The National - News

FATWA COUNCIL TO BRING CLARITY AND TOLERANCE

▶ The new Emirates Council for Fatwas will make discrimina­tion against others forbidden under Islam in the UAE, and unify the fatwa to deter any extremist or misleading statements, writes Shireena Al Nowais

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The UAE’s new religious council will tackle the “crisis of fatwa” facing the Muslim world by providing clarity and a tolerant voice of authority, its members said.

The Emirates Council for Fatwas was formed by the UAE Cabinet on Sunday. The Islamic scholars who make up the council are responsibl­e for issuing rulings for the millions of Muslims in the country. Council members told The

National that among the first acts will be to make it religiousl­y forbidden to discrimina­te against others based on religion or creed, a follow-up to the 2015 law issued by President Sheikh Khalifa.

Under the chairmansh­ip of Sheikh Abdullah bin Bayyah, chairman of the Forum for Promoting Peace in Muslim Societies and vice-president of the Internatio­nal Union of Muslim Scholars in Mauritania, the council will regulate religious fatwas issued in the UAE.

Fatwas at present are issued by the Fatwa Department at the General Authority of Islamic Affairs and Endowments (Awqaf).

Muftis answer queries related to worship and creed, social relations, business transactio­ns, family relations and women’s issues. They receive more than 1,000 calls a day – a number that triples during Ramadan.

But the new council’s role is different, said Sheikh Omar Al Darei, member of the council and director of the Fatwa Department at Awqaf.

“Our department will remain as the authority to respond to these questions,” he said.

The council, he said, will be the umbrella authority under which all national fatwas fall. The council will be concerned with responding and issuing fatwas that concern the general public – mainly related to government and business issues rather than personal or social.

Previously, there was no such authority in the UAE, instead there was only a committee under the authority that responded to the religious questions of institutio­ns. This responsibi­lity will now fall to the council.

“[So] fatwas concerned with organ donations, medical practices, charity and others that concern general public,” Sheikh Al Darei said. “Also fatwas that reflect the country’s position on modern issues, to avoid confusion.”

Sheikh Al Darei said the UAE was one the first countries to issue an anti-discrimina­tion law, criminalis­ing all forms on the grounds of religion, caste, creed, doctrine, race, colour or ethnic origin.

“The council will confront such abuses and sectarian intoleranc­e by releasing official religious opinions on these matters and forbid discrimina­tion,” he said.

The council will be responsibl­e for furthering that message in a religious capacity and to represent the UAE’s tolerant approach to Islam.

The UAE’s religious representa­tion is managed by Awqaf – a moderate and tolerant institutio­n, Sheikh Al Darei said.

“The UAE religious message is always one of tolerance.

“The authority and its preachers and publicatio­ns and all its sectors and institutio­ns have been fixed by the leadership because the principles are those of tolerance, respect, forgivenes­s and mercy. In this country people of all religions pray side by side. The mosque is next to the church and there is no place for extremists and intoleranc­e,” he said.

Another goal of the council is to unify the fatwa, Sheikh Al Darei said. Extremists, he said, have tried to use fatwas as a way to cause disruption.

“An authorised fatwa centre that represents the UAE is crucial,” he said.

Dr Mohammed Al Kaabi, chairman of Abu Dhabi’s General Authority of Islamic Affairs and Endowments, said a unified council would prevent unauthoris­ed rulings from being issued.

“Unifying and regulating fatwa practices in the UAE will prevent personal or improvised fatwas and rebut extremist and terrorist fatwas, in keeping with the leading role played by the UAE in combating terrorism and radicalisa­tion,” he said.

The council members are Islamic scholars from across the UAE and indeed the world.

Shamma Al Dhaheri, 30, is the only Emirati woman and one of only two women on the council, the other being Prof Amany Burhanuddi­n, head of the Indonesian Council of Scholars for Women and Youth.

Ms Al Dhaheri was one of the first batch of seven Emirati high school pupils selected to study in Morocco, when she enrolled at the Mohammed V University in 2006.

Now in the third year of her PhD, she found out she had been made a council member only a few days before the announceme­nt. “It is a big responsibi­lity and a huge addition to knowledge and experience to anyone in the field. I am very grateful and proud to have been chosen.”

Ms Al Dhaheri, who is also head of the preaching section at Awqaf, believes errant use of social media by extremists is a serious threat to modern Islam and hopes that the council will help to regulate and monitor people who issue misleading fatwas deemed contrary to the UAE’s moderate approach. “Social media is an open field and there are many individual­s who use it to attempt to disrupt our security and give false informatio­n about Islam.

“We hope the council will introduce mechanisms and regulation­s that will stop unauthoris­ed individual­s from giving out misleading fatwas through social media.”

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 ?? Victor Besa and Pawan Singh / The National ?? Shamma Al Dhaheri, top, is the only Emirati woman and one of two women on the Fatwa Council, of which Sheikh Omar Al Darei above, is also a member
Victor Besa and Pawan Singh / The National Shamma Al Dhaheri, top, is the only Emirati woman and one of two women on the Fatwa Council, of which Sheikh Omar Al Darei above, is also a member
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 ?? Silvia Razgova / The National ?? The General Authority of Islamic Affairs and Endowments fatwas will now come under the authority of the new council
Silvia Razgova / The National The General Authority of Islamic Affairs and Endowments fatwas will now come under the authority of the new council

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