خلاصه ماشینی:
Minority Muslim Communities in Post-Bipolar Europe (Western Europe & the Balkans) 23-25 Rabi' al Thiuii 1415 I 28-30 September 1994 Amman, Jordan A conference on Minority Muslim Communities in Post-Bipolar Europe (Western Europe & the Balkans), convened by the Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at the University of Durham (UK), was held at the Regency Palace Hotel in Amman at the invitation of the Royal Academy for Islamic Civilisation Research (Al AIBait Foundation).
The conference was inaugurated by Suha Taji-Farouki (Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, University of Durham), the Conference Convener; Mani' al-Johani (Secretary-General, World Assembly of Muslim Youth); Ahmad Maballah (Director of Academic Affairs, L'Institut European des Sciences Humaines ); and by HRH Crown Prince Al-Hassan, delivered on his behalf by HE Professor Nassir El-Din ElAssad (President, Royal Academy for Islamic Civilisation Research, Al AlBait Foundation).
The first working session addressed three focal themes on the basis of case studies drawn from the five western European countries with the most significant Muslim communities in terms of percentage of the population (Britain, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Belgium).
Thilij Sunier (Free University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands) examined relations between Muslim organizations and the local urban community in the Dutch context, using Rotterdam as a case study.
Landman discussed the attempts of the Directorate of Religious Affairs in Ankara to influence the identity of Turkish Muslims in western Europe, while King examined British Muslim views of international political issues as expressed in the English language Muslim media in England.