Who is Dr.Amrani
Monday, 20 June 2005

Who is Dr. Amrani?

ImageMohammed Amrani Hanchi was born on December 11, 1943 in Rabat, Morocco, and spent his youth in the same city. He got his first bachelor's degree in Physical sciences in October 1970. In March 1974 he flew to the United States to pursue his graduate and post-graduate education.

Dr. Amrani first worked as an assistant teacher of Physics during 1971 at the University Mohammed V. He then joined the Administration of Civil Aviation as a civil servant from January 1973 to March 1974. But Amrani's biggest working experience was in the field of Meteorology:

  • January 1975 - October 1981. He took on many responsibilities in the National Meteorolical Service in Rabat, Morocco.
  • February - June 1985. Teached Climatology at the Ecole Mohammadia d'Ingenieurs in Rabat, Morocco.
  • October 1984 - October 1986. Assistant Director of a Moroccan-American project to artificially induce rain and snow over the Atlas mountains in Morocco.
  • November 1986 - June 1989. Professor of Meteorology at the University of King Abdul-Aziz in Saudi Arabia.
  • July 1989 - June 1991. Director of a Project conducted by the Worlwide Organization of Meteorology to artificially induce rain over the Assir region in the south of Saudi Arabia.
Dr. Amrani developed expertise in several domains that range from Dynamic Meteorology, Dynamics of liquids and fluids, Physics of clouds, etc. to Epistemology and General relativity.

Currently, Dr. Amrani devotes all his efforts to the field of Da'wa, i.e. to spread the word of Allah to the whole mankind, and to develop new ways to this end.

  • 1976 - 1981, Rabat. Secretary General of the "Da'wa ila-llah" Association, where he met with many great muslim scholars like Dr. Taqi-Eddin Al Hilali and Abu Bakr Al Jazairi, and benefited from their numerous lectures specially in the field of Hadith.
  • 1974-1975, 1976-1977, 1981-1984, Talahassee - Florida. Was actively involved in the Da'wa among muslim and non-muslim students at the University.
  • 1986 - 1989, Saudi Arabia. Wroked with Sheikh Abd Elamjid Zindani in the field of "Scientific Miracles in Qur'an", and authored the book "Scientific foundations of the Qur'anic assertions".
  • Currently, Morocco. Dr. Amrani is devoting his full time to write the series of books on the "Construction of Qur'anic Civilization", some of which are presented in this site. He also publishes articles and gives lectures on the same subject from time to time.
  • September 25, 1998. Presented a lecture on "Education in Morocco: The Featureless Future", in the British Council, Rabat, Morocco.
  • April 8-14, 1995. Presented two papers to the Training Session on Islamization of Knowledge, held by the IIIT and ISECSO in Rabat, Morocco: A Muhaddiths Crisis, or a Methodology Crisis? 30pp. An Interpretation Crisis, or a Civilizationist reading Crisis? 23 pp.
  • July 1991 - January 1997. Authored books on the "Scientific Assertions of Qur'an and Sunnah", where he states the validity of these assertions and shows the deficiency of many modern theories of Epistemology.
  • February 1988. Presented a paper on the meteorological forecats to the Thenth Conference of Computer, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
  • October 1987. Participated in three research projects and presented a paper to the First International Conference on the "Scientific Miracles of Qur'an and Sunnah", in Islamabad, Pakistan.
  • November 1985. Participated in a workshop on Physics of Clouds and Meteorology, held from November 20 to December 20, 1985 by the International Center of Theoretical Physics in Trista, Italy.
  • November 1985. Participated in the preparation of the National Meteorology's contribution to the Conference on Drought: Water Management and Food Production, held in Agadir, Morocco, November 21-24, 1985.
  • August 1985 - November 1986. Participated in the preparation of Morocco's contribution to the International Campaign to study the characteristics of Gibraltar's Waters.
  • April 15-17, 1985. Prepared and contributed to the preparatory meeting of the North African's Atlas of Winds Project, held by the International Organization of Meteorology, in Algiers.
Last Updated ( Monday, 11 July 2005 )