Ahmadiyya Times | News Staff | Around the Net
Source: USA Today | Reader's Opinion | December 2009
By Qasim Rashid | Chicago, IL.
Switzerland has banned the
building of new minarets. Critics argue that this ban is a violation of
the United Nation's Universal Declaration of Human Rights that
guarantees religious freedom in faith and in practice for its members.
Proponents argue that such a ban will curb the rise of extremist
factions, even though the minaret is not theologically required in
Islam ("Swiss voters ban mosque minarets," News, Monday).
A similar situation has existed in Pakistan. The country banned religious literature of Ahmadi
Muslims, who were declared non-Muslim in a 1974 constitutional
amendment. In 1986, severe restrictions were placed on this community,
so someone practicing the Ahmadi understanding of Islam could be
punished by death.
Over the years extremists, such as those who proposed the original
ban, had gained power. In an attempt to rid Switzerland of extremism,
the voters might have allowed it in through the back door.
The Swiss might have agreed to more than what they bargained for by passing the ban. History is not on their side.
Read here: MINARET BAN IN SWITZERLAND COULD BACKFIRE
Qasim Rashid is a contributing member of Majlis Sultanul Qalm, USA (MSQ USA) and regularly writes for Examiner.com and various other publications on topics
ranging from Islam to human rights.
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