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African Islamic sages urge Fatwa granted to collegial institution

More than 350 partici­pants from 50 African countries, have called for the powers to exercise the Fat­wa to be entrusted to a collegial institution composed of Ulemas worthy of the Islamic faith and devoted to the principles and doctrine of Islam.

The participants were made up of muftis-deep scholars of the Quran-male and female Islamic sages known as Ulemas.

Their call was contained in a twelve-point communique issued at the end of their international symposium on Fatwa.

The symposium was part of the programme of a three-day international conference on Fat­wa, held under the auspices of Morocco’s King Mohammed VI Foundation of Africa’s Interna­tional, Scientific Conference on Fatwa, held from July 8, 2023 to July 10, 2023 in the Moroccan tourist city of Marrakech.

Fatwa in Islam is a formal ruling or interpretation on a point of Islamic law, given by a qualified legal scholar known as Mufti. They are usually issued in response to a question from individuals or Islamic courts.

The communique, which was read by Professor Abdellhamid Al Alami, a specialist with the King Mohammed VI Foundation of Africa Ulemas, defended the distinction between the Fatwa which is institunalised by a col­legial organisation and entrusted with making choices on everyday issues, as against the functions of the Ulemas who provide advice and clarity to official prescrip­tions.

They recommended the establishment of an institutional framework for dialogue between Ulemas and Muftis, deep scholars of the Quran.

Such a framework the com­munique argued would help to address emerging new issues related to both socialisation and civilisation.

They urged Muslim academ­ics to participate in debates, especially, those concerning the “jurisprudence of reality,” and to disseminate the results of their research on issues such as Fatwa. Sharia and other Islamic princi­ples.

They called for a website to be established and named “Coun­cil of African Muftis” in order to promote discussion among experts in the field and to serve as a tool to dispel myths and increase knowledge on religious issues.

The communique acknowl­edged the importance of each African country’s right to their distinct qualities and underlined the importance of ensuring that any change aimed at improving development in Africa is motivat­ed by a sense of moderation, a spirit of conciliation, and pre­disposition towards equity and judiciousness.

They recommended that each of the African foundation mem­ber countries set up the collegial institution and delegate the exer­cise of the Fatwa to it.

 BY TIMES REPORTER

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