Gemayel Praises Azhar Bill of Rights on Basic Liberties

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Phalange Party leader Amin Gemayel telephoned on Wednesday Sheikh Ahmed al-Tayyeb of the Azhar mosque in Egypt, praising him on the Azhar’s bill of rights on basic liberties that was published on Tuesday.

Gemayel said in a statement: “The historic document included the general values that need to be followed in the Arab revolts and in the regimes that would be established as a result of these revolts.”

“It proposed a new Arab-Islamic approach that respects human rights, diversity, and coexistence among different religions,” he added.

“The document also warned against extremism and narrow-mindedness, which should guide the peoples of the region amid the changes that are taking place,” he noted.

The bill, which was announced Tuesday, is a bid by al-Azhar to assert its role as the voice of moderate Islam in the face of the growing political power of more conservative Islamic groups in Egypt following the February ouster of President Hosni Mubarak.

The institution spent three months drawing up the document in collaboration with secular and Islamist scholars.

The conservative Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's most organized political force, and the more radical ultraconservative Salafis, have won a majority in the country's first elected post-Mubarak parliament.

Both call for an Islamic basis for the state, raising worries among Egypt's liberal and Christian groups that conservative religious teachings will dictate the shape of the new constitution. In theory, parliament is to be in charge of nominating who will draft the document.

The Azhar document is the latest in a series of moves by the institution to raise its profile as Islamists rise to political prominence — and to rehabilitate its own image after decades of being seen as a tool of Egypt's regime.

Secular Egyptians, liberals and Christians, in turn, have welcomed its role, hoping it will give religious support for preserving broader democratic rights that they fear conservatives will try to limit.

A previous document by al-Azhar, also backed by intellectuals, supported the Arab revolutions and the public's rights to democratic change.

"This document has a moral strength because it has the backing of al-Azhar scholars, the weight of al-Azhar institute and the critical role of intellectuals," said Nabil Abdul-Fattah, a senior researcher on religion at the state-sponsored Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies. "

Al-Tayyeb told reporters that the bill of rights, which preserves freedoms of worship, opinion, scientific research and art and creative expression, was drafted to be a basis for the country's new constitution, according to comments published by Egypt's state news agency.

He said that Islamic rulings protect freedom of religion and guarantee equal citizenship rights, in a message of reassurance to Egypt's increasingly nervous Christian minorities.

Hassan al-Shafei, a senior Azhar official, said the document has been passed on to authorities to be considered in writing the constitution.

Comments 5
Default-user-icon Targandi (Guest) over 12 years

As if Al Azhar is waiting to hear from Cheikh Amin 3al Fashal. Who friggin cares what this nobody says? WHO?

Thumb shab over 12 years

Religion is the root to all evil

Thumb Abubakr over 12 years

They are not, but maybe youre religion is the evil one, dont be decepted my friend, thats why they create 10 00000 religions , when there is 1, but some people cant open their eyes and find it while its in them already .

Missing youssefhaddad over 12 years

The perfection of God is usually distorted by human interpretations, they call them religions.

Thumb thepatriot over 12 years

"une guerre de religions, pour moi, ça revient à faire une guerre pour savoir qui a le meilleur ami imaginaire!" Tomer Sisley