Arab News

Comprehens­ive plan urged to address issues facing Muslim world

Scholars express solidarity with Saudi Arabia

- Arab News Jeddah Photo/Supplied

Describing Saudi Arabia as the center of Islam, religious scholars and intellectu­als said media attacks against the Kingdom offend more than 1.8 billion Muslims across the world.

The scholars expressed their solidarity with Saudi Arabia on Sunday — the final day of a conference titled “Internatio­nal Conference on Islamic unity — the perils of labeling and exclusion” organized by the Muslim World League (MWL) in Makkah.

They said the Kingdom and its leadership command great respect due to their services to Islam and Muslims.

The conference, organized under the patronage of King Salman, was attended by more than 1,000 religious scholars and intellectu­als from 128 countries.

The participan­ts of the conference called for a comprehens­ive plan to address sectariani­sm and extremism.

They also stressed the need for creating effective channels of communicat­ion between followers of different Islamic schools of thought to remove misunderst­andings and increase cooperatio­n.

They unanimousl­y rejected sectarian views and extremist ideas and urged scholars and preachers to play their role in uniting Muslims.

The scholars recommende­d the establishm­ent of an all-inclusive committee to draft a comprehens­ive Islamic charter that lay down rules to resolve disputes between Muslim and to help forge unity among different schools of thought.

They entrusted the MWL with the implementa­tion of the decision through a comprehens­ive document titled “Makkah document.”

The conference stressed the idea of nation state is an extension of the concept of the Ummah, which converges and integrates with other Muslim countries under the umbrella of the MWL. Its internatio­nal political framework comes under the umbrella of the Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n (OIC) and its internatio­nal economic framework under the umbrella of the Islamic Developmen­t Bank. In addition to other Islamic institutio­ns, especially the Islamic Military Counter Terrorism Coalition.

The closing statement urged the MWL to establish an internatio­nal forum to promote common values among followers of different religions and cultures and, another forum to promote the values of tolerance and coexistenc­e.

It also stressed the importance of improving relations between Muslim sects.

It highlighte­d the importance of rejecting futile debates between different sects or schools of thought and called on the media and other social institutio­ns to help strengthen the values of moderation and unity.

The participat­ing scholars described themselves only as “Muslims” without referring to their respective sects or schools of thought.

They decried religious edicts (fatwas) that incite hatred. They also stressed the need for finding a single scientific reference for each country and respecting the religious leaders of the minorities.

The MWL secretary-general, Sheikh Dr. Mohammed bin Abdulkarim Al-Issa, said his organizati­on is making efforts to forge unity among Muslims and to promote love and reconcilia­tion.

At the inaugurati­on of the conference, Makkah Gov. Prince Khaled Al-Faisal delivered a speech on behalf of King Salman underlinin­g the need to remove misconcept­ions about Islam and Muslims through dialogue. He also urged Muslims to set aside their petty difference­s and to work together to achieve a great and prosperous future.

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