Talk:Shia–Sunni relations

Latest comment: 5 months ago by Omnipaedista in topic Excess detail?

map edit

there should be a color coded map showing which countries are mostly sunni and which ones are mostly shi'a. additionally there should be some way to indicate if the government of a given country is either sunni or shi'a. this would be very helpful for places like syria and bahrain where - i believe - the government and the majority of the people are not of the same sect of islam - ... 213.74.231.183 (talk) 10:12, 27 December 2012 (UTC)Reply

I don't know what data it was compiled from, but the map exists if anyone else wants to do the research. I found it here: http://thesinosaudiblog.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/madhhab_map2.png — Preceding unsigned comment added by Safrolic (talkcontribs) 23:36, 26 June 2014 (UTC)Reply

Peterius (talk) 17:33, 9 June 2017 (UTC) That map on here is not great. There's no clear listing of where it came from and it conflicts with the sunni-shia populations quote directly above it.Reply

This article needs help edit

and i dont know enough to be a help, but i am seriously confused, right off the bat. i mean, you talk about ali, and bakr and caliphs with no mention to who they are, when they were alive, how they were related, where they ruled specifically. in the first paragraph of the article proper alone, it seems like you refer to ali as if he lived and died or rather maybe he was two people... ("a violent coup d'état against Ali in his first day as caliph" at least possibly suggests to me that he died in the violent attack, but not necessarily, but who did the coup, why, and when?) ali who? son of who? lived in where? related to who? serious, i don't know what the hell is going on. --64.142.79.210 09:22, 14 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

The first sentence of the article has a link to the Historic background of the Sunni-Shi'a split which is kind of necessary for this article. To understand some subjects you sometimes need to go read some other things first. I think this article is pretty good overall but some specific parts do need help. --W00tfest99 16:06, 23 February 2007 (UTC)Reply
First of all, my hat is off to the authors for tackling this sensitive, ancient and convoluted subject. But I agree with the first person, I'm more confused after reading the intro than when I looked the subject up. It's like you want to give both sides fair treatment of all particulars in the first breath, even though the number of particulars is huge. What this article needs at minimum is a good thesis statement, and a greatly simplified intro. In the intro, picture yourself explaining things to a Baptist from Arkansas or a Buddhist from Nepal who have never been exposed to Muslim culture, not a fellow Muslim who can argue the fine points. Pb8bije6a7b6a3w (talk) 15:19, 8 August 2014 (UTC)Reply

First comments edit

Now, lets just wait for Zora to vfd it. --Striver 23:25, 3 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

lol. Youre right.--Zereshk 23:33, 3 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

I put a POV tag on it. This page is unencyclopedic. I also suspect that many educated Shi'a would find it risible. Zora 00:33, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

You are welcomed to point out where the page lack encyclopedic qualities, so that we can fix the problem and have a good and encyclopedic page. We both are eagerly waitning your input, expecting them to come equaly fast as the pov tag came. --Striver 02:17, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Oh, and regarding this, this is a Zereshk & Striver joint project, and we both support the facts writen here. You are encouraged to bring a Shia that contests any of the claims in the article, or try to falsifie any of it. It really isnt hard to find anti-Shia propaganda, or quotes what the old Sunni scholars thought of us, its the Salafis full time job to educate everyone of it.--Striver 02:21, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
She actually called us "uneducated"...--Zereshk 05:04, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Yeah...
"It feels to me like a grotesque waste of time and energy to negotiate with the mentally deficient and psychologically impaired."Zora on Brandons talkpage
However, i seems like Zereshk is geting the idea, everything is not up to here. It is not ok to remove what Shias belive are important, dissmising them as fables and pov just because she hasent heard of it.
Brandon, I think I've figured it out. Striver and Zereshk enjoy conflict, enjoy writing something outrageous (poking me) and seeing how I will react. See the talk page on Historical Shi'a-Sunni relations. I always respond, due to my dogged insistence on trying to make Wikipedia "good" (by my standards). I have to let go of that. I just will not deal with them for a while, and see what happens. It's up to the rest of you to deal with Shi'a bias and Striver's spelling and grammar. I need to step back. I'll see how it goes if I just work on other articles for a while. Zora on Brandons talkpage
--Striver 12:31, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
I mean, its great that she has started to educated herself by reading some books about shias, like madelungs, but it is absurd that she belives she knows more than us about Shias after reading that book, dismmising everything that we belive in as inaccurate "since madelung dont think so"... --Striver 12:34, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Striver, you really can be difficult at times. I think it's safe to point out that average Shia knowledge is nothing special in scholarly terms. I know many Sunnis whom if trying to write an encyclopedic article would get laughed off of wikipedia. So, we must drop the idea that your religion privileges you in knowledge, and we must start getting you to cite references much better. From scholarly sources, try books, especially established ones. These websites that are getting passed off as real sources are problems because they are not scholarly works or even in the ball park. Britannica would not publish things how you write them Striver, and just going on tone alone Zora's work is much better. She also tends to cite sources more, and decent ones. So, I would not discount her knowledge. In this article you have the list of Sunni scholars that called Shias kafirs... well, you add, "and more..." that is completely unacceptable, it's as if you mean "ad infinitum", as if Sunnism itself is an attack on Shi'ism. Do you really feel that this article is a balanced portrayal? Please help to fix and balance it out Striver, these aren't argument papers, they are neutral and you are turning it into an argument for your beliefs more or less and that's not how encyclopedias are written, they don't make judgments. Okay? gren グレン 08:29, 5 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Hi gren. Sorry for making you feel bad. That part that you fact cheke was not created by me, it was created by zereshk and she defended their validity on the Shia talk page. The only thing i did was to move it here. The "and moree..." is accurate, i mean, can you belive the creator of the four madhab making takfir, but not anyone else? Further, Sunni Islam *is* factualy a attack on shia Islam, Umar himself confessed that in Sahih Bukhari with the words "Ali Zubair and however was with them opposed us". Even if one totaly disregards the Imamah issue, the factual behavior of the Caliphs remain: They denied fatimah her inheritance on OUTRAGEOUS grounds, she stoped talking to them and demanded to be buried in secret. Sahih Bukhari agrees. And when they also did the same to dishonest. Not to talk about Abu Bakr confistating the land of Fadak from Fatimah (Yes CONFISCATING, its was NOT a part of any inheritance). Continueing to Abu Bakr killing Shias on random zakat non-sense arguments and then the Battle of Camel and Siffin, and then Karbala and so on... How can you say that Sunni Islam is *not* an assault on Shia Islam?
However, i do agree that some of the things in the article need a factual check, for example, where the Abbasid really Sunnis? Did they acknowledge the three first Caliphs? If not, that needs to be pointed out. Then, i wonder if somone can realy be hanged for three year, is that possible? And then, we need to include the later Sunni scholars that very kindly have joined the Shia call for Unity. Also, we need to add books like "and then i was guided" that literaly have taken countries in a rage of conversion to Shia Islam, and being fobiden in manny countries, and also point out that the reverse fenomen does not exsits, Sunni books causing mass conversion to Sunni from Shia. Thanks for your input and i await your reaply! salam! --Striver 13:38, 5 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

Persecution of Sunni ulema edit

Bringing this up as an example of government suppression of Shi'a is just plain wrong. Al-Mamun was attempting to impose his Mutazili dogma on the ulema and they resisted. Had nothing to do with the Shi'a. Zora 23:26, 5 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

The point is that it wasnt just the Shi'a that were being persecuted.--Zereshk 00:25, 6 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Isn't that Sunni-Sunni relations, not Shi'a-Sunni relations? gren グレン 18:50, 11 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
The point is to show the atmosphere of intolerance at the time. There were different schools of thought even within the Sunni superstructure. Some accept Shias. Some dont. Those who did, died for it. (example: Tusi)
Also, there is no Arabic in the text. I therefore dont need to reference anything that I already havent. The Arabic stuff that I posted on the talk page has translations given on the site whose link I posted. Thanx again.--Zereshk 23:44, 11 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

Citations edit

Please make citations so references can be checked. Adding Arabic script is not going to help and therefore it is just like be unreferenced. Provide something that makes it trackable for peer review. gren グレン 18:50, 11 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

The Arabic that you are referring to is actually the name of the text, the reference itself. I left it in Arabic, because I wasnt sure about the proper transliteration. I will write its English transcription beside it.--Zereshk 23:46, 11 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Yah, just make sure there is something (ISBN at least) so that we can identify the source and cite it. Page numbers in a certain version would be helpful. This is controversial and if only you know your source that's not going to be good enough. Try to make it more accessible. Wikipedia:Cite sources shows all of the reasons sources need to be cited, etc. gren グレン 00:53, 12 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Tell me, does the Quran have an ISBN number? Or how about the prophecies of Nostradamus? Or the Bible of Matthew? Likewise, texts that were written several hundred years ago are the same. If you know Islam and Arabic well enough, you will know the books that Ibn Athir for example wrote. Or Nizam ul-Mulk's Siyasatnama. And you will know Ibn Athir's al-nihayah wa al-bidayah. These are obvious sources. Your putting an NPOV tag just illustrates your partisan and obstructionist position. Why cant people just accept that there is injustice in mainstream Islam as well, like everywhere else?--Zereshk 02:16, 12 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
They all do have ISBNs in modern publications... unless, you happen to have a very old book they will have some way to trace them. It doesn't matter how much I know about Arabic or Islam the fact remains that you need to cite things in a way that others can check on them, just read the rules Zereshk. You will note I never added the NPOV tag to this page..., and adding an NPOV tag isn't exactly partisan? It's saying the article is too partisan. I have never denied injustice in mainstream Islam... so let's just cite sources. Okay? Also, if they're very old I recommend trying ot get them on project gutenberg or distributed proofreaders (Europe for foreign character sets). Really, I don't see why this has become an argument about being partisan or not... it's a straightforward case of you must present your sources in a way so that others can research and fact check the article. Thanks. gren グレン 03:14, 13 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

template edit

does {{Religious persecution}} bring any ideas? --Striver 03:00, 13 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

You are going to have to explain what you mean Striver. gren グレン 03:17, 13 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Its strikes me as there is a place for a "religous persecution of Shi'as" article, and it should be linked there. Make a "religous persecution by the Shi'as" also, if you find any such material. --Striver 03:41, 13 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
I am not sure it deserves a place on the template (since we're getting into sectarian and smaller scopes, and the article is broad) but I do think you could certainly create an article. This article almost is that already because it doesn't discuss good relations very much... and, of course there have been problems. If it's done well it could be a good article :) --gren グレン 05:00, 13 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Yeah, that is what occured to me. Unfortunatly, there is not much good to report, but i do think that the good thinks from the "shia" aticle should be included.--Striver 14:52, 13 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

Misunderstood concepts edit

I believe there are some issues that need to be adressed as to whom exactly called "Shiites" as "Kafir" by doing Takfir on them;

It's important to know there were two form of Shiites in history wich both adhered to Shiite teaching (in this case i mean your typical Ithna Ashari)..

  • (1) Shiites that cursed Abu Bakr, Omar and Othman, whom were called Rafidi's for them doing such
  • (2) Shiites that did not curse Omar, Othman, Abu Bakr, etc, the Majority

If we consider that Imam Malik and Abu Hanifa were students under the Shiite Imam, Imam Sadiq, and we analyze how both of these characters have praised their teacher and in addition studied with Shiites alltogether, that Imam Sadiq taught them about Muta, Taqiyyah and other concepts and at the same time them forming a respectful difference in oppinion, we'll realize that these two characters that on the page that have refered to "Shia as Kafir" were refering to the "Rafidi" form of Shiism (1). Someone should definately be sure about whom he attributes the Takfir to and who the person was refering to. The other two Imams (Ahmad Hanbal and Shafi) in addition were indirect students of Imam Sadiq as well, as is generally known.--Paradoxic 15:15, 30 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

It would be enriching if you add this historical point to the article.--Zereshk 17:38, 31 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

Major revision edit

This is truly one of the most fantastically POV articles anywhere on Wikipedia. Despite my major revision, as it stands now I would vote for deletion in a second. The article is not what the title purports to be; it is not a "history of Sunni-Shia relations" but a huge litany of Shia polemics of the most blatant kind. No neutral reader can regard this article as worthy of any encyclopedia. More revisions will come as I have time to undertake them, unless it is deleted or retitled to reflect it's real agenda. --AladdinSE 23:38, 11 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

I have placed an RFC requesting a review. --AladdinSE 23:52, 11 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

AladdinSE,
Your act of censoring information is quite revealing of your intentions.
Im giving you the chance to re-edit your changes, and bring more balance to the article, before I jump in and revert the unfounded deletions youve made. A shameful history cannot be concealed under any circumstance.
Examples of your obvious bias I scanned thru:
  • Any pro-Shia stance is written as "shias claim that..." whereas any pro-Sunni stance is portrayed as standard (i.e. Sunnis dont claim it, because it actually is). That puts you hardly in a position to point the POV finger.
  • You use the word "dynastic" obviously with a negative connotation. That's biased and untrue. That's one example of a "Sunni claim".
  • Youve changed the caption for the image so that it now tries to discredit the document. Such acts are banned by WP. I personally scanned that document. Discrimination against Shias in Malaysia is very real. I personally know the person who was rejected for that application.--Zereshk 01:24, 12 January 2006 (UTC)Reply


You are really saying that the "article", such as it was, was neutral? You really think it describes the "history of Sunni-Shia relations" rather than a heavily POV list of Shia complaints? You think it reads like an encyclopedia entry and not an (extremely) partisan website? If you do, there is very little anyone can say to reason with you. It was so outrageously biased that even I was shocked, and I thought I was used to these kinds of unabashed POV binges from you and others by now. As for your bullet points:

No Im not saying it was neutral. But it will edge toward neutrality if we add some things to it. Im not a big fan of Shia rulers either (i.e. anyone except the 12 imams). Especially when they mix church and state. But instead of deleting what I (and Striver and others) wrote, you can add to it, and hence bring balance. I beseech you to consider doing that, instead of mass reversions which can only lead to editorial conflicts.
"Edge towards neutrality?" That isn't nearly good enough, Zereshk. You and Striver have thrown up article after article of Shia Polemics that have no connection whatsoever to encyclopedic standards with the "Sunni View" sections often left blank or represented by a precious few words. You can't just spout volumes of highly emotional claims and partisan accounts and then wash your hands of the article and say "oh I'll just let the 'Sunni editors' balance the other side." You ask me and others to "argue for the other side" as it were, but you fail to realize that most of us are not here to fly a religious or ideological standard. You don't even know if I am Buddhist, atheist, Shia or Agnostic, or Wican. You just assume that because I have changed Striver's and your edits, I am not only a Sunni but a "vicious Shia hater" (your own words). I change these edits because they are blatantly emotional and extremely one-sided POVs that look completely ridiculous in a encyclopedia.--AladdinSE 22:15, 15 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Now, On what grounds are you charging that the article reads "partisan"? Merely because it seems like a "list of complaints" (which it actually does...youre right about that)? You do realize that the article was heavily sourced? If it is merely a list of complaints, maybe we can balance the article out by adding or expanding sections in which Sunnis were just rulers and had peaceful relations with the Shia. Not all of the history of Sunni-Shia relations is sour. After all, many of Imam Sadeq's students were prominent Sunnis (for example). Im sure you can add extensively so.
On what grounds? Give me a break. On the grounds that you and Striver have not even attempted the slightest sembleance of balance or neutrality. On the grounds that the title is "Historical Sunni Shoa relations" and yet it is a mere list of polemics and emotional complaints. On the grounds that these "heavily sourced" material come from confirmed Shia clerics and partisans. These, you will notice, I did not delete, I merely noted to be what they are, Shia sources. As for your suggestions, well why for the love of pudding don't you go ahead and mention these non-sour points and the Sunni students of Imam Sadeq's etc etc. Stop assuming that I and others are some sort of Al-Azhar clerics. --AladdinSE 22:15, 15 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Having a list of "emotional complaints" is hardly a reason to allege partisanship. What do you call this? I suppose you dont see anything emotional in the text of Death marches (Holocaust). IOW, the term "emotional complaints" is merely your opinion on the matter. We see it as history. That's why we use sources, so you cant throw me the "partisanship" thing again.--Zereshk 07:54, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Emotionalism in encyclopedia articles is more than adequate cause to allege partisanship. The article you point to is not emotional at all. I wish you would actually read it and understand finally how markedly more mature its style and content is as opposed to yours and Striver's.--AladdinSE 20:35, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
  • (Regarding the first sentence in paragraph above:) Oh are they? Please show me such a policy in explicit stipulation. And who will be the judge that they are "emotional"? You? You who reject my invitation to contribute and bring balance? You who only wants a mass deletion of the article?--Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
  • Well then we can wait and see if the RfC committe thinks the text is any more "emotional" than Death marches (Holocaust) or Final Solution. Perhaps as a test to your claim we can replace the name "Jewish" with "Shia" in that article to see how it would sound?--Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
I only wish your style were as good as those articles you point to. Your claim of "mass deletion" is absurd. I will let the edit history speak for itself. Actually, I am tempted to revert all my changes, just so that your and Striver's original atrocious version can be viewed for what it is, a prime example of emotional POV polemics gone amuck. Also please read: Wikipedia:Guide to writing better articles and Wikipedia:Neutral point of view. Consider as an example this policy statement: "Articles that compare views need not give minority views as much or as detailed a description as more popular views" and yet here you and Striver have created an article that is supposed to be a history of relations and it was from first to last a representation of Shia-centric views despite that the sect is a minority. This is in direct opposition to stated Wikipedia policy. --AladdinSE 07:46, 24 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
My claim of you wanting to delete the entire article is absurd? Well then you have a memory problem too: [1] Also, that policy does not mean that we ignore Shia views as illegitimate just because they are a minority in population. Nice try.--Zereshk 00:52, 4 February 2006 (UTC)Reply
Again with this. "Mass deletion" is not the same as an AfD. Claims of "Mass deletion" means a lot of text is removed inside the article, not that the article itself is deleted. --AladdinSE 16:54, 12 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
  • What pro-Sunni stances?? Your version was from first to last an exercise in one-sidedness. And note that all the links and books quoted are highly partisan Shia sources, and yet the statements they "supported" were presented as fact.
Then I implore you to add the other side to the article, not delete the one side that already is. We really need this article. Because it is important. There's alot of bad blood. But Im sure you can find a way where both sides can agree the article is good enough.
Again, you add them! Striver should have added them. Actually the whole concept of the article was false and polemic to begin with. It is a strong candidate for VfD. You know perfectly well that Striver wrote it for the sole purpose of sounding off on Shia grievances and to justify and explain Shia doctrine. What's more, I did not "delete the one side that already is", I left most of those statements and merely pointed out that they are Shia viewpoints backed up by Shia scholars. we do not "really need" this article. We do not need any of Striver's style of writing, in fact. It is so emotional, one-sided and grammaticality poor that he ought not to attempt to edit the English Wikipedia until he has mastered the language and achieved some semblance of neutrality. The entire article here can be housed in one or two subsections in the Succession to Muhammad article.--AladdinSE 22:15, 15 January 2006 (UTC)Reply


Actually, the article was part of other Shia pages to begin with. Zora was so unhappy with this information being on her pages, that she forced us to outsource it. That's how this page was created in the first place. I disagree with the VfD. That history can be emotional for the oppressed is another discussion.--Zereshk 07:47, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
She forced you to do nothing. Other editors have not been allowing you and Striver to get away with your radical POV agenda in those other articles and you have responded by throwing up article after article of terribly written, grammatically atrocious, and fantastically POV "mini" articles where you try to get away with what was not allowed elsewhere. It will not work. --AladdinSE 20:35, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
On the contrary, yes she did. Outsourcing or exporting the dispute is a regularly practiced tactic by Sunni editors to (in their own mind) sweep away the dispute from the article. What do you think then she's doing here, here, and here? (especially considering they all took place after editorial wars on Shia and Ali pages). Shes doing it all the time.--Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Again with "Sunni editors". If you ever learn to control your sectarian zeal and just think of Wikipedians as editors rather than partisans like yourself, it will be a miracle. As for Zora, if you ever achieve one-one hundredth of her neutrality or prose style, that would be an even greater miracle. Her record speaks for itself, including the links you provided. Let whomever doubts it read for themselves.--AladdinSE 07:46, 24 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
You are the one with Sectarian zeal. You dont see us coming around threatening to mass delete Sunni articles and making edit wars in them. And as for Zora, I dont need to expand on that. There are enough users out there that think her editing style sucks.--Zereshk 00:52, 4 February 2006 (UTC)Reply
  • Nonsense. If I were truly a Sunni POV pusher, I would not want to give "dynastic" a negative connotation. The Sunni Umayyads and Abassids were dynastic. And it IS a perfectly true Sunni position. The Sunnis do not accept an "inherited" right to rule the destiny of all Muslims on Earth just because of an accident of birth.
If it is a Sunni position, then why dont you mention it in the article? Instead you use it as if to objectively impugn the Shia. That aside, "dynastic" by its definition in Meriam Webster implies rulership. None of the 12 imams actually ruled. Except for Ali, none of the imams ever exercized any position of khilafah. Having followers by itself does not exactly equate to rulership. Dynasty is something for the Sasanids or Safavids. Not for imams who were either all in prison, or all were murdered. To shorten it: the word "dynastic" is at best misleading. And at worst, it hints at Sunnis (as opposed to Shias) being democratic (i.e. it is judgemental). Please use another word.
Again, I am not here to fly the Sunni standard or any other standard! And I did mention it, and you objected to that mention. And of course dynastic implies rulership. I am aware that none of the 11 imams after Ali were rulers, that is because Shiism has always been a minority sect. Shia still believe that Imaams should have ruled and been caliphs, therefore the dynastic comment is perfectly applicable and not pejorative in the least. They CLAIMED the right to inherited rulership over all Muslims, i.e. the Caliphate. This is a dynastic claim, whether achieved or not. Even so, despite most Sunni scholarly opinion favoring an ideal that shura determines the election of the caliph, history has shown that political expediency and the greed of men, Sunni men included, have often subverted ideals. It's not a "hint" against Shia, it applies to Sunnis too. It happens all over the world to this day. --AladdinSE 22:15, 15 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
You are missing the point. The word "Rulership" implies royalty and royalty ways. When Ali was Caliph, he still lived on eating dried bread. That's a long way from Yazid son of Mu'awiyah, the heir of the Sunnite Caliphate, who sported dogs and monkeys as pets.--Zereshk 07:47, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
No, the word "rulership" does not imply royalty. You can dance around the issue all you want, but the position that the caliphate can only be inherited in the line of members of the Household of the Prophet is a DYNASTY, regardless of wether these inherited rulers or would-be rulers assume the outward forms of royalty or not. And you need not expound the virtues of Ali, he is universally well thought of in history. As for Yazid, I know how much you hate him, personally I am ambivalent, and these batings won't draw me out. I am only interested in neutrality. In my own opinion, Ali was a good and respected ruler because he became caliph through Shura, where the able politicians have a chance of being elected whereas most of the Umayyads and Abassids etc inherited their positions, which means that weak rulers became Caliph. --AladdinSE 20:35, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
My God you even refuse to say that "Sunnis claim it to be dynastic". That would be a compromise for me, if you did. But since you refuse to even budge by simply replacing that word, here are my arguments to any arbiters: --Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
            1. I challenge AladdinSE to present us a Shia text where it says Shia Imams became Imams merely because their fathers were Imams (hence "dynastic"). Shia Imams were only Imams because they were ordained by God (as their belief claims). That they happened to be related in kin is coincidental.--Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
            2. In a dynasty, there is a blood line that is kept. The mothers of Husein and Mahdi were not even Arab, let alone "from the same family", as the word "dynasty" defines.--Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
            3. You refuse to use the word "dynasty" for Sunni Caliphs in the article, (such as Yazeed and his progeny) where they were not chosen by "shura", lived royal lifestyles, ruled over empires. And yet all Shia Imams were killed, and many lived in prison. i.e. none (save Ali) actually ruled. That constitutes a POV stance.--Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
What on earth are you talking about here. What "compromise"? As for Imams and their fathers, dynastic does not mean only father to son, it requires belonging to the same family. Many caliphs and kings and queens around the world did not inherit their positions directly from a parent, but from other forebears. And how can you say I refuse to use "dynasty" for Sunni caliphs, of course the Umayyad and Abassids were dynastic. I said that clearly. Only the Rashidoon did not owe their position to a dynasty.--AladdinSE 07:46, 24 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Yes I understand that compromise has no meaning to you. That's how people with the real agenda are identified. Thanx for pointing that.--Zereshk 00:52, 4 February 2006 (UTC)Reply
  • The caption change is a PRIME example of NPOV. Your version made it sound like it was proof positive of Malaysian official government policy. If legitimate, it was not a government letter, it was a university letter, and I quoted it accurately. Since this letter is not a matter of public record, it cannot be verified as having truly been from that University. As you say, it was your own scan. Nevertheless, I did not delete it, I merely quoted it accurately and made clear it was a university not the government.
The "university letter" clearly says that it is govt policy to not hire Shia. I dont understand your refusal to reject what even the letter says. Are you implying that the letter is a fraud? I find that insulting. Even Sunni news sources report of such policies in Malaysia [2] also (6th paragraph from bottom) Perhaps I should add these links to silence any other doubts regarding this matter.
Yes the letter does clearly say that, and I quoted those words exactly, so how can you complain? If I wanted to reject what the letter says I would delete all reference to it. Your version made it sound like it was an official government letter signed by the prime minister and bearing the royal seal! And if I thought the letter was a fraud, I would have sent it up for deletion from Wikipedia. It may be a fraud, if we are talking of possibilities, since you did not get it from a source other editors and readers can verify as legitimate. That is, it is not a matter of public record. The signature and recipient is not clear or deliberately edited (and I understand why). I could forge a letter like that tomorrow on university letterhead claiming it to say anything I want, and scan it and upload it to Wikipedia. Any caption to a letter like that, since it is not a verifiable matter of public record, must have the caveat that it is a letter purporting to be so and so. That is the essence of NPOV, Zereshk. And by the way those links are fit for inclusion and I would have no objection to them. They're not ideal, after all any newspaper in China is not free in the western sense, and Islam Online is a blog and a partisan website, but they are still usable. By all means you can explore integrating them in the article, with a neutral unemotional portrayal of the facts. I'll do it myself if I have time today or in the next few days. --AladdinSE 22:15, 15 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
It can be verified if needed. Because I have the unmarked, which has a office record number. Not to mention that the university can be contacted for verification.--Zereshk 07:47, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
No, it cannot be verified if needed. Once it becomes a matter of public record, it can be verified. And by the way I doubt very much that the University would want to shout from the rooftops that they practice institutionalized discrimination. And you can't just call the University for confirmation, the university has to put out a document or press release that then becomes part of the public record. Regardless, I was speaking only academically. If I believed the letter was a likely fraud, I would have deleted it.--AladdinSE 20:35, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Yes it CAN be verified. The law, in Malyasia, which the letter speaks of, is public record. You have no right to inject "your doubts" about it into the article. Why are you so desperately trying to silence this matter? Arent you supposed to be impartial?--Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
No, the letter CANNOT be verified. Do not attempt to change what we were talking about. It is the veracity of the letter as an official University letter that is not a matter of public record. I never said or implied no discrimination in Malyasia exists. In fact I supported the inclusion of those links. I wish there were better ones from more reputable and independent journalistic sources, but these will do for now. If I wanted to "silence" anything I would delete it, not quote it accurately as I have done.--AladdinSE 07:46, 24 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Can't you see that you are harming Wikipedia? Can't you see what a string of emotional and breast-beating list of woe's your and Striver's edits tend to be? I know you are very pious Shias, and that you have prominent Ayotollah relatives, and you have very sincere religious feelings about what your history tought you about what happened to Ali and Shias in general. However, you must understand that your emotional edits are extremely POV and one-sided. Open up the Encyclopedia Britannica, or any neutral non-Muslim reference. Do you see any similarity at all between your content or style and theirs? Please, please take a step back and reconsider your attitude regarding these relentless POV edits to the Islamic articles. --AladdinSE 03:10, 12 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

So for example, by the same line of reasoning, blacks shouldnt "complain" of their slavery history in America because it amounts to "chest beating"? Or Jews shouldnt be writing and building and talking about the holocaust in every single corner of this country because it is merely "emotional"? (And if Shias are emotional, then I suppose Jews are hyper-emotional. But then it is a value when it comes to them). Why do you propose we be treated any different?--Zereshk 08:02, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Yes absolutely! This crystalizes the difference in our approaches. You believe that Wikipedia is an appropriate venue for emotional self-flagellation and polemics due to the severity of the abuses, real and perceived, of your Shia brethren. Examine closely your perspective and choice of words: "every single corner of this country." Wikipedia is an international reference not bound by the location of its storage servers! It is a neutral encyclopedia, or is supposed to be. Look at the articles on slavery, History of slavery in the United States and the The Holocaust. You will see a marked difference between the neutral, sober encyclopedic style they contain and the emotional breast-beating wails you and Striver champion when it comes to Shia grievances.--AladdinSE

Frankly, your argument is very weak here, and I have trouble believeing your claim to NPOV here. Im trying to show you that what you call "self flagellation" and "chest beating" of Shias is in fact the standard norm when it comes to blacks and Jews. The reason you dont see any dispute going on their pages is because there is no one to accuse blacks and jews of "chest beating". Look at the links you posted: The Holocaust related pages in fact are filled with emotional text. They have an entire template of links to tell us ("COMPLAIN") how they were exterminated. And you are trying to delete the very few page that wish to do a similar goal for Shias? If you think the text on the Holocaust pages is not emotioanl, then perhaps would you like me to quote you some examples from a sample page?--Zereshk 07:57, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Again you utterly mischaracterize those articles as "emotional." They portray the facts in a sober and encyclopedic manner. There is no self-flagelation. If you consider their style and content to be on an equal, or even near equal footing with your and Striver's own, then it is impossible to reason with you. As for my not being NPOV and you being so, I will just let our edit histories speak for themselves, for anyone to examine.--AladdinSE 20:35, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Right. Liek I said, we can test this. Just pick a "How Nazis exterminated Jews" article, switch the words "Jew" with "Shia", and see which article sounds more "emotional". And remember, there is no WP law against "articles that sound emotional". Show me.--Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Like I said, it is impossible to reason with you, as you equate those fine articles with your own POV-heavy prose stye. Emotionalism is a very good red flag for violations of the Neutral Point of View policy. I am glad you articulate again that you think emotionalism is OK in an encyclopedia, let this be one of your own self-indictments for others to read.--AladdinSE 07:46, 24 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

And Im surprised that you consider Britannica as a source. That's for high school kids, and you know it. Or perhaps you consider the Encyclopedia of Islam which has been authored by people like Goldziher and Lammens as neutral?!! Have you read Goldziher's writings about Shias? And he's considered as standard reference. Astaghfurillah.--Zereshk 07:47, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Of course it is a source, and a very well respected one at that. If you think that because high school kids use it, it becomes some sort of joke, you are sorely mistaken. There are countless Wikipedia articles that have borrowed a great deal from the public domain content of the Encyclopedia Britannica. And you needn't get hung up on Goldziher. Do a contrastive study of well-respected and neutral non-Muslim references, and you'll see what I mean. --AladdinSE 22:15, 15 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
This is what we (me and Striver et al) think: There's a dark history alright between Shias and Sunnis. But it's not all bad. AND...there is room for future positivity. All we ask for is a bit of historical recognition. Not the "bid'ah"-accusing sneers and smirks and sly looks that we get behind us whenever we stand to pray with them in mosques. If Americans can be shameful of their past in slaving the blacks, why cant you? Is it that hard???--Zereshk 06:28, 13 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Again, this is the glaring difference between myself and you and Striver. You think Wikipedia is an appropriate venue for this admirable cause, I do not. What's more you assume I am a Sunni and a member of a class of people that have wronged you and your brethren. For the last time, you know nothing about me, so stop assuming. I am not here boasting of my relatives or unabashedly pushing a partisan POV. I am just another anonymous editor among countless anonymous Wikipedia editors. If you want to go on about being snickered at in Mosques and these other unfortunate discriminations, start a blog or a reconciliation website. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia.--AladdinSE 22:15, 15 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Im sorry SE, if I am seeing 100 pages on how every Ariel and Ehud was burned up in the oven by nazis, we can certainly write a similar page about what happened to Shias. Im not convinced by your efforts in trying to bury this history. You could have at least said: "OK. It did happen. Let us make the effort and present it in an encyclopedic way". Then I would have believed your claim to neutrality.--Zereshk 07:47, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

There is no similarity whatsoever between the very well written and encyclopedic Nazi extermination camp article and your own style and approach to this article and other Shia polemic works which you and Striver have started and worked on. And I never said "it didn't happen," I merely pointed out the article's extremely one-sided presentation, as well as toned down some of the more outrageously POV statements. I also made clear that the sources were all Shia, instead of keeping the impression you tried to impose that these were regular non-partisan sources.--AladdinSE 20:35, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

It's "one sided"? And yet you staunchly reject my invitation to make it double sided and bring balance by contributing to the article. Instead, your solution is a mass deletion of the article. That speaks volumes about your position.--Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Again you allege "mass deletion." Absurd. My edits are there for anyone's inspection. And your invitation is laughable. You keep thinking I am some sort of Sunni editor. You think everyone has an agenda like yourself. You cannot conceive of editors with no standard to fly, and no Ayatollah relatives (or their Sunni equivalents) to consider. The article is so fundamentally flawed that it really does merit deletion and what little can be kept to be merged elsewhere.--AladdinSE 07:46, 24 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Look. I dont care if you worship Buffalo Wings while sniffing toads. Your edits are entirely pro-Sunni. The mark of an extremist pro-Sunni editor is that he refuses to work on an article when invited, instead dismissing all of it, even though it is well referenced.--Zereshk 03:27, 25 February 2006 (UTC)Reply
Your edits are so outrageously biased that you see any move towards neutrality as being "pro-Sunni". It is laughable to take your word for what marks extremism in Wikipedia. Your edits speak for themselves.AladdinSE 13:28, 28 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

In the future, please do not extensively intersperse your rebuttals in my own bullet points, it gets too confusing. Notice how I compiled a list of bullet point rebuttals to your own without interrupting your entry. Let us keep to that standard. --AladdinSE 22:15, 15 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

I think you find the editing style confusing because you are not following the standard style of indenting. That said, we'll be OK as long as you sign at the end of every paragraph.--Zereshk 07:47, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
If you had followed your own advice and signed all your paragraphs, it would have been much better. Still, you were wrong to interrupt my bullet points and start interspersing our comments in this way. After you made your list of points, I did not intersperse them with my rebuttals, but made a new list responding to yours, which you then cut up. Please don't do that. Excessive indentation in an extended Talk discussion can become unwieldy fast. It has already happened here.--AladdinSE 20:35, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
I'll follow my own advice hence forth. That should leave you with no further "complaint"s as to the style that I choose to voice myself with.--Zereshk 08:32, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Ok again I have no idea what you are talking about here. I can only be grateful that you are slightly less confusing then Striver.--AladdinSE 07:46, 24 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Oh, and for the record, SEAladdin keeps saying that he never advocated mass deletion of the article. I think this post of his should suffice: Note where he says: "I would vote for deletion in a second.": [3] But there are others as well.--Zereshk 00:52, 4 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

Good grief. "Mass deletions" means the wholesale removal of text inside the article without justification or explanation. Advocating the actual article being deleted or merged is an entirely different matter. --AladdinSE 00:10, 17 February 2006 (UTC)Reply
Mass deletion and deleting the entire article are different. rrrright. Im curious, do you really take me for a fool? I find that incredibly insulting.--Zereshk 03:27, 25 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

Yeah, that guy is really funny... "he article is so fundamentally flawed that it really does merit deletion and what little can be kept to be merged elsewhere" --Striver 03:49, 25 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

You are incapable of distinguishing between an AFD and the editorial process of large scale in-article text removal. I do not take you for a fool, but I do take you for an emotional and virulently POV pusher of highly embarrassing, non-encyclopedic edits. Striver is the same, however he has the added distinction that his polemics are also grammatically atrocious.--AladdinSE 13:28, 28 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

Yes, the article is bad edit

I haven't messed with it because I'm exhausted, and because I'm reading Moojan Momen's book, Introduction to Shi'ism. It's a solid academic work and seems reliable. I wanted to have a better background on Shi'a history before I tackled this mess.

My impression at the moment, having read about 2/3 of Momen, is that the article title and content are both bad. It wouldn't hurt anything to AfD it. However, we DO need an article on the history of Shi'a Islam and if we changed the title and replaced most of the content, this COULD be it. So I'm neutral as to whether this should be deleted and a new article started, or whether this article should just be "morphed". Zora 08:58, 16 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

We are deeply indebted to you for your tireless research. --AladdinSE 09:48, 16 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
A Bahai's writings on Shias? hmmm. Not a good start.--Zereshk 08:11, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

He is surprisingly evenhanded, given what Bahais have endured in Iran. Zora 10:18, 17 January 2006 (UTC)Reply


Wahhabism edit

I think we need to remove a misconception here about shi'a sunni conflict, in the sence that it is mostly the Wahhabi Islam which is against Shi'as, and not sunnis. Most of the edicts that declare Shi'as non-Muslim, and call for their killing are from Wahhabis. --Peterhynych

That is certainly most true nowadays. We can stress on that in the contemporary sense (even though I personally dont agree with it, but also wish not to stereotype Sunnis either). But for example, was Al-Mutawakkil, who demolished the shrine of Husayn ibn Ali, a Wahhabi or Salafi?--Zereshk 01:05, 28 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

Agree.. --Shah 88 —Preceding unsigned comment added by Shah 88 (talkcontribs) 10:35, 18 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

Wahhabism is a sub-sect of sunnism!--79.69.98.109 (talk) 19:17, 19 November 2012 (UTC)Reply

Historical Efforts for Sunni-Sheaa Dialog edit

(for harmony in inter-communal relations for a peaceful coexistence & progress based on Islamic justice) since beginning of Islam is missing from the article. I can remember the most prominent was by Ibn Taymiyyah in the 13th century AD by having a discourse with the Sheaa scholars in public, to know each other better, to reconcile the differences, & minimise the irreconcilable differences, & to build relationship by mutually acknowledging each other's irreconcilable dogmatic facts & principles for the harmony of the both communities & that effort is covered in his book by the name of : "Minhaj as-Sunnah an-Nabawiyyah" or "The Method (or Way) of the Prophetic Path" & contemporary call for Sheaa-Sunni Dialog on the Sheaa Website under the article named: 'A Call for Shia Sunni Dialog Why and How' By Abdul Malik Mujahid at link: http://soundvision.com/info/muslims/shiasunni.asp ILAKNA (talk) 06:51, 28 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Zereshk edit

Great job at answering Aladin, keep up the good work. --Striver 13:49, 28 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

I am indebted to you for this piece of merriment. I laughed heartily. How true it is that praise from certain quarters is the worst kind of censure! --AladdinSE 20:56, 1 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Balance edit

This article should either be removed from Wikipedia, or should be modified. Basic rules of this article are: 'Anything that goes against Shias is a fact, anything that is written against sunnis is a fiction, and Salafi Islam is the most tolerant religion in the world.;

On one hand, under Shia statehood, its written that: In present-day Iran, while Shi'a religious institutions are encouraged, Sunni institutions are blocked. In 1993 a newly constructed Sunni mosque in Sanandaj was destroyed by a mob of Shi'a zealots.

Whereas attrocities in Saudi-Arabia, which has the worst human rights record, it is included under the heading Shia position:

The following represent solely Shia arguments against perceived Sunni persecution.

Isn't this page indicative of hostility towards Shi'as? Sometimes I wonder, how they had survived all this.

PeterHenych Feb. 28, 2006

Good grief! One has only to compare the differences between the previous version and your edits to discover the textbook definition of imbalance! You remove virtually all mention of "Shi'a views" to present them as facts! You also add a litany of weasel words and Original Research. --AladdinSE 23:06, 1 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Im going to revert you since PeterHenych and Zereshk oppose your version. --Striver 14:12, 11 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

I don't think you quite grasp the concept of Talk discussion. You have given no valid reasons! See, for example, how I state to PeterHenych specific instances of bias and imbalance, and the use of weasel words and original research. Whereas all you have to say is" because so and so oppose your version".--AladdinSE 14:18, 11 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Well, ill quote him if it makes you feel better:

Basic rules of this article are: 'Anything that goes against Shias is a fact, anything that is written against sunnis is a fiction, and Salafi Islam is the most tolerant religion in the world.;
On one hand, under Shia statehood, its written that:
In present-day Iran, while Shi'a religious institutions are encouraged, Sunni institutions are blocked. In 1993 a newly constructed Sunni mosque in Sanandaj was destroyed by a mob of Shi'a zealots.
Whereas attrocities in Saudi-Arabia, which has the worst human rights record, it is included under the heading Shia position:
The following represent solely Shia arguments against perceived Sunni persecution.
Isn't this page indicative of hostility towards Shi'as? Sometimes I wonder, how they had survived all this.

Better? --Striver 14:38, 11 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

No, it is not better at all. Is this really all you have to offer as justification for reverting? Quoting someone else word for word, whom I have already responded to? --AladdinSE 12:28, 12 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Im busy with other articles, ill let other people answer you on this one. Peace. --Striver 16:23, 12 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

That's fine. A small request however: The next time you're too busy, please don't employ this method of cutting and pasting other editors' comments as a time-saving measure. --AladdinSE 16:48, 12 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Vandalism edit

Due to an extreme amount of vandalism, I'm reverting back to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Historical_Shi%27a-Sunni_relations&oldid=74707408. which is on 9th Sept. I'll try to go back through and fix up anything serious that disappears as a result of that, but that's as far back as one needs to go to get past all the vandalism. El Juno 18:28, 11 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

Not up to standards as written edit

This article needs a lot of work and I would also support merging it into [4] which is clearer and better written.

I'm not a scholar of the history of Islam and cannot comment on some of the specific statements, but there are many unsupported statements (ex. denying Fatima the Garden of Fadak), some that are clearly contradicted elsewhere (ex. length of Uthman's Caliphate), some that are of questionable relevance (ex. Fatima's children didn't want to eat without her), and far too many laden with unsupported value judgements (ex. "And what a wonderful Caliphate Imam Ali had become!")

Maybe I'll spend a little time cleaning up the language, but I think this article needs much more than I can give it. I look forward to watching it improve through the wikimagic of collaboration --Foosem 03:05, 29 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

"Internet" section edit

As a neutral observer (I am not a Muslim whatsoever), the "Internet" section seems rather one-sided and unnecessarily inflammatory to me. Is it really necessary to have all of these quotes here? fraggle 20:51, 5 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Sunni criticism of Yazid and support for Hassan And Husaains edit

Many Sunni Ulema, did takfeer on Yazeed, and at his time Islam was not defined simply by Sunni or Shia. Sunni Ulema suffered under the ummayads too. It is wrong to say that Yazeed or the ummayads were authentic representitives of Sunni Islam. The repression of Sunnis in Iran also needs to be mentioned, and the Badr Brigades Death Squads wiping Sunnis out in Iraq (I'm not saying they represent Shiaism) Aaliyah Stevens 19:29, 7 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

You're forgetting the shias who are being blown up every day by Sunnis (not representive of sunnism)
Thats why I had to step in and bring balance to her edits.--Zereshk 01:41, 1 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Move from Historical Shia-Sunni relations to here edit

I moved the article because it is no longer historical, and I re-ordered it to give it some structure. Before it was very ad-hoc. Please state your objections, this title is better Aaliyah Stevens 14:20, 28 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Syria ruled by Alawis edit

Although Syria is headed by the Baath party, the lesdership of the baath party and the top army brass are all Alawi. This is a well known fact, just as the Iraqi baath party was sourced mainly from Sunnis. To add to what Zereshk said, not only does baath party contradict the tenets of Shia Islam, it contradicts the tenets of Sunni Islam, and Islam in general, but thats not the point. If you want to point out that Iraq was dominated by Sunnis in the past, even though they contradicted the tenets of Sunni islam by joining the bath party, the same applies to the Alawis of Syria.

On another note, please do not delete whole swathes of referenced material in the Iran section, please discuss your objections here. I have accomodated you points in that section. Why are you being so hyper senstitive to the notion that Shia are also capable of doing wrong against Sunnis? This should not be a sectarian issue, and I am certainly not sectarian like some Salafis. Aaliyah Stevens 19:21, 28 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

You are in fact advocating a sectarian push here. If that were not so, then you would also be saying that both Sunni and Shia have suffered from Asad's government (thery dont care if youre Sunni or Shia as long as you dont challenge their dictatorial authority). And why dont I see you mention anything about Shia clerics jailed in Iran? Ah, but you didnt say anything. You squarely put the blame on Shias (which is a big misperception). Hence your intentions are exposed.
Saying that Shias rule Sunni majority in Syria like Saddam did Shia Iraq is simply erroneous. Saddam slaughtered 300000 Shias, exiling their Imams, desecrating and destroying their shrines. Do you see Bashar Asad doing the same to Sunnis? There is nothing that ties Shias to the Syrian government. You dont see no Shia Imams in positions of authority, no Shia laws, no Shia doctrines being enforced on Sunnis. On the other hand Sunni Sharia, not secular laws, rules the lives of the Shia majority of Yemen. Even the sources you posted claim the opposite of what you claim:
"Alawis perceive themselves as the unique and only true monotheistic faith, distinct form the rest of Islam, including the Shi’a."[5]
Your other source says:
"Before Hafez al-Asad made a deal of political convenience with Imam Moussa al-Sadr to acknowledge the Alawis as real Shia Muslims, their blood was believed to be licit, by both Shia and Sunni."[6]
Another sign of your sectarian push is using Iranian opposition groups and writers (the Zionist Daniel Pipes, Yoram Schweitzer, etc.) as your sources. Iranian opposition groups have shown to be spreading false information time and time again because of being locked out of the share for powerr in ruling Iran. Iran.org is an opposition group. They make claims that are fabricated. And finally, you object to using blogs as sources, but you use it yourself when it suits you.--Zereshk 01:48, 1 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Brother you have obviously let emotions overrun you, and you have deleted my sourced material, and have forgotten what hafez al-assad did to the Sunni groups in Homs and Hama in the early 80's; he killed an estimated 30-40,000 in one month alone. I accept that both Sunni and Shia consider Alawis heretical, and will say that, but Alawis are a offshoot sect of the Shia, just as the Zahiri are of the Sunnis, who attribute human forms to Allah. Saddam was as much Sunni as the Assads were Shia, same goes for all of the current rulers, only a Khilafah or Imamah is an acceptable form of government in Sunni Islam, and none of the secular regimes in the world follow that Sunni model of government. And to argue about Yemen, I'm not defending Yemen, and actually many Sunnis accept the Zaidis as fellow Sunnis too because they are so close to us; the Yemeni government has persecuted many Sunni groups too. If you want to add stuff about Shia Ulema who have been persecuted in Iran and Syria feel free to do so. Aaliyah Stevens 13:07, 1 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

"Unlike Iraq's Shiite clergy, who were persecuted by Saddam, Sunni clergy were largely employed and controlled by the Baathist government. Sunni imams, or preachers, were led by an official mufti, or grand Sunni authority, paid by the Ministry for Religious Endowment."
  • I think it is you who is emotional. Seems to me, youre just trying to cover all this blood spilled by some Sunnis, by trying to seek out (by any means) and advertise any possible similar acts done by Shias.--Zereshk 01:08, 3 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Saddam Husaain "is revered by Sunnis"? LOL! That just about sums up your approach!. I think we should agree that there is a distinction between secular Muslims Sunni or Shia, and religious Muslims who act based on theology and sectarianism. And keep in mind just as Shia consider Alawis a misguided offshoot, Sunni consider Salafi/wahabis as a misguided offshoot too: The Aqeeda of the Sunnis VS The Salafis. Anyway, lets leave it brother, I don't want argue, the text is settled. Aaliyah Stevens 18:07, 3 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Fine. But I hope you watched that videoclip. Nobody on that clip was a Salafi/Wahabi. There is a difference b/w the way things are, and the way they should be.--Zereshk 20:26, 3 March 2007 (UTC)Reply


POV check edit

I think this article should use a POV check, and maybe an accuracy check too. It should read more like an encyclopedia article and not a polemic by either side. Khanagan 22:13, 3 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

You restored a POV statement that some Shia use Sunni hadith to justify cursing Abu-Bakr, Umar, and Uthman, which although appears to have a reference, the ref doesn't point anywhere, all the Hadith are available online so to support this claim, the hadith it refers to should be sourced, then the sunni view given, or it should be removed. Aaliyah Stevens 12:00, 4 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Provided exact Arabic quotations of the Sunni Hadith for clarification.--Zereshk 17:21, 4 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

As I said almost all the Sunni hadith are available online from Sunni sources. But this is bedides the point, this article is not called "Evidences for Sunni-Shia differences", it is on Sunni Shia relations, and we should keep the Fiqh, Theology, and evidences for both sides to a minimum, and rather describe relations between them.

P.S. I think we need to add the recent summit between King of Saudi and Pres. Of Iran. Aaliyah Stevens 17:23, 5 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Perhaps we could have a section entitled something like
Efforts to improve Sunni-Shia relations
with the stuff about the summit in it. I think there are or will be other conferences on this theme. --Leroy65X 20:03, 5 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

Interesting vandalism edit

As a student learning about this Islamic faith, I use the Wikipedia as a source of clarification for anything I read. Recently, I came across this part of the article.

"The fall of Tabriz in 1501 before the advancing forces of Shah Isma‘il Safawi marked the beginning of a new era in Iranian history. The land of Persia, whose population up to that time had been mainly Sunni, was now beginning to be transformed into a Shi‘ite homeland. Suppression of the Sunni Iranians was swift and merciless. The Sunni ‘ulama and Sufis were specifically targeted for persecution. Many preferred exile to certain death, and with the extermination and exodus of their ‘ulama the Ahl as-Sunnah in Iran lost the leadership capable of maintaining their ‘Aqidah as the dominant creed of the land. Thus the time-honoured Persian tradition of Sunni learning and spirituality that started with the likes of Ibrahim ibn Adham, ‘Abdullah ibn al-Mubarak and Abu Dawud of Sijistan, and was sustained by men like al-Ghazali, ar-Razi and ‘Abd al-Qadir of Jilan, came to a horrendous end in the relentless persecution of the Safavids, PLEASE NOTE THIS IS SUNNI PROPOGANDA"

Sunni propaganda they say. I know that this is not a talk section, but would someone mind elaborating to me the current POV this article has to it or why they would write that and how we can make this article better?

67.182.37.250 08:12, 22 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

POV tag edit

This article emphasizes on Shia-Sunni clashes and neglects attempts to establish unity or at least normalization of the relations. It's clearly POV . We should mention whatever has done by both sects' Ulama to normalize the relationship like taghrib movement. --Sa.vakilian(t-c) 15:28, 9 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Practical Differences Between Sunnis and Shi'ahs edit

This section needs to be completely rewritten--especially considering how many Westerners are probably reading it, as it is a significant modern issue. The grammar is terrible, the section is unorganized, and most importantly, after reading it, I'm still left with the impression, "...what's the big deal?" It's obviously a sensitive issue to Muslims, but seriously, from the perspective of a non-Muslim who isn't familiar at all with the division between Sunni and Shiite Muslims, it comes off as trivial, or at best, confusing. I refuse to believe that no one on Wikipedia can do better than this. -69.47.186.226 20:02, 19 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Attempted Cleanup edit

I've attempted to cleanup the article and answer some of the complaints above, including adding a new section on Sunni-Shia_relations#Efforts_to_foster_Sunni-Shia_unity which others can add on to. --Leroy65X 18:11, 31 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Shi'a - Shiite edit

Is "Shiite" just another name for Shi'a? Because I found several sites that state "Sunni, Shi'a, Shiite". I'm a little confused... didn't find a clear answer in the article.

-G —Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.231.137.151 (talk) 00:11, August 25, 2007 (UTC)

You are correct. The two terms are interchangeable. → AA (talk) — 09:40, 25 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

I belief you are confused about the history rather than the meaning of the words. Sunni means tribe, whilst shiite means not. The daughters of mohamet and arahat are a continued attempt to demean the feminine germ true, but the germ is in fact in number. Good vs evil, no all i see are parlimentary beings worshipping something great like vulcan and the sun. Good night. --201.65.79.114 (talk) 14:34, 17 July 2012 (UTC)Reply

Tag removal edit

I've attempted to cleanup the article and de-POV it. Are there still complaints or can I remove the tags? --BoogaLouie 15:27, 8 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Hearing (or reading) no complaints I'm going to remove the tags --BoogaLouie 15:21, 19 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Fair use rationale for Image:Memri persian hater.JPG edit

 

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The Shia Revival edit

Ther are a great number of citation from this book in the article, most put their by me. The book is by a respected Shia academic, Vali Nasr. As the topic of the book is the not just the revival but the Sunni reaction to it, I hope no one will find its use in the article surprising. --BoogaLouie (talk) 17:49, 20 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

I am from Gilan. Gilan is currently under iranian occupation. Most Gilanis were Sunni. They were forced to become Shii in the wake of masacres comitted by Iranian occupants (Safavid) in 17s and 18s centuries. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 192.30.202.22 (talk) 19:41, 10 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

World demographics edit

The introduction to this article reported a breakdown of 92% Sunni to 8% Shia, citing "britinnica." Presumably "britinnica" was intended to mean Encyclopedia Britanica, but gave no article reference or encyclopedia edition. Beyond this bad citation, the value contradicted the breakdown reported at Demographics of Islam, which appears to have been heavily researched and includes the Encylopedia Brittanica (1997) as a source. I have changed the values in the introduction to keep wikipedia consistent. Any problems with the values reported should be taken up at the demographics article I got them from. --Shaggorama (talk) 17:35, 15 May 2008 (UTC)Reply


Reasons of Edits edit

The section on Saudi Arabia is highly biased, still I kept it highly negative toward Saudi Arabia. some examples of biases : combining Saudis & Salafis together in the same sectin, claiming majority although that claim is at least debatable ( in the Municipal elections Sunnis won in the lage cities of Dammam , Dhahran , Khobar and also in Jubail and Abqaiq . Shiite won by large margin in Qatif and small margin in Ahsa ) , other example is quoting indivisuals like Nasir al-Umar who was jailed and Abdul-Rahman al-Jibrin who was fired from the Higher Council of Ulama before he said his remarks , quoting falsely Saudi textbooks which is available online (http://www2.moe.gov.sa/ebooks/) last example of bias is this quote : "In return, Grand Ayatollah Naser Makarem Shirazi in 2007 responded:The Wahhabis ignore the occupation of Islam's first Qiblah by Israel, and instead focus on declaring Takfiring fatwas against Shias" —Preceding unsigned comment added by Dy yol (talkcontribs) 23:26, 20 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Sorry, we have to use sourced material and reliable sources whether or not they criticize the Saudi regime. --BoogaLouie (talk) 02:13, 5 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
You first reverted because I did not give reasons for my edits, and now you just ignored all my reasons. I added before in this section credible sources critisizing the Saudi regime. You are the one who need to defend his edits. Giving sources is not enough, there is something called cherry picking , I gave you an original source for the textbooks and you just ignored it. Dy yol (talk) 12:18, 10 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Your reasons aren't reasons. You have not proved Vali Nasr statements to be untrue. At best you can change the text to say "according to Vali Nasr ..." --BoogaLouie (talk) 00:54, 12 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
The fact that there is a link to Saudi textbooks in arabic (http://www2.moe.gov.sa/ebooks/)
does not disprove the statement you keep deleting, i.e.: According to scholar Vali Nasr, Saudi textbooks "characterize Shiism as a form of heresy ... worse than Christianity and Judaism."[135] --BoogaLouie (talk) 20:43, 13 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
What is relevent is weather the statement is in the textbooks or not , this is a statement that can or can't be proven, the fact that you can not read in Arabic is not an execuse , I gave you the original text , just give me the book and the page Dy yol (talk) 00:11, 20 December 2008 (UTC)Reply
Kindly do not delete sourced material. Your link is not proof that Saudi textbooks do not "characterize Shiism as a form of heresy ... worse than Christianity and Judaism." --BoogaLouie (talk) 16:47, 26 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

External links edit

Removed links per WP:ELNO. Please make sure to follow standards when including. Also, if it can be usd as an inline citaiton it should be used there first.

Cptnono (talk) 12:23, 14 September 2009 (UTC)Reply

War in Iraq edit

Removed "particularly following the Iraq War|American invasion of Iraq". This smacks of WP:RECENTISM, could easily read that the war caused the conflict, and is limnited to Iraq. The history sections contradict it and it was not in the source provided.Cptnono (talk) 12:23, 14 September 2009 (UTC)Reply

Blatant Vandalism edit

user "72.215.219.47" wrote "F--- YOU" at the top of this talk page. watch out for this vandalism, and possibly bock this user?--Violarulez (talk) 00:49, 16 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

Madhi edit

Restored this sentence:

In contrast, mainstream Sunnis believe the Mahdi will be named Muhammad, be a descendant of the Prophet and will revive the faith, but will not necessarily be connected with the end of the world. [1]

deleted by 71.102.116.218 5 september 2009 Does anyone have any reason to think it is not true? Vali Nasr is a reputable scholar. --BoogaLouie (talk) 17:54, 8 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

Internally Inconsistent edit

At one point it claims 70% of Muslims are Sunni and 20% are Shi'a, in another it claims 85% and 13%, respectively. Which is it? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.169.1.138 (talk) 05:49, 8 April 2010 (UTC)Reply

Why is there no count of deaths due to terror between Sunnis and Shiites? edit

I only need to listen to the news to hear reports of Shiite pilgrims being regularly killed by up to hundreds at a time in terrorist attacks on crowds in Iraq.

The article includes a count of "Muslim suicide bombers," but no breakdown on how many of them were Sunnis attacking Shiites and no count of the victims. Is so little known about who kills who in the middle east? Does no one keep count of the dead,of the killers of the sides? I never cease to be shocked when I read the various accounts of the Iraq wars that no one bothers to even keep count of relative deaths on each side. One would think that mass murder in the Middle East was as unremarkable as selling Popsicles on the street!

Also, on another topic, I think that the Iranian regime's support of Hezbollah and both rhetoric and terror against Israel serves the purpose of courting Sunni support by making attacks on what is felt to be a common enemy. So perhaps a section on whether other terrorism and war is an escape valve for hatred between Sunnis and Shiites is a good idea. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.180.60.177 (talk) 03:18, 23 April 2010 (UTC)Reply

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Neo-liberals? edit

I have removed this statement from the post-1980 section as it is clearly nonsense not supported by the citation.

"or American neo-liberals who wish to provoke "a debilitating Islamic civil war." (Dilip Hiro)".[2]

The article in the Guardian actually says "a debilitating Islamic civil war" is a "scenario that many pro-Bush administration commentators in America had visualised." There is nothing to the support the statement that neo-liberals (of all people) wish to provoke a war.

Lmatt (talk) 00:25, 5 December 2011 (UTC)Reply

Well this statement originally said "This meeting ran counter to what was envisioned by many pro-Bush neo-cons in the current US administration - Shia Iran and the Sunni Saudi Arabia intensifying their rivalry to the point of funding and training sectarian militias in Iraq to engage in a debilitating Islamic civil war." However, it had been gradually corrupted by other editors until, in this revision, http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shi%27a%E2%80%93Sunni_relations&diff=prev&oldid=213761888 "neo-cons" was changed to say neo-liberals! Lmatt (talk) 00:50, 5 December 2011 (UTC)Reply

Archive edit

This talk page is fairly long now. Would anyone else be up for archiving the earlier, now resolved discussions? It would make scrolling through current discussions slightly easier. MezzoMezzo (talk) 09:32, 17 March 2013 (UTC)Reply

update needed edit

in light of recent events in the middle east, this article feels quite badly outdated. The current syria conflict receives only two lines, and no mention is made of the ramifications of ongoing violence in syria and iraq upon neighbouring states (e.g. lebanon) or indeed the other parties backing either side (iran, qatar). Someone who is knowledgeable on current affairs across the region should bring this up-to-date with appropriate references — Preceding unsigned comment added by 152.78.90.0 (talk) 10:31, 21 June 2013 (UTC)Reply

Indonesian's Islamic population, at over 200 million, is "much larger than any other country ... " "... majority adheres to the Sunni Muslim tradition edit

This article should include recognition of Indonesia's Muslims, who comprise a large percent of the worldwide Muslim population.

Wikipedia's article Islam in Indonesia begins:

Islam is the dominant religion in Indonesia, which also has a larger Muslim population than any other country in the world, with approximately 202.9 million identified as Muslim (88.2% of the total population) as of 2009.[3]
The majority adheres to the Sunni Muslim tradition mainly of the Shafi'i madhhab.[4] Around one million are Shias, who are concentrated around Jakarta.[5] In general, the Muslim community can be categorized in terms of two orientations: "modernists," who closely adhere to orthodox theology while embracing modern learning; and "traditionalists," who tend to follow the interpretations of local religious leaders (predominantly in Java) and religious teachers at Islamic boarding schools (pesantren).
  1. ^ Nasr, Vali, The Shia Revival, Norton, 2006, p.68
  2. ^ The enemy of my enemy March 6, 2007 Dilip Hiro
  3. ^ Miller, Tracy, ed. (2009), Mapping the Global Muslim Population: A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World’s Muslim Population (PDF), Pew Research Center, retrieved 2009-10-08 {{citation}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Religious clash in Indonesia kills up to six, Straits Times, 6 Feb 2011
  5. ^ Reza, Imam. "Shia Muslims Around the World". Retrieved 2009-06-11.
Have added this --BoogaLouie (talk) 23:27, 14 December 2014 (UTC)Reply

Section on Lebanon edit

Shia–Sunni relations#Lebanon

"With the eruption of the 2011-2012 Syrian uprising, tensions increased between the Shia affiliated Alawis and Sunnis of Tripoli, erupting twice into deadly violence - on June 2011,..."

I think there is mistake here:

The capital of Lebanon is Beirut. Lybia's capital is Tripoli. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.72.79.108 (talk) 20:55, 23 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

No mistake. Tripoli, Lebanon "Tripoli's population has been estimated to be 500,000 and the large majority of these are Sunni Muslims." --BoogaLouie (talk) 21:57, 6 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

Blacklisted Links Found on the Main Page edit

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Differences more local than generic? edit

As far as I can see, the viewpoint summarized below is simply never mentioned at all by the current article - not even to say it's "wrong" or "alternative". The current article seems to simply _assume_ the viewpoint below is INcorrect - that Sunni/Shite differences are the same everywhere at all times:

"[G]eneralizing without context can give the impression that [differences between Sunnis and Shiites] ... are both fixed and generic -- that Sunnis and Shiites behave in specifically varying ways everywhere, at all times. The reality is far more locally specific and complex, and usually mixed up in issues of class, access to economic resources, national identity and historical inclusion in a given country's social and political mainstream culture."

(The above quote was taken from a HuffPo article...)

108.20.52.21 (talk) 02:41, 24 October 2014 (UTC)Reply

User 66.108.69.223 making changes without reference edit

I have noticed that this user has made changes to few pages without reference. I have undone the change. Please could I request that you reference your edit and amend back when appropriate. Mbcap (talk) 12:02, 17 December 2014 (UTC)Reply

Orphaned references in Shia–Sunni relations edit

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Assessment comment edit

The comment(s) below were originally left at Talk:Shia–Sunni relations/Comments, and are posted here for posterity. Following several discussions in past years, these subpages are now deprecated. The comments may be irrelevant or outdated; if so, please feel free to remove this section.

I cannot understand how Jordan could have 94% Sunni Moslems, when over 70% of its population is Palestenian. Something is wrong here as you state Palestenians are Shia Moslems. is it possble that you do not count the palestenians because most are not allowed to vote?


The article says Pakistan has the largest Sunni population in the world. The pew forum http://www.pewforum.org/2011/01/27/future-of-the-global-muslim-population-sunni-and-shia/ has data claiming that there are approximately 50 million more Sunnis in Indonesia than Pakistan. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Hychoi (talkcontribs) 23:39, 14 March 2014 (UTC)Reply

Last edited at 23:41, 14 March 2014 (UTC). Substituted at 05:59, 30 April 2016 (UTC)

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One million Shia population in Tehran? edit

The article states that "Sunnis cite the lack of a Sunni mosque in Tehran, Iran's capital and largest city, despite the presence of over 1 million Sunnis there", this is complete bullshit. 95% of Iran are Shia, how could Tehran have a population of 1 million Sunni? Sunnis of Iran live in Sistan and Baluchistan, Kordestan and Golestan provinces. -- Mazandar (talk) 06:01, 1 April 2017 (UTC)Reply

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"Nasibi" listed at Redirects for discussion edit

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"Nawasib" listed at Redirects for discussion edit

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Excess detail? edit

@Portwoman: Can you provide a little more specificity as to what detail you want removed? --Louis P. Boog (talk) 20:13, 31 May 2023 (UTC)Reply

This is a case of WP:DRIVEBY. --Omnipaedista (talk) 00:30, 6 November 2023 (UTC)Reply