MUSLIMS are disunited and in dire straits worldwide because they are easily taken in by money, power and fame, said renowned preacher Dr Zakir Naik.
Muslims should logically be strong because one out of every four people in the world is a Muslim, said the controversial missionary from India.
“But the people who are the most troubled are the Muslims,”said Zakir at a public lecture in Kuala Perlis on “The importance of unity in the Muslim ummah (community)”.
“It’s very easy to divide Muslims, very easy. Give them some money, they are divided. Give them some power, they are divided. Give them some fame, they are divided.
“The religion that is most practised in the world today is Islam but we are looked down upon. People are afraid to call themselves Muslim.
“This situation is because Muslims have strayed from the Quran and Sunnah (traditions of the Prophet). And because we are divided.
This is because greater wealth and materialism turns them further away from the teachings of Islam, he said.
As an example, Middle Eastern Muslim countries are among the richest in the world because of their oil wealth.

The lecture was the third in a series called “The Perlis Tour”, Zakir’s latest large-scale public event since a year ago when his presence in Malaysia irked non-Muslim religious leaders.
Last March, a group of activists filed a civil suit seeking to get the government to declare Zakir a threat to national security and to arrest and deport him immediately. The suit was struck out by the high court.
The Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and Taoism said Zakir has been quietly spreading negative views of non-Muslims.
MCCBCHST leaders want his permanent residency revoked. He was also banned from entering the United Kingdom in 2010.
When Pakatan Harapan took over the government after the 14th general election, Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad said Zakir could stay as long as he did not cause any trouble.
The 53-year-old last night focused on his fellow Muslims, whom he chastised for being intolerant of different opinions.
“Today, the practice of labelling another Muslims as unbelievers is so widespread,” Zakir said.
In contrast during the time of the Prophet and his four successor caliphs, which Muslims considered the golden age of Islam, Muslim leaders respected each other’s differences.
“Today, Muslims fight and call each others kafir (infidel) over the smallest of things.” – December 4, 2018.
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