Alfons Teipen was born in Germany, studied at the
universities of Freiburg and Tübingen, and moved to the U.S. in 1989 in an
exchange program between the University of Tübingen and Temple University. Alfons
and received his PhD in religion from Temple University.
Alfons has taught religion at Furman University since
1997. Alfons’ academic interest underwent
a shift from Catholic Theology to Islamic Studies and he is interested in the
comparative study of religion, interreligious dialogue, Muslim - Christian
relations, and women in Islam.
When I questioned Alfons about his dedication to the beret,
he gave me this beautiful response:
“I had bought the beret in Firenze, Italy, in the early
2000s, but had worn it only a few times before it spent most of its time in the
closet. That all changed with the Iraq
war: when France refused to participate in the invasion of Iraq (after 9/11 the
US had falsely accused Iraq of producing weapons of mass destruction in support
of al-Qaida), many Americans became upset with France for not supporting the
war."
"My then-neighbor was one of those folks, who
– in one conversation with me- proposed that the French needed to be punished
for their non-support. This is the time period when Americans began boycotting French wine, and proposed renaming “French fries” into “freedom fries.”
What better reason to wear a beret?
Thanks Alfons
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