Mohammad Naseem

Mohammad Naseem

Mohammad Naseem, born in 1924, is a former GP and the chairman of the Birmingham Mosque Trust (Birmingham Central Mosque), one of the largest and most prominent Islamic places of worship in the United Kingdom.

Born in Amritsar in British India, Naseem was educated mainly in Pakistan and then in England where he trained to become and served as a General Practitioner for many years and also specialised in the medical procedure of circumcision, particularly for the British Muslim community.

He is executive member of, and home affairs spokesman for, the Islamic Party of Britain.[1]

Naseem was the main practitioner of male circumcision in the region and was based in Aston in Birmingham in the West Midlands.

Contents

History

In the 1970s, Naseem became involved in the establishment of a major mosque and Islamic centre in Birmingham and supported a project that had begun in the late 1950s but only got underway in the 1960s. There was great confusion at the time and many of those involved had a design for an Islamic institution but disorganisation created a lack of funds and resources to complete the grand and innovative project. Amidst debate and argument, Naseem is said to have joined the members of a loosely formed group and helped to settle disagreements by way of compromise and organisation.

The mosque project was listed as a registered charity and as a limited company and it was decided that elections would be conducted to select an official committee to run the new trust. Naseem was elected chairman and has remained chairman ever since, following an annual vote at the trust's Annual General Meeting.

Leadership

Naseem has become a familiar face with the Midlands' Muslims and wider faith communities[citation needed], representing the voice of the region's Islamic community[citation needed]. He appointed the first Muslim female, Wageha Syeda, onto a Shariah Council and Salma Yaqoob, as the only female spokesperson for a British mosque. The mosque has also been the only one in the world[citation needed] to open condolence tributes for non-Muslims after initiating books following the Madrid train bombings and the death of Iraqi hostage Ken Bigley. This has, however, come under criticism from many more conservative Muslims[who?].

More recently, Mr Naseem also became the first British mosque official[citation needed] to openly ban extremist group Al Muhajiroun from the mosque grounds and from conducting activities inside the mosque itself[citation needed]. Islamist group Hizb-ut-Tahrir was also banned from conducting activities inside the mosque[citation needed].

The mosque was accused by some Muslims[who?] of imitating the activities of a state-run church but continued with changes including having businesses Asda and Selfridges sponsor and support Ramadhan and Eid activities at the mosque. It is believed many of these innovations were influenced by the presence of Adam Yosef, who served the trust as PR and media officer between 2003 and 2004, during which time many of the widely reported initiatives took place.

Controversy

Comments on the London bombings

Following the 7 July London bombings, comments made by Naseem criticizing the security services and Metropolitan Police were widely criticized by politicians including MPs Khalid Mahmood and Shadow Home Secretary David Davis. He was also criticized by Mohammed Zaki Badawi, chairman of the Council of Mosques and Imams. He was condemned further after he compared Prime Minister Tony Blair to Adolf Hitler in the same week and has generated national debate over the role of mosque representatives in Britain. When a videotape emerged featuring suspected bomber Mohammed Sidique Khan apparently explaining why he intended to attack British civilians, Naseem said that he suspected the videotape had been doctored:

We are in the 21st century. The cows can be made to look as dancing, the horses can speak like humans, so these things can be doctored or can be produced.[2]

Despite the views, the chairman still maintains a positive and progressive relationship with the West Midlands Police, political officials, and interfaith leaders.[citation needed]

Comments on Birmingham terrorist raids

In February 2007 British police in Birmingham arrested nine suspected terrorists. A few days later Naseem said:

Muslims are persecuted unjustly. The German people were told Jews were a threat. The same is happening here. This is a persecuting course of action that the government has taken. They have invented this perception of a threat. To justify that, they have to maintain incidents to prove something is going on.[3]

He also said that Britain is becoming a police state. Assistant Chief Constable David Shaw responded to Naseem's comments by saying that, "Despite certain labels given to those men by the media, what we are dealing with here in its purest sense is criminality," and Naseem is "wrong".[4]

Politics

Naseem has also stood as a candidate for RESPECT The Unity Coalition in the 2005 General Elections, when he challenged the Labour Party seat of Khalid Mahmood MP in Birmingham Perry Barr. He gained over 2,000 votes (5.6%); Labour retained the seat.

Naseem is actively involved in Britain's post-9/11 anti-war movement led by the Stop the War Coalition.

See also

References

External links


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