|
al-azhars online manuscript project delayed
uneasy with cyberspace, some islamic scholars at cairos prestigious
al-azhar university were relieved last month when the launch of
an online project to digitize one of the worlds largest islamic
manuscript collections was postponed.
the portal, al-azhar online (www.alazharonline.org), was scheduled
to launch in cairo on april 14 and in dubai on april 30. subsequent
launches in london and washington, dc had been scheduled for may.
according to promoseven/weber shandwick, the public relations firm
working with the project, the decision to delay was taken in light
of the ongoing us-led war in iraq. but as of late april, as the
war wound to a close, no new launch date had been announced.
many al-azhar sheikhs are apparently apprehensive regarding the
security of ancient texts in the digital realm, expressing worry
that the manuscripts could be tampered with or abused if made accessible
on line.
ahmed khalifa mahmoud, vice director for library affairs at al-azhar,
said the chief concern was that religious texts could be altered,
or used irresponsibly as propaganda. we dont want the
manuscripts to be stolen from the site and posted on a site purporting
to be affiliated to al-azhar, mahmoud said.
and these fears are difficult to allay especially when
no internet security firewall is 100-percent hack-proof.
the effort, first mounted two years ago, sought to create a research
tool for islamic scholars and academics around the world, providing
them with convenient access to some of the oldest and most important
islamic manuscripts in the al-azhar archives.
the mosque was founded in 972 ad, during the fatimid period, later
evolving into a revered center of sunni islamic learning. in 1897,
a central library for al-azhar was established, which served as
a repository for the vast collection of islamic references scattered
throughout the universitys libraries.
some scholars argue that making this canon of ancient islamic texts
easily available to the public would serve to illustrate the vast
contributions of islamic scholarship to the sciences and humanities.
the website would also allow people to circumvent the bureaucratic,
time-consuming procedures involved in gaining access to al-azhars
rare manuscript collection, where security is extremely tight.
a request by business monthly for information about the manuscript
collection and the online project was answered with demands for
the submission of a written request to al-azhars manager of
security, a copy of a passport and a valid identification card.
this was followed by a security review.
when the website is complete in three to five years god
willing scholars around the world will have access, for a
fee, to 42,000 rare manuscripts and 37,000 documents dating back
nearly 14 centuries. ten thousand pages of digital manuscripts
including fatwas (religious opinions) and fiqh (jurisprudence) have
already been scanned, with a committee of azhari scholars choosing
which manuscripts are to be archived and indexed next. the
scanning of the entire library will take at least three years to
complete from the start of the project in february 2003, explained
moen makki, al-azhar onlines project manager, adding that
it takes two to five minutes to scan one page of manuscript.
most of the projects initial budget of $5 million went towards
state-of-the-art scanning machines (provided by ibm), servers, software
and scores of computers. with a staff of 100 working both in cairo
and dubai, the project is one of the largest digitization undertakings
of its kind.
makki noted that one of the most difficult aspects of starting
the project was training al-azhar staff to use the cutting-edge
machines that the effort requires. they were completely unaware
of how to use computer technology, he said.
the mammoth undertaking is being funded by dubai crown prince sheikh
mohammed bin rashid al maktoum, who is the visionary behind such
projects as the dubai internet and media cities and the palm project,
two man-made islands built in the shape of palm trees off dubais
coast.
during sheikh mohammeds visit to cairo in april 2000, al-azhars
grand imam sheikh mohammed tantawi suggested the idea of preserving
the rare manuscript collection, whereupon the crown prince volunteered
to become the projects patron.
the idea is hardly a new one. for the past 15 years, the thesaurus
islamicus foundation, a non-profit organization, has been working
to gather all hadith literature the sayings of the prophet
muhammad that address such varied subjects as worship, law, taxation
and government onto one online computer database. advanced
computer technology has now made it possible to quickly access and
search the vast corpus of hadith literature, a chore that would
have taken months by traditional methods.
abdalla f. hassan
submit
your comment
top
|