Monday, September 18, 2006

I don't support the Vatican but....

But where are the Islamic scholars?

It’s just the right time for them to beat the Vatican in its own game. They should make a start in engaging the Vatican ( and in the process, enlightening the whole non-Christian and non-Islamic worlds) by focussing on the same text of the 13th century Byzantine emperor, Manuel Palelous’s conversation with a ‘learned Persian’.

What will interest me most will be in knowing the answer given by the ‘learned Persian’ to the Emperor when he told him that Prophet Mohmmed sanctioned the use of force in propagating the faith. And the whole world will be greatly enlightened if some Islamic scholars checkmate the Pope by fishing out another quote from the same text of the conversation between the emperor and the ‘learned Persian’, which is by the way is supposed to be 8 pages long.

The exact quotation which caused so many ruckuses in the Islamic world runs like this:

(The emperor had said) “ Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as the command to spread by the sword the faith he preached”.

What was the response of the ‘learned Persian’?

I think that the Islamic scholars are duty bound to provide to the whole of the humanity the answer given by the ‘learned Persian’. Better still, if they think that the answer by the ‘learned Persian’ is not satisfactory, they, themselves should provide us the answer. NOW.

Now, the Papal spokesman had already made a formal apology. That’s good. There should not any misunderstanding between the followers of such great religions.

And, this apology also reinforced the idea that the ‘Arab street’ has such a great impact on the whole world’s political relationships. It’s only natural that some people should come out to the street to protest any threat their interest, perceived or otherwise. But where is the response of the Islamic scholars?

It will make the world a better place if Islamic scholars try to interact with, if not lead, the ‘Islamic street’.

But the worrying thing is that they are conspicuous by their absence. Does this imply that they have not yet been able to find the answer to the question put forward by an emperor 800 years ago?

It is an extremely worrisome development.

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