Global Times

Muslim clerics begin training

▶ Xinjiang classes to guide them to resist extremism

- By Liu Caiyu

Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region recently held training classes for Muslim clerics, which aims to guide them to resist extremism and contribute to regional stability and prosperity.

The class was held in Urumqi, the capital city of Xinjiang, on January 1, according to a statement released on the website of the United Front Work Department of the Communist Party of China Central Committee on Tuesday.

Muslim clerics are required to have comprehens­ive understand­ing of Xinjiang’s stability and developmen­t, and the statement said the religion department should strengthen their politics, law and religious education.

The training sessions require the Muslim clerics to study traditiona­l Chinese traditiona­l, the history of the country and the Party, especially the modern history of the country and of Xinjiang. They also need to learn Putonghua.

Muslim clerics should be the model of patriotism, law abiding, national unity and kindness, and should resist extreme ideas, promote harmony and lead religious believers to embrace national unity as much as their own eyes, and cherish national unity as much as their own lives, the statement said.

Xinjiang is home to 24,400 mosques and about 29,000 Muslim clerics. Since 2001, the State Administra­tion for Religious Affairs has held 12 training sessions for Muslim clerics, and has trained approximat­ely 500 clerics for the region, according to a white paper issued by the State Council in 2016.

“Muslim clerics generally refer to imams, who are respected by Muslims. Trained imams can help tens of thousands of believers nurture patriotism and national unity,” Gao Zhanfu, a vice dean of the Beijing-based China Islamic Institute, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

The China Islamic Associatio­n is about to compile textbooks for Muslim clerics around the country, which will further standardiz­e their training. Professors who specialize in a certain subject are usually invited to train the clerics, Gao noted.

The Central Institute of Socialism also frequently organized trainings for the clerics from Xinjiang, which covered five subjects – Putonghua, Chinese culture, Islam sinicizati­on, de-extremism and a united Xinjiang of all ethnic minorities. Those sessions usually last four months, professors from the school told the Global Times on Wednesday.

To strengthen the awareness of cultivatin­g Muslim clerics, the China Islamic Associatio­n recently enacted a code of conduct for them during a meeting in Beijing. The news was published on the associatio­n’s website on Monday.

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