Saudi Muslim cleric claims the Earth is 'stationary' and the sun rotates around it

A video of Sheikh Bandar al-Khaibari's claims emerged on Galileo's birthday

Lizzie Dearden
Wednesday 18 February 2015 13:14 GMT
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Sheikh Bandar al-Khaibari claimed the sun rotates around the Earth, not the other way round
Sheikh Bandar al-Khaibari claimed the sun rotates around the Earth, not the other way round

A Saudi Arabian cleric has claimed that the Earth does not orbit the sun and is in fact stationary, making the opposite true.

Sheikh Bandar al-Khaibari stunned students at a university in the United Arab Emirates on Sunday by telling them the Earth is “stationary and does not move”, Al Arabiya reported.

A video of the Muslim cleric’s lecture showed him using a cup of water in an attempt to debunk the theory that the world rotates as it orbits the sun.

“Focus with me, this is Earth;” he said, holding the cup.

“If you say that it rotates, if we leave Sharjah airport (in the UAE) on an international flight to China, the earth is rotating, right?

“So if the plane stops still on air, wouldn't China be coming towards it? True or not?”

Waving the cup and his hand round in a circle, he went on to claim: “If the earth rotates in the other direction, the plane will not be able to get to China because China is also rotating.”

Anyone who has been on a flight from the UAE to China will know this is not a problem - but that does not mean the world is standing still.

Experts say the Earth’s rotation in itself makes no difference to flight duration, whatever the direction of travel.

As the Naked Scientists at Cambridge University put it: “The atmosphere is moving with the surface of the Earth below it because there's friction…you continue to move with the surface of the Earth, so there's no difference flying with the rotation of the Earth or against it.”

The Earth's rotation does not affect flight times because the atmosphere moves with it, scientists say

Sheikh al-Khaibari has previously claimed astronauts never went to the moon, dismissing Nasa’s moon landing footage as a Hollywood fake, Al Arabiya reported.

The video of him discussing the Earth’s rotation emerged on the birthday of 16th Century Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei, famed for his support for the long-proven Copernican theory that the planets orbit the sun.

He also employed other clerics’ statements and religious texts to support his latest theory but it was not enough to convince critics on Twitter.

The hashtag #داعية_ينفي_دوران_الأرض, meaning #cleric_rejects_rotation_of_Earth briefly trended after the speech.

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