Following are excerpts
from a sermon delivered by Sheik Yousuf Al-Qaradhawi, chairman of the
International Union of Muslim Scholars, which aired on Qatar TV on March
18, 2011:
Sheik Yousuf Al-Qaradhawi:
Several people have been asking a question: "You have been talking
about the Tunisian revolution, about the Egyptian revolution, about
the Libyan revolution, and about the Yemeni revolution, but there is
one revolution that you did not talk about." I asked them: "What
revolution?" They said: "The Bahrain revolution. Why didn't
you talk about it?" I said to them: "To be honest, the Bahrain
revolution is different from the other revolutions, because it is a
sectarian revolution.
The other four revolutions
are revolutions of the peoples, against their oppressive rulers.
[...]
The Bahraini revolution
is a sectarian revolution. That is the problem – it is the Shiites
against the Sunnis. What can I say when I am already accused of being
anti-Shiite? I am not anti-Shiite. I am against fanaticism, against
sectarianism, and against dividing people according to their religious
denomination.
Therefore, the Bahraini
revolution is not like other revolutions. All the Shiites are against
all the Sunnis. This is a Shiite sectarian revolution. When the Sunnis
saw what was happening, 450,000 people gathered at the Al-Fateh Mosque,
and said: We too have demands.
[..]
[The Shiites] were not
as peaceful as I had thought. They attacked many Sunnis, and took over
mosques that do not belong to them. They used weapons, like the [pro-government]
thugs in Yemen, in Egypt, and elsewhere, against many oppressed Sunnis.
[...]