Muslim and Christian Leaders Issue Religious Freedom Declaration in Morocco
ICC NOTE: Persecution and violence among Christians and other religious minorities within Muslim countries are astronomical. The rise of the Islamic State has only made this fact more prominent. In Marrakesh, Morocco around 250 Muslim and evangelical leaders issued the Marrakesh Declaration, a document seeking to eliminate the rising violence towards Christians in Muslim countries. It is a major step toward offering a blueprint to Muslim leaders on how to combat rampant religious persecution in their respective nations. According Open Doors 35 of the 50 nations on the world watch list experiences the brunt of religious persecution from Islamic extremism.
2/1/2016 Middle East (Christian Today) – Around 250 Muslim and evangelical leaders recently assembled in Morocco to issue a declaration of religious freedom, calling on Muslim nations to defend Christians against persecution.
The Muslim religious leaders, scholars and heads of states released the Marrakesh Declaration, a groundbreaking document that seeks to put an end to the mounting violence towards Christians in Muslim countries.
“We call upon the various religious groups bound by the same national fabric to address their mutual state of selective amnesia that blocks memories of centuries of joint and shared living on the same land,” it says, CBN News reported.
“We call upon them to rebuild the past by reviving this tradition of conviviality, and restoring our shared trust that has been eroded by extremists using acts of terror and aggression.”
The gathering was made possible through the peace efforts of Bob Roberts, pastor of Northwood Church in Texas, who travelled to Morocco with over 250 Muslim religious leaders to release the declaration.
Roberts has reportedly been forming strategic relations with Muslim leaders. Together with his friend, “Imam Muhammad Magid, he initiated and hosted the October “Spreading the Peace Convocation” that saw the gathering of more than 200 imams and evangelical pastors.
“It was a time to ‘build bridges’ and ‘share mutual concerns,” he said, acknowledging that how the Christian majority treats minority Muslims in the U.S affects how the Muslim majority treats the Christian minority in Muslim countries.
“This is a Muslim conference put together by the top sheiks, ministers of religion, the grand muftis of the top Muslim majority nations, and they came up with a declaration, literally using the language of religious freedom to declare that violence cannot be done in the name of Islam,” said Roberts.
