The Deputy

The US deputy
Dr. Tarek Elgawhary
Dr. Tarek Elgawhary is a, teacher, writer, and scholar of comparative religions and Islamic studies. He is the founder of the Making Sense of Islam platform dedicated to developing tools to help Muslims connect and be present with their beliefs and daily practices.
Tarek currently serves as the General Director of the Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought (Amman), Professor of Shafi‘I Fiqh at the WISE University, the US representative for the General Secretariat for Fatwa Authorities Worldwide, and the scholar-in-residence of the Islamic Community Center of Potomac (ICCP). In these various capacities he teaches, lectures, and writes about normative Sunni Islam and how it is expressed and practiced in the modern world.
Tarek’s educational background is a bit unorthodox and eclectic. He spent his western education in the space of comparative religions, having earned a BA in comparative religions with a focus on Jewish studies, and an MA in a specialized program focusing on Islam and Hinduism (both from the George Washington University). Tarek’s graduate studies culminated with his PhD, from Princeton University in Islamic law. Tarek was also trained at the al-Azhar Seminary in Cairo, Egypt between 2003-2007 where he studied and was licensed in the traditional Islamic sciences.
In Tarek’s words “I am honored that I received my spiritual training and guidance from the saintly and learned Shaykh ‘Alī Jumu’a Muḥammad ‘Abd al-Wahhāb (b.1952), the former Grand Mufti of Egypt. I studied Islamic law (fiqh) and legal theory (uṣūl al-fiqh) with him as well as the discipline of ṭasawwuf, and I have been his companion for over twenty years.”
an essay by tarek elgawhary
My Life with Mawlana
We live in a complex world where we find competing interests jostling for our attention and loyalty at almost every moment of the day. While I am sure this has always been the case since humankind first lived together in community, what makes the contemporary situation particularly challenging is that these interests do not always stem from the same thought paradigm.
For a person of faith trying their best to hold on to traditional values and practices, this can be extremely confusing and difficult. As a young man growing up in the United States with immigrant parents from Egypt, I always found myself between two paradigms, two ways of life, and two ethical systems.


