Ahmad Abu Laban
Ahmad Abu Laban (Arabic: أحمد أبو لبن; 1946 – 1 February 2007) was a Danish-Palestinian imam and the leader of the organization The Islamic Society in Denmark. He was a central figure in the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy.
Personal life
Ahmad Abu Laban was born in 1946 in Jaffa, Mandatory Palestine. In 1948, his family fled to Cairo, Egypt, and he grew up there. In 1969, he graduated as a mechanical engineer.[1] In 1974, he married his cousin Iman; the couple had seven children. He studied Islamic theology with scholars in different Muslim countries. He was employed in the Persian Gulf oil industry from 1970 to 1982 and then worked for a contracting company in Nigeria from 1982 to 1984. He contributed to Islamic projects in education in different states of Nigeria.
He emigrated to Denmark in 1984 and lived there for the rest of his life. He publicly denounced terrorism and the use of violence to further the Islamic cause. Moreover, he was known to fight for social justice and help alleviate social ills, by preaching that Danish Muslims had a responsibility to better the society in which they were a part. On 19 January 2007, The Islamic Society in Denmark announced that Abu Laban had fast spreading cancer and that it was probably was lung cancer.[2] Abu Laban died on 1 February 2007, aged 60.[3] The love and devotion many Danish Muslims had for Abu Laban come to display at his funeral, where thousands of Muslims poured into the streets of Copenhagen to engage in his Islamic funeral ceremony.
At the time of his death, Abu Laban worked as a religious advisor with The Islamic Society in Denmark. According to the organization's website, he was a member of the "Co-ordination council of Imams" in Europe.[4]
Controversy
Abu Laban has been declared persona non grata in the United Arab Emirates and Egypt because of his Islamist views.[5] He had been a well-known figure in the Danish media for his often radical statements about Islam and the integration of immigrants into the Danish society.
Sri Lankan researcher Rohan Gunaratna, author of the book Inside Al Qaeda, has characterised Ahmed Abu Laban as an Islamic extremist. Gunaratna also accused Abu Laban of giving political and economic support to the Egyptian Islamist movement al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya, which is considered as a terrorist organization by the United States and European Union.
Muhammad cartoons controversy
Abu Laban became involved in the media crisis which erupted in Denmark after the issue of the Muhammad cartoons in the conservative newspaper Jyllands-Posten. In November 2005, he was one of the leaders of a delegation that toured the Middle East to ask for diplomatic support, one of the factors that sparked the widespread anger in the region in early 2006. Along with Akhmed Akkari, he authored the Akkari-Laban dossier which was used on that tour.
Three additional images - allegedly sent to Abu Laban but never published - were added to the list of cartoons actually published in the dossier handed out during this tour. Ahmad Akkari has explained that the three drawings had been added to "give an insight in how hateful the atmosphere in Denmark is towards Muslims."
Other controversial comments and citations
- On August 21, 1994 Abu Laban was interviewed in Jyllands-Posten following a massacre committed by the militant organization Armed Islamic Group of Algeria that led to the murder of among others seven Christian Monks and a number of foreign tourists. Asked if he could condemn the massacre, he replied: "Perhaps the tourists are spreading AIDS in Algeria just like the Jews are spreading AIDS in Egypt."[6][7]
- In his Friday sermon immediately following the September 11 attacks, he preached that "[he mourned the victims] with dry tears".[8]
- Responding to Theo van Gogh's murder, his response was publicly to criticise it. Not long after, he criticized the European abuse of free speech for the issue of the controversial film Submission of the murdered Dutch filmmaker.[9]
- When Amina Lawal from Nigeria was condemned to stoning, he refused to condemn the sentencing, considering he is not a judge and know not much about the actual episode.
- After a gang killing in Copenhagen, Abu Laban proposed to deter any vengeance killing by the payment of a sum of "blood money" amounting to DKR. 200,000 – or the equivalent of 100 camels, according to his calculation, in today's currency, to prevent any revenge.[10]
- Interviewed on Danish television he was asked if he respected Osama bin Laden, Abu Laban replied: "[Osama bin Laden] is a businessman and "freedom fighter"[11]
- "I call these people rats in holes" was his characterisation of the Danish liberal politician Naser Khader.[12]
- In his Friday prayers on 5 April 2002, Abu Laban called on his congregation to offer their lives in a jihad for the Palestinian cause.[13] Outside the mosque buses were waiting to take the congregants to a demonstration at Parliament Square, where they held up signs equating the Israelis with the nazists, and burned the Israeli flag.[14]
References
- ↑ En imam med magt (Danish)
- ↑ Abu Laban critically ill with cancer (Danish)
- ↑ Abu Laban has died (Danish)
- ↑ Abu Laban at the Islamic Society in Denmark webpage Archived June 11, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. (Danish)
- ↑ Abu Laban taler med to tunger (Danish)
- ↑ Jyllands-Posten 21 August 1994. "Like the Jews." Abu Laban interviewed
- ↑ Islamic Extremists and Their Western Allies on the Offensive against Free Speech in Denmark (Danish)
- ↑ From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and Its Legacy, Kenan Malik. Atlantic Monthly Press, June 2012.
- ↑ Charlotte Aagaard, Van Gogh gik for langt, Dagbladet Information, November 12, 2004 (Danish)
- ↑ Imam proposal for blood-money appals Archived September 1, 2006, at the Wayback Machine. (Danish)
- ↑ Imam Abu Laban on Osama bin Laden (Danish)
- ↑ Abu Laban in his Friday sermon, February 11 2006 (Danish)
- ↑ The Stephen Roth Institute for the study of contemporary Antisemitism and racism, 2002-3 Archived June 30, 2006, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Antisemitism and Racism, Denmark Archived June 30, 2006, at the Wayback Machine.