Difference between revisions of "Stephen Schwartz"

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[[Image:Stephen Schwartz.jpg|right|thumb|Stephen Schwartz]]
 
[[Image:Stephen Schwartz.jpg|right|thumb|Stephen Schwartz]]
'''Stephen Schwartz''' is a close associate of [[Daniel Pipes]] with whom he founded the think tank, [[Center for Islamic Pluralism]] (CIP).<ref>[http://www.islamicpluralism.org/bios.htm Home page], Center for Islamic Pluralism website, accessed 3 September 2009</ref>  
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'''Stephen Schwartz''' is a close associate of [[Daniel Pipes]] with whom he founded the think tank, [[Center for Islamic Pluralism]] (CIP).<ref>[http://www.islamicpluralism.org/bios.htm Home page], Center for Islamic Pluralism website, accessed 3 September 2009</ref> The Center for Islamic Pluralism describes itself as "a think tank that challenges the dominance of American Muslim life by militant Islamist groups." It says its mission is to
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:Educate the broader American public about the reality of moderate Islam and the threat to moderate Muslims and non-Muslim Americans represented by militant, political, radical, and adversarial tendencies.<ref>[http://www.intoislam.com/islam/Islamic/Activism/ Center for Islamic Pluralism CIP Washington, DC], IntoIslam website, accessed 3 September 2009</ref>
  
 
In December 2004 he was touring the US with [[Husain Haqqani]], a [[neocon|neoconservative]]-connected Pakistani, in support of a think tank by the name of [[Institute for Islamic Progress and Peace]] (IIPP).<ref>[http://www.clevelandjewishnews.com/articles/2004/02/12/news/local/cmuslim0213.txt Muslim majority is tired of extremists], Cleveland Jewish News, February 12, 2004, accessed 3 Sept 2009</ref> It is not clear, however, whether CIP and IIPP, both set up by Daniel Pipes, are one and the same.  
 
In December 2004 he was touring the US with [[Husain Haqqani]], a [[neocon|neoconservative]]-connected Pakistani, in support of a think tank by the name of [[Institute for Islamic Progress and Peace]] (IIPP).<ref>[http://www.clevelandjewishnews.com/articles/2004/02/12/news/local/cmuslim0213.txt Muslim majority is tired of extremists], Cleveland Jewish News, February 12, 2004, accessed 3 Sept 2009</ref> It is not clear, however, whether CIP and IIPP, both set up by Daniel Pipes, are one and the same.  

Revision as of 11:07, 3 September 2009

Stephen Schwartz

Stephen Schwartz is a close associate of Daniel Pipes with whom he founded the think tank, Center for Islamic Pluralism (CIP).[1] The Center for Islamic Pluralism describes itself as "a think tank that challenges the dominance of American Muslim life by militant Islamist groups." It says its mission is to

Educate the broader American public about the reality of moderate Islam and the threat to moderate Muslims and non-Muslim Americans represented by militant, political, radical, and adversarial tendencies.[2]

In December 2004 he was touring the US with Husain Haqqani, a neoconservative-connected Pakistani, in support of a think tank by the name of Institute for Islamic Progress and Peace (IIPP).[3] It is not clear, however, whether CIP and IIPP, both set up by Daniel Pipes, are one and the same.

A brief biographical note on the FrontPage website describes him as "a vociferous critic of Wahhabism[1][2][3], Schwartz is a frequent contributor to the National Review, the Weekly Standard, FrontPage, and other conservative publications."[4]

On 6 June 2003, Schwartz participated in a programme at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies on "Saudi Arabia: Friend or Foe?".

Affiliations

Published Works

  • Stephen Schwartz, The Two Faces of Islam: The House of Sa'ud from Tradition to Terror, Doubleday, October 2002. ISBN 0385506929

External Links

Articles

Notes

  1. Home page, Center for Islamic Pluralism website, accessed 3 September 2009
  2. Center for Islamic Pluralism CIP Washington, DC, IntoIslam website, accessed 3 September 2009
  3. Muslim majority is tired of extremists, Cleveland Jewish News, February 12, 2004, accessed 3 Sept 2009