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Sunni and Shia factfile |
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The Sunni-Shia split within Islam originates from controversy surrounding Ali, cousin of the Prophet Mohammed. All Muslims respect Ali as the second historical follower of Islam, but whilst Sunnis believe he was just one of several possible leaders, Shia believe he and his line were divinely appointed. Shia Islam recognises Ali as the
first of the Twelve Imams, a divinely-ordained dynasty of supreme religious
rulers, related Sectarian violence began when Ali was installed, and civil war broke out over the instillation of a 'rightful' caliph in the wake of Ali's reign. The intensity of fighting gradually decreased |
until the 20th century, when the break up of the
Ottoman empire, two gulf wars and a Shia revolution helped reignite tension.
Sunni Islam does not have a formal clergy, unlike Shia which is structured according to a religious hierarchy, culminating in a religious ruler, such as The Grand Ayatollah in Iran. Many Sunnis believe that to instill a human, like the Supreme Imam in Iran, with divine influence is wrong.
Approximately 90 per cent of the Muslim world is Sunni. Countries such as Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt are typically identified as strongholds of Sunni government and scholarship, and throughout history Shia Muslims have been subject to the rule of Sunni
authorities. The 1979 revolution in Iran provided an exception, as has the new government in Iraq.
The Hadith, which sets out guidelines for everyday religious practice, is interpreted slightly differently between the two sects, and as a result customs for prayer can vary between Shia and Sunnis.
Islamic fundamentalism, the kind which produced the Taliban and part of the insurgency in Iraq, is related to Wahhabism, an offshoot of the Sunni sect that advocates a return to pre-modern Islamic values.
In Saudi Arabia, where
the Wahhabi ideology is strong, Shia Muslims have often been subject to
persecution and been branded kaffir, or infidels. ![]()
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