 

Advocate of Traditional Islam: Indeed Al-Tayyeb has emphasised his mission to promote traditional Islam since becoming Grand Sheikh. He has stressed the importance of teaching students about Islamic heritage—considering Al-Azhar graduates as ambassadors of Islam to the world. In an age where the claimants to  authoritative  Islam  seem  to  be  on  every  corner,

Al-Tayyeb has both the institution, and the personal skills to authentically claim to be a representative of traditional Islam, Islam practiced by the majority of Muslims throughout the ages.

 

Leader of the Al-Azhar University: Sheikh Al-Tayyeb leads the second-oldest university in the world, where teaching has continued without interruption since 975 CE. Al-Azhar represents the centre of Sunni Islamic jurisprudence.  It  is  a  key  institution  that  issues  authoritative religious rulings and has provided extensive Islamic education to Egyptian and international students since its inception over a millennium ago. This history makes it a bastion of Sunni traditionalism. The university is considered the most prominent Islamic educational  institution  and  the  foremost  centre  of Sunni Muslim scholarship worldwide.

 

Administers  the  Al-Azhar  Education  Network: Al-Azhar  is  currently  the  largest  university  in  the world, having risen from a group of three schools in the 1950s to its current state with 72 feeder schools, and close to 300,000 students studying there at any one time. Including schools that are part of Al-Azhar waqf initiatives, there are close to 2 million students. This  immense  size  and  grounded  respect  make  the head  of  Al-Azhar  an  extraordinarily  powerful  and academically influential person.

 

‘The Muslim 500’ recognises the Grand Imam, Dr Ahmad al-Tayyeb Shaykh al-Azhar,

as the most influential Muslim in the world in latest edition of 2013. President of WAAG UK, Shaykh M I H Pirzada, also recognised amongst the 500 most influential Muslims in the world.