Fatwa Against
ISIS
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/more-than-1000-indian-muslim-clerics-sign-fatwa-against-isis_
indian-muslim Clerics Sign
Fatwa Against ISIS
"The acts of the Islamic State are
inhuman and un-Islamic."
The Associated Press
By NIRMALA GEORGE
Posted: 09/09/2015 02:03 PM EDT
NEW DELHI (AP) — More than 1,000 Muslim clerics in India
have ratified a religious ruling that condemns the Islamic State and calls the
extremist group's actions "un-Islamic," a top Indian Muslim leader
said Wednesday.
Religious leaders from hundreds of Islamic mosques,
education institutions and civic groups across India have signed the edict, or
fatwa, saying the actions of the Islamic State group went against the basic
tenets of Islam.
The edict was issued by a leading Mumbai-based cleric,
Mohammed Manzar Hasan Ashrafi Misbahi, and has been signed by the leaders of
all the main mosques in India, which has the world's third-largest Muslim
population.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Indian Muslim cleric Mohammed Manzar
Hasan Ashrafi Misbahi, right speaks with Islamic students at the Ajmeri Masjid
in Mumbai, India, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2015. More than 1,000 Muslim clerics in
India have ratified a religious ruling that condemns the Islamic State and
calls the extremist group's actions "un-Islamic, Misbahi said
Wednesday.(AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)
"The acts of the Islamic State are inhuman and
un-Islamic," Misbahi said by phone from Mumbai. "Islam does not allow
the killing of even an animal. What the Islamic State is doing is damaging to
Islam."
Misbahi said the fatwa — which is around 1,100 pages and
labels the Islamic State group "un-Islamic" — has been sent to the
leaders of more than 50 countries, seeking their endorsement.
Muslim clerics across India will speak to their followers
after prayers on Friday, explaining the contents of the edict and why it is
important to denounce the Islamic State, said Abdul Rehman Anjaria, president
of the Islamic Defense Cyber Cell.
Among prominent supporters of the edict are the chief
clerics of New Delhi's iconic Jama Masjid mosque, as well as the leaders of the
Muslim shrines of Ajmer Dargah and Nizauddin Aulia in northern India and
several Muslim sects.
Anjaria said the Islamic State group was enticing young
people to join by using social media for propaganda and giving a false
impression of Islam.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Indian Muslim students read the holy
Quran at the Ajmeri Masjid in Mumbai, India, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2015.
"There is no doubt the Islamic State has damaged the
image of Islam," he said. "Islam does not allow the killing of people
in the name of religion. What they are doing to women ... Islam teaches us to
respect women."
Over the past few months, Indian authorities have stopped
around two dozen young people from leaving the country to join Islamic State
fighters. The group's extremist ideology has not found many supporters in
India, with officials saying they have evidence that 17 Indians have joined the
Islamic State.
India's 172 million Muslims mostly follow a moderate
version of the religion and have opposed the extreme practices of the Islamic
State group and al-Qaida. Muslims constitute about 14 percent of India's
population of nearly 1.3 billion.
Fatwa Against
ISIS
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/more-than-1000-indian-muslim-clerics-sign-fatwa-against-isis_
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/more-than-1000-indian-muslim-clerics-sign-fatwa-against-isis_
indian-muslim Clerics Sign
Fatwa Against ISIS
"The acts of the Islamic State are
inhuman and un-Islamic."
The Associated Press
By NIRMALA GEORGE
Posted: 09/09/2015 02:03 PM EDT
NEW DELHI (AP) — More than 1,000 Muslim clerics in India
have ratified a religious ruling that condemns the Islamic State and calls the
extremist group's actions "un-Islamic," a top Indian Muslim leader
said Wednesday.
Religious leaders from hundreds of Islamic mosques,
education institutions and civic groups across India have signed the edict, or
fatwa, saying the actions of the Islamic State group went against the basic
tenets of Islam.
The edict was issued by a leading Mumbai-based cleric,
Mohammed Manzar Hasan Ashrafi Misbahi, and has been signed by the leaders of
all the main mosques in India, which has the world's third-largest Muslim
population.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Indian Muslim cleric Mohammed Manzar
Hasan Ashrafi Misbahi, right speaks with Islamic students at the Ajmeri Masjid
in Mumbai, India, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2015. More than 1,000 Muslim clerics in
India have ratified a religious ruling that condemns the Islamic State and
calls the extremist group's actions "un-Islamic, Misbahi said
Wednesday.(AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)
"The acts of the Islamic State are inhuman and
un-Islamic," Misbahi said by phone from Mumbai. "Islam does not allow
the killing of even an animal. What the Islamic State is doing is damaging to
Islam."
Misbahi said the fatwa — which is around 1,100 pages and
labels the Islamic State group "un-Islamic" — has been sent to the
leaders of more than 50 countries, seeking their endorsement.
Muslim clerics across India will speak to their followers
after prayers on Friday, explaining the contents of the edict and why it is
important to denounce the Islamic State, said Abdul Rehman Anjaria, president
of the Islamic Defense Cyber Cell.
Among prominent supporters of the edict are the chief
clerics of New Delhi's iconic Jama Masjid mosque, as well as the leaders of the
Muslim shrines of Ajmer Dargah and Nizauddin Aulia in northern India and
several Muslim sects.
Anjaria said the Islamic State group was enticing young
people to join by using social media for propaganda and giving a false
impression of Islam.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Indian Muslim students read the holy
Quran at the Ajmeri Masjid in Mumbai, India, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2015.
"There is no doubt the Islamic State has damaged the
image of Islam," he said. "Islam does not allow the killing of people
in the name of religion. What they are doing to women ... Islam teaches us to
respect women."
Over the past few months, Indian authorities have stopped
around two dozen young people from leaving the country to join Islamic State
fighters. The group's extremist ideology has not found many supporters in
India, with officials saying they have evidence that 17 Indians have joined the
Islamic State.
India's 172 million Muslims mostly follow a moderate
version of the religion and have opposed the extreme practices of the Islamic
State group and al-Qaida. Muslims constitute about 14 percent of India's
population of nearly 1.3 billion.
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