Source: boston.com

A Pakistani Muslim worshipper attends Friday prayers in a Mosque that markets itself as “sect-free” and is open to everyone, in Islamabad, Pakistan, Friday, July 19, 2013. In a country where sectarian violence is spiking, Zahid Iqbal is playing an innovative role in trying to bring peace to Pakistan’s competing Islamic sects. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)
ISLAMABAD (AP) — In a country where sectarian violence is spiking, Zahid Iqbal is playing an innovative role in trying to bring peace to Pakistan’s competing Islamic sects by simply not taking sides.
His mosque in the capital Islamabad markets itself as ‘‘sect free’’ and is open to everyone. Despite pressure, Iqbal has refused to follow convention and define the mosque as Sunni, Shiite or any of the other subgroups that divide Islam, sometimes violently.
‘‘We don’t belong with any sect of Islam,’’ said Iqbal, a real estate businessman in his 30s who also serves as the mosque’s president. ‘‘We only belong to Islam.’’
Iqbal said he thought the conflict between Islamic sects was based on ignorance and invited everyone to come to his mosque, including Christians and Jews, to learn ‘‘the reality of Islam.’’ A large sign on the side of his mosque says it is ‘‘open to all Muslims irrespective of their sect.’’ Islamic center that also included a separate section for women and a library filled with books about various religions. Some of the more surprising titles included ‘‘Angels, Jinns and Satans’’ and ‘‘Sanctity of Circumcision in Bible.’’
The businessman collected nearly $300,000 to build his mosque, which first opened in 2010 but is still a work in progress. There are piles of red bricks and cinderblocks in the courtyard, and wooden polls hold up a shaky looking brick archway that marks the mosque’s entrance.
Iqbal said he had difficulty registering the mosque with the government because authorities told him it must be affiliated with a specific Islamic sect. Amir Ali Ahmed, who heads the department that registers mosques in Islamabad, said there was no such requirement. However, he suggested a low-level employee could have pushed the issue since it’s relatively unusual for a mosque not to identify itself with a sect.
‘‘We would encourage someone to say they aren’t attached to any sect,’’ Ahmed said.
Iqbal said he also encountered difficulty when a rival imam and his students seized the property before the mosque was built, a common problem in a country where land is often taken by force. He managed to resolve the conflict by calling the housing society that donated him the property.
The businessman has faced persistent pressure from rival religious leaders to link the mosque to their sect, but always has refused, he said.
‘‘I’m not afraid of them,’’ Iqbal said. ‘‘I believe my life is in God’s hands, not in the hands of others.’’
There are at least three other mosques in Islamabad that aren’t affiliated
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Categories: Ahmadis And Pakistan, Ahmadiyyat: True Islam, Asia, Islam, Pakistan