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Sayyed Ali al-Amin: No political role for religious leaders

Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
September 17, 2008
March 16, 2022
Sayyed Ali al-Amin: No political role for religious leaders
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Sayyed Ali al-Amin: No political role for religious leaders

Sheikh Ali al-Amin

The former Shiite Mufti of Tyre (Lebanon) Sayyed Ali al-Amin gave a lecture last night at the Ramadan majlis of Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi.

The theme of his talk, unsurprisingly, was about the need for religious leaders to stay out of positions of political power in Muslim countries. Sheikh Amin has been pressing home this point for many years now, so it is not surprising that he continues to do so, especially with what many Lebanese (of all religious creed) see as the hijacking of Lebanese politics by the Shiite group Hizbullah and its charismatic leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrullah.

No mention of Hizbullah or Nasrullah by name was made by Sheikh Amin, but it was clear to everyone in the audience who he was referring to. “There is no permission for a religious leader to get involved in politics,” said the sheikh.

“We cannot have an imam as a politician,” continued Amin. “None of the prophets took charge of politics.”

Amin also quoted Ali ibn Abi Talib, the cousin of Prophet Mohammed, as having said: “People need a leader not a scholar. So there is no need for the divine in leadership.”

“I remember from my Najaf school days that Sheikh Ansari was one of the pillars who defended the notion of scholars not having political ambitions whatsoever,” concluded the Shiite leader.

He also spoke about the Welayat al-Fakeeh notion, or a nation ruled by religious scholars, an obvious reference to Iran after the 1979 revolution, and how he was opposed to this.

Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
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Shiites
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