Islamic Supreme Council of Canada
The Islamic Supreme Council of Canada (ISCC;
Fatwa condemning terrorism
In response to the bombing attempt on Northwest Airlines Flight 253 a group of Canadian and U.S. Islamic leaders associated with the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada issued a fatwa [1], or religious edict, on January 8, 2010 condemning any attacks by extremists or terrorists on the United States or Canada and declaring that an attack by extremists on the two countries would constitute an attack on Muslims living in North America. "In our view, these attacks are evil, and Islam requires Muslims to stand up against this evil," said the fatwa signed by the 20 imams. It concludes that Muslims "must expose any person, Muslim or non-Muslim, who would cause harm to fellow Canadians or Americans". One of the imams was reported saying: "it is religious obligation upon Muslims, based upon the Qur'anic teachings, that we have to be loyal to the country where we live". The fatwa also indicated that religious leaders have a duty to show others around the world that Muslims in Canada and the U.S. "have complete freedom to practise Islam" and that "any attack on Canada and the United States is an attack on the freedom of Canadian and American Muslims."[5][6]
See also
- Islam in Canada
- Canadian Islamic Congress
- National Council of Canadian Muslims
- Islamic Society of North America
References
- ^ Media Monitors Network: "Satisfying Own Desires Under the Cover of Religion" by Syed B. Soharwardy August 1, 2002
- ^ Muslims Against Terrorism: "Imam Syed B. Soharwardy" retrieved March 12, 2015 | "Imam Soharwardy has the "Ijazah" in Soharwardy, Qadri and Chishty sufi orders from his Murshad (spiritual guide)"
- ^ "Calgary imam gets unique perspective of Canadians as he walks across country". canadianpress.google.com. The Canadian Press (on. 2008-06-28. Retrieved 2008-07-14. [permanent dead link]
- ^ a b Profile of ISCC, accessed 2008-07-27
- ^ "Twenty imams issue fatwa against attacks in Canada or the U.S." Toronto Star. Jan 8, 2010. Retrieved Jan 29, 2011.
- ^ "Attack on Canada, U.S. is attack on Muslims: imams". CBC. January 9, 2010. Archived from the original on 11 January 2010.
External links