Scholars Defend Iraqi Resistance, Prohibit Collaboration
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Iraqi children throw stones at an American armored vehicle in Baghdad
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RIYADH,
November 6 (IslamOnline.net) - A cohort of prominent Saudi scholars
have defended resistance against the occupation forces in Iraq as a
legitimate right, prohibiting cooperation with the occupiers and
collaboration against resistance groups.
"Jihad
against the occupiers is a duty for all able-bodied and does not
require a general leadership," stressed twenty-six eminent ulemas
in an open letter to the Iraqi people posted on the Islamtoday.net
Web site.
"Resistance
is a legitimate right and the Islamic Shariaa obliges the people of
Iraq to defend themselves, their honor, their land, their oil and
their future against the colonialist alliance as they did in the past
against the British colonialism."
The
signatories, including Safar Al-Hawali, Nasser Al-Omar, Salman
Al-Oadah, Al-Sharif Hatem Al-Awni, Awad Al-Qarni and Saud Al-Fenesan,
said the "occupiers are undoubtedly warring aggressors that
religions call to fight against until they withdraw defeated ... just
as human laws recognize the people's right to fight."
In
a statement, a copy of which was sent to IslamOnline.net on Sunday,
August 22, ninety three prominent Islamic leaders called on Muslims
around the world to fully
support resistance to occupation in Iraq and Palestine.
Collaborators
The
Saudi scholars underlined that a Muslim is prohibited from harming
resistance fighters or tipping others who could hurt them.
They
also asserted that Muslims are forbidden from assisting or supporting
the military operations of the occupation forces.
"Any
support given to military operations conducted by occupation forces is
illegitimate because it means supporting sin and aggression."
The
Iraqi resistance has every right to kidnap collaborators with the
US-led occupation forces but should not kill them rather treat them as
prisoners of war, a leading Iraqi Sunni scholar said.
"Iraq
is an occupied country and Iraqis are entitled to resist this ugly
occupation no matter what the means is…It makes sense then to target
collaborators," Muthana Harith Al-Dari, spokesman for the
respected Association of Muslim Scholars (AMS), told Al-Quds Press
news agency on Sunday, September 26.
Spare
Civilians
The
prominent Saudi scholars reiterated that resistance attacks must not
target fellow Muslims and civilians from countries that did not commit
troops to the US-led occupation forces.
They
stressed it would serve "the best interests of Islam and Muslims
in Iraq and worldwide" to spare those people who work in
humanitarian, media and other missions that do not support the
occupation.
The
International Association for Muslim Scholars (IAMS) vigorously
denounced on Sunday, September 26, the kidnapping and killing of
civilians as an aggression against others, calling particularly for
the swift release of all civilians taken hostage in Iraq.
"We
state that it is forbidden
to kidnap any human being in any situation other than open
warfare, when the person kidnapped becomes a prisoner of war who must
not be killed. Indeed, he must eventually be released," the IAMS
said in a statement, a copy of which was sent to IslamOnline.net.
Two
Italian hostages freed in Iraq have vehemently defended the Iraqi
people’s right to resist the US-led occupation forces until
liberating their homeland.
"You
have to distinguish between terrorism and resistance. The guerrilla
war is justified
, but I am against the kidnapping of civilians," Simona
Torretta, one of the two hostages, told Corriere della Sera
newspaper in an interview published on Friday, October 1.
Preserve
Unity
The
Saudi scholars underlined the need to preserve Iraq’s unity and
avoid internal clashes.
"Internal
fighting would only serve the interests of Jews sneaking into the
war-torn country as well as the occupation forces that work on
inciting divisions among the Iraqis to consolidate their presence in the
country."
They
accused "foreign hands" of inciting sectarian divisions in
Iraq and trying to drive a wedge between all Iraqi sects; Shiites and
Sunnis, Kurds and Arabs.
The
eminent scholars called on all Muslims worldwide to offer assistance
to rebuild chaos-marred Iraq.
They
further urged Islamic charities to undertake a humanitarian role in
the war-torn country to alleviate the backbreaking burdens of the
Iraqi people, suffering under the yoke of the US occupation.
South
Korean missionaries are now taking the lead in aggressively evangelizing
Muslims in Arab countries, focusing on Iraqi refugees in
Jordan, The New York Times reported Monday, November 1.
Only
days into the invasion in March 2003, the Beliefnet.com
and Newhouse.com
websites reported that two leading evangelical Christian missionary
organizations were readying teams to enter Iraq to address “the
spiritual needs” of the population.
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