Difference between revisions of "Maajid Nawaz"

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[[Image:Nawaz.jpg‎||300px|thumb|right|Maajid Nawaz, Credit: [https://www.flickr.com/photos/eregis/16795472607/ Flickr/Eregis] Wikimedia]]
 
[[Image:Nawaz.jpg‎||300px|thumb|right|Maajid Nawaz, Credit: [https://www.flickr.com/photos/eregis/16795472607/ Flickr/Eregis] Wikimedia]]
[[Maajid Nawaz]] is the chairman of the [[Quilliam Foundation]]
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'''Maajid Nawaaz''' is a co-founder (and now Chairman) of The [[Quilliam Foundation‏]] a London based 'counter-extremism' think-tank which claims to challenge Islamic extremism in the UK. He stood in the 2015 general election as the [[Liberal Democrats]] parliamentary candidate in Hampstead and Kilburn.
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==Background==
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Nawaaz is a former member of the political Islamic group, [[Hizb ut-Tahrir]]. Incorporated as a limited company on 20 November 2007, Quilliam was launched on 22 April 2008, receiving much media attention. The think tank has been embroiled in several controversies since its founding for encouraging domestic spying and preparing secret blacklists of citizens and groups that it alleges share the 'ideology of terrorists.'
  
 
==Early life==
 
==Early life==
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After being convicted of HuT membership, Nawaz was sent to Mazra Torah prison where he had access to books, and mixed with a wide range of political prisoners. He would later trace the roots of his rejection of Hizb ut-Tahrir to this period.<ref>Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.276.</ref>  By his own account, his initial disillusionment was more with a lack of support from the British HuT leadership than with its ideas.<ref>Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.276.</ref>  
 
After being convicted of HuT membership, Nawaz was sent to Mazra Torah prison where he had access to books, and mixed with a wide range of political prisoners. He would later trace the roots of his rejection of Hizb ut-Tahrir to this period.<ref>Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.276.</ref>  By his own account, his initial disillusionment was more with a lack of support from the British HuT leadership than with its ideas.<ref>Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.276.</ref>  
  
Although Quilliam would later advocate deradicalisation programs in Egyptian prisons as a model for Britain, Nawaz was himself dismissive of some of the groups involved arguing that ‘they remained Salafists in doctrine and nonviolent Islamists in ideology.’<ref>Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.264.</ref>  
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Although Quilliam would later advocate deradicalisation programs in Egyptian prisons as a model for Britain, Nawaz was himself dismissive of some of the groups involved arguing that ‘they remained Salafists in doctrine and nonviolent Islamists in ideology.’<ref>Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.264.</ref>
  
 
===Break with HuT===
 
===Break with HuT===
Nawaz was released and returned to Britain in March 2006. Although he later said his doubts about HuT had crystallised in prison, he did not leave the group until May 2007.<ref name="JanePerlez">Perlez, Jane, [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/12/world/europe/12britain.html?_r=0 From Finding Radical Islam to Losing an Ideology], ''New York Times'', 12 September 2007.</ref>
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Nawaz was released and returned to Britain in March 2006. Although he later said his doubts about HuT had crystallised in prison, he did not leave the group until May 2007.<ref name="JanePerlez">Perlez, Jane, [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/12/world/europe/12britain.html?_r=0 From Finding Radical Islam to Losing an Ideology], ''New York Times'', 12 September 2007.</ref>  During the interval, he met [[Ed Husain]] several times around the University of London, where he had enrolled, initially at the Senate House Library, and later at the Institute of Education.<ref>Ed Husain, ''The Islamist'', Penguin, 2007, p.270.</ref>
  
 
==Autobiography==
 
==Autobiography==
Nawaz's autobiography, Radical, has clear points of similarity with [[Ed Husain]]’s The Islamist, though written in a more sensation style. Nawaz describes carrying a knife as party of a local youth culture which involved him in multiple confrontations with gangs linked to Combat 18.<ref>Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.54.</ref> Some of those who grew up with him, have reportedly claimed his accounts of the far-right scene at the time were exaggerated.<ref>Nafeez Ahmed; Max Blumenthal, [http://www.alternet.org/grayzone-project/self-invention-maajid-nawaz-fact-and-fiction-life-counter-terror-celebrity The Self-Invention of Maajid Nawaz: Fact and Fiction in the Life of the Counter-Terror Celebrity], Alternet, 5 February 2016.</ref> Nawaz has dismissed such criticisms, but even a sympathetic reviewer, the fellow former HuT member [[Shiraz Maher]] described ''Radical'' as a 'thespian version of his life', noting that 'The book was co-written with Tom Bromley, a professional ghostwriter and editor, who produced the first manuscript which Maajid then built on. It shows.'<ref>Shiraz Maher, [http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2012/08/memoir-of-an-islamist/ Memoir of an Islamist], spectator.co.uk, 9 August 2012.</ref>.
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Nawaz's autobiography, ''Radical'', has clear points of similarity with [[Ed Husain]]’s ''The Islamist'', though written in a more sensational style. Nawaz describes carrying a knife as part of a local youth culture which involved him in multiple confrontations with gangs linked to [[Combat 18]].<ref>Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, ''Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening''. Random House, 2012, p.54.</ref> Some of those who grew up with him, have reportedly claimed his accounts of the far-right scene at the time were exaggerated.<ref>Nafeez Ahmed; Max Blumenthal, [http://www.alternet.org/grayzone-project/self-invention-maajid-nawaz-fact-and-fiction-life-counter-terror-celebrity The self-invention of Maajid Nawaz: fact and fiction in the life of the counter-terror celebrity], ''Alternet'', 5 February 2016.</ref> Nawaz has dismissed such criticisms, but even a sympathetic reviewer, the fellow former HuT member [[Shiraz Maher]] described ''Radical'' as a 'thespian version of his life', noting that 'The book was co-written with [[Tom Bromley]], a professional ghostwriter and editor, who produced the first manuscript which Maajid then built on. It shows'.<ref>Shiraz Maher, [http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2012/08/memoir-of-an-islamist/ Memoir of an Islamist], spectator.co.uk, 9 August 2012.</ref>.
  
 
==Activities==
 
==Activities==
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*[[Quilliam Foundation]]
 
*[[Quilliam Foundation]]
 
*[[Gatestone Institute]]
 
*[[Gatestone Institute]]
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==External resources==
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*Nafeez Ahmed, Max Blumenthal, [http://www.alternet.org/grayzone-project/self-invention-maajid-nawaz-fact-and-fiction-life-counter-terror-celebrity The Self-Invention of Maajid Nawaz: Fact and Fiction in the Life of the Counter-Terror Celebrity], ''Alternet'', 5 February 2016.
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*Nathan Lean, [https://newrepublic.com/article/128436/maajid-nawaz-really-believe What Does Maajid Nawaz Really Believe?] ''New Republic'', 27 January 2016.
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*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtN_TKEukm0&feature=youtu.be Maajid Nawaz on BBC Hardtalk (2006)], YouTube, 31 January 2016.
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*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_bXlziKIGk Maajid Nawaz: In and Out of Islamism (2007)], YouTube, 5 February 2016.
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

Latest revision as of 09:16, 5 September 2017

Maajid Nawaz, Credit: Flickr/Eregis Wikimedia

Maajid Nawaaz is a co-founder (and now Chairman) of The Quilliam Foundation‏ a London based 'counter-extremism' think-tank which claims to challenge Islamic extremism in the UK. He stood in the 2015 general election as the Liberal Democrats parliamentary candidate in Hampstead and Kilburn.

Background

Nawaaz is a former member of the political Islamic group, Hizb ut-Tahrir. Incorporated as a limited company on 20 November 2007, Quilliam was launched on 22 April 2008, receiving much media attention. The think tank has been embroiled in several controversies since its founding for encouraging domestic spying and preparing secret blacklists of citizens and groups that it alleges share the 'ideology of terrorists.'

Early life

Maajid Nawaz's family was originally from Gujrat in Pakistan. He grew up in Southend, Essex.[1]

Hizb-ut-Tahrir

Nawaz became involved with Hizb-ut-Tahrir (HuT) in 1992.[2] He subsequently attended Newham College where other HuT members including Ed Husain were already students.[3] He eventually became president of the Student Union and arranged for HuT leader Omar Bakri Muhammed to speak there.[4] Like Husain, was at the College when Nigerian student Ayotunde Obanubi was stabbed to death.[5] In his autobiography Radical, Nawaz claimed to have been present at the scene with a concealed knife, although he states that a withering glance from a student liaison officer ‘pulled me up sharp, and for a crucial split second I had a flash of realisation about what I might be about to do. I slid my knife back into its sheath, clicked it back in place and pulled back, completely back. No one knew what I’d done, no one knew how close I had been.’[6]

Egyptian detention

Nawaz travelled to Egypt in 2001 to study Arabic.[7] In April 2002, he was imprisoned by the Egyptian Government for Hizb ut-Tahir-related activity. He was beaten under interrogation, and witnessed the use of electrocution against a HuT colleague, Reza Pankhurst.[8] After being convicted of HuT membership, Nawaz was sent to Mazra Torah prison where he had access to books, and mixed with a wide range of political prisoners. He would later trace the roots of his rejection of Hizb ut-Tahrir to this period.[9] By his own account, his initial disillusionment was more with a lack of support from the British HuT leadership than with its ideas.[10]

Although Quilliam would later advocate deradicalisation programs in Egyptian prisons as a model for Britain, Nawaz was himself dismissive of some of the groups involved arguing that ‘they remained Salafists in doctrine and nonviolent Islamists in ideology.’[11]

Break with HuT

Nawaz was released and returned to Britain in March 2006. Although he later said his doubts about HuT had crystallised in prison, he did not leave the group until May 2007.[7] During the interval, he met Ed Husain several times around the University of London, where he had enrolled, initially at the Senate House Library, and later at the Institute of Education.[12]

Autobiography

Nawaz's autobiography, Radical, has clear points of similarity with Ed Husain’s The Islamist, though written in a more sensational style. Nawaz describes carrying a knife as part of a local youth culture which involved him in multiple confrontations with gangs linked to Combat 18.[13] Some of those who grew up with him, have reportedly claimed his accounts of the far-right scene at the time were exaggerated.[14] Nawaz has dismissed such criticisms, but even a sympathetic reviewer, the fellow former HuT member Shiraz Maher described Radical as a 'thespian version of his life', noting that 'The book was co-written with Tom Bromley, a professional ghostwriter and editor, who produced the first manuscript which Maajid then built on. It shows'.[15].

Activities

Israel Advocacy

In October 2015, Nawaz signed a letter in The Guardian along with more than 150 people drawn from the arts and politics. The letter launched Culture for Coexistence, an organisation that opposes the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.[16]

Counterjihad connections

In January 2015, Nawaz was among the signatories of a statement put together by the Gatestone Institute and published in the New York Times.[17]

Affiliations

External resources

Notes

  1. Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.17.
  2. Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.80.
  3. Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.110.
  4. Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.117.
  5. Nawaz, Maajid; I watched a man stabbed in a London street - and felt nothing, Mail Online, 25 May 2013. accessed 11 March 2016.
  6. Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.130.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Perlez, Jane, From Finding Radical Islam to Losing an Ideology, New York Times, 12 September 2007.
  8. Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.236.
  9. Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.276.
  10. Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.276.
  11. Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.264.
  12. Ed Husain, The Islamist, Penguin, 2007, p.270.
  13. Nawaz, Maajid with Tom Bromley, Radical: My journey from Islamist extremism to a democratic awakening. Random House, 2012, p.54.
  14. Nafeez Ahmed; Max Blumenthal, The self-invention of Maajid Nawaz: fact and fiction in the life of the counter-terror celebrity, Alternet, 5 February 2016.
  15. Shiraz Maher, Memoir of an Islamist, spectator.co.uk, 9 August 2012.
  16. Harriet Sherwood, 'Star authors call for Israeli-Palestinian dialogue rather than boycotts', The Guardian, 22 October 2015, accessed 23 October 2015
  17. Hilary Aked, One of America's Most Dangerous Think Tanks is Spreading Hate Across the Atlantic, Alternet, 23 November 2015
  18. National Secular Society Our Honorary Associates. Accessed 20 September 2015.