What the Mullahs Are Mulling

Interesting article. A guy who was an Afghan “mujahid” during the war with USSR brought together clerics from various Muslim countries in Turkey to discuss how to bring peace in Afghanistan.

The time is coming for us to force the “religious clergy” to condemn terrorism by increasing awareness in the general public.

Violence In Afghanistan Has No Religious Justification Say Muslim Clerics At A Conference in Istanbul - NYTimes.com

ISTANBUL — Midday in Istanbul’s historical Beyazit district and the air suddenly fills with the call to prayer from the many royal mosques nearby. It is a reminder that a part of the city that now bustles with shoppers, university students and tourists was once the heart of a great Islamic empire.
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Istanbul is no longer home to the caliphate, but it still transmits to the faithful: At the beginning of the week, leading Muslim scholars from across the world — Indonesia, Britain, Pakistan — met in a modestly sized hotel conference room to hammer out the rights and wrongs of the conflict in Afghanistan.**

Although I was told not to identify participants without their permission for fear of reprisals by the Taliban, no one seemed afraid to call a spade a spade. **Much effort was spent debunking the notion that the struggle in Afghanistan is a holy war rather than a straightforward tussle for power.

The conference, “Islamic Cooperation for a Peaceful Future in Afghanistan,” was the brainchild not of a cleric but of Neamatollah Nojumi, a professor of conflict resolution at George Mason University who came to the subject the hard way. At the age of 14 he was a mujahid fighting the Soviets in his native Afghanistan.**

Simply by gathering people of good will in one room, the organizers believe they have succeeded where national authorities have failed.

**Now his mission is to stop Afghans from fighting Afghans. The method is straightforward. Senior Afghan clerics meet with the world’s leading Islamic theologians to discuss suicide bombings, the targeting of civilians, the destruction of historical artifacts — even domestic violence.
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This week’s conference culminated in a detailed and strongly worded resolution that reaffirmed Islam’s compatibility with universal human norms and called on religious institutions in Afghanistan, Pakistan and neighboring countries to end violence. The document will be circulated to more than 160,000 mosques in Afghanistan so that its findings may trickle into individual consciences there.

**The meeting was the third of its kind, and the overall effort has started to make a difference, according Ataur Rahman Salim, director of the Scientific Islamic Research Center in Kabul. It is now easier to oppose the men of violence. “The majority of Islamic scholars are not afraid to speak out,” he said.
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**But “some are sitting on the fence,” he added. Indeed. Several speakers supported the Taliban over the Afghan government and were more critical of NATO bombings than of suicide attacks by insurgents.

I sat next to the Indian scholar Aijaz Arshad Qasmi, who is closely associated with the ultra-orthodox Deoband community. He believes that NATO, not Pakistan, is complicating the situation in Afghanistan and that government is supported by a mere 10 percent of the population. And yet he parts company with the Taliban when it comes to the use of violence. “Conflict will not solve conflict,” he told me. “Islam does not mean war.”**

Nor does Islam mean denying women access to education and health services, according to the draft of the final resolution. The document also states that the violation of women’s rights contradicts the tenets of Islam.

Participants did not expect this process to solve Afghanistan’s main problem — “government without governance,” according to Nojumi — but it does allow a burgeoning civil society movement to call both the Afghan government and insurgents to account and to put pressure on interfering neighbors to back off.

Simply by gathering people of good will in one room, the organizers believe they have succeeded where national authorities have failed. Whereas four clerics from Pakistan attended this conference, the Afghan and Pakistani governments have tried and have not managed to organize a meeting of clerics since the beginning of the year.

Given the diversity of participants, the degree of unanimity was remarkable. The recourse to violence in Afghanistan had no religious justification, speaker after speaker said. Or, in the words of the final declaration, “A crime committed in the name of Islam is a crime against Islam.”

Andrew Finkel has been a foreign correspondent in Istanbul for over 20 years, as well as a columnist for Turkish-language newspapers. He is the author of the book “Turkey: What Everyone Needs to Know.”

Re: What the Mullahs Are Mulling

Remarks by Pakistani cleric spark controversy, stir up Pak-Afghan tension – The Express Tribune

Pakistani Mullas are supporting suicide bombing and terrorism in Afghanistan while hypocritically opposing the same formula for Pakistan. They have no shame. Are Afghanis not human? not muslims?

The two neighbours had agreed to hold the conference in Kabul in early March to take a stand against violent extremism and condemn suicide bombings. Pakistani clerics, however, announced a boycott on the pretext that the forum could be used against the Afghan Taliban.
Pakistan Ulema Council chief Allama Tahir Ashrafi showed concerns that the Kabul moot may issue an edict against the Taliban, a claim strongly denied by Afghan ambassador to Pakistan Umer Daudzai and Afghan Clerics Council Spokesperson Maulvi Shehzada Shehzad.
Pakistani scholars had also demanded an invitation be extended to the Afghan Taliban to attend the conference, which the Afghan Clerics Council had formally done in a statement. The Taliban, however, dismissed the conference as a ‘conspiracy against them,’ asking Pakistani scholars to do the same.

Days after the Pakistani ulema boycott, the situation further worsened following reported remarks by Allama Ashrafi about suicide attacks in Afghanistan during an interview to Tolo, an Afghan private television channel. The channel quoted Tahir Ashrafi saying suicide attacks are “unacceptable in Pakistan but legitimate in Afghanistan as it is occupied by the United States, like Kashmir by India and Palestine by Israel.”
The remarks sparked widespread condemnation in Afghanistan, including by President Hamid Karzai himself. Ashrafi accused the Afghan TV channel of being “dishonest” and claimed most of the interview was not aired. His remarks, however, had already created mistrust among Afghans.
Karzai said Ashrafi was officially proposed by Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, but instead of preparing for the conference, he made such statements.

Re: What the Mullahs Are Mulling

This Tahir ashrafi guy allegedly told an afghan tv that the suicide attacks are justified in Afghanistan as long as NATO troops remain there which has created ripples there.

Re: What the Mullahs Are Mulling

He wouldn't say that about Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar! Wonder what he would say about Turkey which is actually part of NATO!

Re: What the Mullahs Are Mulling

Any Mulla can do this .
They mold every thing in their interest .
Suicide attack is 'Haram' in all circumstances . Even attack on civilian is totally haram in all circumstances including Jahad .