Muslim News Magazine Television Network
Muslim News Magazine Television Network Watch MNM-TV MNM Shows MNM News Archives Advertise on MNM Shop for MNM DVD's Contact MNM

Respected Kenyan Professor, Ali Mazrui Passes Away at age 81

 

 

 

Muslim News Magazine TV

Kenyan academic Professor, Dr. Ali Mazrui

FRONT PAGE HEADLINES

Respected Kenyan Professor, Ali Mazrui Passes Away at age 81

City of Seattle Unanimously Votes To Replace Columbus Day With Indigenous Peoples’ Day

Supreme Court Hear's Arguments in Holt v. Hobbs Religious Freedom Case

Now that Eric Holder has Resigned - What Questions Remain for the Next Attorney General

Unsung Muslims in American History: Samir Muqaddin investigated Marilyn Monroe's Controversial Death in 1962

Congressman Keith Ellison shines during 'American Muslims in Public Service' Conference at USC

MNM News Archives

(HOLLYWOOD, CA, 10/14/14) -- BAIT-CAL and Muslim News Magazine TV (MNM), today offered sincere condolences on the death of internationally-known and respected Kenyan academic Professor, Dr. Ali Mazrui. He was 81-years old.

Dr. Mazrui, a professor at Binghamton University in New York, was perhaps best known in the United States for his role in the ground-breaking 1980s BBC television series "The Africans - a Triple Heritage" that outlined the Western, Islamic and indigenous influences on that continent.

"Our company worked with the professor several times and recorded an exclusive interview with him in 2009," said MNM V.P. of Operations Lon Muqaddin. "Dr. Mazrui was an intellectual icon for the global Muslim community. He helped to guide many Muslim American institutions and his academic leadership will be missed."

Born in the Kenyan coastal city of Mombasa on 24 February 1933, some 20 years before the Mau Mau uprising against British colonial rule, he always portrayed himself as a true patriot.

In his series of essays On Heroes and Uhuru-Worship, he wrote as an African scholar deeply involved in the fight for the freedom of his people, expressing empathy with those on the front line of the battle against colonialists.

Kenyan academic Professor, Dr. Ali Mazrui

"What about blaming the freedom fighter for the atrocities committed by the security forces contending him?" he asked.

Mr Mazrui's writings, though embedded in history, still resonate because he talks about the need to recognize national heroes, without worshipping them.

They also give insight into some of the greatest concerns currently facing the world as he wrote about terrorism and Islam.

In one of his books, Islam between Globalization and Counter Terrorism, he explained how the religion was entrapped in the danger of rising extremism.

'Shaping scholarship'

The professor had immense international experience in his academic career.

He studied at some of the world's most prestigious universities, including Oxford, from where obtained a doctorate in philosophy in 1966.

Mr Mazrui then joined Uganda's famous Makerere University as head of the Department of Political Science and Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences.

Throughout his career, he wrote numerous books and expressed strong opinions in widely published papers.

In the 1970s, Mr Mazrui's sharp criticism of the then-Kenyan and Ugandan regimes - led by Daniel arap Moi and Idi Amin respectively - displeased the ruling class, leading to his exile in the US.

At the time of his death, he was an Albert Schweitzer professor in the humanities and the director of the Institute of Global Cultural Studies at Binghamton University in New York.

Leading tributes to Mr Mazrui, Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta described him as "towering" academic whose "intellectual contributions played a major role in shaping African scholarship".

"Indeed, death has robbed us of one of Kenya's greatest scholars," Mr Kenyatta said.

'The African condition'

Tanzania's Deputy Minister of Communication, Science and Technology, January Makamba, paid a more personal tribute, saying Mr Mazrui "taught me to appreciate and value Africa's complex identity and multiple heritages".

Mr Mazrui wrote and presented a ground-breaking BBC television series in the 1980s entitled The Africans - a Triple Heritage that talked of the Western , Islamic and indigenous influences on Africa.

He won several awards and in 2005, the US journal Foreign Policy and British journal Prospect listed him as among the world's top 100 public intellectuals

Mr Mazrui lamented the growing influence of the West on societies across the world.

"Even the very vices of Western culture are acquiring worldwide prestige. Muslim societies which once refrained from alcohol are now manifesting increasing alcoholism," he said in a speech in 2000 at an event hosted by the Royal African Society and the BBC in London.

"Chinese elites are capitulating to Kentucky Fried Chicken and MacDonald hamburgers. And Mahatma Gandhi's country has decided to go nuclear."

In 1979, Mr Mazrui also delivered the BBC's Reith Lecture, entitled The African Condition.

He will be buried, in accordance with his wishes at the historical monument of Fort Jesus in Mombasa, his birthplace.

 

 

 

Find Muslim News Magazine on FACEBOOK
HOME
ABOUT US
ADVERTISING
SCHEDULE
DVD STORE
CONTACT US

 

MUSLIM NEWS MAGAZINE IS A LICENSED TRADEMARK OF BAITCAL WORLDWIDE. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2014 BAIT-CAL WORLDWIDE.