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Updated:Tue. Mar. 21, 2006

 

Iraqis and the Occupation

Iraqi Muslims: Islam Is Not at War With Itself

By Firas Al-Atraqchi
Freelance Columnist

09/03/2004 

Iraqis question whether the US has an agenda to fuel sectarian violence in the war-ravaged country.

Iraqi Shiites protest, condemning US troops for their raid on a Sunni Mosque

US officials have charged that Islam is at war with itself in the wake of the of the fatal suicide bombings in Kadhimiya district in Baghdad and the holy city of Karbala, which together claimed more than 271 civilians, mostly religious pilgrims commemorating Ashoura. According to Iranian press reports, up to 50 Iranian pilgrims were among the dead.

(Ashoura marks the martyrdom of Al-Hussein, son of the Imam Ali and grandson of the Prophet Mohammed. More than 1,400 years ago, Al-Hussein and a band of some 70 supporters were surrounded by thousands of Umayyad soldiers who promptly massacred the entourage, killing Al-Hussein and his entire family. Al-Hussein was killed because he sought to return to the values that first cemented the Islamic community - a measure that threatened the corruption and political power of the new rulers of the expanding empire.)

Such statements which hint at Sunni militancy against Shiites in Iraq smack of agenda-building, say Iraqi theologians and religious leaders.

Adding insult to injury, Jim Hoagland of the Washington Post wrote Wednesday that “the latest waves of holy murders should shake from their fantasies the Islamic political leaders and religious authorities who deny that a war for control of Islam is raging around them. The war will claim many more lives if Muslim society does not face up to the cancerous growth feeding on Islam and lead -- not join, but lead -- the fight against that cancer.”

The blood had not yet dried on the ground before members of the US-selected Iraqi Governing Council (IGC) declared, without an iota of proof, that it was Jordanian-born terrorist Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi acting on behalf of Al-Qaeda that was behind the attack.

In an email message to the London-based Al-Quds newspaper, Al-Qaeda denied any knowledge or affiliation with Tuesday’s attack on Shiites. The email message did, however, issue a warning to the IGC and any collaborators with the foreign occupation.

Yesterday, leading Sunni clerics joined their Shiite brethren and called on all Iraqis to consider themselves “Husseiniya,” the living embodiment of the struggle and sacrifices that the Imam Al-Hussein faced.

A day later, the leading Sunni religious establishment in Iraq called on the Iraqi resistance to immediately halt all attacks on Iraqis and Iraqi institutions.

“Jews and Americans are behind this,” shouted someone from the Kadhimiya mosque after the first blasts. A US troop contingent deployed to the area came under attack from enraged Shiite crowds.

Foreign journalists were also attacked in central Baghdad, according to reports from independent sources.

Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani, leading Shiite cleric, joined Harith Al-Thari, chairman of the Sunni Cleric Council, in blaming US forces for “dragging their feet” in securing Iraq’s borders. “We call on all dear Iraqi sons to be more vigilant against the schemes of the enemy, and ask them to work hard to unite and have one voice to speed up regaining the injured country’s sovereignty and independence and stability,” Sistani said to cheers from both Shiites and Sunnis.

According to Jawad Al-Naboulsi, a Sunni Iraqi businessman in Beirut, Lebanon, today’s attacks are by forces desperately trying to engineer a civil war. “They know Islamic Iraq is coming, but they fear Shiites and Sunnis uniting as one fist,” he said. “We are Arabs; we are Iraqis; this is our land; this is our religion. Today, we are all Shiite,” he added.

Sources in Baghdad said that hundreds of Sunni Iraqis rushed to clinics and hospitals to donate blood for the injured and wounded.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair seems to agree that there are concentrated efforts to tear Iraq apart: “The purpose… is to try and set the different religious communities in Iraq against each other, to destroy the progress in Iraq, to cause the maximum amount of dissent, division and hatred,” Blair said at a press conference in London today.

While US media points the finger at Al-Zarqawi and highlights the “schism” between Sunnis and Shiites, both of the latter have rejected calls for revenge and have sworn to face off what they term “American Zionist efforts to break up Iraq in a bloody civil war.”

“Americans and no one else will pay for every drop of blood spilled by every Shiite and every Iraqi because it is America first and foremost that is to blame here,” went one chant in a thousands-strong procession including Sunnis and Shiites.

Reuters reported that “Hundreds of Shi’ites waved black flags of mourning and backed their clerics’ plea for unity, chanting: ‘We are brothers, Sunnis and Shi’ites, and we will not sell our country to foreigners.’”

On Wednesday, The Independent’s Robert Fisk doubted US claims that Sunni insurgents, allied with Al-Qaeda, could be behind the attack.

“If a violent Sunni movement wished to evict the Americans from Iraq - and there is indeed a resistance movement fighting very cruelly to do just that - why would it want to turn the Shia population of Iraq, 60 per cent of Iraqis, against them?” Fisk asked.

At press time, it still remained unclear who was behind the Karbala and Baghdad attacks.

Firas Al-Atraqchi is a Canadian journalist of Iraqi heritage. Holding an MA in Journalism and Mass Communication, he has eleven years of experience covering Middle East issues, oil and gas markets, and the telecom industry. You can reach him at firascape@hotmail.com.


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