Top Saudi cleric says Iran leaders not
Muslims as haj row mounts
Send a link to a friend
[September 07, 2016]
By Sami Aboudi
DUBAI (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's top
religious authority said Iran's leaders were not Muslims, drawing a
rebuke from Tehran in an unusually harsh exchange between the regional
rivals over the running of the annual haj pilgrimage.
The war of words on the eve of the mass pilgrimage will deepen a
long-running rift between the Sunni kingdom and the Shi'ite
revolutionary power. They back opposing sides in Syria's civil war and a
list of other conflicts across the Middle East.
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a message published on
Monday, criticized Saudi Arabia over how it runs the haj after a crush
last year killed hundreds of pilgrims. He said Saudi authorities had
"murdered" some of them, describing Saudi rulers as godless and
irreligious.
Responding to a question by Saudi newspaper Makkah, Saudi Arabia's Grand
Mufti Sheikh Abdulaziz Al al-Sheikh said he was not surprised at
Khamenei's comments.
"We have to understand that they are not Muslims ... Their main enemies
are the followers of Sunnah (Sunnis)," Al al-Sheikh was quoted as
saying, remarks republished by the Arab News.

He described Iranian leaders as sons of "magus", a reference to
Zoroastrianism, the dominant belief in Persia until the Muslim Arab
invasion of the region that is now Iran 13 centuries ago.
"BIGOTRY"
Al al-Sheikh's remarks drew an acerbic retort from Iran's Foreign
Minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, who said they were evidence of bigotry
among Saudi leaders.
"Indeed; no resemblance between Islam of Iranians & most Muslims &
bigoted extremism that Wahhabi top cleric & Saudi terror masters
preach," Zarif wrote on his Twitter account.
Saudi authorities normally seek to avoid public discussion of whether
Shi'ites are Muslims, but implicitly recognize them as such by welcoming
them to the haj, and by accepting Iranian visits to the Saudi-based
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.
Tensions between the two countries have been rising since Riyadh cut
ties with Tehran in January following the storming of its embassy in
Tehran, itself a response to the Saudi execution of dissident Shi'ite
cleric Nimr al-Nimr.
[to top of second column] |

A Muslim pilgrim takes selfie at the Grand mosque in Mecca September
6, 2016. REUTERS/Ahmed Jadallah

Custodian of Islam's most revered places in Mecca and Medina, Saudi
Arabia stakes its reputation on organizing haj, one of the five pillars
of Islam which every able-bodied Muslim who can afford to is obliged to
undertake at least once.
Riyadh said 769 pilgrims were killed in the 2015 disaster, the
highest haj death toll since a crush in 1990. Counts of fatalities
by countries who repatriated bodies showed that more than 2,000
people may have died, more than 400 of them Iranians.
Iran blamed the 2015 disaster on organizers' incompetence. Pilgrims
from Iran will be unable to attend haj, which officially starts on
Sept. 11, this year after talks between the two countries on
arrangements broke down in May.
The split between Islam's main sects dates to a dispute among
Muslims over who would rule their community after the death of the
Prophet Mohammad, and Shi'ites still regard his descendents as a
line of imams blessed with divine guidance.
Today such disagreements over history remain emotive points of
tension between the sects, but they are also divided over day
-to-day issues including differing interpretations of Islamic law
and the role and organization of the clergy.
In the Wahhabi teaching of Sunni Islam followed by the Saudi clergy
and government, Shi'ite doctrine about imams is seen as incompatible
with the concept of a monotheistic God.
(Reporting by William Maclean, Sami Aboudi, Noah Browning and Babak
Dehghanpisheh; Editing by Andrew Heavens and Toby Chopra)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |