Suleiman bin Abdullah Al Sheikh

Suleiman bin Abdullah Al Sheikh (1785 – October 1818) was a religious scholar in the Emirate of Diriyah and one of the grandsons of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, founder of the Wahhabi movement.

[6] He argued that Wahhabi visitors should overtly practice their religion in such places and that they should not have close relations with infidels while visiting their land.

[6] One month after the capture of Diriyah by the Egyptian forces led by Ibrahim Pasha, son of Muhammad Ali, in October 1818 Suleiman was killed by them,[3][8] since he did not accept their supremacy which he regarded as the submission to kufr.

[2][4] Sulayman's works served as a manual for later Wahhabi scholars to make sense of the major tenets of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab.

[5] His view was just a reproduction of the approach that had existed in Islam, particularly among some Kharijite and Shiite groups, since the seventh century which emphasized the difference between true and false religion and banned all interaction with infidels.