Institute of Islamic Studies

The protestant “Institute of Islamic Studies” is a network of scholars in Islamic studies and is carried out by the Evangelical Alliance in Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

Churches, the political arena, and society at large are provided foundational information relating to the topic of ‘Islam’ through research and the presentation thereof via publications, adult education seminars, and democratic political discourse.

International Institute of Islamic Studies

As long as the International Institute of Islamic Studies (IIIS) of the World Evangelical Alliance does not have its own website, this English part of ifi’s website will serve the IIIS as well. The English half of the bilingual journal ‘Islam and Christianity” will serve as the regular publication of IIIS for the moment being.

Research Focus

As far as our work is concerned, the focus is primarily on Islam in Europe, the global development of Islamic theology and of Islamic fundamentalism, as well as a respectful and issue-related meeting of Christians and Muslims. In the process, misunderstandings about Islam and Muslims can be cleared up, and problematic developments in Islamic fundamentalism and political Islam are explained. Through our work we want to contribute to engaging Muslims in an informed and fair manner.

What we do

Statement

The Institute of Islamic Studies thoroughly defends the democratic principles of tolerance and diversity of opinion and rejects every form of extremism, xenophobia, racism as well as defamation and violence against ethnic, social, or religious minorities. The employees and board members are committed to the Christian view of mankind, which respects every individual’s dignity and for that reason advocates mutual respect, fairness, human rights, thoroughgoing freedom of religion and freedom of thought as well as cultural diversity.

The Institute of Islamic Studies operates on the basis of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and the World Evangelical Alliance’s Resolution on the Freedom of Religion.

Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights reads as follows: “Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.”