Rome's Envoy to
Saudi Arabia Converts to Islam
1. Rome's Envoy to Saudi Arabia
Converts to Islam by Luke Baker, CNN, November 26 2001 CE
ROME (Reuters) -- Italy's ambassador to Saudi
Arabia has converted to Islam, the second time in seven years that an envoy of
Rome to the land of Mecca has adopted its religion.
Torquato Cardilli, a career diplomat from
overwhelmingly Roman Catholic Italy, revealed his decision to Saudi newspapers
Saturday, his 59th birthday. Italian diplomatic sources confirmed the
announcement Monday.
His official conversion was made on the eve of
the Islamic holy fasting month of Ramadan, which began on Nov. 16 in Saudi
Arabia. Cardilli himself could not be reached for comment but an employee at his
embassy in Riyadh confirmed the reports.
The Saudi embassy in Rome said it planned a
statement later. An embassy spokeswoman said there was no record of any Saudi
ambassador to Italy ever converting to Catholicism.
Italy's Foreign Ministry had no comment.
The conversion of Cardilli -- who is married
with two children -- follows the move to Islam made by Mario Scialoja, Italian
ambassador to the Arab kingdom in 1994-95, who has since left the foreign
service and is head of Italy's Muslim League.
Scialoja's decision came as a shock, made while
he was Rome's permanent representative to the United Nations in New York and
long before he was posted to Riyadh.
Cardilli's change of faith follows years of
study of Islam. A graduate in oriental culture and languages from the University
of Naples, Cardilli has spent much of his 33-year diplomatic career in the
Muslim world.
Following postings in Sudan, Syria, Iraq and
Libya, he took over the embassy in Riyadh in October last year. Cardilli has
also served as ambassador to Albania and Tanzania.
His personal move comes at a sensitive time,
with Italy a member of the U.S.-led coalition fighting the hard-line Islamic
Taliban movement in Afghanistan and barely two months after Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi offended the Muslim world by saying Western Christian
civilization was superior to Islam.
Corriere della Sera newspaper said Cardilli had
been recalled to Rome "for consultations."
Some 3,000 to 5,000 Italians have converted to
Islam from Catholicism in recent years, according to figures from the Union of
Islamic Organizations and Communities.
A spokesman for the Italy-based group said it
welcomed Cardilli's entry into the Muslim community, saying of his conversion:
"The ways of the Lord are infinite."
Source: http://www.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/meast/11/26/religion.islam.italy.reut
2. Italian Envoy Reverts to Islam
by Javed Hassan, Arab News, November 26 2001 CE
RIYADH, 26 November — The Italian ambassador to
Saudi Arabia, Torquato Cardeilli, has reverted to Islam, the Italian Embassy
here announced yesterday.
Cardeilli, who speaks Arabic, is the first
ambassador to revert to Islam in Saudi Arabia, home to Islam’s holiest sites in
Makkah and Madinah, according to a dawa center in Batha which handles Muslim
reversions.
Nouh ibn Nasser, director of the Batha center,
said the Italian converted on Nov. 15, the day before the start of the holy
month of Ramadan.
"He came to the office and read the two
testimonies (necessary to declare faith) and then prayed with us," Nasser said.
Cardeilli, 59, was not available for comment as
he left Riyadh to Rome on Saturday.
But in a press statement, the ambassador
expressed his happiness over his reversion to Islam. He said he was fully
convinced about the truthfulness of Islam through his regular reading of God’s
final revelation, the Holy Qur’an.
During his 34-year diplomatic career, Cardeilli,
a graduate in linguistics and oriental civilization, has been posted to several
Arab countries and took up his current post in Riyadh in November 2000.
Cardeilli was born in 1942. He is married and
father of two. He was first appointed at the Italian Foreign Ministry’s
political office in 1967 and previously worked as a diplomat in Sudan, Syria,
Iraq, Libya, Albania and Tanzania.
In September, Italian Prime Minister Silvio
Berlusconi sparked outrage across the Arab and Muslim world with remarks over
the West’s "superiority" over Islam.
Berlusconi insisted his comments were
misinterpreted by a hostile left-wing Italian press and has since outlined his
"deep respect for Islam" as a great religion.
The dawa center’s Nouh said that on average
three to four people come to his office daily to embrace Islam, and the number
rises to five during Ramadan.
Twenty similar offices operate in Riyadh and
there are many more in the other cities throughout the Kingdom.
For his part, Mohammed Abbas Afesh, of the
World Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY), told Arab News that his organization has
recently distributed a great deal of Islamic literature in English among the
diplomatic missions in Riyadh, including the Italian Embassy.
"We also arranged lectures on various aspects
of Islam. As a result of this effort, a few people, including some women,
embraced Islam," Abbas said, adding that the events of Sept. 11 had sparked a
great deal of interest in Islam among Christians.
"They want to know about the concept of jihad
and other relevant matters. Overall, they are receptive to the message of
Islam."
Source:
http://www.arabnews.com/Article.asp?ID=10826