Description
This book presents an experiment in dialogue about the role of the “mosque” in the consultative system. The author’s discussion leads him into tangential details far removed from the core topic, a clear testament, as he states, that despite our shared language, we do not always speak with one voice.
The aim of raising this issue is to demonstrate conclusively that the “mosque party” can restore Islam’s true beauty, rescuing it from the shackles of history and philosophy, winning the difficult battle against feudalism and fundamentalism, and granting our Islamic nation its first political organization capable of guaranteeing the citizen’s voice both legally and practically. These achievements may seem miraculous in light of the current precarious state of the Islamic world. However, as the author argues, Islam once achieved this miracle among isolated Arab tribes in the darkness of the seventh century, and nothing prevents it from achieving it again among modern Arab societies communicating via satellite on the threshold of the twenty-first century.










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