Damascus-Sana
The lecture given by the Minister of Awqaf, Dr. Muhammad Abdul Sattar Al-Sayyed, entitled “The Whole Interpretation: Downloading the Text on Reality” at the Assad National Library on the sidelines of the 31st Book Fair, included themes related to the correct understanding of the religious text commensurate with our age.
The war, which targeted Syria, had various aspects in which religion was used to justify the killing using the fatwas of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, he said. "The issue is not religious, but an investment in the Koran wrongly, ignoring the texts calling for tolerance."
Al-Sayyid pointed out that the Muslim Brotherhood and the Wahhabi movement are two sides of the same coin.The difference between them is a formality.The truth is one is atonement, murder and terrorism.He pointed out that the ordinary citizen sees the Islamic State terrorist organization which is covered behind religious slogans sanctified by every Muslim so that some think that Islam is the one who made extremism.
The Minister pointed out that the book of jihad in Islam by the martyr Sheikh Mohammed Saeed Ramadan al-Bouti explains many of these aspects and shows the difference between jihad in the case of defense and the attack on others.
Sayyed stopped at the objectives of the terrorist war on Syria from sowing discord in Islam and targeting Iran, which advocates the Palestinian cause against Zionism, saying that the West tried to use religion to serve its aims.
Mr. Al-Sayyed presented the contents of his book entitled "Downloading the Text on Reality", which aims to develop an interpretation in which the Syrian thought is based on the centrality of Islam, which originated from the Levant, explaining that the religious text is portrayed as there are verses revealed in certain circumstances and there are verses that urged Jihad to defend And not to kill people and that the terrorists canceled 120 calls for peace and took any calls for jihad
Within a certain context and circumstances, he concluded his lecture by saying that “our religion is a kindness, not a religion of violence”.
Bilal Ahmad