Amman Message
The Amman Message is a statement calling for tolerance and unity in the Muslim world that was issued on 9 November 2004 by King Abdullah II bin Al-Hussein of Jordan. Subsequently, a three-point ruling was issued by 200 Islamic scholars from over 50 countries, focusing on issues of defining who is a Muslim, excommunication from Islam, and principles related to delivering religious opinions.
Content
The Amman Message was delivered in Amman, Jordan, as a Ramadan sermon by Chief Justice Sheikh Iz-al-Din al-Tamimi in the presence of King Abdullah II and a number of Muslim scholars. According to a report issued by the International Crisis Group, "The sermon stressed the need to re-emphasise Islam's core values of compassion, mutual respect, tolerance, acceptance and freedom of religion." The next year, in July 2005, an Islamic convention brought together 200 Muslim scholars from over 50 countries who issued a three-point declaration. This declaration focused on:- The recognition of eight legal schools of sharia/fiqh and the varying schools of Islamic theology viz.
- #Sunni Hanafi
- #Sunni Maliki
- #Sunni Shafi'i
- #Sunni Hanbali
- #Shia Jaʿfari
- #Shia Zaydi
- #Ẓāhirī
- #Ibadi
- *Forbade declaring an apostate anyone who is a follower of:
- #the Ashʿari/Maturidi creed
- #real Tasawwuf
- #true Salafi thought
- The forbiddance from pronouncing disbelief upon others recognized as Muslims
- The stipulations placed as preconditions to the issuing of religious edicts, intended to prevent the circulation of illegitimate edicts
Conference and declarations
Following are conferences and declarations:- The International Islamic Conference: True Islam and Its Role in Modern Society,
- Forum of Muslim 'Ulama' and Thinkers,
- First International Islamic Conference Concerning the Islamic Schools of Jurisprudence and the Modern Challenges,
- The Third Extraordinary Session of the Organization of the Islamic Conference,
- The Second International Conference of the Assembly for Moderate Islamic Thought and Culture,
- The International Islamic Fiqh Academy Conference Seventeenth Session,
- Muslims of Europe Conference,
- The ninth session of the council of the Conference of Ministers of Religious Endowments and Islamic Affairs,
- Amman Message in the Eyes of Others: Dialogue, Moderation, Humanity,
Fatwas and endorsements
Sr No | Name | Title | Country | Sect | Fiqh | Endorsing Fatwa | Website | Image |
1 | Muhammad Sayyid Tantawy | Grand Imam of Al-Azhar University | Egypt | Sunni | Shafiʿi | |||
2 | Ali Gomaa | Grand Mufti of Egypt | Egypt | Sunni | Shafiʿi | |||
3 | Ali Bardakoğlu | President of The Grand Council for Religious Affairs, Turkey | Turkey | Sunni | Hanafi | |||
4 | Ahmed Kuftaro | Grand Mufti of Syria | Syria | Sunni | Shafiʿi | |||
5 | Said Abd Al-Hafiz Al-Hijjawi | Grand Mufti of Jordan | Jordan | Sunni | Shafiʿi | - | ||
6 | Nuh Ha Mim Keller | Islamic Scholar of Jordan | Jordan | Sunni | Shafiʿi | - | ||
7 | Yusuf al-Qaradawi | Director of the Sunna and Sira Council | Egypt Qatar | Sunni | Hanafi | |||
8 | Abdullah bin Bayyah | Vice President of the International Union of Muslim Scholars | Mauritania | Sunni | Maliki | |||
9 | Muhammad Taqi Usmani | Vice President of the Islamic Fiqh Academy | Pakistan | Sunni | Hanafi | - | ||
10 | Sayyid Shaykh Nazim Al-Haqqani | Deceased leader of the Naqshbandi Haqqani Sufi Order | Northern Cyprus | Sunni | Hanafi | - | ||
11 | Abdullah al-Harari | Founder of the Al-Ahbash | Ethiopia | Sunni | Shafiʿi | |||
12 | Muhammad Tahir ul-Qadri | Founding Leader of Minhaj-ul-Quran International, Chief Executive of Minhaj International University | Pakistan | Sunni | Hanafi | - | ||
13 | Habib Ali al-Jifri | Founding Leader of Tabah Foundation in Abu Dhabi, Member of Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought in Amman | Yemen | Sunni | Shafiʿi | - | ||
14 | Habib Umar bin Hafiz | Founding Leader and the dean of Dar al-Mustafa in Tarim, Yemen | Yemen | Sunni | Shafiʿi | - | ||
15 | Ali Hosseini Khamenei | Grand Ayatollah, Supreme Leader of Iran | Iran | Shia | Jafari | |||
16 | Muhammad Saeed al-Hakim | Grand Ayatollah | Iraq | Shia | Jafari | |||
17 | Mohammad Ishaq Al-Fayyad | Grand Ayatollah | Iraq | Shia | Jafari | |||
18 | Basheer Hussain Najafi | Grand Ayatollah | Iraq | Shia | Jafari | |||
19 | Hussein Esmaeel al-Sadr | Grand Ayatollah | Iraq | Shia | Jafari | |||
20 | Fazel Lankarani | Grand Ayatollah | Iran | Shia | Jafari | |||
21 | Muhammad Ali Al-Taskhiri | Grand Ayatollah General Secretary of Forum for Proximity of the Islamic Schools of Jurisprudence | Iran | Shia | Jafari | |||
22 | Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah | Grand Ayatollah | Lebanon | Shia | Jafari | |||
23 | Muhammad bin Muhammad Ismail Al-Mansur and Humud bin Abbas Al-Mu'ayyad | Shaykh | Yemen | Shia | Zaidiyyah | |||
24 | Ibrahim bin Muhammad Al-Wazir | General Secretary, The Islamic Unification and Works Movement, Yemen | Yemen | Shia | Zaidiyyah | |||
25 | Ahmad bin Hamad Al-Khalili | Mufti of the Sultanate of Oman | Oman | Ibadi | - | |||
26 | Ali Hosseini Sistani | Grand Ayatollah | Iraq | Shia | Jafari | |||
27 | Karīm al-Hussaynī | The Āgā Khān IV, Imam of the Shia Imami Nizari Ismailis | Portugal | Shia | Ismaili |
Reception
, while Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, gave a speech in which he praised the Amman message and the gathering of numerous scholars, commenting, "This was a clear message that Islam is not a monolithic faith, but one made up of a rich pattern of diversity, albeit all flowing from the same fount."Despite the ecumenical nature of the Amman Message, since it was issued there has been a marked decline in Shia-Sunni relations as a result of increased sectarian conflict in such countries as Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Bahrain and Yemen.