Any input you may have is welcome

azade_ wrote:I've been looking around on the net to find something about this subject but haven't been able to. While most kurds are muslim, they are often viewed as being openminded about it and sometimes taking it lightly when it comes to practicing. Still, I wonder which school of figh kurds usually follow, if any at all, and if if there is any pattern or if it's different from family to family.
Any input you may have is welcome

Darkseid wrote:
Being open-minded makes you a liberal. Muhammad was a liberal. In fact, you are more closer to Muhammad as being a liberal than you are as being just any type of muslim. It doesn't matter if you are Shiite or Sunni as long as you are willing to be openminded in the sense of wanting to co-exist.
Also it doesn't matter if you believe in god if you can still abide by the same behavior as those that do. Even a nonthiest (like Balci) that doesn't believe in god nor hell will be saved from hell, because he or she is able to abide by the laws (thou shall not kill, thou shall not steal, thou shall not lie) even if his or her interpretation of order doesn't imply a godlike figure.

azade_ wrote:Darkseid wrote:
Being open-minded makes you a liberal. Muhammad was a liberal. In fact, you are more closer to Muhammad as being a liberal than you are as being just any type of muslim. It doesn't matter if you are Shiite or Sunni as long as you are willing to be openminded in the sense of wanting to co-exist.
Also it doesn't matter if you believe in god if you can still abide by the same behavior as those that do. Even a nonthiest (like Balci) that doesn't believe in god nor hell will be saved from hell, because he or she is able to abide by the laws (thou shall not kill, thou shall not steal, thou shall not lie) even if his or her interpretation of order doesn't imply a godlike figure.
Well if someone doesn't believe in the existence of a god, then they wouldn't even care about the question of going to heaven or hell
But anyway I know you don't have to follow a school of fiqh at all but I was just wondering what the tendencies are.
Your thoughts of the lutheranian view are beautiful but as a muslim I have to disagree - there are some guidelines which everyone have to follow if they want to be a muslim. That's a whole different discussion though

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