SAUDI-ISLAM
JUNE 7 2008 14:31h
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The king`s call sparked much interest from Jewish and Christian groups around the world.
Some 500 religious scholars and academics gathered for a 3-day conference in Mecca which ended on Friday as the first step of a plan announced by the Saudi king this year to create a dialogue with other faiths.
The king's call, which followed a meeting with Pope Benedict at the Vatican last year, sparked much interest from Jewish and Christian groups around the world.
The Mecca meeting recommended "conferences, forums and discussion groups between the followers of the prophetic messages, and relevant civilisations, cultures and philosophies to which academics, media and religious leaders will be invited", according to the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA).
It said the participants, who included Egypt's Grand Sheikh of al-Azhar Mohamed Sayed Tantawi and former Iranian President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, established that a dialogue with other faiths was legitimate in Islam.
SPA gave no more details, but a gathering of Jewish and Christian clerics in Saudi Arabia would be ground-breaking.
Saudi Arabia, home to Islam's holiest sites, sees itself as the leader of Sunni Islam. It promotes a hardline school of Islam called Wahhabism which has traditionally seen some other Muslims and non-Muslims as "infidels".
But Riyadh has been making efforts to build better ties with Washington and improve its international image after the Sept. 11 attacks of 2001, in which 15 of the 19 attackers were Saudi. Saudi Islamist militants also launched a violent campaign against to overthrow the monarchy in 2003, denouncing the rulers as un-Islamic.
Although the official religious establishment is on board for the king's interfaith effort, many Wahhabi clerics remain opposed even to talking to Shi'ite Muslims.
A group of independent clerics issued a statement last week saying Shi'ites, including Lebanese group Hezbollah, were posturing against Israel to hide an anti-Sunni agenda.
Some Shi'ites said that, despite the presence of Iran's Rafsanjani, few of their number were invited to the Mecca meeting. None came from Europe or North America and one from Saudi Arabia's own Shi'ite minority which complains that it is given second class status.
The final statement said the conference called for "communication between Islamic sects in an effort to unite the Islamic nation and lighten the effects of fanaticism".
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