Mouhanad Khorchide

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Prof Mouhanad Khorchide

Mouhanad Khorchide (مُهَنَّد خُورْشِيد , * 6 September 1971 in Beirut) is an Austrian sociologist and Islamic theologian. He is Professor of Islamic Religious Education and Director of the Center for Islamic Theology (ZIT) at the University of Münster in Germany.[1]

Personal life and studies[edit]

2006-2010 Khorchide worked at the University of Vienna in the fields of Islamic studies and Islamic pedagogy. Parallel to this, he was Imam of a mosque near Vienna.

Since July 20, 2010, Khorchide has succeeded Sven Kalisch as Professor of Islamic Religious Education, with whom the University of Münster has been training Islamic religious education teachers since fall 2010.[1]

In July 2020, Mouhanad Khorchide presented the Austrian Documentation Center for Political Islam together with Lorenzo Vidino and the responsible Integration Minister Susanne Raab (ÖVP). Since then, Khorchide has headed the scientific advisory board of this center.[2]

The major Muslim associations in Germany reject Khorchide's approach, or at least look at it with much suspicion.[3]

See also[edit]

Works[edit]

  • Islam is Mercy: Essential Features of a Modern Religion 2014. ISBN 978-3-451-80286-7
    • German: Islam ist Barmherzigkeit. Grundzüge einer modernen Religion 2012.
  • Scharia – der missverstandene Gott. Der Weg zu einer modernen islamischen Ethik 2013.
  • Gott glaubt an den Menschen: Mit dem Islam zu einem neuen Humanismus 2015.

As editor:

  • with Klaus von Stosch: Herausforderungen an die islamische Theologie in Europa. Challenges for Islamic theology in Europe 2012.
  • with Marco Schöller: Das Verhältnis zwischen Islamwissenschaft und islamischer Theologie. Beiträge der Konferenz Münster, 1.-2. Juli 2011 2012.

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Prof Dr Mouhanad Khorchide, University of Münster".
  2. ^ About Us Dokumentationsstelle Politischer Islam, Retrieved 2023-01-10.
  3. ^ Engelhardt, Jan Felix (2016). "On Insiderism and Muslim Epistemic Communities in the German and US Study of Islam". The Muslim World. 106 (4): 740–758. doi:10.1111/muwo.12168.