Audio By Carbonatix
The National Chairman of the Ghana Muslim Mission has called for unity among all Muslim sects.
Dr Sheikh Amin Bonsu said, "…As Muslims, we serve one God, Allah, we are one people with one religion, Islam, one book, the Holy Quran, as a manual and guide and one Prophet, Prophet Mohammed (SAW).
"We follow the same direction in salat, facing the Holy Kaba with our shoulders and feet joined in a straight line to signify one brotherhood," he stated, stressing the need for oneness.
Dr Bonsu, who was speaking at the closing ceremony of the maiden National Muslims Conference organised in Accra, said in unity, a lot could be achieved for the development of the Muslim community and charged all sects to bury their differences.
The conference on the theme, " Muslim Education in Ghana at the Crossroads — The Need for Concerted Action," was aimed at strategising towards achieving higher positive educational outcomes for Muslim children at the basic level of education.
It was also to draft a plan towards developing existing Muslim Senior High Schools across the country for quality and holistic secondary education, strategising towards ensuring regular funding for Muslim education in Ghana and discussing Muslim rights and responsibilities within Ghana’s educational system.
Dr Bonsu said, "if we unite, we will be able to build more educational, health, and other infrastructure that the Muslim communities require to develop and to be able to contribute their quota to national development."
He noted that they could have one voice with a united front, live in peace, undertake humanitarian and developmental projects, including the building of educational and health infrastructure and other social amenities.
Dr Bonsu said they could also provide scholarships to brilliant but needy students and care for widows and orphans.
He commended the Muslim Caucus in Parliament for organising the conference, saying it was timely, and Muslims had yearned for that for so many years.
The three-day National Muslims Conference was organised by the Muslim Caucus in Parliament in collaboration with the Office of the National Chief Imam and Heads of the various Islamic sects.
At the end of the conference, a deed of the covenant was signed by all the Imams of Muslim sects in Ghana to provide a forum for deliberation and management of matters relating to education, health, financial, and the general wellbeing of Muslims in Ghana.
Latest Stories
-
FIFA World Cup: Iran moves camp from USA to Mexico, amid ongoing conflict
2 hours -
Tamale police arrest suspect with large quantities of drugs
2 hours -
BoG pushes for integrated African payment systems to boost trade — Dr Asiama
2 hours -
Two people shot in encounter with Secret Service near the White House
3 hours -
Red Cross volunteers die from suspected Ebola in DR Congo
3 hours -
US Secret Service investigates reports of shots near White House
3 hours -
ECG injects GH¢3m into power upgrades across 40 Accra communities
3 hours -
‘Owadiah’ makes history: William Opare becomes first Ghanaian to break 45 seconds in 400m
3 hours -
Scottish woman ‘was on a mission’ to find out who her Ghanaian husband was. Then she died
3 hours -
Four Ada SHS students arrested after viral cutlass threat video sparks alarm
3 hours -
Christopher Bonsu Baah win Staff Player of the Year award in debut season with Al Qadsiah
4 hours -
Laryea Kingston’s Uganda beat Ghana 8-7 on penalties to secure U-17 World Cup spot and extend Black Starlets’ absence to nine years
5 hours -
FIFA U17 World Cup playoffs: Uganda beat Black Starlets on penalties to qualify
5 hours -
GN Savings and Loans: Ndoum thanks Mahama after Court of Appeal victory
5 hours -
2026 U17 WWCQ: Goalfest in Accra as Black Maidens hit Liberia for six
5 hours