Religious mobilization for Iran's wars against the Arabs.. Revolutionary Guard scholars from Sanaa spread blasphemy and vow to liberate Makah
English - Sunday 31 October 2021 الساعة 08:42 am![](https://newsyemen.life/admin/images/uploads/766e84f21dbf64865a6c4e2f99908ed6.webp)
On Thursday, October 28, Iran's arm in Sana'a gathered dozens of religious figures under the name of the "Yemen Scholars Conference" with the participation of the Lebanese Hezbollah and the highest Iraqi Scholars Group, to mobilize religiously the wars of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards in the Arab world.
The conference witnessed an extremist Shiite rhetoric in the name of the Islamic revolution against the Arab countries, and Abdul Majeed Al-Houthi launched a strong attack on the governments of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, threatening what he described as the liberation of holy sites, referring to the holy city of Makah, which he described as (the holiest sites).
In derogatory and offensive terms - that cannot be published - Abdul Majeed al-Houthi - appointed to the position of Vice-President of the Association of Yemeni Scholars - claimed that "what is happening in Makah Al-Mukarramah, the holiest of sites, of corruption.......and........did not Happening since the prophetic mission.
And the Houthi leader incited violently against the Saudi authorities, considering that they were (......... planted by colonialism, as the Zionists planted in the land of Palestine), the limit of his allegations.
He claimed that "the Islamic nation is going through a historical turning point that separates it into two groups that have no third party, either explicit faith or outright hypocrisy," believing that "most Arab and Islamic countries fall into the arms of the Jews and Christians, and slip from the mantle of Islam."
In the sectarian event, the Houthi group’s Mufti Shams al-Din Sharaf al-Din spoke about “the multiple opportunities to achieve Islamic unity, and at the forefront is the connection with God, religion and Islamic belief, and working to remove sectarian and regional barriers between the sons of the Islamic nation.”
He accused those he described as "systems of employment and treason" of seeking to separate Muslims, "by scattering their wealth to fuel conflict and the fire of sectarian, sectarian, and regional strife, so that the situation does not stabilize and strengthen its power."
The preacher of Al-Aqsa Mosque, Sheikh Ikrima Sabri, considered, for his part, that "what is currently happening of normalization with the Zionist occupation leads to rupture, disunity and weakening the social and unitary fabric of the nation."
Meanwhile, the Deputy Secretary-General of Hezbollah, Sheikh Naim Qassem, called for "the unity of the ranks and the gathering of the word, and the realization of Islamic unity under the banner of Islam," calling on those he said were "the scholars who were brought up on the Islamic approach from Sunni and Shiite scholars to the meeting, and the establishment of righteousness and the unity of the nation." .
To this, the head of the Iraqi Scholars Group, Sheikh Khalid Al-Mulla, called “not to exploit the doctrinal differences to tear the nation apart,” believing that “the enemies of Islam knew the seriousness of the disease of discrimination and conflict among Muslims, and worked to sow the seeds of sedition among them with different addresses, especially in Iraq. Yemen, Syria, Libya and Lebanon.
Al-Houthi’s mobilization of a group of clerics who benefit from his group and are doctrinally loyal to the group reminds this segment of the exploitation of religion and its use of political conflicts, the revival of fatwas of incitement and the justification of calls for violence to overthrow Arab regimes and destroy national Arab states, and the fragmentation and weakening of their national armies, and the replacement of armed groups in their place, at the beginning of 2011. It was known in the media as the Arab Spring.