Israeli Mossad Allegedly Runs Islamic Studies Institute: Insights from Abu Zeid al-Idrisi

Watan-The Moroccan Islamic thinker, Abu Zeid al-Makri al-Idrisi, said that what prevents him from being more optimistic than necessary is the existence of an institute for Arab and Islamic studies in Tel Aviv, under the supervision of the Israeli Mossad rather than the Israeli Ministry of Education, for example.
Al-Idrisi added in an interview with Al-Jazeera channel via the program “Sharia and Life” that this institute specializes in graduating preachers, sermonizers, educators, and scholars, and its name is “The Preachers’ Graduation Institute.”
Suspicious Institute for Islamic Studies Managed by Mossad
He also said that this suspicious institute graduates those preachers who raise the issue of “adult breastfeeding” and the issue of whether the Isra and Mi’raj journey was valid.
In this context, according to Sheikh al-Idrisi, Benjamin Ephraim was one of these examples where he impersonated an imam in a mosque in Libya under the name “Abu Hafs” and confessed to his membership in the Mossad.
مع وجود معهد للدراسات الإسلامية تحت إشراف الموساد.. كيف تتمكن إسرائيل من السيطرة على طبقة من الدعاة المسلمين؟ المفكر الإسلامي أبو المقرئ الإدريسي يجيب#الجزيرة_في_رمضان #الشريعة_والحياة_في_رمضان pic.twitter.com/E4IbfKAG91
— قناة الجزيرة (@AJArabic) April 3, 2024
Islamic Awakening
Al-Idrisi continued, saying that the Islamic awakening today is at a level of giving, presence, coordination, and effectiveness that we have not seen for four centuries, but it – as he said – faces a turbulent sea of these modern tools.
He said that today’s youth, with their passion, technology, and enthusiasm, as demonstrated in their sympathy with Gaza through donations and condemnation of Western hypocrisy, can guide their path cautiously from these hypocrites, using their minds, hearts, and the necessary religious knowledge in their culture to distinguish between mercenary scholars like “Al-Madkhali” and sincere scholars. A large part of them is absent in prisons, but their thoughts, books, stances, and influence, as he said, are never absent “because darkness cannot obscure light,” according to his description.
Abu Zeid al-Makri al-Idrisi (born in 1960 in Marrakech) is an Islamic politician, preacher, and Moroccan thinker who served as a parliamentary deputy for the Justice and Development Party and is one of the proponents of the Unity and Reform Movement.