
Two experts, one a Christian the other a devout Muslim, are both wary of a  plan in progress to establish the first four-year accredited Islamic college in  the United States.
Both fear that the proposed school, which could open  as soon as next fall, would promote the idea of the Islamic  state.
“Certainly, an attempt at the formation of an accredited college  by Muslim academics can be a good thing if it is founded in the ideas of freedom  and liberty and against Islamism (political Islam),” said Dr. M. Zuhidi Jasser,  founder and president of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy (AIFD), to The  Christian Post.
“But I’m not convinced that this college will be creating  anti-Islamist Muslims who will reform sharia (Islamic law) and bring Muslim  thought into an era where religious law can be separated from government as the  Establishment Clause mandates,” he added.
Jasser, who is a devout  practicing Muslim American and a former physician to the U.S. Congress, pointed  out that one of the college’s main scholars, Imam Zaid Shakir, had said in a  2006 New York Times story that he hopes the United States will one day be a  Muslim country ruled by Islamic law.
The “primary root cause” of Islamic  radicalism, stressed Jasser, is the mission to establish an Islamic  state.
“The leadership of Zaytuna [College] seems to be all about  political Islam with no public critique of the global mission of the Muslim  Brotherhood and other Islamist idealogies,” said Jasser, whose public critique  of problems he sees in his faith has resulted in a backlash from the Muslim  community.
He added, “I dream of the day where universities have  established endowed chairs in the study of anti-Islamist studies from the  viewpoint of freedom and with devout Muslims leading the charge and the  academics.”
A group of American Muslims, including Zaid Shakir, is  leading an effort to establish Zaytuna College, or what some call the “Muslim  Georgetown.”
Shakir, who converted to Islam while serving in the U.S. Air  Force, said the college will offer liberal arts education and Islamic studies,  The Associated Press reported. The college plans to start with offering two  majors: Arabic language and Islamic legal and theological studies.
In  1996, Shakir founded Zaytuna Institute based in Berkeley, Calif. The American  Muslim imam, who now has tens of thousands of followers, was trained under  Islamic scholars in North Africa and the Middle East for years after his  conversion.
Shakir told the New York Times earlier that he wants the  United States to be ruled by Islamic law “not by violent means, but by  persuasion.”
Dr. William Wagner, author of How Islam Plans to Change the  World, said he is not surprised about the plan to build a Muslim college in the  United States. He said for years Islamists have planned to open universities in  western countries.
“They see the value of education especially in  educating their young leaders for eventual takeover of some western countries,”  said Wagner, former professor of missions at Golden Gate Baptist Theological  Seminary in San Francisco, to The Christian Post.
“Their strategy  includes extensive student work in many U.S. universities and the start of a new  university is only an extension of their main strategy,” he said.
Wagner  served for over 30 years as a missionary in Europe, the Middle East and North  Africa with the International Mission Board.
Currently, leaders of  Zaytuna are in the midst of a fundraising campaign. They need $2 to $4 million  to launch the school next year. A Zaytuna adviser told AP in a recent interview  that the school will soon raise tens of millions of dollars to build a campus in  the Bay area in the next few years.