Saturday, October 9, 2010

Geo436.com blog: Saudi issues fatwa defending Hazrat Aisha Siddiqua (R.A)

Geo436 RIYADH: Saudi Arabia”s Islamic authority Saturday issued a strong defense of the prophet Mohammed”s wife Hazrat Aisha Siddiqua (R.A), known as Ummul Momineen, meaning, The Mother of Believers, after a Kuwaiti activist”s attack on her fed new tensions between the region”s Sunnis and Shiites.

The General Presidency of Scholarly Research and Ifta, the official fatwa-issuing body of the government, attacked what it called “libelous, insulting and damning” statements against Aisha (R.A).

“Insulting the companions of the messenger of Allah, or impugning his family”s honour via his wives, is committing a great crime, especially talking about (Aisha (R.A)),” it said in a statement on the official SPA news agency.

The statement, which has the weight of an official fatwa, or authoritative religious opinion, appeared to be a reaction to the disparaging remarks against Aisha (R.A) made in early September by exiled Kuwaiti Shiite activist Yasser al-Habeeb.

Habeeb made his remarks in a ceremony in his London office to mark Her (R.A) death, triggering new tensions between Kuwait”s majority Sunni and minority Shiite communities that threatened to expand around the Gulf.

Aisha is held up as “The Mother of Believers” by Sunni Muslims.

But many Shiites disdain her as having had a role in the events that split the two main Islamic communions.

After Habeeb”s remarks Kuwait authorities banned protests to quell potential violence and then stripped him of his citizenship.

Habeeb has lived in England since 2004 after fleeing Kuwait to escape a lengthy jail sentence for making abusive remarks about Islam”s first two caliphs, who are rejected by Shiites.

Some critics linked Habeeb”s incendiary comments on Aisha (R.A) to predominantly Shiite Iran”s alleged attempts to stir up conflict in the Gulf.

According to media reports, however, Iran”s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei himself issued a fatwa on October 2 forbidding attacks on Aisha (R.A) or other revered Sunni figures.

Inside Saudi Arabia, where the Shiite community comprises 10 percent or more of the population, a Shiite community leader also quickly came out to condemn Habeeb”s remarks.


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