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・ Ed Lee (politician)
・ Ed Leede
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・ Ed Lennon
・ Ed Lennox
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Ed Husain
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・ Ed J. Davenport and Harriett Davenport
・ Ed J. Pinegar
・ Ed Jackson (rugby player)
・ Ed Jagels
・ Ed James (disc jockey)
・ Ed James (writer)
・ Ed Janiszewski
・ Ed Janus


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Ed Husain : ウィキペディア英語版
Ed Husain

Ed Husain〔http://www.quilliamfoundation.org/ed-husain.html〕 (born 25 December 1974) is a writer, adjunct senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York,〔http://www.cfr.org/experts/religion-religion-and-politics-syria/ed-husain/b15381〕 and senior advisor at the Tony Blair Faith Foundation. Husain is the author of ''The Islamist'', a book about political Islamism and an account of his five years as an Islamist activist. Husain cofounded, with Maajid Nawaz, the counter-extremism organization the Quilliam Foundation. He has also worked for HSBC Private Bank and the British Council. In 2014, he was appointed to the Freedom of Religion or Belief Advisory Group of the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office. He is also a member of the Independent Review Panel for the Global Community Engagement and Resilience Fund (GCERF).
== Early life ==
Husain was born and brought up in the East End of London, in a Bangladeshi Muslim family. Husain's father was born in British India and his mother in Bangladesh, from the region of Sylhet.〔Irfan Yusuf (27 July 2007) (The Islamist ) On Line Opinion (Australia). Retrieved on 16 February 2009.〕 His father arrived in the United Kingdom in 1961, and started a small Indian takeaway business in Limehouse.〔Ann McFerran (10 August 2008) (''Best of Times, Worst of Times: Ed Husain'' ) Times Online. Retrieved on 15 February 2009.〕 Husain's parents followed a spiritual form of Islam based on Sufi traditions,〔Dominic Casciani (24 May 2007) (Inside the jihadi worldview ) BBC News (BBC). Retrieved on 15 February 2009.〕 led by Saheb Qibla Fultali.〔〔Piers Paul Read (7 April 2008) (''How I Found Allah and Quit the Jihad'' ) The American Conservative. Retrieved on 15 February 2009.〕
In his early years, Husain was brought up in Limehouse and attended a local primary school called the Sir William Borough School, and he attended a predominantly Bangladeshi and Muslim secondary school called Stepney Green School.〔The Islamist. By Ed Husain. pp. 288. London, Penguin Books, 2007.〕 During his years in secondary school Husain was an outsider. He rejected the Bengali gang culture present in the school, and was sometimes oppressed by other students.〔Madeleine Bunting (12 May 2007) (''We were the brothers'' ) Guardian. Retrieved on 15 February 2009.〕 Husain attended the Brick Lane Mosque in his early years (the mosque follows a movement belonging to a Sufi order). He later drifted away from his parents' teachings, and, at the age of sixteen, was encouraged by a student to attend classes at the East London Mosque, and later joined the Young Muslim Organisation (YMO), part of the Islamic Forum Europe.

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