It is impossible to provide a solution that will hold for all time in regards to any human situation, let alone one as complex as the Sunni-Shiite Conflict. The Divisions between Sunnis and Shiites have persisted for the same reason that the divisions between Catholics and Orthodox Christians have persisted. Once a religious sectarian division comes into existence it is impossible to theologically heal it unless at least one side concedes that its position on the theological issues that the two sects disagree on is wrong.
However, since Catholics and Orthodox Christians have stopped killing each other and cursing each other as heretics for the last 400 years or so, it begs the question as two why Sunnis and Shiites continue to do this. (Note that the majority of Sunnis and Shiites do not feel this way, but a large vocal minority in each camp still do.) There are several reasons for this animosity, all of which must be overcome for a genuine, peaceful relationship to form.
1) Historical Grievances: The primary reason this division persists is that there has never been an atonement by either side for the pain and persecution that it has suffered when the other was in power over a given territory. Although, Shiites endured more persecution at the hands of Sunnis than the reverse, this is not to say that Sunnis have not endured persecution at Shiite hands. Both groups remain defiant that since they have the moral high-ground as granted from their faith, their actions in repressing the other sect, torturing its adherents, and murdering its leaders was progress towards removing the heresy. Compare this to the Catholics, who have apologized for the Rape of Byzantium, which was huge historical grievance between them and the Orthodox.
2) Ethnic Identities: In many countries, especially Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon, people identify "ethnically" by their sect of religion. Therefore saying somebody is Shiite in Iraq is similar to how people view being Irish-American or Japanese-American in the United States. It marks you socially and it determines who your friends are, who you marry, what jobs you take, who you love, who you despise, etc. As a result, whenever conflict has broken out, each religious group comes together to defend its people's interests. This results in political and social hatred of the other religion in addition to any theological issues.
3) Rumors of the Other's Theology: Some Sunnis think that Shiites are deluded into believing that 'Ali was a second prophet, which would violate Muhammad being the final capstone of the Prophets, a huge theological issue. Some Shiites believe that Sunnis were paid off to accept the three Rightly-Guided Caliphs before 'Ali and that Sunni Islam was therefore corrupt and ineligible to continue the Islamic tradition. Both have alleged the other was deceived by Jews, which says more about how Muslims view Jews than each other. Of course, both of these are mis-characterizations of the actual theologies of these two sects, but the point remains that as long as these problematic rumors exist, the two sides cannot reconcile.
4) Approaches to Government: Ever since the abolition of the Caliphate in 1936, Sunni Islam has been leaderless and there has come to be an understanding that religion does not participate in actual governance. (This is not a separation of church and state since the two can cooperate closely, but this prevents direct theocracy.) Shiites, on the other hand, have religious leaders called Ayatollahs who do attempt to have terrestrial authority and in Iran have actually achieved it.
It is peacefully exploring a nearby field.
It is peacefully exploring a nearby field.
he killed the muslims
The capture of Damascus.
Inn the year 610 the early Muslims begin to write down the Koran. This was back in history.
Lord Mahavir passed away from his liberation. He finally got rid of all of his bad karma and was liberated from the cycle of death and rebirth
Muslims in general and Arab Muslims were the best merchants of the time. They travelled all over the world and discovered many lands and sites on earth. They sold and purchased goods and spread good manners and love. This was the main cause for many nations to know Islam and finally embrace it from Asia to china and Africa.
Pakistan wanted independence because of religious reason. the two religious Hinduism and Islam couldn't live together. finally most Muslims went to Pakistan and made prace with Hindus and now Hindus have India. Muslims have Pakistan
In the novel "Scarlett" by Alexandra Ripley, Mammy is said to have died from old age and a broken heart. She passed away peacefully in her sleep, feeling content that Scarlett was finally happy and settled in her life.
Internal conflict between Latin Christians and Greek Orthodox Christians prevented a prolonged unified fight against the Muslims. The majority of the Muslims were Sunni so they didn't have a similar issue. Also, the Holy Land was located within the Islamic World, giving the Muslims the advantage. Finally, the Western Europeans were dealing with a continuous line of barbarian attacks from the north. This disallowed them from fully focusing on the Crusades.
This question is a puzzle. The Catholic Church existed before the time of the prophet Mohamed. Are you asking about Spain? Under Islamic rule, there were times when Jews, Christians and Muslims in Al Andalus (Islamic Spain) had peaceful and constructive relationships, and there were times when things were not so peaceful. After the Islamic Caliphate of Al Andalus fell apart into separate kingdoms, Catholic rulers conquered some of those kingdoms and relations continued to be peaceful. When Catholics conquered other kingdoms, the story was different, and when Spain was finally unified under Ferdinand and Isabella in 1492, Jews and Muslims were given the choice, convert to Christianity or leave, under penalty of death.
First they established the Inquisition in 1478. This was initially intended to assure that Muslims in conquered area did, indeed, convert to Christianity. In 1492 they defeated the last Muslims in Spain. The Muslims could either convert or leave. Later they simply expelled the Muslims. Finally they expelled the Jews. Later the nature of the Inquisition changed and it became much harsher.