AlMaghrib Institute

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AlMaghrib Institute
Non-profit educational
Industry Education
Founded 2001
Founder Muhammad Alshareef
Headquarters Houston, Texas,
Ottawa, Ontario,
London, England
, United States,
Canada,
United Kingdom
Area served
United States,
Canada,
United Kingdom
Key people
Muhammad Alshareef,

Waleed Basyouni,

Yasir Qadhi,
Products Seminars
Website www.almaghrib.org

AlMaghrib Institute is an Islamic studies institute founded by Muhammad AlShareef in 2002.[1][2][3] AlMaghrib provides courses on Islam in a six-day, two weekend intensive seminar format.[4]

Instructors

Most of AlMaghrib instructors are graduates of the Islamic University of Madinah,[5] which is why AlMaghrib is characterized as Salafi in ideological orientation, despite founder Muhammad AlShareef's commitment not to use labels other than "Islam" and "Muslim".[6]

Academics

AlMaghrib's founders are working towards establishing an M.A. and Ph.D.-granting Islamic seminary with a permanent campus in the United States, featuring teachers as full-time faculty.[7]

Controversy

Stance on Terrorism

Leaders of ISIS have called on to assassinate Yasir Qadhi, and American college professor Rhodes College and dean of Academic Affairs at AlMaghrib Institute. ISIS issued the call because Qadhi condemned the Charlie Hebdo shootings, which happened in Paris in January.[8]

AlMaghrib has received a significant amount of public scrutiny primarily because recordings of the highest English-speaking cleric in Al-Qaeda, Anwar al-Awlaki, continued to be sold at AlMaghrib events, even after they were banned by AlMaghrib in 2009.[9]

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who in December 2009 attempted to detonate plastic explosives on board Northwest Airlines Flight 253 from Amsterdam to Detroit, once took a class at the AlMaghrib Institute.[10] Abdulmutallab claimed that al-Awlaki was also a student at AlMaghrib.[11] Yasir Qadhi, the Dean of Academic Affairs at AlMaghrib Institute, was quoted by CNN saying, "At some level, we did not convince him of the validity of our views," and "that is cause for regret".[12]

Other controversial students include Daniel Maldonado, a convert who was convicted in 2007 of training with a group linked to Al Qaeeda militia in Somalia; Tarek Mehanna, a pharmacist arrested for conspiring to attack Americans; and two young American men held in Pakistan in 2009 for seeking to train with militants.[13][14]

AlMaghrib has been accused of being "liberal" and "apolitical" by other American Salafi groups. As a result of this external and internal scrutiny, AlMaghrib rebranded itself and moved away from the public use of the label "Salafi".[15]

Stance on Holocaust

Yasir Qadhi made headlines in 2001 when he made public claims doubting the extent of the Holocaust. He later recanted those statements saying his past views were based on misinformation.[16]

References

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External links