http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2005/12/6210EFA7-77E9-4421-881D-6B1372013AE8.html

Thursday, 15 December 2005
Lebanon: Al-Qaeda Promotion Of Religious Divisions Angers Shi'a 
By Bill Samii 
 

Leading Lebanese Shi'a reject al-Zarqawi's attempts to sow discord
(AFP)
Western military personnel, contractors, aid workers, and journalists,
as well as Iraqi security forces, were the traditional targets of
Iraqi insurgents and Al-Qaeda's leader in Iraq, Abu Mus'ab al-Zarqawi.
In mid-September, al-Zarqawi expanded the fight to the country's
Shi'ite Muslim community, which makes up roughly 65 percent of the
population. Al-Zarqawi's actions have had repercussions in another
country with a sizable Shi'ite community, Lebanon. In exclusive
interviews with RFE/RL, two leading Shi'ite clerics, Sheikh Afif
Nabulsi and Sheikh Seyyed Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah, condemned
al-Zarqawi and the terrorist attacks in Iraq.


A Call To Arms 

On 14 September, the website bayanat.info posted an audio link to a
statement from al-Zarqawi's Al-Qaeda Organization in the Land of the
Two Rivers (Tanzim al-Qa'ida fi Bilad al-Rafidayn). The statement
employed inflammatory historical references and used derogatory
terminology. Battles come and go and time passes, but the goal -- "A
Crusader, rejectionist [derogatory term for Shi'a] war against the
Sunnis" -- does not change. The statement continued, "The interests of
the Crusaders coincided with the whims of their hateful rejectionist
brothers, leading to these crimes and these massacres against the Sunnis."
  
The statement claimed that in the battle for the Iraqi city of Tal
Afar, coalition forces protected Shi'ite neighborhoods so they could
"launch a war of total extermination against the Sunni neighborhoods
in an attempt to obliterate all forms of life in these neighborhoods."
Then, the statement continued, poison gas was used against the city's
Sunnis. The Badr Corps militia of the Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) was accused of torturing and killing Sunni
men who escaped the shelling, and violating the honor and stealing the
jewelry and ornaments of the Sunni women. "It is an organized
sectarian war whose chapters were prepared with precision despite the
existence of those whose sight God blinded and set a seal on their
hearts."
  
"This is a special call to the Sunni tribes in Iraq in general....
rise up from your sleep, wake from your slumber.... The wheels of the
war to annihilate the Sunni tribes have not and will not stop; they
are coming your way, to your very doorsteps unless God permits
otherwise. Unless you take the initiative and join the mujahedin to
defend your religion and protect your honor, you will most certainly
regret with sorrow...."
  
Al-Zarqawi's statement identified Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and
Kurdistan Democratic Party leader Mas'ud Barzani as "the Jews'
servants" and accused them of seeking the benefits of a "polytheistic
constitution." The Iraqi government was equated with that of
Ibn-al-Alqami, a Shi'ite minister who allegedly betrayed the caliph in
1258 when Hulugu attacked Baghdad, and the Shi'ite prime minister,
Ibrahim al-Ja'fari, was accused of declaring an "an all-out war
against the Sunnis...under the pretexts of restoring the law and
eliminating the terrorists." Al-Qaeda in Iraq, therefore, "has decided
to declare an all-out war against the rejectionist Shi'a everywhere in
Iraq, wherever they may be as a fitting recompense for them."
  
Five days after this statement was posted, another one from the same
group appeared on a jihadist website
(http://www.tajdeed.co.uk/forums). This one said that Shi'a associated
with Muqtada al-Sadr, and any others who condemned the attacks against
Sunnis in Tal Afar, are exempt from the earlier threat of retaliation.
The war against Iraq's two main Shi'ite political parties -- Al Da'wah
al-Islamiyah and SCIRI -- and the other mainstream political
organizations will continue.
  
Threats In Sidon
  
The impact of Al-Qaeda's anti-Shi'a action is being felt in Lebanon
today. Sheikh Afif Nabulsi, president of the Association of Jabal Amel
Ulama, received a threatening message from the Al-Mujahedin in the
Sham Countries on 5 December. Leaflets delivered to the Sayyida Fatima
Al-Zahra mosque complex in Sidon criticized Nabulsi for "declaring
hostility to the mujahedin" and referred to him as an "atheist." 
  
Nabulsi has a record as a proponent of Shi'a-Sunni accord, and these
are not the first threats against Shi'ite clerics in southern Lebanon.
Nabulsi said in an interview with RFE/RL in Sidon on 8 December that
he is unafraid. Furthermore, the local representative of the
Palestinian "resistance" reassured Nabulsi in a telephone call that
his organization does not back such a hostile initiative. 
  
Nabulsi also rejected al-Zarqawi's declaration of war. "If he called
for a war against the Shi'a, the Shi'a do not call for a war against
the Sunnis. They call for peace with the Sunnis. We will not accept
anything that will cause war. It is not the first time this man talks
about such things," he said.
  
Nabulsi said that such calls for war against the Shi'a have historical
precedents, and there probably will be similar occurrences in the
future. The Shi'a, however, will stay "strong and reasonable" and will
not respond in kind. Nabulsi advocated open-mindedness and discussion
in order to achieve agreement. Efforts to create divisions between
Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims are artificial, Nabulsi said, and the Shi'a
will not respond to violence. 
  
Asked about Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, Nabulsi said, "only fools
follow him."
  
Later in the interview, however, Nabulsi made it clear that the Shi'a
will not turn the other cheek. He said that the hostage takers in Iraq
who behead their captives are living in the dark ages and are
"warriors against God and the Prophet [Muhammad]." We should reply to
such acts in kind, Nabulsi continued. "An eye for an eye, a tooth for
a tooth, and a head for a head." 
  
Condemnation in Beirut
  
One would find it much harder to threaten a cleric in Haret Hraik, the
mostly Shi'ite suburb of southern Beirut. There are surveillance
cameras on most of the streets. Moreover, troublemakers might be
discouraged by the omnipresent posters of Shi'ite religious men. These
include Lebanese clerics -- such as Hizballah Secretary-General Hassan
Nasrallah and his predecessor, Abbas Musawi -- as well as Iranian ones
-- Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
  
Seyyed Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah, considered by many to be Lebanon's
leading Shi'ite cleric, denies having a formal political role.
Politics and religion are never far apart in the Shi'ite faith,
however, and furthermore, the faithful frequently seek Fadlallah's
views on a wide range of issues. 
  
As a Shi'ite leader, Fadlallah is very critical of al-Zarqawi's
actions. He said, "We are against what those people believe in,
because killing people because they are of different opinion is not
Islamic in any way." 
  
Fadlallah seemed particularly incensed by al-Zarqawi's promotion of
Shi'a-Sunni divisions. "They feel that shedding the blood of Shi'ites
around the world is lawful and the Shi'ites are not Muslims and they
are unbelievers and the unbelievers should be killed. But not all
Iraqi Sunnis agree with al-Zarqawi. That's why it is difficult to
envisage a sectarian war in Iraq," he said.
  

Going Nowhere
  
It seems unlikely that the promotion of Sunni hostility to Shi'ite
co-religionists will get much traction in Lebanon. In this country of
some 3.8 million people, the Shi'a are a sizable group and play a
significant political role. Moreover, two Shi'ite organizations --
Hizballah and Amal -- are viewed by many Lebanese as the "Islamic
resistance" and credited by them with ending the Israeli occupation of
the country's south.










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