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Saudi Arabia treats Ismailis as second-class citizens
By: Nabil Raza
Source: Human Rights Watch
LONDON, Britain: The Saudi government should end its systematic
discrimination against its Ismaili religious minority, Human Rights
Watch said in a report released on 22 September.
Human Rights Watch called upon the government to set up a national
institution empowered to recommend remedies for discriminatory
policies and responding to individual claims.
The 90-page report, "The Ismailis of Najran: Second-Class Saudi
Citizens," based on more than 150 interviews and reviews of official
documents, documents a pattern of discrimination against the Ismailis
in the areas of government employment, education, religious freedom,
and the justice system.
"The Saudi government preaches religious tolerance abroad, but it has
consistently penalized its Ismaili citizens for their religious
beliefs," said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights
Watch. "The government should stop treating Ismailis as second-class
in employment, the justice system, and education."
At least several hundred thousand, and perhaps as many as 1 million,
Ismailis live in Saudi Arabia, part of the Shias in the
Sunni-dominated country of 28 million. Most Ismailis live in Najran
province, on Saudi Arabia's southwestern border with Yemen, where
tensions have been growing in recent years.
Saudi Arabia conquered Najran following a brief war with Yemen in
1934, incorporating into the kingdom the local Sulaimani Ismailis, one
strand of Ismaili belief. Najran has been home to the highest
Sulaimani Ismaili cleric, the Absolute Guide, since the 17th century.
Despite more than 70 years of shared history, Saudi authorities at the
highest levels continue to propagate hate speech against this
religious minority. In April 2007, the Council of Senior Religious
Scholars, the body tasked with officially interpreting Islamic faith,
ritual, and law, termed Ismailis "corrupt infidels, debauched
atheists." In August 2006, Saudi Arabia's highest judge, Shaikh Salih
al-Luhaidan, declared to an audience of hundreds that Ismailis
"outwardly appear Islamic, but inwardly, they are infidels." Other
Saudi officials did not rebut or disown those statements.
Growing tension since the mid-1990s between Ismailis and Najran's
governor, Prince Mish'al bin Sa'ud bin Abd al-'Aziz, led to clashes in
April 2000, after the authorities arrested an Ismaili cleric they
accused of "sorcery." Security forces arrested hundreds of Ismailis,
and tortured and secretly tried dozens of others. The authorities then
purged some 400 Ismailis from the local bureaucracy.
Since then, local officials who have been sent to Najran from other
parts of the country and reflecting the country's dominant
conservative Wahhabi Muslim ideology, have continued to discriminate
against Ismailis in employment, education and the justice system, and
interfered with their ability to practice their religion.
Only one of the 35 department heads of the Najran provincial
government is an Ismaili. Almost no Ismailis work as senior security
personnel or as religion teachers. Saudi textbooks teach that the
Ismaili faith is a sin of "major polytheism," tantamount to
excommunication. Wahhabi teachers in Najran insult Ismaili pupils'
faith and try to convert them to Sunni Islam, even using threats of
class failure and flogging.
Ismailis are not free to pass their religious teachings on to new
generations. The authorities have at times exiled the Absolute Guide
from Najran or placed him under house arrest. Saudi authorities also
ban the import or production of Ismaili religious literature. Ismailis
face obstacles in obtaining permits to build new mosques or expand
existing ones, whereas the state funds and builds Sunni mosques in
Najran, even in areas without a Sunni population.
The country's Sharia judges, following Wahhabi beliefs, routinely
discriminate against Ismailis on the basis of their faith. In March
2006, a judge annulled the marriage of an Ismaili man to a Sunni
woman, saying that the man lacked religious qualification. In May
2006, another judge barred an Ismaili lawyer from representing his
Sunni client.
"State-sponsored and officially tolerated discrimination against the
Ismailis of Najran seriously threatens their identity and denies them
basic rights," Stork said. "The authorities are shutting them out from
education, government employment, and professions."
In July 2008, King Abdullah opened a well-publicized interfaith
conference in Spain initiated by Saudi Arabia and attended by Muslim,
Jewish, Christian, Hindu, and Buddhist religious leaders.
"The measure of Saudi religious tolerance will be its practice at
home, not only what it preaches abroad," Stork said.
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"Knowledge is
better than wealth because it protects you while you have to
guard wealth. it decreases if you keep on spending it but the
more you make use of knowledge ,the more it increases . what you
get through wealth disappears as soon as wealth disappears but
what you achieve through knowledge will remain even after you."MORE
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