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King Abdullah
calls for interfaith dialogue
RIYADH (Saudi Arabia)—King Abdullah is calling for a dialogue among
Muslims, Christians and Jews, the first such proposal from this strictly
Muslim kingdom at a time of mounting tensions between followers of Islam
and those of other religions.
In a speech late Monday, Abdullah said the country’s top clerics gave
him the green light to pursue his idea. Their backing is crucial in a
religiously conservative society that expects decisions taken by its
rulers to adhere to Islam’s tenets.
The monarch, whose kingdom follows a severe interpretation of Islam
known as Wahhabism and bans non-Muslim religious services and symbols,
said he discussed the idea with Pope Benedict XVI when they met at the
Vatican last year.
“The idea is to ask representatives of all monotheistic religions to sit
together with their brothers in faith and sincerity to all religions as
we all believe in the same God,” the king told delegates to a seminar
titled “Culture and the Respect of Religions.”
His remarks were reported by the official Saudi Press Agency. “I have
noticed that the family system has weakened and that atheism has
increased. That is an unacceptable behavior to all religions, to the
Quran, the Torah and the Bible,” Abdullah said. “We ask God to save
humanity. There is a lack of ethics, loyalty and sincerity for our
religions and humanity.”
Abdullah’s call is significant. The Saudi monarch is the custodian of
Islam’s two holiest shrines in Mecca and Medina, a position that lends
his words special importance and influence among many Muslims.
His message for tolerance comes at a time of mounting Muslim anger over
the republication by Danish newspapers of cartoons of Islam’s Prophet
Muhammad and the weekend high-profile conversion of a Muslim commentator
to Roman Catholicism.
Abdullah did not say whether Muslim clerics from Saudi Arabia would be
willing to meet with Jewish leaders from Israel. Saudi Arabia and all
other Arab nations except Egypt and Jordan do not have diplomatic
relations with Israel and generally shun unofficial contacts.
In Israel, Chief Rabbi Yona Metzger welcomed Abdullah’s call. “Our hand
is outstretched to any peace initiative and any dialogue that is aimed
at bringing an end to terror and violence,” he said in a statement.
Rabbi David Rosen, head of inter-religious relations at the American
Jewish Committee, said he was “delighted” by the Saudi announcement.
“Religion is all too often the problem, so it has to also be the
solution, or at least part of the solution, and I think that the tragedy
of the political initiatives to bring peace has been the failure to
include the religious dimension,” Rosen said.
Since coming to power in August 2005, Abdullah has taken steps to
encourage dialogue among his kingdom’s Sunni Muslim majority and its
other Muslim sects, including Shiites. —Agencies
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