Lamya Kaddor

Lamya Kaddor (born 11 June 1978 in Ahlen) is a German scholar of Islamic studies of Syrian ancestry, a writer and founder and chairwoman of the Liberal-Islamic Association (LIB e.V.).[1][2] She is known for introducing Islamic education in German in public schools in Germany.[3]

Lamya Kaddor
Member of the Bundestag
for North Rhine-Westphalia
Assumed office
2021
ConstituencyAlliance '90/The Greens List
Personal details
Born (1978-06-11) 11 June 1978
Ahlen, West Germany
(now Germany)
Political partyGreens

Early life

Kaddor's arrived in Germany from Syria in 1978.[4]

Career as teacher

Together with Rabeya Müller, Kaddor published the first German Qur'an translation for children and adults: "Der Koran für Kinder und Erwachsene".[5] Furthermore, she is the initiator and editor of the first German school book for Islamic education, called "Saphir".[6]

Especially since 2014, Kaddor has been working on the subject of Salafism and Islamism. Five of her former students volunteered for jihad in Syria, which Kaddor perceived as a personal defeat.[7]

Kaddor taught Islamic education in a secondary school in Dinslaken in North Rhine-Westphalia.[8]

Together with peace activist Tarek Mohamad, Kaddor organized the Nicht Mit Uns – or Not With Us – protest march in Cologne in June 2017 to make a stand against acts of terror and violence carried out in the name of Islam.[9]

Political career

In the negotiations to form a so-called traffic light coalition of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), the Green Party and the Free Democratic Party (FDP) following the 2021 German elections, Kaddor was part of her party's delegation in the working group on homeland security, civil rights and consumer protection, co-chaired by Christine Lambrecht, Konstantin von Notz and Wolfgang Kubicki.[10]

In parliament, Kaddor has been serving on the Committee on Internal Affairs since 2021.[11]

Other activities

  • Islamkolleg Deutschland (IKD), Member of the Advisory Board (since 2021)[12]

Political positions

When Hans-Peter Friedrich said at his first news conference as Federal Minister of the Interior in 2011 that “Islam in Germany is not something substantiated by history at any point” and that Islam did not play a major role in German culture, Kaddor responded that “such statements are not only politically and historically wrong, I think they are dangerous.”[13]

References

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