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A timely topic
will be on deck for the 2002 Jellema Lectures at Calvin College.
"State, Society
and the Family: A Qur'anic Worldview" will be addressed in two
different lectures by Aziza al-Hibri, a philosopher, professor of law
and Muslim feminist from the University of Richmond Law School.
She will speak
on April 3 at 7;30 p.m. on "Gender and the Family in the Qur'an."
On April 4 at 3:30 p.m. she will speak on "Religion and the State
in Islam." Both lectures will be held in the Calvin Seminary auditorium
and are free and open to all.
The lectures, named
for former Calvin professor of philosophy Harry Jellema, are being co-sponsored
by the philosophy, sociology, religion and political science departments
at Calvin and the school's gender studies committee.
In Aziza al-Hibri
the school has chosen a dynamic and significant speaker for the annual
Jellema Lectures. She has written extensively on the subject of women
and Islam and has served as a guide on the topic for a wide variety
of media outlets, including PBS, CNN and the BBC, as well as organizations
and government groups. She is founder and executive director of Karamah:
Muslim Women Lawyers for Human Rights and founding editor of Hypatia:
A Journal of Feminist Philosophy.
She has published
widely on human rights, Islamic law and the rights of women in Islamic
legal systems. She has traveled and lectured extensively throughout
the Muslim world in support of Muslim women's rights and participated
in conferences and various workshops on topics relating to Islamic jurisprudence,
democracy and women's rights and Muslims in the United States. She also
has thought for years about issues related to terrorism. In fact, in
1995 she testified before a House of Representatives committee on "The
Comprehensive Antiterrorism Act of 1995." A couple of summers ago,
she traveled to the Afghanistan-Pakistan border to meet with Afghani
women and men and was briefed on the situation in Afghanistan.
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