Prof Annemarie Schimmel, the renowned German scholar of Islam, died on
January 25, 2002. She was 80. A specialist on Islamic mysticism, Schimmel
published 80 books, had five degrees, twenty-six awards and lectured at
various universities including Harvard (where she was Professor of
Indo-Muslim Culture from 1970-1992), Bonn, London and Ankara. She was fluent
in ten languages including Arabic, Farsi, Turkish, Urdu and Dari.

Her life-long mission was "to awake understanding for Islam", arguing that
"Islam was among the most misunderstood religions". The German scholar was
seen as a bridge-builder with the Islamic world. Her works on Islamic
mysticism are popular in the West.

Schimmel was born in Erfurt, a town in central Germany in 1922. By the age
of fifteen she turned to the study of Arabic. At age nineteen she received a
doctorate in Islamic Languages and Civilisation from the University of
Berlin.

She became the Professor of Arabic and Islamic Studies at the University of
Marburg when she was 23 and where she went on to earn a second doctorate in
the History of Religions. In 1954, she became Professor of the History of
Religion at the University of Ankara. There she spent five years teaching in
Turkish and immersing herself in the culture and mystical tradition of the
country.

An admirer of Allama Muhammad Iqbal, Schimmel translated his Javidnama into
German verse. In 1958, she made the first of many visits to Pakistan, a
country that became central to her work. Pakistan honoured her with the
Hilal-e-Imtiaz, its highest civil award, and a fine tree-lined avenue in
Lahore is named after her. A scholarship for women was set up in her name in
1988. Based in Lahore, the scholarship is for postgraduate study in the UK.

But few people outside the cosseted walls of academia had heard of her until
she spoke out against Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses. Millions of
Muslims considered the book highly offensive to the religion of Islam in
contrast to the bastions of Western liberalism, the media, the arts and the
seats of learning which were adamant that freedom of expression was
paramount, and that responsibility of expression was a secondary
consideration. Professor Schimmel entered the debate insisting that Muslims
were the victims of a carefully devised piece of literature. Prof Schimmel
effectively took on the Establishment. Her position, based on years of
expertise in Islamic literature and history, was authoritative and
unwavering.

To acknowledge and appreciate her support for Islam and Muslims, 'The Muslim
News Awards for Excellence' named one of the awards, Championing a Muslim
cause, after her. The following is a message she sent in 2001, from Bonn:

"I very much appreciate your work and would like to send you my warmest
regards and good wishes for the event and, even more, for all the useful
work you are doing. It is so necessary in our time to emphasize the values
of Islamic culture, for despite the constant talk of globalisation we
sometimes have the impression that the misunderstandings between religions
and civilisations grow stronger the easier communication becomes. What we
need are people who defend the values of religion and of responsible actions
and try to make their compatriots understand the true aspects of culture
and, in this case, especially of Islam. Those who help create a true picture
of the role of Islam in the civilisations of the world deserve every kind of
support, and have to be applauded for their attempts to create a better
understanding between individuals and between cultures. I am proud to be
associated with the Awards for Excellence, which is given by the Muslim News
to people who excel in this field, and I send you my very best wishes and
warmest greetings."

Her works include Gabriel's Wing: A Study into the Religious Ideas of Sir
Muhammad Iqbal (1963), Mystical Dimensions of Islam (1975), Triumphal Sun: A
Study of the Works of Jalaloddin Rumi (1978), Islam in the Indian
Subcontinent (Leiden, 1980), Muhammad is His Messenger (1985), Islamic Names
(1989; Edinburgh Univ), A Two-Coloured Brocade: The Imagery of Persian
Poetry (1992), and Deciphering the Signs of God: A Phenomenological Approach
to Islam (1994), Look! This is Love: Poems of Rumi, Make a Shield From
Wisdom, The Mystery of Numbers, As Through A Veil: Mystical Poetry in Islam

The Muslim News Awards and Sir Cam, Cambridge, England

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