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The consequences of civil discourse

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Description

The consequences of civil discourse

On the eve of the farewell to the nineties, the Islamic interior celebrated, through its publications and special seminars, a prolific discussion and various treatments of the “need for renewal” and the “legitimacy of review.”

There was an eager welcome to any proposals or hosting in this context, and those proposals were, in their entirety, proposals that adhered to the Sharia standards and proposed “renewal” with the aim of strengthening the Islamic presence and extending it to new areas, not renewal with the aim of displacing the religious content or reducing its presence.
However, after the events of September 2001, the tone of the renewal discourse began to change in its intimacy, although it continued to revolve within the conditions of the Islamic interior. The fall of Baghdad was not announced at the beginning of 2003 until many of the banners of belonging had fallen and many of those renewal voices had withdrawn from the Islamic interior to a completely different camp.
It is true that there are still reformist figures who maintain their legitimate sobriety and political independence and before whom one stands with sincere reverence - and they are many, praise be to God - but we must admit with all clarity that the matter has developed with many pens of civil discourse to painful outcomes that the eyes of the observer almost turn white with sadness as he witnesses their growing wildness.

Keywords: Ibrahim bin Omar Al-Sakran, Ibrahim bin Omar Al-Sakran, Dar Al-Hadara for Publishing and Distribution

Additional information

Dimensions: 200 mm * 140 mm

Number of pages: 358

Number of parts:

Language: Arab

Binding: Paperback

Written/Prepared by:

  • Ibrahim bin Omar Al-Sakran

Publication Year: 2016

publisher:

  • Dar Al-Hadara for Publishing and Distribution