DUBAI - Denouncing misguided religious fanaticism and terrorism, Muslim scholars
and religious leaders who recently attended a major world Islamic conference
in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), jointly called
for the issuing of a unified fatwa (edict) on pressing issues in order to avoid
the misuse of the religion.
Attended by more than 500 delegates, of which one-third were women, the conference
was aimed at developing a framework to bring Muslims back to the original source
of Islam. The recommendations are to be submitted later this month to authorities
to ensure their enforcement in the Islamic world.
"We have all agreed that the Muslim nation should now follow the guidelines
of the Prophet and rectify its mistakes according to the main principles of
Islam. ... This should be agreed upon by all Muslims and proves that Islam is
a wide-ranging religion that takes into consideration different and diverse
opinions that satisfy local needs," said Mansoor al-Minhali, director of
Islamic Affairs at the U.A.E. Ministry of Justice and Islamic Affairs.
The call for a unified fatwa at the conference late last month was prompted
by the controversy over the issuance of public fatwas permitting the killing
of foreigners in Iraq and elsewhere by individuals.
Last year, a prominent Muslim preacher from Qatar issued a fatwa allowing the
killing of Israeli pregnant women and their unborn babies on the basis that
the babies could grow up to join the Israeli Army. He also said that killing
"all Americans, civilian or military" in Iraq was allowed.
Condemning such fatwas, the scholars also emphasized that the declaration of
Islamic legal opinions and fatwas should be left in the hands of experts.
"Anyone reading a couple of verses of the Koran installs himself as an
'imam' [religious leader] and issues fatwas. ... Our nations are paying the
price," said Issam Beshir, minister of Islamic endowments in Sudan, whose
country figures on the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism
"Many individual fatwas were issued, only to give the enemies of Islam pretexts
to distort its pure image," he added.
A fatwa clarifies the Islamic ruling in an answer given to a question or a
set of questions usually related to an Islamic issue. It does not make any difference
whether the questioner is a person or a group of persons.
Experts at the conference explained that issuing fatwas is an arduous task
and not every individual has the right to issue them and make pronouncements
on matters.
"This is because the one who commits himself to issuing fatwas acts on behalf
of Allah's Messengers and Prophets," said the scholars.
Added Mansoor: "Fatwas should not be taken from any unqualified individuals,
such as the individual who appears on satellite channels and issues fatwas according
to what the audience wants to hear."
"In crucial issues that affect society as a whole, such as medical, financial,
and political, the fatwa will be left to a council who will issue a collective
declaration of Islamic opinion according to the Sharia," he said.
Mohammed Saeed Ramadan al-Booti, a renowned Muslim scholar, pointed out: "We
call for unification of our word and unification of our authority that issues
fatwas. Unfortunately there are a lot of activities that swim against the current.
The more authorities we have, the more negative effects we have, including chaos."
There have been other campaigns against such fatwas. A petition sent to the
United Nations by over 2,500 Muslim intellectuals from 23 countries has called
for an international treaty to ban the use of religion for incitement to violence.
It also calls on the UN Security Council to set up a tribunal to try "the
theologians of terror." Most of the signatories are from Saudi Arabia and
other Gulf states plus Iraq, Jordan, and Palestine.
Hundreds of Arab writers and academics are collecting more signatures to the
petition, including Jawad Hashem, a former Iraqi minister of planning, and Alafif
al- Akdhar, a leading Tunisian writer and academic.
The signatories also described those who use religion for inciting violence
as "the sheikhs of death" and asked the UN to order its member states
to stop broadcasting the "mad musings of the theologians of terror."
The scholars also emphasized the importance of addressing the issue of the
association of Islam with terrorism through government institutions, the education
system, and all sectors of society.
Calling those who interpret Islam for violent purposes a "deviant"
group, the delegates called it a distortion of the religion and refuted Western
charges that Islam fosters extremism and terrorism. Such charges have intensified
since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.
Some Muslim countries are in fact fighting their own war on domestic terrorism,
embodied in groups of Islamist militants who regard local regimes as un-Islamic.
"It is now necessary that Islamic scholars come forward to make it clear
that Islam has nothing to do with that [the killings]," UAE Assistant Undersecretary
of Islamic Affairs Hamdan al-Mazruwei said.
Added Beshir, the Sudanese minister: "This is a group of people that deviated
in their behavior. They belong [nominally] to the [Prophet] Muhammad's base,
but they do not follow his steps."
Stressing that extremism and meaningless violence are alien to the spirit and
nature of Islam, the experts unanimously condemned the growing trend among a
few misguided elements in Muslim societies of adopting extremism. They pointed
out that Islam does not sanctify anarchy that endangers human lives and destroys
peace.
"Islam has taken the face of an aggressive personality. We are to blame
for all this because there are certain groups that have an extreme attitude
toward Islam and those at the other end who are extremely liberal," said
Dr. Abdulmonim Bellah, a renowned Islamic scholar. "The moderate Muslims,
who are in the mainstream, are not being heard. All this is because Muslims
are not following Islam's original principles."
(Inter Press Service)