Home arrow Opinion arrow International arrow Muslim writer’s public conversion upsets scholars
spacer
Murphy Book Banner

spacer
spacer

spacer
spacer spacer
spacer
Webcatholicregister
Comments

Login






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Murphy Book Button


 
Muslim writer’s public conversion upsets scholars
Friday, 28 March 2008
 

Written by Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service,

Views : 783    



Image
Pope Benedict XVI baptizes Magdi Allam as he celebrates the Easter Vigil in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican March 22. Allam, 55, a Muslim-born convert and an Italian journalist, was among the five women and two men baptized by Pope Benedict during t he Mass. (CNS photo/Dario Pignatelli, Reuters)
ROME - The Muslim-born journalist baptized by Pope Benedict XVI at the Easter Vigil said he wanted a public conversion to convince other former Muslims not to be afraid of practising their new Christian faith.

But a representative of a group of Muslim scholars who recently launched a new dialogue with the Vatican said the prominence given to the Baptism of Magdi Allam, a frequent critic of Islam, raises disturbing questions.

Allam, 55, was one of seven adults baptized by the Pope March 22 in St. Peter’s Basilica.

Aref Ali Nayed, a spokesman for the 138 Muslim scholars who initiated the Common Word dialogue project last October and who established the Catholic-Muslim Forum for dialogue with the Vatican in early March, said conversion is a private matter, but the very public way in which Allam was baptized appeared “deliberate and provocative.”

In a front-page editorial March 25, the Vatican newspaper said Allam’s Baptism was given no greater emphasis during the vigil than the Baptism of the other six adults Pope Benedict received into the church that night. Allam’s decision to be baptized and the Vatican’s decision to include him in the papal ceremony did not carry with it any “hostile intention in the face of a great religion like Islam,” said the article signed by Giovanni Maria Vian, the editor of L’Osservatore Romano.

“For decades the Catholic Church has shown a desire to meet and dialogue with the Muslim world despite a thousand difficulties and obstacles,” he wrote. “But difficulties and obstacles must not obscure what we have in common.”

In a March 25 interview with Il Giornale, an Italian newspaper, Allam said thousands of Italian Christians have converted to Islam with no repercussions.

“On the other hand, if a Muslim converts it is the end of the world and he is condemned to death for apostasy. In Italy there are thousands of converts who live their faith in secret for fear they will not be protected,” Allam said. “I publicly converted to say to these people: ‘Come out of the catacombs, live your faith openly. Do not be afraid.’ ”

In a March 23 article in Corriere della Sera, the newspaper for which he writes, Allam said, “His Holiness has launched an explicit and revolutionary message to a church that, up to now, has been too prudent in converting Muslims.” He said Catholics were “abstaining from proselytism in countries with a Muslim majority and being silent about the reality of converts in Christian countries out of fear — the fear of not being able to protect the converts in the face of their condemnations to death for apostasy and for fear of reprisals against Christians living in Islamic countries.

“Well, with his witness today, Benedict XVI tells us we need to conquer our fear and not be afraid to affirm the truth of Jesus even to Muslims,” Allam wrote in Corriere.

Allam told Il Giornale that although his mother was a devout Muslim she sent him to Catholic preschool, elementary and high schools. In the Corriere article, he said he even had gone to Communion once, which demonstrates how he had been attracted to the church for a long time.

He told Il Giornale his mother later regretted sending him to Catholic schools “because I never shared a certain zeal in practising Islam; I always had a lot of autonomy. And, so, I became aware that Catholicism corresponded perfectly to the values that I held.”

Allam also said his Easter Baptism marked a total and definitive turning from “a past in which I imagined that there could be a moderate Islam.” He said Islamic “extremism feeds on a substantial ambiguity found in the Quran and in the concrete actions of Mohammed.”

While he moved definitively away from Islam five years ago, Allam said it was Pope Benedict’s teaching that convinced him to become a Catholic.

In a written statement reacting to Allam’s Baptism by the Pope at the globally televised Easter Vigil, Nayed said, “It is sad that the intimate and personal act of a religious conversion is made into a triumphalist tool for scoring points.”

Recommend this article...


Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service
About the author:



Quote this article in website Favoured Print Send to friend Related articles

Users' Comments  RSS feed comment
 

Average user rating

   (0 vote)

 

No comment posted

Add your comment



mXcomment 1.0.8 © 2007-2008 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
< Prev   Next >
 
Brothers of St. John of Godd
Sharelife button
Covenant House button
Mavrix
Atlantic School of Theology
RedemptoristsCanada
Scarboro Missions
Kairos

RSS Feed

 RSS
The following links have RSS Feeds to which you are welcome to subscribe

News

Opinion

Faith

Education

Arts

Youth

Donate today!

Support the
Canadian Catholic Press

Year of St. Paul
spacer
Catholic Press AssociationAssociation of Roman Catholic Communicators of CanadaMySqlCanadian Church Press
spacer
 


© 2008 The Catholic Register
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.
 
/>
  >