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'''Hamed Abdel-Samad''' ({{lang-ar|حامد عبد الصمد}}, {{IPA-arz|ˈħæːmed ʕæbdesˈsˤɑmɑd|IPA}}; born in 1972 in [[Gizeh]], [[Egypt]]) is a [[Germany|German]]-Egyptian [[Political science|political scientist]], [[historian]] and [[author]].
'''Hamed Abdel-Samad''' ({{lang-ar|حامد عبد الصمد}}, {{IPA-arz|ˈħæːmed ʕæbdesˈsˤɑmɑd|IPA}}; born in 1972 in [[Gizeh]], [[Egypt]]) is a [[Germany|German]]-Egyptian [[Political science|political scientist]] and [[author]].


== Life ==
== Life ==

Revision as of 09:51, 29 September 2015

Hamed Abdel-Samad (2013)

Hamed Abdel-Samad (Template:Lang-ar, IPA: [ˈħæːmed ʕæbdesˈsˤɑmɑd]; born in 1972 in Gizeh, Egypt) is a German-Egyptian political scientist and author.

Life

Abdel-Samad was born as the third of five children, the son of a Muslim Sunni Imam.[1] Abdel-Samad came to Germany in 1995 at the age of 23. He soon married an 18 years older, "rebellious, left-wing teacher with a penchant for mysticism." Abdel-Samad studied Japanese, English and French in Cairo[2] as well as political science in Augsburg. He worked as a scholar in Erfurt and Braunschweig. In Japan, where he was involved with eastern spirituality, he met his second wife. He taught and conducted research until the end of 2009 at the Institute for Jewish History and Culture at the University of Munich; his dissertation topic was: Bild der Juden in ägyptischen Schulbüchern ("Image of the Jews in Egyptian textbooks”). Subsequently he decided to become a full-time professional writer.

A member of the Muslim Brotherhood in his university days, a stay in a summer camp run by them triggered doubts, causing him to become skeptical, and finally identify as an atheist. [3]

Work

Abdel-Samad became known to the German public through his book Mein Abschied vom Himmel (My Farewell from Heaven) (2009). It is neither a settlement with his culture, nor a call to abandon the Muslim faith. According to Abdel-Samad, he just wanted to understand the contradictions of his life.[1] Following the book’s publication in Egypt a group issued a fatwa against Abdel-Samad and he was put under police protection.[1]

Abdel-Samad calls for an "Islam light" in Europe without shari'a, jihad, gender apartheid, proselytism and “entitlement mentality”.[4] He criticized the German political establishment for appeasing Islam, while ignoring fears about Islam. According to Abdel-Samad, this behavior created resentment in the German population.[5]

Abdel-Samad participated in the German Islam Conference held at the invitation of the German Federal Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière.

In autumn 2010, Abdel-Samad took the journalist Henryk M. Broder on a 30,000 km-long road trip through Germany for a five-part TV series.

In an interview aired on Al-Hafez on June 7, 2013 (as translated by MEMRI), hardline Egyptian cleric and Al-Azhar professor Mahmoud Shaaban[6][7][8] accused Abdel-Samad of committing "heresy" and stated that "he must be killed for being a heretic...if he refuses to recant." Shaaban also stated that "after he has been confronted with the evidence, his killing is permitted if the [Egyptian] government does not do it." [9]

Alleged kidnapping

Egyptian news websites reported the kidnapping of Hamed Abdel-Samad by unknowns on Sunday 24 November 2013 according to his brother Mahmoud.[10][11] It was then reported that he resurfaced on Wednesday 27 November 2013.[12] His mother denied that he was kidnapped.[13]

References

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