17 March 2026 - 05:24
Source: Hawzah News
Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Al-Sistani Declares Supporting Iran a Religious Duty

Iraq's foremost Shia Muslim scholar, Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Ali al-Sistani, has issued a landmark religious decree declaring it a "collective duty" for Muslims to support Iran as the US-Israeli war against the Islamic Republic intensifies

ABNA24 - Iraq's foremost Shia Muslim scholar, Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Ali al-Sistani, has issued a landmark religious decree declaring it a "collective duty" for Muslims to support Iran as the US-Israeli war against the Islamic Republic intensifies.

 The fatwa, calls on believers to gather in mosques and public squares to demonstrate solidarity with Iran and its Islamic system. The religious ruling emphasizes that a strong public presence is essential to confront attempts aimed at weakening or dividing the country during this critical period.

The directive comes as the conflict that began February 28 continues to escalate, with US and Israeli attacks drawing Iranian retaliatory strikes across the region.

The fatwa represents a significant show of support from the Najaf-based religious authority, whose influence extends throughout the Shia Muslim world. Grand Ayatollah Sistani's rulings carry substantial weight among Shia communities globally and are seen as guiding principles for political and social action.

The decree frames support for Iran as not merely political but religious obligation, potentially mobilizing millions of believers across the region. The call for public gatherings in mosques and squares signals an effort to demonstrate widespread grassroots solidarity with Tehran amid the escalating military confrontation.

Observers note that the timing and content of the fatwa reflect growing concern among regional religious authorities about the conflict's trajectory and its potential to destabilize the broader Middle East. The reference to attempts aimed at "weakening or dividing the country" suggests apprehension about the war's strategic objectives beyond immediate military targets.

Iranian officials have welcomed the decree, with sources in Tehran describing it as an important affirmation of unity within the Islamic world against what they characterize as foreign aggression. The fatwa reinforces existing ties between Iran's clerical establishment and the Najaf seminary, two of Shia Islam's most significant centers of religious authority.

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