Wahhabism
Was Founded By Muhammad Bin Abdal Wahhab In Najd, Now Saudi Arabia
Main
Points:
1. Salafism originated in Egypt in the late 19th
century.
2. Salafism was
exported to Saudi Arabia in the 1970s.
3. Muslim
Brotherhood was founded on Salafist ideology.
4. ISIS, PFI,
SIMI, Al Qaida and Taliban follow Salafist ideology.
5. Hasan al
Banna, Aduh, Sayyid Qutb, Rashid Rida and Jamaluddin Aghani preached Salafism.
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New
Age Islam Staff Writer
3 October
2022
There have long been calls to ban the Popular Front of India for their
alleged involvement in terror activities. AFP
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The article
by Arun Anand presents a brief study of the origin and development of the
Salafist ideology in the Islamic world. He points out that Wahhabism and
Salafism are wrongly considered synonymous. They are different in approach.
Wahhabism believes in a return to the golden age, the age of the first three
generations. It strongly advocates jihad against non-believers and rejects
modernism. Salafism, on the other hand, seeks to reconcile Islam with modernity
but accepts the ideology of Ibn Taimiyyah who presented the concept of Dar
al Harb and Dar al Islam. The ruler who does not adhere to the
Islamic law will be declared unbeliever and will be overthrown according to Ibn
Taimiyyah. Anyone not adhering to his interpretation of Islam is an unbeliever.
This
ideology professes blanket warfare against non-believers. The Salafists adopted
this ideology. Hasan al Banna followed this ideology and founded his organisation
Muslim Brotherhood on this ideology. Sayyid Qutb also promoted this ideology.
MB spread its base across the world. However, Hasan al Banna was assassinated
in 1949 and Sayyid Qutb carried the movement forward. But he too was executed
by Jamal Abdal Nasser in 1966. However, by that time, Salafism spread in the
Islamic world with a stress on Jihadism against non-Muslims and against Muslims
who believed in democratic principles of governance and social behaviour. Osama
bin Laden was a student of this school and Taliban, ISIS, Boko Haram etc were
found on the ideology of Salafism.
In India
SIMI and now PFI followed Salafism. PFI strengthened its base in Kerala because
of its economic and ideological affinity to Saudi Arabia and Egypt. After SIMI
was banned, this ideology found expression in PFI. And so after the ban on PFI,
some other organisation based on Salafist Jihadism may spring up.
Therefore,
to root out Salafist Jihadism, an ideological solution must be found out to
this ideological malaise. The solution can be found only through an ideological
counter-narrative and this ideological counter- narrative can be formed only by
liberal Islamic thinkers. Therefore, this task can be achieved by taking the
Islamic intelligentsia into confidence, not by alienating them.
----
Ban on
PFI: Time To Recognise Threat Posed By ‘Salafism-Jihadism’
By
Arun Anand
October 01,
2022
The ban on
Popular Front of India (PFI) and several of its affiliates imposed by the
Government of India is likely to effectively address some symptoms of a
malaise. But it might not be the permanent solution as new outfits might come
up to replace the PFI. This has happened in the past also as PFI had replaced
Student Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) after the latter was banned. No government
can address this issue unless we, as a society, understand and subsequently
address the threat posed by the ideology of ‘Salafism-Jihadism’ which is the
origin of such organisations.
Salafism
and Wahhabism
There is
often a confusion about Salafism and Wahhabism and commentators tend to use
these terms interchangeably. Both these movements believed in revival of pure
Islam but they weren’t the same till there was a cross between the two in Saudi
Arabia in the 1970s.
Wahhabism
was founded in the region of Najd (in today’s Saudi Arabia) in the 18th century
by Abd-al-Wahhab. Many scholars and experts refer to it as a reformist
movement. But Wahhabism isn’t a reform movement. It believes that Islam should
return to its golden age-the age of the Prophet and the first four Caliphs. It
strongly advocates use of ‘jihad’ in its teachings.
Salafism on
other hand, emerged in Egypt and was exported to Saudi Arabia in the 1970s as a
large number of radical Egyptians landed there to escape the crackdown on them
in Egypt. Saudi Arabia also welcomed them as with the oil boom, its economy
skyrocketed and it didn’t have enough educated people to set up and run
universities, hospitals, infrastructure projects and the rapidly expanding
administrative apparatus.
Trevor Stanley
wrote way back in 2005 (Understanding the Origins of Wahhabism and Salafism;
Terrorism Monitor Volume: 3 Issue: 14), “Salafism… originated in the mid- to
late 19th century, as an intellectual movement at al-Azhar University, led by
Muhammad Abduh (1849-1905), Jamal al-Din al-Afghani (1839-1897) and Rashid Rida
(1865-1935). The movement was built on a broad foundation. Al-Afghani was a
political activist, whereas Abduh, an educator, sought gradual social reform
(as a part of da’wa), particularly through education. Debate over the place of
these respective methods of political change continues to this day in Salafi
groups such as the Muslim Brotherhood.”
Stanley
underlined the finer nuances that differentiated these two movements: “In terms
of their respective formation, Wahhabism and Salafism were quite distinct.
Wahhabism was a pared-down Islam that rejected modern influences, while
Salafism sought to reconcile Islam with modernism. What they had in common is
that both rejected traditional teachings on Islam in favour of direct,
‘fundamentalist’ reinterpretation.”
However, as
mentioned above, once the two — Wahhabism and Salafism — met in Saudi Arabia,
the outcome was a deadly mix of Salafism-Jihadism that was exported to the rest
of the world including India.
Salafism-Jihadism
Salafism is
a branch of Sunni Islam. Those who follow it believe in emulating “the pious
predecessors” (Al-Salaf Al-Ṣāliḥ; often equated with the first three
generations of Muslims). The use of violence against those who do not follow
this principle shaped the ideology of Islamism-Jihadism.
Hasan al
Banna and Sayyid Qutb, both played a significant role in establishing this
ideology in 20th century. Banna was an Egyptian political and religious leader.
He founded the Society of Brothers, commonly known as ‘Muslim Brotherhood’ in
the 1920s. This organisation has a global reach now. “The Muslim Brothers
formed their society in Egypt in order to reclaim Islam’s political dimension,
which had formerly resided in the person of the now-fallen Caliph. Confronted
by the Egyptian nationalists of the time who demanded independence, the
departure of the British and a democratic Constitution, the Brothers responded
with a slogan that is still current in the Islamist movement: “The Koran is Our
Constitution… The doctrine was shared by the entire Islamist movement, whatever
their other views,” observed Gilles Kepel in Jihad: The Trail of Political
Islam (Bloomsbury Academic; 2021, pp25). Banna was assassinated in 1949 but
Syyid Qutb, the top theorist of Muslim Brotherhood, carried the movement
forward.
Qutb was an
Egyptian religious leader. Robert Spencer writes in The History of Jihad;
(Bombarider Books; Pp299), “Qutb’s influential book Milestones positioned Islam
as the true source of societal and personal order, as opposed to both
capitalism and communism… Qutb concluded: ‘It is essential for mankind to have
a new leadership!’. The new leadership would come from Islam. To Qutb, what the
Muslim Umma needed was a restoration of Islam in its fullness and purity,
including all the rules of the Sharia for regulating society… Qutb taught that
jihad was necessary in order to establish Sharia.”
Qutb was
executed by the Egyptian government led by socialist ruler Gamel Abdel Naseer
in 1966. But Muslim Brotherhood continued its journey and so did Salafism.
In a
monograph titled, “Salafi-Jihadism: A 1,400-Year-old Idea Rises” (published by
School of Advanced Military Studies, United States Army Command and General
Staff College Fort Leavenworth, Kansas in 2016), Major Jacob M Teplesky
observed, “Salafi-Jihadist ideology provides just cause and proper authority
for waging war against apostate governments and Western targets. If we fail to
understand the history and theory underlying Salafi-Jihadist groups’ use of
violence to topple regimes and impose sharia, we will not grasp the current
operating environment or enemy doctrine.”
He further
adds, “The Salafi-Jihadi version of global jihad is linked to the teaching of
Ibn Taymiyyah (1263–1328), who offered a legal and religious justification for
overthrowing unjust and non-Muslim rulers. Believing anyone who rejected Islam
should be opposed, Taymiyyah thus rendered jihad an offensive as well as a
defensive action. Taymiyyah’s principles of jihad, “particularly the permissibility
to overthrow a ruler who is classified as an unbeliever due to a failure to
adhere to Islamic law, the absolute division of the world into Dar-al-kufar
[land of unbelief] and Dar-al-Islam [land of Islam], the labelling of anyone
not adhering to one’s particular interpretations of Islam as an unbeliever, and
the call for the blanket warfare against non-Muslims… became the doctrine of
Salafi-Jihadis.”
The
Salafism-Jihadism is now the biggest global threat for security as a 2018 study
by Centre for Strategic and International studies (‘The Evolution of the
Salafi-Jihadist Threat’) pointed out, “There were 67 Salafi-jihadist groups
across the globe in 2018, tied with 2016 for the highest level since 1980. This
reflected a 180 percent increase in the number of groups from 2001 to
2018. There were approximately 44 groups
other than the Islamic State, al-Qaeda, and their direct affiliates in 2018.
This total, which included organizations like Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and
Lashkar-e-Taiba, accounted for roughly 67 percent of all groups.” There are many Salafi-jihadist groups which
are active in different parts of the world such as Jama’at Nasr al-Islam, Boko
Haram, the Islamic State West Africa, Taliban and Al-Shabaab.
Salafi-Jihadism
in India
In an investigative
report (January 2022) by India based think tank Usanas Foundation that exposed
the funding of a number of Salafi-Jihadist organisations in India, authors
Abhinav Pandya and Akshay Kumar
revealed, “ (a) major cause of
concern is the financial support for Salafi organizations in Kerala. Over the
past years, this southern state of India has become the hub of radicalization
and recruitment ground for several transnational terrorist groups. Salafi
organizations in Kerala have constantly been accused of supporting violent
extremism, and several ISIS recruits from the state have been associated and
radicalized through them. Banned Kerala-based Islamist terror groups such as
the Student Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) and extremist groups like Popular
Front of India (PFI) (also banned now) have used hard-core Salafi teachings for
radicalizing youth and recruitment. The fact that raises alarms is that these
transactions also match the period when radicalisation and extremist trends in
Kerala acquired a steeper trajectory.”
The recent
raids on PFI across several states, before it was banned, have revealed the
pan-India expanse of Salafist-Jihadist ideology. It is time to recognise this
grave threat to our society and the nation.
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Arun Anand an author and columnist, has written
several books. Views expressed are personal
Source: Ban On PFI: Time To Recognise Threat
Posed By ‘Salafism-Jihadism’
URL: https://newageislam.com/radical-islamism-jihad/saudi-wahhabism-egyptian-salafism-jihadism/d/128090
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