H
Hypatia
Guest
Certainly the Saudi’s do not think it is appropriate… to the extent that there are worries that they might destroy historical sites associated with the life of the Prophet (pbuh) himself because it promotes idolatrous devotions (i.e., they don’t want to encourage Sufism). They are also opposed to things like remembering the birthday of the Prophet, etc.One thing I thought I knew was that there were some differences in praxis between Shi’a and Sunni. For example, I thought that Shi’a recognised some deceased Muslims as saints. I appreciate that is probably an inappropriate western term but I’m afraid I don’t know what else to call them. I also understand there are various religious shrines that Shi’a visit. It is my understanding, which I accept may be erroneous, that Sunnis believe this is not appropriate.
That said, many Sunnis do recognize certain persons as models of holiness and build shrines to them. These are all common sufi practices. Such shrines are common in Sunni areas like Pakistan and in India. The admiration for “saints” is not limited to the Shi’a. See, for instance, the Dargah of Moinuddin Chishti in Ajmer, India, which is a common pilgrimage site for Muslims. There are many others. The house where Mary (pbuh) the Mother of Jesus (pbuh) died is, likewise, an common place of pilgrimage in Turkey.
There are certainly some deep political divisions and competing attempts to control the interpretation of Islam between, esp. Arab Sunnis and the mostly Persian Shi’a. It is the case that Sunni Arab states tend to be suspicious of their Shi’a residents because they suspect them of being readily available agents of Iran. Saudi for instance seems to largely live in official denial of the size of its Shi’a population, which it seems to significantly under-report… the north east quarter of the Kingdom is overwhelming Shi’a. But it does this precisely because Saudi is committed to being a Sunni Kingdom and does not want to open any roads to Iran within the Kingdom. Similarly in Bahrain, where the the Sunni rulers have reacted very defensively to Shi’a demands for more political freedom in part because Iran has, on occasion, hinted that they think Bahrain is naturally a part of Iran. Saudi likewise is deeply interested in making sure a Shi’a uprising doesn’t happen in Bahrain, both because it doesn’t want that uprising to spread to its own substantial but ignored Shi’a population, and because they are afraid that Shi’a control of Bahrain would be Iranian control of Bahrain, thereby bringing Iran one step closer to the Arabian peninsula.Even though Shi’a and Sunni Muslims may pray together and associate together in the west I do not believe this to be the case in other parts of the world. For example, why do populations of countries protest where the majority of Muslims are Shi’a but the government is Sunni. I believe that was the situation in Iraq when Saddam Hussein was the ruler. I also understand it is the cause of the current protests in Bahrain.
There are a few Sunni groups who do treat Shi’a as heretics… but these groups also tend to treat Sunni Sufis as heretics as well, etc., etc. I.e., they are rigorists who tend towards violence against other Muslim groups who they label as non-believers and accuse of shirk. We have seen outbreaks of this type of violence in Pakistan, where there have been attacks on Shi’a populations, as well as on Sufi devotees and Sufi shrines.
yes. Al-Wahab is a fairly radical reformer within Sunni Islam: a kind of modernist trying to get behind the traditional practices that had become associated with Sunni Islam. He wanted to return to a “pure” Islam. He can be fairly compared to some of the more rigorist Protestant reformers, e.g., Zwingli, stripping the statues out of churches and breaking the stained glass windows because they were idolatrous.Is Wahhabi Islam practised in Saudi Arabia a form of Sunni Islam.
The Islam article on Wikipedia has been locked for a while and they have tried to maintain it in a fair way. It is not bad as a really basic intro. The Ismaili article on Wikipedia is not bad either, at least the last time I looked.I admit to not being Wikipedia’s biggest fan; however, do you know if their article on Islam is a reliable article about your faith?