Suhaib Webb
Suhaib Webb | |
---|---|
File:Suhaibwebb3.jpg | |
Born | William Webb June 29, 1972 Oklahoma United States |
Occupation | Imam |
Website | http://www.suhaibwebb.com |
Suhaib Webb is an American Muslim imam who is currently the imam of the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center (ISBCC).[1]
Contents
Biography
Early life
He was born William Webb in 1973 in Oklahoma to a Christian family, including a grandfather who served as a preacher.[2] At age 14, he lost interest in religion, going through a self-described spiritual crisis. He also began engaging in delinquency by joining a local gang and became a local Hip-Hop DJ and producer,[1] making records with various artists.
Education
After converting to Islam in 1992, Webb left his career as a DJ and studied at the University of Central Oklahoma, where he graduated with a Bachelor's degree in Education.[citation needed] He also studied privately under a Senegalese Sheikh, learning enough Islam and Arabic to become a community leader in Oklahoma City, where he was hired as Imam at the Islamic Society of Greater Oklahoma City.[3] He simultaneously started teaching at Mercy School, an Islamic K-12 school in Oklahoma City.[citation needed]
Career
Webb is an active member of the Muslim American Society and its youth department and has been so for the last ten years. It is through the Muslim American Society's scholarship program that he was sent to Egypt to attain fluency in Arabic and focus on Islamic studies.[3] Webb frequently hosts lectures and posts articles offering Islamic perspectives on modern-day issues such as community involvement and social relevance.[4]
Apart from his studies, he frequently lectures in the United States and Malaysia, and records public lecture series on Islam and contemporary Muslim matters. After graduating from Al-Azhar, he moved to Santa Clara in the San Francisco Bay area, where he worked with the bay area Muslim American Society Office & Muslim Community Association. On December 1, 2011, Webb was inaugurated as the Imam of the Islamic Society of Boston's Cultural Center (ISBCC),[5] the largest Islamic center in New England.[2]
Reputation
According to a strategy report by the UK government, senior UK government officials, including representatives of nine of the biggest Whitehall departments, consider Webb as a notable moderate leader for mainstream Muslims along with the likes of Hamza Yusuf and Amr Khaled that should receive more support in providing leadership to Muslims in the West.[6][7][8] Webb was named one of the 500 Most Influential Muslims in the World by the Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre in 2010.[9] Webb's website, SuhaibWebb.com, was voted the best "Blog of the Year" by the 2009 Brass Crescent Awards,[10] and his tweets won him the vote of "Best Muslim Tweeter" of 2010.[11]
Views and accomplishments
Webb joined a trip of imams to Auschwitz in 2010, followed by a public statement to condemning Holocaust-denial and anti-Semitism.[12] He helped raise $20,000 for widows and children of firefighters killed in the 9/11 attack.[13] He is a part of efforts to more effectively rebut militants and religious extremists [14][15] and is an advocate for grassroots Muslim activism to promote social change. He advocates for an American-style Islam, one which he claims to be true to the Quran and Islamic law but that reflects this country's customs and culture.[16][17] He has spoken out against radical clerics that seek to prey on insecure youth and their American identities, stating that "We do have to shepherd them and look out for people like al-Awlaki who tries to undermine that (U.S.) experience and use it against them." [18] Following the Boston Marathon bombings, Webb condemned the acts as radical [19] and joined with interfaith clergy to pray that "we continue to live in harmony, honoring and celebrating our similarities and differences, working together for the common good." [20]
Controversies
According to FBI surveillance documents [21][22] Webb joined Al Qaeda operative Anwar Awlaki (killed by U.S drone strike in 2011) two days before 9/11 in headlining a fundraiser on behalf of H Rap Brown (aka Jamil al Amin), who had been accused of murdering a sheriff's deputy and wounding another deputy in Georgia the year before. That night, Webb and Awlaki raised $100,000 to pay for Brown’s defense. Brown was found guilty of the murder and was unanimously denied an appeal by Georgia's Supreme Court. The Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center (ISBCC) confirmed that Webb had in fact worked with Anwar Awlaki but claimed Webb did not know the full extent of al-Awlaki’s terrorist agenda when Webb was “working with him (Awlaki).” [21]
In 2007, Webb wrote an article calling homosexuality an “evil inclination” and told a gay would-be convert to Islam to seek treatment for his “problems.” Webb also gave a public speech where he encouraged his congregation to speak out against gay marriages. He says he has since re-thought the issue and no longer opposes gay marriages.[23] Webb has also had homosexuals contribute to his website.[24] noting that a time has come for a change on who the community addresses this issue.
On April 19, 2013, Webb was replaced as the representative of Boston’s Muslim community [25] to the interfaith service honoring the victims of the Boston Marathon bombings at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross by Governor Deval Patrick's office for undisclosed reasons. Webb still attended in the pews along with several other prominent imams. Webb was replaced by Nasser Wedaddy, director of civil rights outreach for the American Islamic Congress and chair of the New England Interfaith Council.[26]
References
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External links
- Official website
- Suhaib Webb Video and Audio lectures from Halal Tube
- Suhaib comments on his conversion to Islam
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- Living people
- American former Christians
- 1972 births
- Muslim scholars
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- University of Central Oklahoma alumni
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- Al-Azhar University alumni