Sonia Verma
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One of the most distinguished muftis in the Gulf switches on his computer, dons a headset and prepares to issue yet another fatwa.
Abdulrahman Ammoura, 48, usually dispenses his religious advice to the faithful at a nearby mosque but today he is in a cramped cubicle in Abu Dhabi, answering the telephone at the world's first call centre for people seeking a fatwa, or religious edict. The popularity of the service easily eclipses attendance at his Friday prayers; it is used by Muslims all over the world, and its organisers say it now takes about 3,700 calls a day, including queries from Britain.
“I am tired, so tired,” the mufti says, midway through a six-hour shift. “I hear ringing in my ears.” He is distressed by his most recent caller, a married woman whose alcoholic husband had turned violent, hitting her and forcing her to have sex. Should she seek a divorce, the woman asked. “I said, No - it is better for him to find help'. A woman living alone with children could face too many problems.”
His advice now counts as an official fatwa in the United Arab Emirates, under new rules issued by the General Authority for Islamic Affairs and Endowments. The UAE Government established the call centre three months ago in an attempt to root out extreme interpretations of Islam issued by unqualified scholars. All fatwas issued through the call centre comply with the Government's moderate religious stance. Any others are considered invalid instructions.
The 48 muftis who staff the phones - there is also a handful of female scholars - are screened by the authority and must show impeccable credentials in Islamic law. They work in teams, with six men and two women on six-hour shifts, between 8am and 8pm on working days.
A skeleton staff takes calls for “religious emergencies” during the night.
The UAE follows the Maliki school of Sunni Islam, which the Government considers a “moderate, middle way” of the religion.
Callers can select the service in Arabic, Urdu or English. Each workstation is equipped with religious reference texts and the internet so that the muftis can consult a variety of sources before issuing their rulings.
Most callers have questions concerning the rules of worship, relationships and business. All the muftis interviewed said that, so far, none of their callers had questions relating to any kind of extremism or violence. “The hardest questions I am asked involve sex,” said Mufti Ammoura, who began his career as an imam in the UAE Air Force 25 years ago. “I feel shame, but I have to answer the questions because it is my duty.”
Apart from the freephone line (800 2244 within the UAE, for which the international prefix is +971) the muftis get thousands of questions via their website, awqaf.ae - although the site is Arabic only - and by SMS, with a maximum 270-character response.
Each call is limited to three minutes, but the muftis complain that some callers break the rules, refusing to hang up or calling again and again with the same question. “One caller opened his heart to me for more than an hour. What can I do?” one said.
Officials will not disclose the cost of the call centre. Depending on his qualifications, a mufti can earn between £1,250 and £2,300 a month, not including overtime.
There are also plans for expansion, hiring 50 more muftis and opening satellite centres elsewhere in the Muslim world. “We were not prepared for the popularity,” one official said. “Already, we get more calls than Emirates Airlines.”
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Are you saying that the Muftis are involved in hatching Christie-esque murder plots?
I think we should be told....
Rhys Jaggar, Leeds, UK
I wonder how they deal with the minutiae of comparative and localised fiqh issues; perhaps they say, "I do not know", which is after all, half of knowledge. It seems like a broad-based service which aught to be unnecessary given the presence of the world distribution of Muslim jurisprudents...
Abdul Majeed, Bradford, West Yorkshire, UK
God is watching and will in due course, pass judgement on this man.
Barrington, Manchester, U.K.
Barrington Magee, Heald Green, England., U.K.
While I abhor the case of a wife staying with an alcoholic who is violent (I think every reasonable person does), we don't know the specifics. Perhaps she and her children would be left destitute (this is the Middle East, not the UK). The mufti was clearly troubled, but couldn't really help. Sad.
lynne, San Jose, US
What a disgraceful idea and what types of fatwa they're giving! The wife cannot apply for divorce even though she was raped by his husband!
Rashed, Manchester, UK
An alchoholic (i presume muslim who are not supposed to drink)
is beating his wife and then rapes her. The advice is not to divorce him but to make him seek help.
Now come on, does this woman have any realistic chance of making him seek help? This advice is disgraceful the man should be locked up
David, Worcestershire, UK
In terms of business, it has been done before in some middle eastern countries, benefitting those behind it more financially. In terms of religion, its a terrible idea. You can't get fatwas by dialing, anyone seeking a fatwa should educate themselves, not let others tutor & direct them
Heath, surrey, UK
Maliki isn't moderate,second only to hanbal school.The most moderate & more flexible is the Hanafiyah school. These fatwas by dialing will only help muslims become more dependent on scholars instead of finding answers themselves.
Heath, Surrey, England
I think this is a very good idea, please can we have the same in UK???????????
S. Jama, London, UK