Timothy Winter
Timothy John Winter, also known as Shaykh Abdal Hakim Murad, is an English Sunni Muslim scholar, researcher, writer and academic. He is the Dean of the Cambridge Muslim College, Aziz Foundation Professor of Islamic Studies at both Cambridge Muslim College and Ebrahim College, Director of Studies at Wolfson College and the Shaykh Zayed Lecturer in Islamic Studies at University of Cambridge. His work includes publications on Islamic theology and Muslim-Christian relations. In 2003 he was awarded the Pilkington Teaching Prize by Cambridge University and in 2007 he was awarded the King Abdullah I Prize for Islamic Thought for his short booklet Bombing Without Moonlight. He has consistently been included in The 500 Most Influential Muslims list published annually by the Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought and was ranked in 2012 as the 50th most influential. Most recently in the 2020 Edition of The 500 Most Influential Muslims, Winter was ranked the 48th most influential Muslim in the world.
Background and education
Winter is the son of an architect and artist.Winter was educated at Westminster School and graduated with a double-first in Arabic from Pembroke College, Cambridge in 1983. He then went on to study at Al Azhar University in Cairo and further private study with individual scholars in Saudi Arabia and Yemen. After returning to England, he studied Turkish and Persian at the University of London.
Major work and projects
In 2009 Winter helped to open the Cambridge Muslim College, an institute designed to train British imams. Winter also directs the Anglo-Muslim Fellowship for Eastern Europe, and the Sunna Project which has published the foremost scholarly Arabic editions of the major Sunni Hadith collections. He serves as the secretary of the Muslim Academic Trust. Winter is active in translating key Islamic texts into English including a translation of two volumes of the Islamic scholar al-Ghazali's Ihya Ulum al-Din. His academic publications include many articles on Islamic theology and Muslim-Christian relations as well as two books in Turkish on political theology. His book reviews sometimes appear in the Times Literary Supplement. He is also the editor of the Cambridge Companion to Classical Islamic Theology and author of Bombing without Moonlight, which in 2007 was awarded the King Abdullah I Prize for Islamic Thought. Winter is also a contributor to BBC Radio 4's Thought for the Day. Additionally, Winter is one of the signatories of A Common Word Between Us and You, an open letter by Islamic scholars to Christian leaders, calling for peace and understanding.Cambridge Mosque Project
Winter is the founder and leader of the Cambridge Central Mosque project which is working to develop a new purpose built mosque in Cambridge to cater for up to 1,000 worshipers. The mosque is planned to be entirely reliant on green energy with an almost-zero carbon footprint. Regarding the project, Winter stated, "This will be a very substantial world class landmark building in what is considered by some to be a down-at-heel part of Cambridge."Views on extremism
Winter is a traditionalist and considers the views of extremists like al-Qaeda as religiously illegitimate and inauthentic. He decries the failure of extremists to adhere to the classical canons of Islamic law and theology and denounces their fatwas. He unequivocally rejects suicide bombing and considers the killing of noncombatants as always forbidden, noting that some sources consider it worse than murder. According to Winter, Osama bin Laden and his right-hand man Ayman al-Zawahiri are un-Islamic, unqualified vigilantes who violate basic Islamic teachings.Winter is critical of Western foreign policy for fueling anger and resentment in the Muslim world. He is equally critical of Saudi Arabia's Wahhabi ideology, which he believes gives extremists a theological pretext for their extremism and violence.
Personal life
Winter's younger brother is football writer Henry Winter.Awards and nominations
In January 2015, Winter was nominated for the Services to Education award at the British Muslim Awards.Publications
Books written
- Travelling Home: Essays on Islam in Europe
- Gleams from the Rawdat al-Shuhada: of Husayn Vaiz Kashifi
- Montmorency's Book of Rhymes Illustrated by Anne Yvonne Gilbert
- Commentary on the Eleventh Contentions
- XXI Asrda Islom: Postmodern Dunyoda qiblani topish
- Muslim Songs of the British Isles: Arranged for Schools
- Postmodern Dünya’da kibleyi bulmak
- Co-authored with John A. Williams, Understanding Islam and the Muslims
- Understanding the Four Madhhabs: Facts About Ijtihad and Taqlid
Books edited
- The Cambridge Companion to Classical Islamic Theology
- Islam, Religion of Life by Abdul Wadod Shalabi
- Co-edited with Richard Harries and Norman Solomon, Abraham’s Children: Jews, Christians and Muslims in Conversation
Translations
- Imam al-Busiri, The Mantle Adorned
- Al-Asqalani Ibn Hajar, Selections from Fath Al-Bari
- Abu Hamid al-Ghazali, Disciplining the Soul and Breaking the Two Desires
- Roger Du Pasquier, Unveiling Islam
- Imam al-Bayhaqi, Seventy-Seven Branches of Faith
- Abu Hamid al-Ghazali, The Remembrance of Death and the Afterlife
Articles
- “America as a Jihad State: Middle Eastern Perceptions of Modern American Theopolitics.” Muslim World 101 : 394–411.
- CNN.com.
- “Jesus and Muhammad: New Convergences.” Muslim World 99/1 : 21–38.
- “Poverty and the Charism of Ishmael.” In Building a Better Bridge: Muslims, Christians, and the Common Good, edited by Michael Ipgrave.
- "Ibn Kemal on Ibn 'Arabi's Hagiology." In Sufism and Theology, edited by Ayman Shihadeh.
- "The Saint with Seven Tombs." In The Inner Journey: Views from the Islamic Tradition, edited by William Chittick.
- "Ishmael and the Enlightenment's Crise de Coeur." In Scripture, Reason, and the Contemporary Islam-West Encounter, edited by Basit Bilal Koshul and Steven Kepnes.
- "Qur'anic Reasoning as an Academic Practice." Modern Theology 22/3 : 449–463; reprinted in The Promise of Scriptural Reasoning, edited by David Ford and C. C. Pecknold.
- “The Chador of God on Earth: the Metaphysics of the Muslim Veil.” New Blackfriars 85 : 144–157.
- Encounters 10:1–2 : 93–126.
- "The Poverty of Fanaticism." In Fundamentalism, and the Betrayal of Tradition, edited by Joseph Lumbard.
- “Readings of the ‘Reading’.” In Scriptures in Dialogue: Christians and Muslims Studying the Bible and the Qur'an Together, edited by Michael Ipgrace, 50–55.
- In The Empire and the Crescent: Global Implications for a New American Century, edited by Aftab Ahmad Malik.
- " In British Muslims: Loyalty and Belonging, edited by Mohammad Siddique Seddon, Dilwar Hussain, and Nadeem Malik.
- “Pulchra ut luna: some Reflections on the Marian Theme in Muslim-Catholic Dialogue.” Journal of Ecumenical Studies 36/3 : 439–469.
- “The Last Trump Card: Islam and the Supersession of Other Faiths.” Studies in Interreligious Dialogue 9/2 : 133–155.
- Daily Telegraph.