Turkey's top cleric: Secularism threw world into total war

AA photo

Secularism has thrown the world into a total war by outstripping the level of violence that stemmed from religious conflict, Turkey's top cleric has argued while criticizing some analyses of the recent spate of jihadist attacks.

"Humanity set off on a different quest with the French Revolution. It envisaged building a more secular world separate from religion. But secularism sent the world into a total war by also superseding the amount of violence that stemmed from religions," Mehmet Görmez, the president of the Directorate General for Religious Affairs (Diyanet), said Dec. 14.

"People were thus able to imagine an atomic bomb with scientific explorations. They produced chemical weapons and several times the number of people who died in wars throughout history have died during wars in modern times. Two great world wars occurred and now a Third World War is being mentioned. Such a sentence can roll off the tongue of even the Honorable Pope," Görmez also said in reference to Pope Francis' interpretation of the Nov. 13 Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) attack on Paris that killed 130 people.

His remarks came during a meeting in Ankara with the U.S. State Department's Special Representative to Muslim Communities, Shaarik H. Zafar.

"Even today, after the second failure of another world war, perhaps one can speak of a third war, one fought piecemeal, with crimes, massacres, destruction," the pope said at the time.

Görmez, meanwhile, joined the chorus against U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's controversial proposal to bar Muslims from entering the country, saying no nation or religious group had the right to ignore the consequences of terrorist violence and wars.

"In a country like America,...

Continue reading on: