The Showbiz Preacher
Amr Khaled uses his television sermons to reach
millions of Muslims with a motivational message
By Amany Radwan
Cairo
AMR KHALED IS NO ORDINARY
PREACHER. Shunning traditional Islamic grab, the 38-year-old Egyptian goes on TV
dressed in camel jacket and cream shirt and delivers sermons like a self – help
guru rather than a holy man. Discussing the Prophet Muhammad on a recent
broadcast on Iqraa TV, live from Medina, Saudi Arabia, Khaled avoids the
incendiary, anti-western rhetoric favored by many other prominent preachers in
this part of the world: instead he issues a different kind of motivational
message. The Prophet was not only a spiritual messenger but a skillful planner,
so Muslims should take control of their own futures too. "Move forward, take a
step, make an initiative," he says, before imploring viewers to ask for God's
forgiveness. By the end of the hour-long show, equal parts showbiz and religion,
most of the studio audience is wiping away tears.
Khaled is used to it. Since hr
began giving sermons on Egyptian TV in 2000, Khaled has built a following that
numbers in the million across the Muslim world. His success at packaging Islam
as a hip creed and stressing how religion can enrich the inner lives of Muslims
has made him the most popular tele-Islamist in the Middle East, When he travels,
he is mobbed by fans, many of them women in head scarves: at a press call in
Cairo last week, hundreds of admirers scrambled to snap photos of him inside a
hotel ballroom. Says Fahmi Huweidi, an Egyptian writer, in explaining Khaled's
appeal: "He doesn't frown and warn his followers tat they will all go to hell."
That's also why Khaled's may
become a valuable ally for Western governments struggling to contain smoldering
anger in the Muslim world. A dedicated moderate, Khaled regularly tells viewers
to reject extremism, "Bin Laden's bombs kill many, but he is speaking in the
name of a few," Khaled told Time. "I am speaking in the name of millions of
young Muslims men and women who want to live peacefully in coexistence with the
West." Now he plans to bring that message to Europe: Last week he announced
plans to hold a three-day conference on Islam's relationship with the Westin
early March. The setting? Denmark, where the controversial satirical cartoons of
the Prophet Muhammad were first published. Khaled hopes to convene seminars in
other European capitals and to make his first trip to the U.S later this year.
"We have a golden opportunity to hold a real constructive dialogue," he says.
"Building bridges and reaching out to the West are the main hope for the
future."
Khaled is an un likely star. A
former accountant, he took up full-time preaching in 1998. Two years later he
appeared on a private Egyptian TV channel, gabbing about religion with guests
and cracking jokes. He was soon drawing audiences of 40,000 to lectures at a
suburban Cairo mosque. Despite – or perhaps because of his success. Khaled says
Egyptian state security officers informed him in 2002 that his lectures would no
longer be permitted. Authorities worried about his potential as a political
challenger to President Hosni Mubarak. "Khaled represented a movement that is
>>> in conflict with existing regimes," says Cairo political analyst Hala
Mustafa, an expert on Islamic movements. "He acted like a movie star, masking
his political ambitions." Khaled decided to leave Egypt. Dividing his time
between London and Beirut, he launched the satellite broadcasts that made him a
household name throughout the region.
Khaled doesn't just talk
religion. His TV specials address the social issues that plague the Muslim
world, such as unemployment and poverty. He runs self-help and charity campaigns
on his website, and has spoken out against drug use and smoking. From his
electronic pulpit. He encourages young people to go abroad and bring their
experiences home to help stir an Islamic renaissance.
Of course, not all young Arabs
are convinced by his call to take on religious extremism in their societies.
Khaled would like to say above politics, but his visibility may force him to
take more contentious stands. He initially tried to avoid the cartoon
controversy, fearing his intervention might give added publicity to the
offending drawings. When he did decide to decide to speak up. He appealed for
calm, calling on Westerners to better understand Islam and for Muslims to help
them do so. "There are radicals who want to take the world to the point of no
return," Khaled says. "The voice of reason has to be heard." He has his work cut
out for him. – With reporting by Lindsay
Wise/ Cairo.