Sunday, November 27, 2011

Muslim medical students boycotting lectures on evolution... because it 'clashes with the Koran'

UK: Muslim medical students boycotting lectures on evolution
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER


Conflict: An increasing 
number of Muslim biology 
students are boycotting
lectures on the 
theories
 of Charles Darwin

Muslim students, including trainee doctors on one of Britain's leading medical courses, are walking out of lectures on evolution claiming it conflicts with creationist ideas established in the Koran.

Professors at University College London have expressed concern over the increasing number of biology students boycotting lectures on Darwinist theory, which form an important part of the syllabus, citing their religion. 

Similar to the beliefs expressed by fundamentalist Christians, Muslim opponents to Darwinism maintain that Allah created the world, mankind and all known species in a single act.

Steve Jones emeritus professor of human genetics at University College London has questioned why such students would want to study biology at all when it obviously conflicts with their beliefs.

He told the Sunday Times: 'I had one or two slightly frisky discussions years ago with kids who belonged to fundamentalist Christian churches, now it is Islamic overwhelmingly.

One of Muslim author Harun Yahya's articles denouncing Darwinism
'They don't come [to lectures] or they complain about it or they send notes or emails saying they shouldn't have to learn this stuff.

Theories: Turkish creationist Yahya 
associates Darwinism with Nazism
'What they object to - and I don't really understand it, I am not religious - they object to the idea that there is a random process out there which is not directed by God.'

Earlier this year Usama Hasan, iman of the Masjid al-Tawhid mosque in Leyton, received death threats for suggesting that Darwinism and Islam might be compatible.

Sources within the group Muslims4UK partly blame the growing popularity of creationist beliefs within Islam on Turkish author Harun Yahya who, influenced by the success of Christian creationists in America, has written several books denouncing Darwinist theory.

Yahya associates Dawinism with Nazism and his books are and videos are available at many Islamic bookshops in the UK and regularly feature on Islamic television channels.

Speakers regularly tour Britain lecturing on Yahya's beliefs.

Evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins has expressed
his concern at the walkouts
One such lecture was given at UCL in 2008 and this year's talks have been given in London, Manchester, Leeds, Dundee and Glasgow.

Evolutionary Biologist and former Oxford Professor Richard Dawkins has expressed his concern at the number of students, consisting almost entirely of Muslims, who do not attend or walk out of lectures.




Finland: Lack of Islam teachers

http://islamineurope.blogspot.com Via Österbottens Tidning (Swedish):

More Islam teachers are needed in elementary schools in Finland, although according to the National Board of Education, the situation is about to get better.

The board of education estimates there are more Muslim than Orthodox students. They each make up about 1% of the total number of students. Today Islam teachers are a diverse group, according to the University of Helsinki.

Arto Kallioniemi, professor of religious pedagogics, says that many of the current teachers have an immigrant background, but in recently years they've been joined by Finnish women who converted to Islam.

In elementary schools in Helsinki, 8% of the students take Islam classes. There are twice as many Muslim students in the capital as Orthodox students.

Kallioniemi says that the "Teacher's Education 2020" report predicts that in 2020 a quarter of students in the capital region will be of immigrant origin. Besides the Russians, many of them will be Muslims. 

In Finland, the law states that everyone is entitled to education in their own religion. In Finland, there are curriculums for 11 different religions. But the greatest need now is for Islam teachers in elementary schools.