TlE MICHIGAN DAILY P Arab Peoples Plan Use of Short Wave Broadcast: (EDITOR'S NOTE: Typical of the new ferment at work throughout the old world of Islam today is the bustling activity at Cairo's. al-Azhar University. Founded in the tenth , century, long before Bologna, Paris and Oxford Universities, al-Azhar was concerned exclusively with Moslem theology and Arabic studies until modern times. But in recent years, courses in mathematics, the natural sciences and other secular subjects have been added to the curriculum. The author, a recog- nized specialist on'African matters, points out the role of al-Azhar in furthering Islam's long-range goals.) By JOHN 3. CONSIDINE "How can you hope," a news- man asked Doctor Mohammed Al Bahy of al-Azhar University, "to create your proposed e n t e n t e among Moslem groups in such widely separated places as the southern Soviet 'republics, Brazil and Indonesia?" "By short-wave radio," replied Al Bahy. "Our work will be no less important than the Voice-of-the- Arabs broadcasts, which already cover a great portion of Africa." "Does your present budget pro- vide for such an activity?" "Yes. This year the Commission for the Propagation of Islamic Culture of al-Azhar University has a credit of 400,000 Egyptian pounds (more than a million dollars)." "What are your principal ob- jectives?" "There are 400 million Moslems in the world. Our main objective is to re-enforce the bonds of friendship which bind them to- gether; we aim to create an at- mosphere of understanding in the Islamic world by unifying the point of view of these great human masses." "May we qualify the missions of al-Azhar University as preaching missions?" "In preaching Islam they will not proceed in the same fashion as do missionaries of other re- ligions. If preaching means con- vincing people with an eye to prompting them to deny their re- ligion in order to embrace another, this is not our goal. Al-Azhar does not wish to convert Christians and Jews to Islam Gives Field "However, as a field for the'Az- harist missionaries, there are mil- lions of atheists who do not be- lieve in the true God and of pa- gans who worship idols. It is to these millions that Islam will ad- dress itself. We do not want the impious to persevere in their athe- ism." Thus Doctor Al Bahy, Director of Research and Culture at al- Azhar in Cairo, the Moslem world's leading university, outlines the current missionary effort which this famned seat of learning is pro- moting with government funds and the blessing of President Nas- ser. The full significance of this effort can be appreciated only if we recognize that al-Azhar in this specific project speaks not alone for Nasser and Egypt but for a deeply sympathetic Moslem world. Islam Awakens "Islam may have been long asleep," says Father Janot, the Jesuit authority on Moslemism, "but during the past few years its awakening has been tumultuous." There is 'an almost fanatical hunger on the part of great ele- nents of the Arab world to march with the times, to cast off the bitter fruits of long political cul- tural weakness, to smother the memory of subjection to Christian Europe, to recapture some of the , , old glories of thirteen hundred years of Moslem history. From Tangiers to Jakarta every Moslem people has been divided between the conservatives, who have argued a revival in terms of Islamic religious life of primitive purity, and the modernists who would taste the secular freedom of today's liberal world society. Thus far the totalitarian mys- tique of the conservatives has won the day. It is regrettable that in this struggle, social change is con- fused with religious change; while it is commendable to witness ear- nest defense of religion, it is too bad to find religious men fighting for - the maintenance of social practices that impose palpable in- Justices on segments of Moslem society, particularly its women. This can end only in the eventual weakening of religion. Experiences Revolt Before the birth of the current Moslem resurgence, Turkey under the powerful Kemal Pasha, the dread Ataturk, experienced a po- litical revolt and an anticlerical movement which was as bitter as that' in France of earlier years. Ataturk's symbol was a fan of six arrows dramatizing his famous dictum: "We are republicans, national- ists, populists, statists, laics, revo- lutionaries." But since Ataturk died in 1938, religion has recon- quered its place in Turkish life; today it would be political suicide for a Turkish candidate to preach laicism. 8 Bourguiba in Tunis delighted the young bloods in 1957 by sup- pressing polygamy, but the oppo- sition was so bitter that it has discouraged modernist reforms elsewhere. Morocco, though it in- troduced mild marriage reforms in 1958, has been much more re- spectful of tradition. Holds Little Respect In capitals of Europe and in the United States a modernized Mos- lemism from n o r t h e r n India known as the Ahmadiya move- ment created the impression some years back that traditional Islam was caling for change. This tiny thread of a movement holds'little respect among Moslem masses. On the contrary, the new face of Islam offers small comfort to any who look for evidence that the followers of the Prophet are mov- ing toward sweet reasonableness. No Moslem people favors a social or religious pluralism in the field of government. At the UN most Moslem nations voted against Article 18 of the U n i v e r s al Declaration of the- Rights of Man, which recognized the right not only ,to practice the religion of one's choice but to change one's religion. Saudi Ara- bia voted against every proposal of principle of religious freedom. To Move Against Catholicism Moslem nations make it clear that they desire to rid themselves of Catholic schools and Catholic medical activities as soon as they can. In Pakistan, Catholic schools and colleges with an enrollment of some fifty thousand enjoy great prestige and possess the support of the country's elite, many of whom were products of these schools during days of British rule. The government is firm, how- ever, in its specification that "the purpose of education is to provide an appreciation of Islam and Is- lamic history and culture." Cath- olic teachers have a hard task teaching mixed classes with the prescribed Islamic text books of religious history. In the new nation of Sudan, the end of all pretense at tolerance has already arrived. Some three hundred Catholic schools in the southern 'Sudan were confiscated in 1957 and all Catholic dispen- saries taken over. "Without the action of the national govern- ment," frankly stated a Khartoum newspaper in 1958, "these churches would have expanded and acquired much greater influence." Egypt has a special problem since there are over a million and a half Egyptian citizens who are Christians, principally members of Oriental Orthodox churches. Article 31 of the new constitution of 1956 insures equality of rights without distinction "of race, ori- gin, language, religion or creed." At the same time Islam demands full-fledged religious totalitarian- ism, as the official state religion. Currently, President Nasser is try- ing hard to respect all Egyptians. Recently when the Pope named a new Patriarch for the little Coptic Catholic Church in Egypt, Nasser sent the Governor of Cairo to rep- resent him at the installation. In the field of aggressive ad- vance, Pan-Islamism plays a ma- jor role despite the squabbles be- tween Moslem peoples. Pan-Islam- ism provides the intellectual, moral and spiritual unity that has created the belief that Islam is finally nearing its destiny of con- quering the world. The Mecca pilgrimage holds added importance in the new plans for Islam. In 1955 a congress in- spired by Pan-Islamists was held in Egypt and has assembled an- nually since. Its purpose. is to bring together all the live forces of the Moslem world toward the end that the Mecca pilgrimage may become the focal center "of a solidarity uniting all Moslems, a gigantic enkindler of our power." - - - - - - - t'.." vr :y':4:v t ti:"" fi{ti;"}v,{ .vi .w"; s . "* CO."' . * .; % .. : M . ____ AT LEAGUE: Schedule Latin American, Ballroom Dance Lessons ,+ d"' " .+ ,y , . ,;,.. s. 4 x I ; '''t '''^ . f :'S: ' d More Fashion Mile Car gage in our Coats The shirtdress dresses, up ... . i soft wool jersey with glowing satin highlights. Satin-trimmed collar, satin-banded-and-howed full skirt. Black, navy, mocha or green. Sizes 8-1&I8 530 S. FOREST AVE. Just off Corner S. U. Opposite Campus Theatre Store Hours: 9:30-5:30 Monday thru Saturday Subscribe t The Michigan Daly to:mtchskit b Datontae - x the{lueribon n a y$sow! a - f This 1s Anne Her cashmere sweater and dyed to match skirt by Dalton takes the blue ribbon-in any show! And so does the poodle! Come in and see the luscious array of styles and colors in Dalton Cashmeres at DANCE LESSONS - Dance lessons at the League have been scheduled again this year. Conventional dancing will begin at 7:15 p.m. on Tuesday and Wednesday. Latin American dancing will follow at 8:15 p.m. League dancing classes will meet for .the first time at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday for con- ventional d4neing and- at 8:30 p.m. for Latin American dancing, Anne Hammond, '60, announced. The instructor will be Joseph Eder, and this will be his fourth year with the League dance classes. Previously Eder had dance studios in Europe in which he trained both amateurs and pro- fessionals. This year Mr. Eder plans to teach the lastest styles in the fox- trot, waltz, and tango. These styles, he said, are just now being intro- duced into the major dance studios. Mr. Eder stressed that it is as important for the girl to get instruction in following in the new steps as it is for the boy to learn to lead. Besides the new versions in con- ventional dances, Eder will also teach the charleston,, jitterbug, mambo, rumba, and the cha-cha. He emphasized that actually most of the movements are new in nearly all the dances. The League dance classes will be an eight week course, and they may be signed up for at the door Tuesday or Wednesday night for the appropriate time. Since the classes are a service of the League, they are offered free to girls and for a $4 fee for boys. If simple sweater strategy ... the pullover from ... COLLINS classic " as shown .. . $8.98 Smart, and with loads of comfort when chill winds blow. 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