More than 130 Muslim scholars have written to Pope Benedict XVI and other
Christian leaders urging greater understanding between the two faiths.
The
letter says that world peace could depend on improved relations between
Muslims and Christians.
It identifies the principles of accepting only one god and living in peace
with one's neighbours as common ground between the two religions.
It also insists that Christians and Muslims worship the same god.
The letter comes on the anniversary of an open letter issued to the Pope
last year from 38 top Muslim clerics, after he made a controversial speech
on Islam.
Pope Benedict sparked an uproar in September last year by quoting a medieval
text which linked Islam to violence.
The letter coincides with the Eid al-Fitr celebrations to mark the end of
Ramadan.
Koran and Bible
It was also sent to the Archbishop of Canterbury, the heads of the Lutheran,
Methodist and Baptist churches, the Orthodox Church's Patriarch of
Constantinople Bartholomew I and other Orthodox Patriarchs.
The letter, entitled A Common Word Between Us and You, compares passages in
the Koran and the Bible, concluding that both emphasise "the primacy of
total love and devotion to God", and the love of the neighbour.
With Muslims and Christians making up more than half the world's population,
the letter goes on, the relationship between the two religious communities
is "the most important factor in contributing to meaningful peace around the
world". . . .
FULL TEXT
"Bush's Crusade," The Wisdom
Fund, October 16, 2003
"Abdolali Bazargan's Letter to the
Pope," Islamic Center of Beverley Hills, October 25, 2007
"A
Common Word Between Us and You," October 13, 2007