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Revision as of 02:26, 21 February 2008 editCrotalus horridus (talk | contribs)Rollbackers7,850 edits St. Petersburg Declaration: removed full-text of declaration (possible copyvio and unencyclopedic in any case); trimmed down list to include only the more prominent signers← Previous edit Revision as of 02:29, 21 February 2008 edit undoCrotalus horridus (talk | contribs)Rollbackers7,850 edits on second thought, marked for prod; fails WP:V, no reliable third-party sources were found.Next edit →
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'''Secular Islam Summit''' was an international forum for ] of ]ic societies, held in March 2007 in ], organized and sponsored by the ], a global federation committed to ], ], free inquiry and ] in partnership with the International ], a non-partisan and neutral forum that brings together members of the international ] to discuss issues of ].<ref>Kuwait News Agency Feb 2007 First "Secular Islam Summit" to convene early next month in Florida </ref> '''Secular Islam Summit''' was an international forum for ] of ]ic societies, held in March 2007 in ], organized and sponsored by the ], a global federation committed to ], ], free inquiry and ] in partnership with the International ], a non-partisan and neutral forum that brings together members of the international ] to discuss issues of ].<ref>Kuwait News Agency Feb 2007 First "Secular Islam Summit" to convene early next month in Florida </ref>



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Secular Islam Summit was an international forum for secularists of Islamic societies, held in March 2007 in St. Petersburg, Florida, organized and sponsored by the Center for Inquiry, a global federation committed to science, reason, free inquiry and secularism, in partnership with the International Intelligence Summit, a non-partisan and neutral forum that brings together members of the international intelligence community to discuss issues of terrorism.

The summit was broadcast live on CNN 's Glenn Beck program.

St. Petersburg Declaration

On March 5 delegates to the summit released a public manifesto calling for reform within Islam. The text, known as the St. Petersburg Declaration, urged Islamic societies to reject sharia law and fatwa courts, and to accept freedom of religion and the equality of all citizens under the law.

Those who signed the declaration included Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Wafa Sultan, and Ibn Warraq, among others.

Criticism

The summit was criticised by the Muslim group Council on American-Islamic Relations for being organized by non-Muslims instead of a Muslim group.

References

  1. Kuwait News Agency Feb 2007 First "Secular Islam Summit" to convene early next month in Florida
  2. Washington Post March 17 2007

External links

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