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Wahhabism and Modern Islamic Ideology

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Title: Wahhabism and Modern Islamic Ideology


1
Wahhabism and Modern Islamic Ideology
  • From Muhammad ibn Abd-al-Wahhab to Sayyid Qutb

2
Wahhabism and Modern Islamic Ideology
  • Wahhabism A conservative 18th century reform
    movement of Sunni Islam
  • Muhammad ibn Abd-al-Wahhab--(17031792). Born in
    Najd, Arabia.
  • Was from a line of scholars of the Hanbali school
    of jurisprudence
  • The Hanbali school of jurisprudence stressed
    reliance on the Quran as the preeminent source
    of Islamic law (Sharia)
  • The next most reliable source was the Hadith, or
    sayings of the Prophet, that reflected the way
    the early community (umma) interpreted the
    message of Muhammad.

3
Wahhabism and Islamic Ideology
  • Wahhabi stressed the following
  • The oneness of God (monotheism)
  • All acts of piety and deference toward the
    Prophet and other Muslims, dead or alive, as
    idolatry.
  • Jihad (holy war) against such Muslims who
    violated this principle
  • No blind adherence to the interpretations of
    Islamic scholars
  • Responsibility to learn the way of the Prophet
    (the sunnah), i.e. the Quran and Hadith, fell
    upon the individual Muslim (to be educated in
    Madrassas, or holy schools

4
Wahhabism and Islamic Ideology
  • Islam had endured through several centuries of
    political leadership that had diluted its pure
    message (The Umayyad and Abbasid dynasties).
  • Islam needed purification
  • What was needed was a revival of itjihad
    (independent reasoning) within the Muslim, not a
    reliance on accepted teaching (this movement
    became known as Salafism).
  • Muslims should avoid shirk
  • Major shirk, which relates to the aspects of
    worship, intention, obedience and showing
    fidelity to people.
  • Minor shirk, which relates to the act of showing
    off
  • Hidden shirk, in which a believer may fall
    inadvertently, modes of dress, associating with
    idolatrous Muslims, adopting western styles, or
    customs

5
The Muslim Brotherhood
6
The Muslim Brotherhood
  • British Colonial rule 1882-1922
  • Indirect Control 1923-52 during which Egypt was
    ruled by a monarchy
  • Ottoman Caliphate abolished in 1924
  • Egyptian politics during this period dominated
    by the struggle between Egyptian nationalists,the
    monarchy and the British
  • Egypt used by the British as an operations base
    during World War II
  • 1948 Arab-Israeli war (Brotherhood sends
    volunteers)

7
Hasan al-Banna
8
The Muslim Brotherhood
  • Born in Mahmudiyya, north-west of Cairo
  • Importance of Sufism (Hasafi tariqa)
  • Moved to Cairo in 1922 and studied to become a
    primary school teacher
  • Graduated in 1927 and moved to Ismailiyya, on
    the Suez canal
  • Founded the Muslim Brotherhood in 1928
  • Back to Cairo in 1932, grassroots organizing
  • In 1948 Prime Minister al-Nuqrashi assassinated
  • In 1949 Hasan al-Banna assassinated by security
    forces

9
The Muslim Brotherhood
  • the social organization of the tariqa (to which
    he took an oath of allegiance at 18)
  • levels of understanding (khassah vs. ammah)
  • importance of helping the poor
  • belief as social practice
  • opposition to Christian missionary
  • activities

10
The Muslim Brotherhood
  • Islamic decline and renaissance
  • Westernization and colonialism, especially as
    seen in education
  • Social and political justice
  • The function of the ulama
  • Islam as a comprehensive system

11
The Muslim Brotherhood
  • The propagation of Islam as an all-encompassing
    solution to political and social problems The
    Quran is the answer
  • The mosque as a center of socialization, the
    institutional heart of an Islamic revolution a
    school, a hospital, a spiritual base
  • The importance of organization and moral
    probity rejection of colonialism, imperialism,
    secularism and the West

12
The Muslim Brotherhood
  • Distinct from the Salafi movement of Afghani,
    Abduh and Rida Banna was from a different social
    class and was no alim
  • Primary interest was in social organization, not
    in theoretical speculation
  • Brotherhood and ulama in competition for the
    masses
  • Superiority of turath to modernity

13
The Muslim Brotherhood
  • Spirituality in the East
  • Islam the solution, defined by the Quran
  • the pros and cons of patriotism and nationalism
  • Ideologies of racial superiority fraudulent
  • The Brotherhood supports debate, difference, and
    gentleness
  • Quran and Sunna and a strong determined
    leadership are the answer

14
Sayyid Qutb
15
Sayyid Qutb
  • Continuity of Qutbs thought? Different phases
  • Q8.53 Truly God does not change the state of a
    people until they change that which is in
    themselves
  • The full implications of submission and
    servitude to God
  • We must see ourselves as though we were of the
    Prophets generation

16
Sayyid Qutb
  • Quote in our capacity to reconstruct and
    relive the abundance of the feelings,
    comprehensions, and experiences accompanying the
    revelation (of the Quran) and the first
    generation of Muslims, who received the Quran in
    the thick of the struggle. Theirs was an
    environment of jihad (striving) jihad against
    the self, temptations, and people . . . The
    ambiance of the emerging Muslim community and its
    nascent social system was a reflection of a
    lively friction between feeling, interests, and
    principles.

17
Sayyid Qutb
  • Islam was corrupted and distorted by philosophy,
    leisure and the ulama
  • only those who take up the position of the
    vanguard (and thus the place of the Prophet and
    his Companions) can interpret the Quran
  • The implications of Gods lordship

18
Sayyid Qutb
  • The Renaissance was the beginning of the end
    man over God, reason over scripture
  • The Wests focus on materialism Darwin, Freud,
    Marx, no room for spirituality
  • All Western ideologies have exploited humanity
    Feudalism, Capitalism, Marxism, Nazism
  • Capitalism destruction of the soul and the
    individual

19
Sayyid Qutb
  • Tawhid submission to God in all realms, no
    difference between ibadat and muamalat
  • Man, as vice-regent of God, measure of all
    things
  • The limitations of reason and technology
  • Islam is the solution for alienation and
    spiritual malaise
  • Qutb an independent thinker, with fully
    articulated theory by 1962, same time Nasser
    brings the Azhar under state control

20
Sayyid Qutb
  • The Quran a dynamic, revolutionary document
  • Mecca and Medina 1) patience and oppression, 2)
    political formation and expansion (importance of
    jihad in its fullest meaning)
  • Enemies International Zionism, Crusaderism and
    Communism
  • Vanguard the poor, weak (Nasserism?)
  • Egypt in a state of jahiliyyah -gt jihad
  • Interpretation in the hands of the vanguard, not
    the ulama
  • Dynamic fiqh, not paper fiqh, but first an
    Islamic State

21
Sayyid Qutb
  • What do we make of Sayyid Qutb?
  • Hasan al-Hudaybi (d. 1973)s Missionaries not
    Judges, and the shift of the Brotherhood towards
    moderation and gradualism
  • Influence on other Islamist groups

22
The Iranian Revolution
  • The Question of Succession The Rightly Guided
    Caliphs
  • Abu Bakr (632-34)
  • father of the Prophets favorite wife Aisha
  • the ridda wars
  • Umar (634-44)
  • father of the Prophets wife Hafsah
  • vast expansion of Muslim rule, Jerusalem falls
  • Uthman (644-56)
  • Married to the Prophets daughter Ruqayya
  • Murdered in his house while reading the Quran
  • Ali (656-61)
  • Married to Fatima al-Zahra, the Prophets
    daughter
  • The Prophets cousin, first male convert to
    Islam

23
Important Battles
  • 656 Battle of the Camel
  • Talha, Zubayr and Aisha against Ali
  • 657 Battle of Siffin
  • Ali vs. Muwiya (cousin of Uthman, son of Abu
    Sufyan and Hind) -gt 661 Umayyad caliphate
  • Arbitration some of Alis followers desert him
    (Kharijites)
  • 661 Ali assassinated by a Kharijite
  • Second generation after the Prophet
  • 680 Karbala
  • Alis son Husayn is killed by Muwiyas son Yazid
  • -gt this defeat central to later Shia identity,
    commemorated on 10th of Muharram (Ashura)

24
Distinguishing characteristics of post-formative
Shiism
  • Muhammad designated Ali his successor -gt ritual
    cursing of first caliphs
  • belief in Gods guidance of the Prophets family
    -gt Imams are protected from error
  • division into three major groups, Zaydis (5ers),
    Ismailis (7ers), Imamis (12ers)
  • different legal and theological canon than
    Sunnis -gt distinct ritual practices
  • importance of Ashura -gt example of Husayn
  • Shia states Fatimids, Buyids, Safavids

25
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26
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27
Ayatollah Khumayni (d. 1989)
28
Ayatollah Khumayni
  • A sayyid and mullah
  • Status advanced to marja in 1963 clash with Shah
    (Khurdad 15 movement move to Iraq
  • Forced to leave Najaf for Paris by Saddam in 1978
  • Becomes spiritual head of Iran after revolution
  • Dies of heart failure in 1989

29
The Iranian Revolution
  • Shahs Iran in the 70s secular modernism,
    nationalism based on national myth going back to
    pre-Islamic Persia
  • Khomeini, one ayatollah among many, exiled in
    1964 for criticizing the Shah
  • Social classes opposed to Shah devout middle
    classes (bazaar), working classes
  • Student opposition Marxism vs. the socialist
    Shiism of Ali Shariati (d. 1977)
  • The political and economic independence of the
    ulama in Iran

30
The Iranian Revolution
  • Rational explanation of the importance of Gods
    Law
  • The necessity of the ruler to exhibit the
    following qualities knowledge of law and justice
  • Citation of relevant ayas and traditions that
    justify the central role of the faqih
  • Enayats argument that Khumeini downplayed the
    importance of the return of the 12th Imam and
    brought the Shia closer to Sunnis by stripping
    the Imam of supernatural qualities

31
The Iranian Revolution
  • Khomeinis doctrine of wilayat al-faqih
    (guardianship should include all issues for which
    Prophet of Islam and Shi'a Imam have
    responsibility, including governance of the
    country)
  • This view opposed by most other ulama
  • Economic downturn in the late 1970s, Khomeini
    drew on Shariatis concept of the disinherited
    (mustadafeen)
  • Attack on Khomeini in 1978 demonstrations for a
    year, Shah flees in January 1979
  • Liberal and religious rivals sidelined by the
    80s
  • Iran-Iraq war 1980-88
  • The legacy of Hussein at Karbala a culture of
    martyrdom in the context of war
  • A harsh critique of moral authority of the West

32
Iranian Exportation of the Revolution
  • Lebanon balance between Sunnis, Shia, Maronite
    Christians, Druze political roles distributed
    according to demography
  • Civil War begins in 1975, Syrian presence since
    1976, Israel invades in 1982 to throw out PLO
  • Imam Musa Sadr (d. 1978 ?) from Iran in 1974,
    founds Amal (Hope) thought is similar to
    Shariati
  • 1982 and on in response to Israeli invasion,
    Hizballah is established, Fadlallah recognized by
    them as spiritual advisor
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