وثيقة أمريكية حاقدة علي مملكة النور والإنسانية توضح فيه الدور الذي تلعبه لنشر الحرية والأخاء والمساواة داخل الولايات المتحدة.
http://www.freedomhouse.org/uploads/spec...ort/45.pdf
ArrayAll the documents analyzed here have some connection to the
government of Saudi Arabia. In some instances, they have five connections. The publications under study each have at least two of the following links to Saudi Arabia. They are:
• official publications of a government ministry;
• distributed by the Saudi embassy;
• comprised of religious pronouncements and commentary by religious authorities appointed to state positions by the Saudi crown;
• representative of the established Wahhabi ideology of Saudi Arabia; and/or
• disseminated through a mosque or center supported by the Saudi crown.[/quote]
Array….” The website also asserts that “the cost of King Fahd’s efforts in this field has been astronomical, amounting to many billions of Saudi Riyals,” resulting in “some 210 Centers wholly or partly financed by Saudi Arabia, more than 1,500 Mosques and 202 colleges and almost 2,000 schools for educating Muslim children.” The King and his son donated millions of dollars to the King Fahd mosque.8[/quote]
ArrayA prolific source of fatwas condemning “infidels” in this collection was Sheik ‘Abd al-‘Aziz Bin ‘Abdillah Bin Baz:lol22:(died 1999),إبن الشرموطة فضحنا في كل حتة who was appointed by King Fahd in 1993 to the official post of Grand Mufti. As Grand Mufti, he was upheld by the government of Saudi Arabia as its highest religious authority. Bin Baz was a government appointee who received a regular government salary, served at the pleasure of the King and presided over the Saudi Permanent Committee for Scientific Research :lol::lol::lol:and the Issuing of Fatwas, an office of the Saudi government. His radically dichotomous mode of thinking, :thumbup:coupled with his persistent demonizing of non-Muslims and tolerant Muslims, runs through the fatwas in these publications.[/quote]
ArrayBin Baz is famously remembered by many Saudis for a ruling he issued in 1966 declaring the world flat. :lol22:He was also responsible for the fatwa, unique in Islam, barring Saudi women from driving.13
Perhaps as a way of atoning for a fatwa he reluctantly issued in 1991 at the time of the Gulf War accepting the presence of non-Muslim troops in Saudi Arabia:lol22:, in subsequent years Bin Baz seemed to go out of his way to pronounce against Christians, Jews, and “infidel” Westerners. His fatwas, which carry considerable weight, have been circulated through official Saudi diplomatic channels to mosques and schools throughout the world, including some in the United States, and have been particularly influential in radicalizing Muslim youth at home and abroad. The extremist views proclaimed in these official fatwas belie what Adel al-Jubeir:lol22:, the articulate Saudi spokesman and special advisor to Crown Prince Abdullah, asserts during televised press conferences about fanatical sheiks in the Kingdom being mainly “underground,” and the fatwas they issue being merely expressions of “their personal opinions.” Though Bin Baz
4
is now dead, his fanatical fatwas continue to be treated as authoritative by the Saudi government.[/quote]