Abstract:
Religious scriptures encourage the right action for every human being, whether they are followers of that
religion or not. Although, Buddhism and Islam explain the important of the right action in a unique manner,
but the meetings of Buddhist and Muslim most often portray as violent confrontation in Modern world. The
objective of this paper to analyze and understand the views of right action from the ideas of Buddhist
Samma Kammanta and Islamic Al- Amal At-Tayyib from for the initiation of good interreligious
understanding. This research applies library-based qualitative methodology, in which the researchers use
data that includes textual analysis on written materials such as books, journal articles, and internet sources.
The outcomes disclose that although both religions have fundamentally different doctrines yet share a
similar scope on right action which prioritize humanity and human wellbeing. This study guides to eliminate
misunderstandings about religions: Buddhism and Islam, and to succeed in a process of understanding and
for nonviolent commitment among the diverse religious groups. To this end, this paper concludes that to
what extent Buddhist Samma Kammanta tenets can assimilate Islamic Al- Amal At-Tayyib doctrines and
practices, paving the way for interreligious dialogue for peace. And drawing on some fundamental
commonalities between Buddhism and Islam.