Extremist Saudi Literature

Dear Editor,
 
 
I would agree with the above article that such literature that espouses violence should not be condoned. It plays into the objections of critics of Islam who think Islam is a religion of violence. The Holy Qur'an presents a picture of a God who has created and cares for all things including mankind. He saves people who are oppressed from their oppressors.
 
According to the Holy Qur'an Muslims are only allowed to fight in self defence or to defend their religous freedom . Muslims are in this day and age not forbidden from practising their religion or  from worshipping in mosques.  So the condition for Jihad according to the Holy Qur'an do not exist. I feel saddened that such extremists do not feel the need to understand the Holy Qur'an.
 
There are Muslims in the UK who still follow the Holy Qur'an  like the Ahmadiyya Community of Islam who believe in "Love for All Hatred for None" .  
 
 
Yours faithfully,
 
Talha

 

This was written in response to the following article:

Literature in UK Mosques Tied to Saudis

LONDON (AP) — Agencies linked to the Saudi government have distributed extremist literature to mosques and Islamic centers in Britain, an independent think tank said Tuesday.

The Policy Exchange, timing its report to Saudi King Abdullah's state visit, said the material expressed a deep-rooted antipathy toward Western society, calling for violence against enemies of Islam, including women and gays who demand equal rights.

"Saudi Arabia is the ideological source of much of this sectarianism — and must be held to account for it," the study said. "Islamic institutions in the U.K. must clean up their act."

Abdullah, who depends on support from the same clerics known to inspire al-Qaida militants, has faced criticism for his support of Islamic extremists.

The king also has been dogged by criticism over Saudi Arabia's human rights record. Prime Minister Gordon Brown already is under pressure to use his visit to raise concerns about allegations that the regime is involved in torture and other abuses.

The Policy Exchange report, "The Hijacking of British Islam: How Extremist Literature is Subverting Britain's Mosques," describes 80 books and pamphlets collected at nearly 100 Islamic institutions, including leading mosques, in 2006 and 2007.

Experts in Islamic studies analyzed the material, some of which was translated into English from Arabic or Urdu.

Policy Exchange said the survey found radical material in about 25 percent of the institutions. They included some of the best-funded and most dynamic Muslim institutions in Britain — some of which are held up as mainstream bodies, the study said.

There were demands for gays to be killed and women to be subjugated, along with comments such as: "The Jews and the Christians are the enemies of the Muslim," the report said.

Some of the literature espoused the creation of a separate state for Muslims, governed by Sharia law, and urged individual Muslims "to feel an abhorrence" for Muslims considered to be practicing an insufficiently rigorous form of Islam.

"On occasion, this attitude of deep-rooted antipathy towards Western society can descend into exhortations to violence and jihad against the `enemies' of Islam,'" the study said.

The study recommended that the government, councils, police and leaders should have nothing to do with mosques that continued to sell or distribute extremist literature.