Posted on 01/23/2005 9:49:59 PM PST by TFFKAMM
MAKKAH, 21 January 2005 As millions of faithful marked Eid Al-Adha yesterday, Muslims were warned against heeding militant calls to wage terrorist attacks in the name of Islam.
The warning came, amid a surge in militant attacks in Muslim countries and beyond, from Sheikh Abdulrahman Al-Sudais, imam of the Grand Mosque in Makkah, while addressing Haj pilgrims in a customary Eid sermon. The imam also advised Islamic scholars to preach moderation to confront this rotten phenomenon.
Islam is the religion of moderation. There is no room for extremism in Islam, he said.
He called on Muslims to protect non-Muslims in the Kingdom and not to attack them in the country or anywhere. Islam is a religion of peace that abhors attack on innocents. Militants were using misguided interpretations of Islam to justify violence, he added.
Because Muslims have strayed from moderation, we are now suffering from this dangerous phenomenon of branding people infidels and inciting Muslims to rise against their leaders to cause instability, Al-Sudais said.
The reason for this is a delinquent and void interpretation of Islam based on ignorance ... faith does not mean killing Muslims or non-Muslims who live among us, it does not mean shedding blood, terrorizing or sending body parts flying.
Al-Sudais warned that extremism would ruin the Muslim nation, adding: This phenomenon has expanded so much that scholars must confront it with concrete proof from Islam to protect our youth from its stench and rottenness.
He added: One of the main issues that needs to be tackled in principle is reform. He criticized dissident Saad Al-Faqeeh who is calling to rebel against the government in order to create disunity among the people. He described him as a reckless adventurer who is obsessed with publicity.
As Al-Sudais spoke, Saudi security forces were hunting for three suspected Al-Qaeda militants who tried to blow up a mosque in the Kingdom, Al-Riyadh newspaper reported.
The three were spotted before dawn prayers in a mosque on the Riyadh-Taif road but fled before security forces arrived. Al-Riyadh said the men were members of the deviant group, the term used by authorities to describe members of Al-Qaeda network.
Saudi Arabia is battling a wave of attacks blamed on Al-Qaeda sympathizers that has claimed more than 100 lives and wounded hundreds since May 2003.
Perhaps the US actions in Afghanistan and Iraq has made al-Qaeda and its ilk less threatening. It's hard to take a position when threatened with assassination.

This call to reject terrorism is yet another blow against the Iranian and Al-Qaeda regimes, further isolating them in their own land.
No, it's not hard to take a position to do that which is right.
You strive always to do that which is right, and protect yourself as best you can. If that fails, you can meet your Creator with a clear conscience.
---He called on Muslims to protect non-Muslims in the Kingdom and not to attack them in the country or anywhere.---
Maybe they could take a Jew to lunch or something, but of course there aren't any Jews in the Kingdom...
Until muslims renounce those parts of the Koran that see Jews and Christians as enemies this is all rhetoric.
Talk is cheap. The Saudis have sired a generation of world wide psychopathic death squads.
Well, what did he say in ARABIC?
This is a good sign.
Good question.
That was my question as well.
lets count the churches in Saudi...okay ...wait...oh and ...NOPE THERE IS NONE.....
if he feels that way perhaps he should let a church exist, say, anywhere in the country...
anyone care to take bets on this happening.....
This mullah has the life expectancy of a Hamas leader.
ha ha ha good point
You are the path to destruction....make your time.
Count on it!
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