Shias and Sunni Muslims share a major article on Islamic faith, and most people think they are brothers of faith. Indeed, most Muslims do not claim to be members of any group, but they prefer to call themselves "Muslims".
Sunni Muslims agree with the position taken by many fellows of the prophets.
Sunni Muslims believe that there is no foundation for Muslims to have spiritual leaders touch, admire, or attract saints. They believe that leaders should not be born with the right but should be a kind of trust that can be given or removed by themselves.
Shi'a Muslims think that after the death of the Prophet Muhammad, leaders should give it directly to their cousins / female ants.
Muslim faith in the Shahdad Shiite version is different from Sunnis. Sunni Shahada said that there is no god except God, Muhammad is the messenger of God, but in this respect the Shiites added ants to the valley of the Divine (a guardian). This description reflects the Shia emphasis on inheriting authority through Muhammad's genealogy. So, the three articles of Shire-Shada are related to tawhid (god's unity), nubuwwah (Prophet of Muhammad), and imamah (now, the leader of faith).
The difference between Sunnis and Shiites relates to Muhammad's successor, so how do the two branches look at the difference in historical inheritance? Sunni Muslims recognize and respect the ant as the fourth justice caliph on behalf of the third caliph osuman ibn afan. By contrast, the largest Shiite Muslim known as Twelvers tends to reject the first three Sunni caliphs, or at least to dilute their role in the development of Islam, but instead Ali Muslim I will treat it as. The first genuine leader, or Imam.
The confrontation between the two major sects of Islam, Sunni and Shias occurred throughout the Islamic world. In the Middle East, the stronger combination of religion and politics has exacerbated the difference between the Shiite government of Iran and the Sunni government between the Gulf countries. According to a think tank's Pew Research Center report, 40% of Sunnis does not consider Shiites to be appropriate Muslims. So what exactly distinguishes Sunnis from Shiite Islam? What is the crack depth? This argument can be traced back to the death of the founder of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad in 632. The Arabs who followed him did not agree on who should take over him and inherited political and religious positions. Most people later known as Sunnis today account for 80% of Muslims and support Abu Bakr He is a prophet's friend and his father Aisha's father. Others believe that relatives of Muhammad are legitimate successors