British Muslim Forum
The British Muslim Forum is an organization of Sunni Muslims which represents 500 Mosques across the UK. Muhammad Imdad Hussain Pirzada is the current President of the organization.[1]
Leaders
Following are the founding members and main leaders of BMF.
- Shaykh Muhammad Imdad Hussain Pirzada (Retford, UK)
- Shaykh Syed Maroof Hussain Shah (Bradford, UK)
- Shaykh Mohammad Habib-ur-Rehman Mahboobi (Bradford, UK)
- Allama Shahid Raza Na’eemi OBE (London, UK)
- Allama Ahmad Nisar Beg Qadri (Manchester, UK)
- Allama Muhammad Bostan Qadri Birmingham, UK)
- Allama Riaz Ahmad Samdani (London, UK)
- Allama Khalil Ahmed Haqani (London, UK)
- Allama Masood Alam Khan Al-Azhari (Nottingham, UK)[2]
Fatwa (Islamic verdict) issued 2005 in response to the London bombings
On behalf of over 500 clerics, scholars and Imams the British Muslim Forum issues the following religious decree:
Islam strictly, strongly and severely condemns the use of violence and the destruction of innocent lives. There is neither place nor justification in Islam for extremism, fanaticism or terrorism. Suicide bombings, which killed and injured innocent people in London, are haram - vehemently prohibited in Islam - and those who committed these barbaric acts in London are criminals not martyrs. We pray for the defeat of extremism and terrorism in the world. We pray for peace, security and harmony to triumph in multicultural Great Britain.[3]
Gul Mohammad, the then, secretary-general of the BMF, quoted the Koran saying: "Whoever kills a human being ... then it is as though he has killed all mankind, and whoever saves a human life it is as though he had saved all mankind.[4]
References
- "The British Muslim Forum » About". Archived from the original on 2019-10-27. Retrieved 2019-10-28.
- "The British Muslim Forum » Founder Members". Archived from the original on 2019-10-27. Retrieved 2019-10-28.
- "BBC NEWS | UK | Full text: Fatwa issued after London bombs". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-07-28.
- "UK Muslims issue bombings fatwa". July 19, 2005 – via news.bbc.co.uk.