C
Contarini
Guest
The Grand Mufti of Egypt, representing the Sunni establishment, has indeed spoken out. Why couldn’t you have done a simple Google search and discovered this for yourself?The King of Saudi Arabia might be a good start. The Saudi Grand Mufti. The Grand Mufti of Egypt. Grand Ayatollah Khamanei of Iran. The point is that until the Muslim world itself rises up against these barbarian extremists, the whole Muslim world, rightly or wrongly, will be lumped in together with the extremists.
The Saudis are more culpable–they export Wahhabi Islam, which is a radical fundamentalist version, and may have played some role in the rise of ISIS, though ISIS in the end is no one’s friend but its own and by one report I read is planning to start revolutionary cells in Saudi Arabia.
Iran is no friend to ISIS or the other Sunni terrorist groups. But both Iran and Saudi Arabia are governments dominated by a radical, fundamentalist version of Islam, although not as extreme as groups like ISIS and Al-Qaeda. The more moderate establishment institutions such as al-Azhar in Egypt do condemn the radicals over and over, but Westerners who are prejudiced against Islam ignore them, as you very culpably did in your last post.
Edwin