The Shoura Council of Saudi Arabia oppose a law promoting respect for other religions

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According to the highest islamic authority, and the Shoura (Legislative) Council in Saudi Arabia, it's a sin to respect other religions, and any muslim that would say otherwise should be killed as an apostate. 

In other words, muslims are not allowed to consider us more than kafers, and sons of apes and pigs. 

But what about the Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC) United Nations' resolution A/C.3/62/L.35, the famous "Combating defamation and non respect of religions," and their demand, after their outrage of Geert Wilders Fitna movie, for another United Nation and Human Rights' resolution against insults to religions? 

Hahahaaaaaaaaa, if this wasn't a respectful site, I could've told you what to do with it. But let's say it politely for those who didn't get it: Read my lips.  

Of Fatwas and Infidels

An article writen by an arab and published in Al-Arabiya (owned by Saudi Arabia).

Abeer Mishkhas 

Sunday, 30 March 2008

The Shoura Council last week defeated a proposal to adopt a law promoting respect for other religions and religious symbols. The proposal that would have had the blessings of the Arab League was opposed by 77 members and supported by 33.

In his reason for voting against the proposal, one member told Al-Watan newspaper that the negative effects might outweigh the positive ones as it would give legality to nonmonotheistic religions and consequently it would allow the building of houses of worship for those religions in Muslim countries.

The proposal was surely influenced by the Danish cartoon crisis that recently resurfaced. If we look at the consequences of approving such a proposal, we will see that it would have been an important step forward. It simply proposes respect for other religions and tolerance for those who practice them. The proposal suggests simply that people in the world need to learn to live together and to accept each other for what they are and that people must also remember that respect and tolerance work both ways.

A few days earlier, there was a report that Sheikh Abdul Rahman Al-Barrak had issued a fatwa against two Saudi writers, Yousef Aba Al-Khail and Abdullah bin Bejad. Their articles which were published in Al-Riyadh newspaper questioned the Sunni Muslim view that is standard in Saudi Arabia that adherents of other faiths should be considered unbelievers. Al-Barrak called them infidels and said they should repent or be killed: “Anyone who claims this has refuted Islam and should be tried so that he can take it back. If not, he should be killed as an apostate from the religion of Islam,” Sheikh Barrak was quoted by Reuters as saying in his March 14 religious edict which was published on his website. Let us be clear — the two articles were entitled “The Other in the Islamic Balance” and “The Islam of the Shariah and the Islam of Struggle.” Their thrust was that Islam does not denounce non-Muslims as infidels. One writer argued that early Islam did not consider people of different beliefs to be “infidels” as we now understand the word. He cites Qur’anic verses that support his argument. He reacted to the fatwa by saying that its aim was to prevent him from stating his opinion and to frighten people away from interpreting the text themselves. The other writer argued that Islam at its core was a peaceful religion that does not hate “the other” and that it is “merciful toward all mankind.” He added that people have used religion down through the ages as a tool in disputes in order to give themselves and their beliefs sanctity.

The fact that those writers offered a new understanding of a difficult issue is good; at least it opened up the subject for discussion and one expected the discussion to be civilized. Unfortunately as has become the habit of some, their only response is to denounce the holders of opposing views as infidels — no reasoned argument, no logic, no historical precedents. Simply denounce. It is sad that coverage of this matter in the Saudi papers has been so feeble; it went unreported apart from a few comments. Writers should be aware of the danger of such a fatwa and should leap to the defense of others, even if they do not agree with what the other writers have said.

What the Shoura member and the two writers propose amounts to the same thing — respect for, and acceptance of, other religions and communities. This is something that the sheikh evidently failed to understand. For him it is blasphemy even to suggest something different, and his only answer was a fatwa that was a death sentence. One of the writers has said that the sheikh is not representative of the mainstream. And while he may not be particularly influential, he could certainly “inspire” one of his followers to carry out the sentence of death. One of the writers says he is going to sue the sheikh even though he acknowledges the futility of doing so.

The problem is not simply with one sheikh and one fatwa; it is the tendency to rule out discussion and argument altogether. That is why this is no trivial, pedantic internal discussion. There are wider implications. In an atmosphere of menacing threats, it is hard to see how serious discussions of issues can flourish and, at the same time, we see very clearly the central difficulty that Saudi society has with the outside world.

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5 Comments

hal said:

You know, it really does not matter what the sheik says, many Muslims will say to us! And, in a way, they are correct. What really matters is that the Koran says MURDER and etc. And it says it clearly. When you talk to a Muslim, like Naseem, they will tell you that "just one Muslim said 'kill apostates'". And in this way they dodge the fact that they must obey the Koran, and the call to murder is very definitive in any language the Koran is written in. "they will say, " well, sheik so and so said it, but that doesn't make it truth. Oh yes it does! Any idiot can read the Koran and see whether or not Sheik so and so is right or not! and, in this case, he is 100% correct, and no one will be able to argue with him - but, even before he spoke - every Muslim with an IQ over 90 knew that what he said was the clear God's truth - God says that the Murder of innocents is often a good and holy thing to do - and infidels are very very dirty and inferior. And, lets be honest! No one is going to ever change the Koran to be human - it is totally unfixable and to say otherwise is madness based on the most ridiculous wishful thinking that ever existed!! Hear that ?

Lex said:

Should I wish a plague on the House of Saud? It is already infected and the prognosis is quite grim. One might even say that the patient has already died and gives only the appearance of life.

Should we have expected anything else? Of course not, although various Islamophiles have been telling me how open Saudi is to other religions. Yeah, right.

The other day, during a radio interview with me, Robert Spencer talked about MTP's last words, relating to cleansing the Arab peninsula of all but Muslims.

BTW, have you heard about Dr. Wafa's situation right now? In America!

Marie Author Profile Page said:

It does not matter what "Islamic Scholars" state, the majority stills says we are Kaffirs and sons of apes and pigs.

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by ibn Misr published on March 30, 2008 6:20 AM.

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