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U.S. dominates list of world’s ‘500 Most Influential Muslims’

c. 2012 Religion News Service

(RNS) There are more Muslims from America than any other country on this year's "The Muslim 500: The World's 500 Most Influential Muslims," compiled by the Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre, a respected think tank in Jordan, including two in the top 50.

Boxing legend Muhammad Ali

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Boxing legend Muhammad Ali (2011). Credit: RNS photo by Pablo Raw via Flickr (http://flic.kr/p/9MBoLY). **Note: Due to copyright laws, RNS can not offer this image to download. Please use the link above.

Sheikh Hamza Yusuf Hanson, a California-born convert who founded Zaytuna College, an Islamic college in Berkeley, Calif., and is a leading Islamic authority in America, ranked No. 42, two places ahead of Seyyed Hossein Nasr, an Islamic studies professor at George Washington University known for his work in Islamic philosophy.

America's roughly 2.6 million Muslims are a tiny fraction of the world's 1.6 billion Muslims, but they took 41 spots on the 500 list. Countries with the next highest number of names were Egypt, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and the United Kingdom, with 25 Muslims each, followed by Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, with 24.

"Compared to the global Muslim population, the representation of U.S. Muslims in this list is disproportionate, but yet representative in the way they shape global discourse," said Duke University Islamic studies professor Ebrahim Moosa.

The third annual compilation lists the winners according to 13 categories, including spiritual guides, Quran reciters, scholars, politicians, celebrities, sports figures, radicals, and media leaders. Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah took the list's No. 1 spot.

Congressman Keith Ellison

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Keith Ellison, one of the only two Muslim members of Congress. Credit: Religion News Service photo courtesy of Keith Ellison for Congress

Other Americans to make the list include:

Topics: Faith, Leaders & Institutions
Beliefs: Islam
Tags: aasif mandvi, azizah al-hibri, council on american islamic relations, ebrahim moosa, imam mohamed magid, islamic society of north america, kareem abdul-jabbar, keith ellison, king abdullah, masjid al-madina, mohamed el-erian, muhammad ali, muslim women lawyers for human rights, nawawi foundation, nihad awad, pimco, rep. andre carson, saudi arabia, seyyed hossein nasr, sheikh hamza yusuf hanson, sheikh muhammad bin yahya al husayni al-ninowy, sheikh yusuf estes, the daily show, the muslim 500, the world's 500 most influential muslims, u.s. bureau of prisons, u.s. commission on international religious freedom, umar faruq abdullah, zaytuna college

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Comments

  1. Surprised that no one mentioned this, but Umar Faruq Abd-Allah is a Mizzou Alum. Both his parents were on faculty here as well as his grandfather.

  2. Thanks for letting us know! This story is actually from our national media partner, Religion News Service, so it was written with a more general approach. But I’m seeing a chance to do our own version of this, now that we know that about Umar Faruq Abd-Allah.

    Thank you very much!

    Kellie Kotraba
    Editor

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Of the numbers 50, 12, 4, sixty or two, which is the lowest?

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