|
Al-Resalah ((アラビア語:قناة الرسالة); ''The Message'') is an Arabic language satellite television channel "to present true Islam".〔owner Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal during the station’s launch〕〔 It is funded by Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia, recorded in all over the United Arab Emirates to Morocco and Kuwait, and broadcast from Cairo. Al-Resalah has slots on the Arabsat and Nilesat satellites, serving primarily the Middle East, but North Africa and Europe as well. The General Manager of Al Resalah was Tareq Al-Suwaidan, a former host at the Middle East Broadcasting Center (MBC) and a leading member of the Kuwaiti Muslim Brotherhood.〔(Statement of Richard A. Clarke Before the United States Senate Banking Committee ) 22 October 2003〕 Tareq Al-Suwaidan was fired from his job in August 2013 by the channel's owner, Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, because of Al-Suwaidan's support for the Moslem Brotherhood. The head of Al Resalah’s programming in Egypt is Ahmed Abu Haiba, the original producer of Amr Khaled’s first television program.〔(Fatwas and Feminism: Women, Religious Authority, and Islamic TV ) By Sharon Otterman, TBS 16, 2006〕 The channel's advisory committee includes Sheikh Abdullah Bin Sulaiman Al-Manai (Senior Ulema Commission, Saudi Arabia); Dr. Abdallah Omar Naseef (president of the Muslim World Congress); Dr. Hamed Ahmad Al-Refaie (secretary-general of the MWC and president of the International Islamic Forum for Dialogue); Dr. Abdullah Al-Muslih (Commission on Scientific Signs in the Quran and Sunnah); Sheikh Ali Al-Nashwan (executive manager of the prince's Kingdom Holding Company's Humanitarian Division, and religious advisor to the prince); Dr. Abdulaziz Al-Askar (former head of the media department at Imam Muhammad ibn Saud Islamic University); and Dr. Walid Arab Hashem (Shura Council member).〔The Saudi Gazette, March 7, 2006 cited by (Memri )〕 Al Resalah’s website features a list of fatwas by Egypt’s famous preacher Yusuf Al Qaradawi approving music videos, SMS chatting and hosting non-veiled women on its shows.〔(Religious broadcasters avoid confrontation ) by Ayat Basma, MEB Journal, Jan Feb 2008〕 IslamOnline noted that Iqraa TV was the first Islamic channel created, followed by others such as Al-Fajr TV and Al-Manar, but that Al-Resalah had "taken things a step further, pushing forth into the wider realm of entertainment media". Al-Suwaidan too speaks of a nascent revival that has started not only in Muslim countries, but also within Muslim minorities, and that Al-Resalah hopes to contribute to.〔(Hold Your Breath for a Coming Resalah ) By Sarah Sharaf, IslamOnline Mar. 16, 2006〕 In February 2008 al-Suwaidan explained that Al-Resalah began with a wide range of programmes, but in the end concentrated on religious features, aiming to be within the top ten by Ramadan 2008. He claimed that after only one and a half years, Al-Resalah ranks at 18 out of 400 Arab satellite channels and at number one of religious channels outside of Saudi Arabia. The target audience is Arab, young and female: according to al-Suwaidan, 70% of the viewers are women〔(“Islamic and yet modern television” Tareq Al-Suwaidan, producer of Al-Risala ) interviewed by Daniela Conte, 5 Feb 2008〕 (60% according to Abu Haiba〔). Some members of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood have expressed enthusiasm for the station.〔(The new Muslim TV: media-savvy, modern, and moderate ) Ursula Lindsey, The Christian Science Monitor, May 2, 2006〕 MEMRI, an organization often critical of Islamic media, has accused al-Reslah of airing anti-Western, anti-Semitic, and pro- Al Qaida content. == References == 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Al-Resalah Satellite TV」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|