Tilmann Schaible

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Tilmann Schaible (* 1961 in Stuttgart ) is a German qualified pedagogue . After years as a publisher , editor and dealer in Islamic and Islamist media as well as a functionary of various Muslim associations, especially in Bavaria , he moved to Austria, where he was appointed specialist inspector for Islamic religious instruction in Tyrol and Salzburg in 2005 by the Islamic Faith Community in Austria .

Live and act

Schaible was born into a Christian family. After graduating from high school , he converted to Islam . He completed a teaching degree in Munich .

In the late 1980s, Schaible was instrumental in founding various associations related to the Islamic Community in Germany , most of which had the support of young Muslims as a concern, including the "Verein zur." Founded on October 25, 1987 at the Islamic Center in Munich (IZM) Promotion of Muslim Children and Young People ”and the“ Islamic Scouts ”founded on November 10, 1988, of which Schaible became chairman on February 28, 1991. He participated in the founding of the “Klär-Werk” initiative, which according to the statutes is associated with the House of Islam . He was also a member of the German Muslim League Hamburg . In November 2001 he was chairman of the Islamic Religious Community of Bavaria e. V. (IRB) in Bavaria, which is trying to introduce Islamic religious instruction in Bavaria. The IRB is an umbrella organization in whose establishment independent Muslim communities as well as communities of DİTİB , IGMG , VIKZ , the Central Council of Muslims in Germany and the Islamic Council for the Federal Republic of Germany participated. On June 15, 2004, Schaible appeared in his capacity as IRB chairman as an expert at a public hearing of several committees of the Bavarian state parliament on the so-called headscarf ban .

In Schaible's publishing house Dâr-us-Salâm or Informationszentrale Dâr-us-Salâm ( Garching near Munich ), which he also operated as a mail order company for publications from other publishers, he published his own works and those of other authors, where he worked in usually acted as editor or editor. The authors published by Dâr-us-Salâm included Harry Harun Behr , Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi , Fatima Grimm , Eva-Maria El-Shabassy , Murad Wilfried Hofmann and Mohammed Aman Hobohm .

Writings by well-known representatives of the Muslim Brotherhood , including Sayyid Qutb , Yusuf al-Qaradawi and Said Ramadan , which Stefan Meining, together with those of Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi, as “difficult or completely incompatible with the Basic Law or a modern one, the values ​​of the Enlightenment committed society in line "judged. Harun Yahya was also in the Dâr-us-Salâm program with works such as the largely anti-Semitic Falling Völker (published by SKD-Bavaria ). According to Meining, however, there was no public criticism of this program.

Schaible published articles in the journal Al-Islam published by the IZM . He revised the authored by Kerim Edipoğlu and Safiya Balioglu translation of Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi Let us be Muslims (= into German life as a Muslim ), in the Cordoba-Verlag (Karlsruhe) was published ( ISBN 978-3-930767-02-1 ) . He also corrected Amina Saleh-Ronnweber's translation from Arabic into German by Muhammad Qutb's (younger brother of Sayyid Qutb) Objections to Islam , which was published by SKD-Bavaria (Munich) ( ISBN 3-926575-25-5 ).

When Schaibel moved to Austria, he said he broke away from the IZM at the turn of the millennium and stopped selling Islamist publications in the following years.

Schaible worked as a religion teacher in Austria from December 1997 (for example at the HAK in Oberndorf near Salzburg , at the HAK II in Salzburg and at the HTL in Salzburg). From August 1, 2005 to February 28, 2011, Schaible was a specialist inspector for Islamic religious instruction in Tyrol and Salzburg .

Publications

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Stefan Meining: A mosque in Germany. Nazis, Secret Services, and the Rise of Political Islam in the West . Beck Verlag, Munich 2011, p. 227 f.
  2. a b Stefan Meining: A mosque in Germany. Nazis, Secret Services, and the Rise of Political Islam in the West . Beck Verlag, Munich 2011, p. 227.
  3. ^ Stefan Heinlein: Islamic religious instruction in Austria . Interview on Deutschlandfunk from November 2, 2001 ( online ).
  4. Islam lessons in court instead of in schools . In: merkur-online.de, May 23, 2003 ( online ).
  5. Ibrahim Salama: Muslim Communities in Germany. Law and jurisprudence in the integration process (= Leipzig contributions to oriental research . Volume 27). Lang, Frankfurt am Main et al. 2010, p. 98.
  6. Conny Süss: Does the ban on headscarves threaten the costume? . In: merkur-online.de, June 16, 2004 ( online ); https://www.bayern.landtag.de/de/16_1321.php
  7. ^ Stefan Meining: A mosque in Germany. Nazis, Secret Services, and the Rise of Political Islam in the West . Beck Verlag, Munich 2011, p. 228.
  8. ^ Stefan Meining: A mosque in Germany. Nazis, Secret Services, and the Rise of Political Islam in the West . Beck Verlag, Munich 2011, p. 242.
  9. http://www.islam-salzburg.at/lehrer.htm ( Memento from December 15, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
  10. See http://islam-salzburg.at/fi.htm and http://www.islam-tirol.at/fi.htm
  11. With Ursula Spuler-Stegemann : The 101 Most Important Questions - Islam (= Beck'sche series . 7005). 2nd, revised edition. Beck, Munich 2009, p. 127, it is stated that Schaible “works within the framework of the“ Islamic Religious Community in Austria ”for the school area of Upper Austria and Salzburg”.