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Ahmad Tejan Sillah

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Ahmad Tejan Sillah
Chief Imam of the Freetown Central Mosque
Spiritual leader of the United Council of Imams in Sierra Leone
Chief imam of the Masjid Fatima Zahra mosque, Freetown
In office
1982–1985
United Nations Goodwill Ambassador
Assumed office
2000
Personal details
BornFreetown, Sierra Leone
Residence(s)Freetown, Sierra Leone
Alma materDar al-Tabligh, Qum, Iran
ProfessionImam, Islamic Preacher

Ahmad Tejan Sillah is a Sierra Leonean Shia Muslim scholar and Islamic preacher. He is the chief imam of the Freetown Central Mosque, one of the largest mosque in Sierra Leone.[1][2] He is also one of the leaders of the Sierra Leone United Council of Imams,[3][4] an Islamic organisation that is made up of imams across Sierra Leone. Sillah is one of the most prominent Islamic scholars in Sierra Leone. Sillah is a Shia Muslim of the Twelver branch of Shia Islam

Born and raised in Freetown, Sierra Leone, Sillah received a master's degree in Islamic studies at the Dar Al Tabligh Islamic University in the holy city of Qum in Iran.[3] Sillah is an advocate for child and women's rights to be respected as stated in the Quran. He has often preached against violence in society and violence against women.

During Sierra Leone's civil war, Sillah was one of the leading advocates for peace. He traveled to dangerous rebel held areas of the country to preach to the rebels to lay down their arms and accept peace.[3][2] In 2000, he was appointed by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) as a Goodwill Ambassador.

Sillah is a founding member of the Inter-Religious Council of Sierra Leone, which is made up of both Muslim and Christian religious leaders.

Early life and education

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Ahmad Tejan Sillah was born and raised in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone. He is a Shia Muslim cleric. He attended primary and secondary schools in Freetown. In 1974, he received a master's degree in Islamic studies at the Dar al-Tabligh in the holy city of Qum in Iran.[3] He was an Islamic preacher for two years in Iran before returning to Sierra Leone. He is religiously close to Ayatollah Ali Khameinei, the spiritual leader of Iran.[1]

Sillah served as an Islamist cultural advisor at the Iran embassy in Sierra Leone from 1983 to 1985. He was the chief imam of the Masjid Fatima Zahra mosque in Freetown from 1982 to 1985. He has been the chief imam of the Freetown Central Mosque since 1985. From 1986 to present he has served as the spiritual leader of the United Council of Imams in Sierra Leone, an organisation he is a founder member of. Since 1985, he has served as the Director of the Muslim Cultural Society in Sierra Leone and also Director of the Sierra Leone Ahl Ul Bayt World Assembly Sierra Leone, a humanitarian organisation that helps poor Sierra Leoneans. Sillah served as the principal of the International Institute of Islamic Studies in Freetown from 1991 to 1993.

Activist

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Sillah is a founding member of the Inter-Religious Council of Sierra Leone, which is made up of both Muslim and Christian religious leaders. In 2000 he was appointed by the United Nations Population Fund Agency (UNFPA) as a Goodwill Ambassador. Sillah has traveled across Sierra Leone and many other countries preaching peace, belief in the Koran and religious tolerance of non-Muslims.

He has used his own wealth to pay fees for poor students, sponsor students to attend college, and he is an advocate for child and women's rights to be respected as stated in the Quran. He has preached against violence in society and against women. Sillah has preached that most of what exists in a true democratic society had existed in Islam long before democracy itself took place in the Western World.[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Reference at allafrica.com".
  2. ^ a b "In Sierra Leone, President Koroma Commends Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat". Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2013-12-12.
  3. ^ a b c d "Profile: The Democratic Cleric - The Patriotic Vanguard". 30 September 2013.
  4. ^ "Freetown Chief Imam Hosts President Koroma, Others - The Patriotic Vanguard". 9 September 2013.
  5. ^ "Reference at allafrica.com".