IQNA

Online Quran Teaching, Booming Business in Pakistan

8:31 - February 05, 2016
News ID: 3458984
TEHRAN (IQNA) – Pakistan has become a global hub for online Islamic training courses as more and more people in western countries become interested in studying the Quran.

The business of teaching from thousands of miles away, using new technologies such as Skype, is booming because there are not enough mosques and Muslim seminaries in the West to meet demand, according to Pakistani entrepreneurs.

"People in the US, Canada and UK are always telling us: We do have mosques, we do have proper setups, but we can never find one-on-one lessons,” Usman Zahoor Ahmed, 32, owner of ReadQuranOnline.com said, the Pakistan Today reported.

"And in this current atmosphere, they want to know what kind of teaching is being provided to their children — they want the lessons in their home, where mom or father is always watching,” he added.

Online Quran Teaching, Booming Business in Pakistan

Ahmed started his call center eight years ago with only two employees and just a few students. Now, however, he employs 22 teachers who work all night teaching 320 students, about 40 per cent of whom live in the United States.

According to Ahmed’s brother Saqib, who helps run the center from the basement of Ahmed’s house, more than 50 similar centers operate in Pakistan, and at least one has more than 1,000 students.

A teacher at the center, Safeer Ahmed, 20, says, "I already got the education but now feel it’s my service to spread it and teach it to others.”

Although, law enforcement officials in Europe and the United States have warned of the danger of Westerners becoming radicalized online, Ahmed said fears about online radicalization have little to do with legitimate Internet businesses that match students with online teachers for a tour through the "basics” of Islam.

The center offers students a 30-minute lesson five days a week for about $25 a month. Initially, the lessons focus on the proper pronunciation of Quranic verses. There are also pictorial lessons on daily Muslim practice – praying five times, for example. The lessons then move to translating and interpreting the Quran, which requires eight years of daily lessons.

The Ahmeds say they pull in $6,000 to $7,000 a month from their 320 students. They pay teachers $100 to $220 a month — or $1,200 to $2,640 annually.

Online Islamic teaching centers are on the rise but Ahmed doesn’t mind the increased competition.

"There will be 3 billion Muslims around the world [by 2100], and they are all our market,” he said. "All you need is a computer, microphone, headset and Skype.”

Shaukat Ullah Khattak, a religion scholar who runs a seminary in northwestern Pakistan, said such courses fulfill the spiritual needs of students and teachers.

"It’s mandatory for every Muslim to learn the Quran and spread it to others. Online Quranic academies are doing great service . . . and kids in the West are now taking a keen interest,” Khattak said.

However, Edgar Hopida, spokesperson for the Islamic Society of North America, said Muslims in the United States are focused on building their own educational institutions.

"We don’t see people turning to Pakistan or other countries to learn the Quran,” Hopida said. "It’s easy to learn here in America.”

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