By James M. Dorsey
October 28,
2020
Jordanian
ruler Abdullah I bin Al-Hussein gloated in 1924 when Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the
visionary who carved modern Turkey out of the ruins of the Ottoman empire,
abolished the Caliphate.
“The Turks
have committed suicide. They had in the Caliphate one of the greatest political
forces, and have thrown it away… I feel like sending a telegram thanking
Mustapha Kemal. The Caliphate is an Arab institution. The Prophet was an Arab,
the Quran is in Arabic, the Holy Places are in Arabia and the Khalif should be
an Arab of the tribe of Quraish,” Abdullah told The Manchester Guardian at the
time, referring to the tribe of the Prophet Mohammed.1 “Now the Caliphate has
come back to Arabia,” he added.
It did not.
Arab leaders showed no interest in the return of the Caliphate even if many
Muslim intellectuals and clerics across the Middle East and the Muslim World
criticized Ataturk’s abolition of it. Early Islamist political movements, for
their part, largely declared the revival of caliphate as an aspiration rather
than an immediate goal.
A century
later it is not the caliphate that the world’s Muslim powerhouses are fighting
about. Instead, they are engaged in a deepening religious soft power struggle
for geopolitical influence and dominance.
This battle
for the soul of Islam pits rival Middle Eastern and Asian powers against one
another: Turkey, seat of the Islamic world’s last true caliphate; Saudi Arabia,
home to the faith’s holy cities; the United Arab Emirates, propagator of a
militantly statist interpretation of Islam; Qatar with its less strict version
of Wahhabism and penchant for political Islam; Indonesia, promoting a
humanitarian, pluralistic notion of Islam that reaches out to other faiths as
well as non-Muslim centre-right forces across the globe; Morocco which uses
religion as a way to position itself as the face of moderate Islam; and Shia
Iran with its derailed revolution.
In the
ultimate analysis, no clear winner may emerge. Yet, the course of the battle
could determine the degree to which Islam will be defined by either one or more
competing stripes of ultra-conservativism—statist forms of the faith that
preach absolute obedience to political rulers and/or reduce religious
establishments to pawns of the state. Implicit in the rivalry is a broader
debate across the Muslim World that goes to the heart of the relationship
between the state and religion. That debate centers on what role the state, if
at all, should play in the enforcement of religious morals and the place of
religion in education, judicial systems and politics. As the battle for
religious soft power between rival states has intensified, the lines dividing
the state and religion have become ever more blurred, particularly in more
autocratic countries. This struggle has and will affect the prospects for the
emergence of a truly more tolerant and pluralistic interpretation of one of the
three Abrahamic religions.
An Ever More Competitive Struggle
A survey of
the modern history of the quest for Muslim religious soft power reveals an ever
more competitive struggle with the staggered entry of multiple new players.
Initially, in the 1960s, the Saudis, with Pakistani and a degree of West
African input, had the playing field more or less to themselves as they created
the building blocks of what would emerge as the world’s most focused, state-run
and well-funded Islamic public diplomacy campaign. At the time, Western powers
saw the Saudi effort in fostering conservative Islam as part of the global
effort to contain communism. Ultimately, it far exceeded anything that the
Soviets or the Americans undertook.
The Saudi endeavour,
in contrast to the United States that could rely on its private sector and
cultural attributes, was by necessity a top-down and largely
government-financed initiative that overtime garnered widespread public
support. The bulk of Saudi money went to non-violent, ultra-conservative religious,
cultural and media institutions in countries stretching from China across
Eurasia and Africa into the Americas. Some recipients of Saudi largesse were
political, others were not. More often than not, funding was provided and
donations were made with the tacit approval and full knowledge of governments,
if not their active cooperation.
Following
the 1979 Iranian revolution, the kingdom’s religious outreach no longer focused
on containing communism alone, and Saudi practice increasingly mirrored Iran’s
coupling of religious soft power with hard power through the selective use of
proxies in various Middle Eastern countries. Rarely publicly available receipts
of donations by Saudis to violence-prone groups and interviews with past bagmen
suggest that the kingdom directly funded violent militants in select countries
in response to specific circumstances. This included Afghanistan during the
anti-Soviet jihad in the 1980s, Pakistan to support anti-Shiite and
anti-Iranian militants, Bosnia Herzegovina in aid of foreign fighters
confronting Serbia in the 1990s, Palestine, Syria where Islamists were fighting
the regime of Bashar al-Assad, Iraq wracked by an anti-Shiite insurgency and
Iran in a bid to fuel ethnic unrest.
Money was
often hand carried to recipients or channelled through businessmen, money
exchangers and chosen banks. Receipts of donations to Sipah-e-Sahaba, a banned
virulently anti-Shia group that attacked Shias in Pakistan, and its successors
and offshoots, bear the names of a Saudi donor who is hard to trace. They
suggest that the dividing lines between private and officially-sanctioned
funding are blurred.
To be sure,
the level of Saudi funding and the thrust of the kingdom’s religious soft power
diplomacy has changed with the rise of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The
drive today is to project the kingdom and its Islam as tolerant,
forward-looking, and outward- rather than inward-looking. Saudi religious
outreach also aims to open doors for the kingdom through demonstrative acts
like the visit to the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz in Poland by a
delegation of 25 prominent Muslim clergymen led by Mohammed al-Issa, the head
of the Muslim World League. The League, which was once a prime vehicle for the
kingdom’s global promotion of religious ultra-conservatism, has also been
forging closer ties with Jewish and Christian evangelist communities.
Indeed,
Prince Mohammed has turned the League into a propagator of his vaguely defined
notion of a moderate Islam. Meantime, Saudi Arabia’s retreat from religiously
packaged foreign funding2 has created opportunity for the kingdom’s
competitors.
Facts on
the ground in the kingdom and beyond, nonetheless, tell at times a different
story. Schoolbooks are being cleansed of supremacist and racist references in a
slow and grinding process initiated after the 9/11 Al-Qaeda attacks in New York
and Washington.
The United
States Commission on International Religious Freedom said in its 2020 report
that “despite progress in recent years, Saudi textbooks have seen some backsliding
regarding language inciting hatred and violence toward non-Muslims. While the
2019–2020 textbooks showed marginal improvements in the discussion of
Christians, textbooks still teach that Christians and Jews ‘are the enemy of
Islam and its people,’ and that members of the LGBTQI community will ‘be struck
[killed] in the same manner as those in Sodom.’”3
Prince
Mohammed’s nominal embrace of religious tolerance and inter-faith dialogue has
produced far more public interactions with Jewish and Christian leaders but not
led to a lifting on the ban on public non-Muslim worship and the building of
non-Muslim houses of worship in the kingdom itself. Access to holy sites like
Mecca and Medina remains banned for non-Muslims, as it has been for most of Islam’s
history, and often entry into mosques is also barred.
While Saudi
Arabia has implemented strict regulations on donations for charitable purposes
abroad, the source and the channelling of funding to militants that serve the
kingdom’s geopolitical purpose remains unclear at best. Militant Pakistani
bagmen described in interviews in 2017 and 2018 the flow of large amounts of
money to ultra-conservative madrassas that dot Pakistan’s borders with Iran and
Afghanistan. They said the monies were channelled through Saudi nationals of
Baloch origin and often arrived in suitcases in an operation that they believed
had tacit Saudi government approval. The monies, according to bagmen
interviewed by this writer, were being transferred at a time when U.S.
policymakers like former national security adviser John Bolton were proposing
to destabilize the Iranian regime by supporting ethnic insurgencies.4 Saudi
Arabia was also publicly hinting that it may adopt a similar strategy.5
No Longer in A Class of Its Own
The 1979
Islamic Revolution in Iran marked the moment when Saudi religious soft power
was no longer in a class of its own. It also launched a new phase in
Saudi-Iranian rivalry that progressively has engulfed the Middle East and North
Africa and beyond. Competition for religious soft power and influence is a
fixture of the rivalry. So is the marked difference in Saudi and Iranian
concepts of religious soft power.
Although
both had sectarian traits, Saudi Arabia’s primary focus was religious and
theological while revolutionary Iran’s was explicitly political and
paramilitary in nature and geared toward acquiring hard power. Iranian outreach
in various Arab countries focused on cultivating Shiite militias, not on
greater religious piety.
The
Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s in which Sunni Gulf states funded Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein’s war machine shifted Iran’s focus from export of its revolution
to a greater emphasis on Iranian nationalism. Iran also moved to nurturing
Shiite militias that would constitute the country’s first line of defence.
Gone were
the days of Tehran’s emphasis on groups like the Islamic Front for the
Liberation of Bahrain that gathered regularly in a large sitting room in the
home of Ayatollah Hussein-Ali Montazeri, a one-time designated successor of
revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, and the exploits of his son,
Mohammed Montazeri, who was nicknamed Ayatollah Ringo and founded an armed
group in Lebanon and Syria that aimed to liberate Muslim lands.
The
watershed shift has shaped Iran and its religious strategy, including its
support for and recruitment of Shiite and other groups and communities in the
Middle East, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. It constituted Iran’s soft and hard
power response to the Saudi effort to infuse Muslim communities worldwide with
an ultra-conservative, anti-Shiite, anti-Iranian interpretation of the faith.
Elsewhere, like in Southeast Asia and West Africa, the thrust of Iranian
religious diplomacy was, like much of the Saudi effort, focused primarily on
religious and social issues.
The shift
was evident early on in emotive debates in Iran’s parliament in 1980 about the
utility of the occupation of the U.S. embassy in Tehran at a time that Iran was
at war with Iraq. Men like Hojatoleslam Hashemi Rafsanjani, the speaker of the
parliament who later became President, Ayatollah Mohammed Beheshti, the number
two in the Iranian political hierarchy at the time, and chief jurist Ayatollah
Sadegh Khalqali, who was known as the hanging judge for his penchant for the
death penalty, argued unsuccessfully in favour of a quick resolution of the
embassy crisis so that Iran could focus on the defense of its territory and
revolution.
The debates
signalled a shift from what was initially an ideological rivalry to a
geopolitical fight that continues to this day and that is driven by the
perception in Tehran that the United States and the Gulf states are seeking to
topple the Islamic regime.
An Ever More Complex Battle
If the
first phase of the battle for the soul of Islam was defined by the largely
uncontested Saudi religious soft power campaign, and the second phase began
with the emergence of revolutionary Iran, the third and most recent phase is
the most complex one, not only because of the arrival on the scene of new
players but also because it entails rivalries within rivalries.
The new
players are first and foremost the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, Qatar, and
Indonesia. Their entry into the fray has further blurred the dividing lines
between purely religious and cultural soft power, nationalism, and the struggle
within Muslim societies over values, including various freedoms, rights, and
preferred political systems.
The third
phase is complicated by the fact that all of the players with the exception of
Indonesia have embraced Iran’s model of coupling religious soft power with hard
power and the use of proxies to advance their respective agendas. This is
apparent in the Saudi-UAE-led war to counter Iran in Yemen; Emirati, Egyptian
and Turkish support for opposing sides in Libya’s civil war; and Turkish and
Gulf state involvement in Syria.
The intensifying
violence lays bare the opportunism adopted by most players. Saudi Arabia, for
example, has been willing to forge or maintain alliances with groups aligned
with the Muslim Brotherhood even though it has designated the organization as a
terrorist entity,6 while the UAE, which claims the mantle of moderation but
still supports the forces of Libyan rebel leader Khalifa Haftar whose ranks
include a significant number of Salafist fighters.7
The
resurgence of political Islam as a result of the 2011 popular Arab revolts that
toppled leaders in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, and Yemen, fuelled the worst fears of
men like Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed, Egyptian General-turned President Abdel
Fattah al-Sisi and UAE Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed.
The
upheaval also created an opportunity for the UAE, a country that prides itself
on being a cutting-edge, cosmopolitan home to people from some 190 countries.
It launched a multi-faceted effort to project itself as an open and tolerant
society that is at the forefront of Islamic moderation and tolerance, and to
respect religious diversity and inter-faith dialogue.
Bin Zayed’s
acquiescence of the Salafis, who have sought to impose strict Islamic law on
Haftar’s eastern Libyan stronghold of Benghazi, is based on their association
with an ultra-conservative strand of the faith that preaches absolute obedience
to the earthly ruler in power. That acquiescence contradicts Bin Zayed’s
otherwise dim view of ultra-conservative interpretations of Islam like
Wahhabism.
Speaking in
2005 to then U.S. ambassador James Jeffrey, Bin Zayed compared Saudi Arabia’s
religious leaders to “somebody like the one we are chasing in the mountains,” a
reference to Osama bin Laden who at the time was believed to be hiding in a
mountainous region of Afghanistan.8 In an email to New York Times columnist
Thomas Friedman twelve years later, Yusuf al-Otaiba, a confidante of Bin Zayed
and the UAE’s ambassador in Washington, asserted that “Abu Dhabi fought 200
years of wars with Saudi over Wahhabism.”9
Al Otaiba’s
comment came a year after the UAE, in a bid to undermine Saudi religious
diplomacy, sponsored a gathering of prominent Sunni Muslim leaders in the
Chechen capital of Grozny that effectively ex-communicated Wahhabism.10 Western
officials refrained from publicly commenting, but they privately commended
Emirati efforts to confront a worldview that they feared provided a breeding
ground for social tensions and extremism.11
Bin Zayed
has played a key role in shaping Bin Salman’s policies to shave off Wahhabism’s
rougher edges and to bring the UAE’s and Saudi Arabia’s religious soft power
endeavors closer together. This alignment has resulted in what author Shadi
Hamid calls non-political politicized Islam, or a “third trend in political
Islam.”12 That trend, in the words of scholar Gregory Gause, “is tightly tied
to state authority and subservient to it.”13
Bin Zayed’s
efforts have paid off. Despite ruling at home with an iron fist, Bin Zayed has
been able to promote a state-controlled Islam that styles itself as tolerant
and apolitical and preaches obedience to established rulers without addressing
outdated or intolerant concepts embedded in the faith such as the notion of
Kafirs or infidels, slavery, and Muslim supremacy that remain reference points
even if large numbers of Muslims do not heed them in their daily life.
His
success, backed by armies of paid Western lobbyists, is evidenced by the fact
that the UAE is widely perceived as a religiously tolerant, pluralistic, and
enlightened society. This is in stark contrast to Bin Salman and Saudi Arabia’s
reputational problems as a result of the 2018 killing in Istanbul of journalist
Jamal Khashoggi and the arrests and alleged torture of dissidents and others
deemed a potential threat.
The UAE has
also successfully projected itself as a secular state despite the fact that its
constitution requires legislation to be compatible with Islamic law. In doing
so, Emirati leaders walk a fine line. Islamic scholars with close ties to the
UAE felt a need to rush to defend Al Otaiba, the UAE ambassador,14 against
accusations of blasphemy for telling Charlie Rose in a television interview
that “what we would like to see is more secular, stable, prosperous, empowered,
strong government.”15
To avert
criticism, the UAE government rolled out Mauritanian philosopher Adballah Seyid
Ould Abah who insisted that it was “obvious that (Al Otaiba) did not mean
secularism according to the concept of ‘laícite’ or according to the social
context of the term. Saudi Arabia, the UAE and other countries in the region
are keen on sponsoring a religion, maintaining its role in the public field,
and protecting it from ideological exploitation which is a hidden manifestation
of secularization.”16
The UAE
scored one of its most significant successes with the first ever papal visit to
the Emirates by Pope Francis during which he signed a Document on Human
Fraternity with Al Azhar’s Grand Imam, Ahmad El-Tayeb. The pope acknowledged
the UAE’s growing influence, when in a public address he thanked Egyptian judge
and his late advisor Mohamed Abdel Salam, who was close to both the Emiratis
and Egypt’s Al-Sisi, for drafting the declaration. Abdel Salam ensured that the
UAE and the Egyptian president rather than Al Azhar put their stamp on the
document.
Creating the UAE’s Religious Ecosystem
To bolster
the Emirati version of “counter-revolutionary” Islam and counter influential
Qatari-backed groups associated with the Muslim Brotherhood and other strands
of political Islam, Bin Zayed launched a multi-pronged offensive involving
geopolitical as well as religious building blocks.
Bin Zayed
drew a line in the sand when in 2013 he helped orchestrate a military coup that
toppled Mohammed Morsi, a Muslim Brother who won Egypt’s first and only free
and fair election.17 His engineering of the 2017 debilitating
UAE-Saudi-Bahraini-Egyptian diplomatic and economic boycott of Qatar, which is
accused of being a pillar of political Islam, further strengthened Bin Zayed’s
drawing of the religious soft power battle lines.
The battles
that have ensued between the UAE and Qatar have been as much in the realm of
ideology and ideas as they have been in war theatres like Libya, where the UAE
has funded and armed Libyans fighting the elected, internationally recognized
Islamist Government of National Accord based in Tripoli.
Bin Zayed signalled
his ideational intentions with the creation of religious organizations of his
own, the launch of Emirati-run training programs for non-UAE imams, and a visit
a year after the 2013 coup in Egypt to Al Azhar’s sprawling 1000-year-old
mosque and university complex in Cairo. The visit was designed to underline the
Emirati ruler’s determination to steer Al Azhar’s adoption of moderate language
and counter extremism and fanaticism.18
Meantime,
the new Emirati imam-training programs put the UAE in direct competition with
Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Morocco, major purveyors of Muslim clerical training.
The UAE scored initial successes with the training of thousands of Afghan
clerics19 and an offer to provide similar services to Indian imams.20
The UAE’s
growing world influence was evident in those who participated in the 2016
Grozny conference that effectively excommunicated Wahhabism. Participants
included the imam of the Al-Azhar Grand Mosque, Ahmed El- Tayeb, Egyptian Grand
Mufti Shawki Allam, former Egyptian Grand Mufti and Sufi authority Ali Gomaa, a
strident supporter of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi, Al Sisi’s
religious affairs advisor, Usama al-Azhari, the mufti of Damascus Abdul Fattah
al-Bizm, a close confidante of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, influential
Yemeni cleric Habib Ali Jifri, head of the Abu Dhabi-based Islamic Tabah
Foundation who has close ties to Bin Zayed, Indian grand mufti Sheikh Abubakr
Ahmad, and his Jordanian counterpart, Sheikh Abdul Karim Khasawneh.
The
participation of El-Tayeb, a political appointee and salaried Egyptian
government official, and other Egyptian religious luminaries who had supported
Al-Sisi’s military coup, said much about the UAE’s inroads into Al Azhar, an
institution that was for decades a preserve of Saudi ultra-conservatives.
El-Tayeb signaled the shift when in 2013 he accepted the Sheikh Zayed Book
Award for Cultural Personality of the Year in recognition of his “leadership in
moderation and tolerance.”
El-Tayeb
was lauded “for encouraging a culture of tolerance, dialogue and protection of
civil society” at a moment that Morsi, the embattled Egyptian president, was
fighting for his political life, and Bin Zayed was cracking down on Emirati
Muslim Brothers.21
The Grozny
conference was co-organized by the Tabah Foundation, the sponsor of the Council
of Elders, a UAE-based group founded in 2014 that aims to dominate Islamic
discourse that many non-Salafis assert has been hijacked by Saudi largesse. The
Council, like the Forum for Promoting Peace in Muslim Societies, another
UAE-funded organization, was created to counter the Doha-based International
Union of Muslim Scholars (IUMS) headed by Yusuf Qaradawi, one of the world’s
most prominent and controversial Muslim theologians who is widely viewed as a
spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood.
The Tabah
Foundation is headed by Saudi-based Mauritanian politician and Islamic scholar
Abdullah Bin Bayyah as well as El-Tayeb. Before he established the
Emirati-supported group, Bin Bayyah was vice president of Qaradawi’s European
Council for Fatwa and Research, created to provide guidance to European Muslims
through the dissemination of religious opinions. He also heads the Emirates
Fatwa Council that oversees the issuing of religious opinions and trains and
licenses clerics.
Bin Bayyah
as well as other prominent traditionalists with past ties to the Brotherhood
and/or political Islam, including Hamza Yusuf, an American convert to Islam,
and Aref Ali Nayed, a former Libyan ambassador to the UAE, found common ideological
ground in the assertion that the Brotherhood and jihadist ideology are
offshoots of ultra-conservative strands of Islam. They saw the UAE’s position
as rooted in decades of animosity between Al Azhar and the Brotherhood that
Egyptian presidents Gamal Abdel Nasser, Anwar Sadat and Hosni Mubarak exploited
to counter the Brothers and Wahhabism.
Born Mark
Hanson, Yusuf, a disciple of Bin Bayyah, is widely viewed as one of the most
influential and charismatic Western Islamic preachers.
Nayed, an
Islamic scholar, entrepreneur, and onetime supporter of the 2011 popular “Arab
Spring” revolts, moved Kalam Research & Media, a Muslim think tank that he
founded in 2009, to Dubai and aligned it with the UAE’s strategy.
“I believe
that the entire region is undergoing an identity crisis in reality. Who are we?
And what is the Islam we accept as our religion?… It is an existential question
and there is a major struggle. I believe that there is fascism in the region as
a whole that dresses up as Islam, and it has no relation to true Islam… Let me
be explicit: there are countries that support the Muslim Brothers, and there
are countries that are waging war against the Muslim Brothers… This is a
regional war—we do not deny it,” Nayed told BBC Arabic.22
Embracing
Machiavelli’s notion of religion as a powerful tool in the hands of a prince,
members of the Abu Dhabi ruling family, including Bin Zayed and his foreign
minister, Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, began courting Bin Bayyah in early
2013. They invited the cleric to the Emirates the same month that Morsi was
toppled.23
In a letter
three months later to Qaradawi’s IUMS that bitterly opposed the overthrow of
Morsi and condemned the Egyptian military government’s subsequent brutal
repression of the Brotherhood, Bin Bayyah wrote that he was resigning from the
group because, “the humble role I am attempting to undertake towards reform and
reconciliation [among Muslims] requires a discourse that does not sit well with
my position at the International Union of Muslim Scholars.”24
Bin Bayyah
published the letter to demonstrate to Emirati leaders that he had ended his
association with Qatari-supported Islamist groups. He has since acknowledged
that he speaks on behalf of the UAE government.25 The courting of Bin Bayyah
emanated from Bin Zayed’s realization that he needed religious soft power to
justify the UAE’s wielding of hard power in countries like Yemen and Libya. The
timing of Bin Zayed’s positioning of Bin Bayyah as what Usaama Al-Azami, an
Islamic scholar,26 dubs “counter‐revolutionary Islam’s most important scholar,”
was hardly coincidental. It coincided with the gradual withdrawal from public
life of the far more prolific and media savvy Qaradawi, who had become a
nonagenarian.
Al-Azami
argues that the UAE’s financial and political clout rather than intellectual
argument will decide to what degree the Emirates succeed in their religious
soft power campaign.
“The
counter‐revolutionary Islamic political thought that is being developed and
promoted by Bin Bayyah and the UAE suffers from certain fundamental structural
problems that means its very existence is precariously predicated on the
persistence of autocratic patronage. Its lack of independence means that it is
not the organic product of a relatively unencumbered engagement with political
modernity that might be possible in freer societies than counter‐revolutionary
Gulf autocracies,” Al-Azami wrote.27
Yahya Birt,
a British Muslim scholar of UAE-supported clerics, argues that their need to
project their sponsors at times is at odds with reality on the ground. “The
extracted price of government patronage is high for Ulema in the Middle East.
Generally speaking, they have to openly support or maintain silence about
autocracy at home, while speaking of democracy, pluralism, and minority rights
to Western audiences,” Birt said.
“What does
this mean for the soft power dimension of the UAE with projects such as the
Forum for Promoting Peace? On the face of it the Forum seems benign enough:
promoting ideas of peace, minority rights and citizenship in the Arab and
Muslim world, but at what price? Any criticism of the UAE’s human rights
violations…seems impossible,” Birt went on to say.28
Longing For Past Imperial Glory
Slick
public relations packaging is what gives the UAE an edge in its rivalry with
both Saudi Wahhabism as well as with Qatar and Turkey. Saudi Arabia is hobbled
by the image of an austere, ultra-conservative and secretive kingdom that it is
trying to shed and a badly tarnished human rights record magnified by hubris
and a perceived sense of entitlement. For its part, Turkey’s religious soft
power drive has a raw nationalist edge to it that raises the spectre of a
longing for past imperial glory.
Inaugurated
in 2019, Istanbul’s Camlica Mosque, Turkey’s largest with its six minarets,
symbolizes President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ambitions. So does the
controversial return a year later of the Hagia Sophia, the 1,500
old-church-turned-mosque-turned museum, to the status of a Muslim house of
worship. In contrast to Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the general who turned Hagia
Sophia into a museum to emphasize the alignment with the West of the state he
had carved out of the ruins of the Ottoman empire, Erdogan embarked on a
campaign of support for mosques and Muslim communities in former imperial
holdings and beyond.
In doing
so, Erdogan was following in the footsteps of Ottoman sultans who sought legacy
in grandiose mosque construction. He was signaling his intention to restore
Turkish glory by positioning his country as the leader of the Islamic world,
willing and able to defend Muslims across the globe. His was a worldview
outlined by Ahmet Davutoglu, Erdogan’s onetime prime and foreign minister, who
argued that Turkey’s geography, history, and religious and cultural agency
empowered it to be a regional hegemon.29
Erdogan
underlined the importance of religious soft power in his geopolitical strategy
by granting his Religious Affairs Department or Diyanet a key role in foreign
and aid policy. Established by Ataturk in 1924 to propagate a statist, moderate
form of Islam that endorsed secularism, Erdogan infused the directorate with
his version of political Islam.
Erdogan
harnessed the Diyanet to legitimize his military escapades in Syria, Libya, and
Iraq30 in much the same way that Iran and now the UAE blends hard power with
religious soft power. Diyanet regularly instructs imams at home and abroad to
recite a Quranic verse, Sura Al-Fath or the Verse of the Conquest, to
legitimize the Turkish president’s adventures. The sura conveys a message of
victory and conquest as well as the favor God conferred upon the Prophet
Mohammed and his followers. It promises increased numbers of faithful as well
as forgiveness of worldly mistakes by those who do jihad on the path of God.
The
construction of mosques and the dispatch of Diyanet personnel who serve as
imams, religious counselors, and political commissars have been an important
component of a multi-pronged Turkish strategy to build influence. The strategy
also included development and humanitarian aid, the funding and building of
infrastructure, private sector investment, and the opening of universities.
The meshing
of religious soft power and aid has served Turkey well. Perhaps nowhere more so
than in Somalia where US$1 billion in aid channelled through Diyanet and other
NGOs funded the building of the Recep Tayyip Erdogan Hospital in the capital
Mogadishu31 and the establishment of Turkey’s foremost foreign military base.32
Somalia is at the eastern end of a major Turkish diplomatic, economic and cultural
push across the African continent that is part of policy designed to position
Turkey as a major Middle Eastern, Eurasian and African player.
The price
tag attached to Turkish largesse often was that beneficiaries handed over
schools operated by the exiled preacher Fethullah Gulen, a onetime Erdogan ally
who Turkish officials accuse of building a state within a state and engineering
the 2016 failed military attempt to unseat Erdogan with the backing of the UAE.
Beneficiaries were often required to extradite suspected Gulen followers and
look the other way when Turkish intelligence agents kidnapped alleged followers
of the preacher and return them to Turkey.33
Turkey’s
quest for religious soft power kicked into high gear in the wake of the failed
2016 coup with Erdogan repeatedly defining Turkish identity as essentially
Ottoman. It is an identity that obliged Turkey in Erdogan’s view to come to the
defense of Muslims around the world, starting with the 45 modern-day states
that once were Ottoman territory. Erdogan, for instance, embraces Palestinian
nationalist aspirations as well as Hamas, the Islamist group that controls the
Gaza Strip, and the struggle for independence of Kosovo because they are
Muslim. Erdogan is not the first Turkish leader to root Turkey’s Islamic
identity in its Ottoman past.
So did
Turgut Ozal, who in the 1980s and early 1990s put Turkey on the path towards an
export-driven free market economy. Ozal, as president, also pioneered the
opening to post-Soviet Central Asia and encouraged Turkish investment in the
Middle East and North Africa. But he shied away from de-emphasizing Turkey’s
ties to the West. Erdogan’s contribution has been that by breaking with
Turkey’s Kemalist past, he was able to put Islam as a religion and a foundational
civilization at the core of changing Turkish educational and social life and
positioning the country on the international stage.
If Ozal, a
former World Banker, was the more cosmopolitan expression of Turkish Islamism,
Erdogan veered towards its more exclusivist, anti-Western bent. Ozal embraced
Westernization as empowering Turkey. Erdogan rejected it because it deprived
the state of its religious legitimacy, ruptured historic continuity, and
produced a shallow identity. It is a strategy that has paid dividends. Erdogan
emerged as the most trusted regional leader in a 2017 poll that surveyed public
opinion in 12 Middle Eastern countries. Forty percent of the respondents also
recognized Erdogan as a religious authority even though he is not an Islamic
scholar.34
The irony
of Erdogan’s fallout with Gulen as well as the souring of Turkish-Saudi
relations, initially as a result of Turkish suspicions of Gulf support for the
failed coup and the 2018 killing in Istanbul of Khashoggi, is that both the
Turkish preacher and the Saudi journalist were nurtured in Saudi-backed
organizations associated with the Muslim Brotherhood.
Gulen
played a key role in the 1960s in the founding of the Erzurum branch of the
Associations for the Struggle against Communism, an Islamist-leaning Cold War
Turkish group that had ties to Saudi Arabia.35 Erdogan, former Turkish
president Abdullah Gul and former parliament speaker Ibrahim Karatas, among
many others, were formed in nationalist and Islamic politics as members of the
Turkish National Students Union, which represented the Muslim World League in
Turkey.36
Turkey has
a leg up on its competitors in the Balkans, Central Asia, and Europe. Centuries
of Ottoman rule as well as voluntary and forced migration have spawned close
ethnic and family ties. Millions of Turks pride themselves on their Balkan
roots. The names of Istanbul neighbourhoods, parks and forests reflect the Balkans’
Ottoman history. Central Asians identify themselves as Turkic, speak Turkic
languages and share cultural attributes with Turks.
In Europe,
Turkish operatives often enjoy the goodwill of large well-integrated Diaspora
communities even if the fault lines run deep between Turks and Kurds opposed to
the Turkish government’s repression of Kurdish political aspirations.
Turkey’s
Achilles Heel may be that the Ottoman-style Islam it projects is a misreading
of the empire’s history. In another twist of irony, Erdogan embraced a Kemalist
vision of the Ottomans as a religiously driven empire rather than one that
perceived itself as both Muslim and European and that was pragmatic and not
averse to aspects of secularism. It is that misreading that in the words of
Turkey scholar Soner Cagaptay has produced “an ahistorical, political
Islam-oriented, and often patronising foreign policy concoction” and has
informed Turkey’s soft power strategy.37
Turkey has
sought to bolster its bid for religious soft power by positioning itself
alongside Malaysia as the champion of the rights of embattled Muslim
communities like Myanmar’s Rohingya. Turkey’s claim to be the defender of the
Muslim underdog is however called into question by its refusal, with few
caveats, to criticize the brutal crackdown on Turkic Muslims in China’s
northwestern “autonomous region” of Xinjiang.
Turkey’s
perfect opportunity to project itself arose with Gulf acquiescence to the
U.S.’s official recognition of Israeli annexation of East Jerusalem and the Golan
Heights, as well the launch of a peace plan that buried hopes for a two-state
solution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. To the chagrin of the UAE and
Saudi Arabia, Turkey convened a summit in Istanbul of the Riyadh-based,
Saudi-dominated Organization of Islamic Cooperation that groups 54 Muslim
countries to denounce the U.S.’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
Erdogan vowed two years later to prevent Israel from annexing parts of the West
Bank and declared that Jerusalem was “a red line for all Muslims in the
world.”38 Erdogan has also condemned the UAE and Bahrain’s recent diplomatic
recognition of Israel even though he has never reversed Turkey’s own ties with
the Jewish state.
Indonesian
Muslims wearing masks and maintaining social distance perform Friday prayer at
the At-Tin Grand Mosque in Jakarta, Indonesia on June 5, 2020. (Eko Siswono
Toyudho/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
------
The New Kid on the Block
Indonesia,
the new kid on the block in the competition for Muslim religious soft power and
leadership, has proven to be a different kettle of fish. Nahdlatul Ulama, the
world’s largest Muslim movement, rather than the government of President Joko
Widodo, has emerged as a formidable contender, one that is capable of operating
on the same level as the states with which it competes.
As a
result, the Indonesian state takes a back seat in the global competition among
Muslims. It benefits from its close ties to Nahdlatul Ulama as well as the
movement’s ability to gain access to the corridors of power in world capitals,
including Washington, London, Berlin, Budapest, the Vatican, and Delhi.
Nahdlatul Ulama was instrumental in organizing a visit to Indonesia in 2020 by
Pope Francis that had to be postponed because of the coronavirus pandemic.39
The
movement also forged close working ties to Muslim grassroots communities in
various parts of the world as well as prominent Jewish and Christian groups.
Nahdlatul Ulama’s growing international influence and access was enabled by its
embrace in 2015 of a concept of “Nusantara (archipelago) Islam” or
“humanitarian Islam” that recognized the United Nations Declaration of Human
Rights.40 The movement has also gone beyond paying lip service to notions of
tolerance and pluralism with the issuance of fatwas intended to
re-contextualize the faith by eliminating categories like infidels.41
Nahdlatul
Ulama’s evolution towards a process of re-contextualization of Islam dates back
to a 1992 gathering of religious scholars chaired by Abdurrahman Wahid, the
group’s leader at the time and later president of Indonesia. The gathering
noted that “the changing context of reality necessitates the creation of new
interpretations of Islamic law and orthodox Islamic teaching.”42
Speaking to
a German newspaper 25 years later, Nahdlatul Ulama General Secretary Yahya
Cholil Staquf laid out the fundamental dividing line between his group’s notion
of a moderate Islam and that of Indonesia’s rivals without identifying them by
name. Asked what Islamic concepts were problematic, Staquf said: “The
relationship between Muslims and non-Muslims, the relationship of Muslims with
the state, and Muslims’ relationship to the prevailing legal system wherever
they live … Within the classical tradition, the relationship between Muslims
and non-Muslims is assumed to be one of segregation and enmity… In today’s
world such a doctrine is unreasonable. To the extent that Muslims adhere to
this view of Islam, it renders them incapable of living harmoniously and
peacefully within the multi-cultural, multi-religious societies of the 21st
century.”43
Widodo
initially hoped that Nahdlatul Ulama’s manifesto on humanitarian Islam would
empower his government to position Indonesia as the beacon of a moderate
interpretation of the faith. Speaking at the laying of the ground stone of the
International Islamic University (UIII) in West Java, Widodo laid down a gauntlet
for his competitors in the Middle East by declaring that it was “natural and
fitting that Indonesia should become the (authoritative) reference for the
progress of Islamic civilization.”44
Widodo saw
the university as providing an alternative to the Islamic University of Medina,
that has played a key role in Saudi Arabia’s religious soft power campaign, and
the centuries-old Al Azhar in Cairo, that is influenced by financially-backed
Saudi scholars and scholarship as well as Emirati funding. The university is “a
promising step to introduce Indonesia as the global epicenter for ‘moderate’
Islam’,” said Islamic philosophy scholar Amin Abdullah.45
Saudi and
Emirati concerns that Indonesia could emerge as a serious religious soft power
competitor were initially assuaged when Widodo’s aspirations were thwarted by
critics within his administration. A six-page proposal to enhance Indonesian
religious soft power globally put forward in 2016 by Nahdlatul Ulama at the
request of Pratikno, Widodo’s minister responsible for providing administrative
support for his initiatives, was buried after the foreign ministry warned that
its adoption would damage relations with the Gulf states.46
That could
have been the end of the story. But neither Saudi Arabia nor the UAE
anticipated Nahdlatul Ulama’s determination to push its concept of humanitarian
Islam globally, including at the highest levels of government in western
capitals as well as in countries like India. Nor did they anticipate Mr.
Widodo’s willingness to play both ends against the middle by supporting
Nahdlatul Ulama’s campaign while engaging on religious issues with both the
Saudis and the Emiratis.
The degree
to which Nahdlatul Ulama is perceived as a threat by the UAE and Saudi Arabia
is evident in battles in high level inter-faith meetings convened by the
Vatican, U.S. Ambassador at Large for International Religious Freedom Sam
Brownback, and others over principles like endorsement of the UN human rights
declaration.
Nahdlatul
Ulama’s rise to prominence was also what persuaded Muhammad bin Abdul Karim
Al-Issa, the head of the Muslim World League, to visit the Indonesian group’s
headquarters in Jakarta in early 2020.47 It was the first visit to one of the
world’s foremost Islamic organizations in the League’s almost 60-year history.
The visit allowed him to portray himself as in dialogue with Nahdlatul Ulama in
his inter-faith contacts as well as in conversation with Western officials and
other influential interlocutors.
Al-Issa had
turned down an opportunity to meet two years earlier when a leading Nahdlatul
Ulama cleric and he were both in Mecca at the same time. He told a Western
interlocutor who was attempting to arrange a meeting that he had “never heard”
of the Indonesian scholar and could not make time “due to an extremely previous
busy schedule of meetings with international Islamic personalities” that
included “moderate influential figures from Palestine, Iraq, Tunisia, Russia
and Kazakhstan.”48
Saudi
Arabia was forced several months later in the run-up to the 2019 Indonesian
presidential election to replace its ambassador in Jakarta, Osama bin Mohammed
Abdullah Al Shuaib. The ambassador had denounced in a tweet—that has since been
deleted—Ansor, the Nahdlatul Ulama young adults organization, as heretical and
he had supported an anti-government demonstration.49
Nahdlatul
Ulema’s ability to compete is further evidenced by its increasingly influential
role in Centrist Democrat International or CDI, the world’s largest alliance of
political parties, that grew out of European and Latin American Christian
Democratic movements. Membership in CDI of the National Awakening or PKB, the
political party of Nahdlatul Ulama, arguably gives it a leg up in the soft
power competition with the UAE and Saudi Arabia, which both ban political
parties. Meantime, the PKB is far more pluralistic than Turkey’s ruling Justice
and Development Party (AKP), which has shown increasingly authoritarian
tendencies.
CDI’s
executive committee met in the Javan city of Yogyakarta in January 2020.
Participants included prominent Latin American leaders and former heads of
state, Hungarian Prime Minister Victor Orban, Slovenian Prime Minister Janez
Jansa and Elmar Brock, a close associate of German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Nahdlatul
Ulema’s sway was apparent in CDI’s adoption of a resolution that called for
adherence to universal ethics and humanitarian values based on Western
humanism, Christian democracy, and Humanitarian Islam. The resolution urged
resistance to “the emergence of authoritarian, civilisationalist states that do
not accept the rules-based post-WWII order, whether in terms of human rights,
rule of law, democracy or respect for international borders and the sovereignty
of other nations.”50
Nahdlatul
Ulama benefits from what journalist Muhammad Abu Fadil described as rejection
of an “Arab face of Islam” that in his words was “hopelessly contorted by
extremism” in Western perceptions. Abu Fadil suggested that “certain elements
in the West have become interested in ‘Asian Islam,’ which appears to be more
moderate than Arab Islam; less inclined to export radical ideology; less
dominated by extremist interpretations of religion; and possessed of a genuine
and sincere tendency to act with tolerance.”51
Conclusion
A major
battle for Muslim religious soft power that pits Saudi Arabia, Iran, the United
Arab Emirates, Qatar, Turkey, and Indonesia against one another is largely
about enhancing countries’ global and regional influence. This battle has little
to do with implementing notions of a moderate Islam in theory or practice
despite claims by the various rivals, most of which are authoritarian states
with little regard for human and minority rights or fundamental freedoms.
Muslim-majority
Indonesia, the world’s third largest democracy, is the odd-man out. A
traditionalist and in many ways conservative organization, Nahdlatul Ulama, the
world’s largest Muslim movement, has garnered international respect and
recognition with its embrace of a Humanitarian Islam that recognizes the United
Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the principles enshrined in
it and has taken tangible steps to address Islamic concepts that it considers
outdated. In doing so, Nahdlatul Ulama has emerged as a formidable challenger
to powerful state actors in the battle for the soul of Islam. But it still
faces the challenge of overcoming the Arab view, expressed by Abdullah I of
Jordan after the end of caliphate, that Muslim leadership must somehow return
to the Arabs.
1
The Manchester Guardian, Hussein The New Khalif: Special Interview In His CAMP in
TrandJordania. Arab Claims to Moslem Leadership. Dangers to Hedjaz From Arabia:
Reproach For the Allies. Emir Abdullah Confident, 13 March 1924, ProQuest
Historical Newspapers: The Guardian and The Observer ↝
2
Jonathan Benthall, The Rise and Decline of Saudi Overseas Humanitarian
Charities, Georgetown University Qatar, 2018,
https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/bitstream/handle/10822/1051628/CIRSOccasionalPaper20JonathanBenthall2018.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
↝
3
United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, Annual Report
2020, 28 April 2020,
https://www.uscirf.gov/sites/default/files/Saudi%20Arabia.pdf ↝
4
John R. Bolton, How to Get Out of the Iran Nuclear Deal, The National Interest,
28 August 2017,
https://www.nationalreview.com/2017/08/iran-nuclear-deal-exit-strategy-john-bolton-memo-trump/
↝
5
James M. Dorsey, Pakistan caught in the middle as China’s OBOR becomes
Saudi-Iranian-Indian battleground, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer, 5
May 2017,
https://mideastsoccer.blogspot.com/2017/05/pakistan-caught-in-middle-as-chinas.html
↝
6
James M. Dorsey, Indonesia: A major prize in the battle for the soul of Islam,
The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer, 30 July 2020,
https://mideastsoccer.blogspot.com/2020/07/indonesia-major-prize-in-battle-for.html ↝
7
David Kirkpatrick, A Police State With an Islamist Twist: Inside Hifter’s
Libya, The New York Times, 20 February 2020, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/20/world/middleeast/libya-hifter-benghazi.html
↝
8
United States Embassy in the United Arab Emirates, MBZ Meeting with Senior
Advisor on Iraq Jeffrey, Wikileaks, 15 October 2005,
https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/05ABUDHABI4308_a.html ↝
9
Leaked emails of Yusuf al Otaibah shared in 2017 with this author by
GlobalLeaks ↝
10 James M. Dorsey, Fighting for the Soul of
Islam: A Battle of the Paymasters, RSIS Commentary No. 241, 20 September 2016,
https://www.rsis.edu.sg/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/CO16241.pdf ↝
11 Interviews with the author in September and
October 2016 ↝
12 Shadi Hamid, The false promise of
‘pro-American’ autocrats, Brookings, 19 March 2020,
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/order-from-chaos/2020/03/19/the-false-promise-of-pro-american-autocrats/
↝
13 F. Gregory Gause III, What the Qatar crisis
shows about the Middle East, The Washington Post, 28 June 2017,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2017/06/27/what-the-qatar-crisis-shows-about-the-middle-east/
↝
14 Seyid Ould Abah, What does the UAE envoy to
Washington mean by ‘secularism?’ Al Arabiya, 12 August 2017,
https://english.alarabiya.net/en/views/news/middle-east/2017/08/12/What-does-the-UAE-envoy-to-Washington-mean-by-secularism-.html
↝
15 Charlie Rose, Qatar and the Middle East, 26
July 2017, https://charlierose.com/videos/30799 ↝
16 Adballah Seyid Ould Abah, What does the UAE
envoy to Washington mean by ‘secularism?’ Al Arabiya, 12 August 2017,
https://english.alarabiya.net/en/views/news/middle-east/2017/08/12/What-does-the-UAE-envoy-to-Washington-mean-by-secularism-.html
↝
17 David D. Kirkpatrick, Recordings Suggest
Emirates and Egyptian Military Pushed Ousting of Morsi, The New York Times, 1
March 2015, https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/02/world/middleeast/recordings-suggest-emirates-and-egyptian-military-pushed-ousting-of-morsi.html
↝
18 WAM, Mohamed bin Zayed visits Al Azhar,
meets Grand Imam – UPDATE, 18 September 2014,
http://wam.ae/en/details/1395269811015 ↝
19 Haneen Dajani, Afghan imams learn from UAE counterparts,
The National, 16 April 2015,
https://www.thenational.ae/uae/afghan-imams-learn-from-uae-counterparts-1.70308
↝
20 Charu Sudan Kasturi, UAE keen on Indian
imams, The Telegraph, 11 February 2016,
https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/uae-keen-on-indian-imams/cid/1487085 ↝
21 Mohammed Eissa, Azhar Grand Imam el-Tayyeb
Wins Cultural Personality Award, Ahram Online, 30 April 2013, http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/18/0/70444/Books/Azhar-Grand-Imam-ElTayyeb-wins-Cultural-Personalit.aspx.
↝
22 BBC News, Without Restrictions (بلا قيود), YouTube, 23 September 2015,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yx9WRaYvOfw ↝
23 BinBayyah.net, Net, 2013,
http://binbayyah.net/arabic/archives/category/news/page/15 ↝
24 Usaama al‐Azami, ‘Abdullāh bin Bayyah and
the Arab Revolutions: Counter‐revolutionary Neo‐traditionalism’s Ideological
Struggle against Islamism,’ The Muslim World Today, Vol. 101:4, p. 427-440 ↝
25 The UAE Council for Fatwa, 4 February 2019,
http://binbayyah.net/english/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Popes-Visit-to-Abu-Dhabi-English.pdf
↝
26 Ibid. Al-Azami ↝
27 Ibid. Al-Azami ↝
28 Ibid. Birt ↝
29 Ahmet Davutoglu, The Clash of Interests: An
Explanation of the World (Dis)Order’, Perceptions Journal of International
Affairs, Vol. 2:4, December 1997–February 1998), p.1. ↝
30 Hurriyet Daily News, ‘Conquest’ prayers
performed across Turkey’s mosques for Afrin operation, 21 June 2018,
https://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/conquest-prayers-performed-across-turkeys-mosques-for-afrin-operation-126072
↝
31 Pınar Akpınar, From Benign Donor to
Self-Assured Security Provider: Turkey’s Policy in Somalia, Istanbul Policy
Center, IPC Policy Brief, 3 December 2017,
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/323219525_From_Benign_Donor_to_Self-Assured_Security_Provider_Turkey's_Policy_in_Somalia
↝
32 Ash Rossiter and Brendon J. Cannon,
Re-Examining the ‘Base’: The Political and Security Dimensions of Turkey's
Military Presence in Somalia, Insight Turkey 21:1, Winter 2019 ↝
33 Die Morina, Kosovo Minister and Spy Chief
Sacked Over Turkish Arrests, Politico, 30 March 2018,
https://balkaninsight.com/2018/03/30/kosovo-intelligence-director-and-internal-minister-dismissed-over-turkish-arrested-men-03-30-2018/
↝
34 Yusuf Sarfati, Religious Authority in
Turkey: Hegemony and Resistance,” Baker
Institute for Public Policy, Rice University, March 2019,
https://www.bakerinstitute.org/media/files/files/c873dd82/cme-pub-luce-sarfati-031119.pdf
↝
35 Ertuğrul Meşe, Komünizmle Mücadele
Dernekleri, İstanbul: İletişim, 2016, p. 134-135 ↝
36 Uğur Mumcu, Rabıta, Ankara: UMAG, 2014, p.
199 ↝
37 Soner Cagaptay, Erdogan’s Empire, London: I.
B. Tauris, 2020, p. 54 ↝
38 Haaretz, Erdogan Vows to Defend
Palestinians Against Israel's 'Annexation Project' in Holiday Message to U.S.
Muslims, 26 May 2020,
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-erdogan-warns-against-israel-s-annexation-project-in-message-to-u-s-muslims-1.8872356?utm_source=smartfocus&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=daily-brief&utm_content=https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-erdogan-warns-against-israel-s-annexation-project-in-message-to-u-s-muslims-1.8872356
↝
39 Multiple interviews with Nahdlatul Ulama
officials ↝
40 Bayt Ar-Rahmah, The Nusantara Manifesto, 25
October 2018, https://www.baytarrahmah.org/media/2018/Nusantara-Manifesto.pdf ↝
41 Bayt Ar-Rahmah, Political Communique
2018_10_25 Nusantara Manifesto, 25 October 2018,
https://baytarrahmah.org/2018_10_25_nusantara-manifesto/ ↝
42 Bayt Ar-Rahmah, Gerakan Pemuda Ansor Central Board
Bayt-Ar-Rahmah Board of Directors Joint Resolution and Decree, 25 October 2018,
https://www.baytarrahmah.org/media/2018/Ansor_BaR_Joint-Resolution-and-Decree_2018.pdf
↝
43 Marco Stahlhut, Terrorismus und Islam
hängen zusammen, Frankfurter Algemeine Zeitung, 18 August 2017,
https://www.reddit.com/r/de/comments/6uorfx/faz_islam_und_terrorismus_h%C3%A4ngen_zusammen_volltext/
↝
44 Fabian Januarius Kuwado, Harapan Jokowi
pada Universitas Islam Internasional Indonesia.., Kompas, 5 June 2018,
https://nasional.kompas.com/read/2018/06/05/12232491/harapan-jokowi-pada-universitas-islam-internasional-indonesia
↝
45 Luthfi T. Dzulfikar, How Indonesia’s new
international Islamic university will host global research for ‘moderate
Islam,’ The Conversation, 16 December 2019,
https://theconversation.com/how-indonesias-new-international-islamic-university-will-host-global-research-for-moderate-islam-128785
↝
46 Interview with the author of the paper, 13
July 2020 ↝
47 Antaranews, World Muslim League supports
NU's harmonization mission, 28 February 2020,
https://en.antaranews.com/news/142430/world-muslim-league-supports-nus-harmonization-mission
↝
48 James M. Dorsey, Indonesia: A major prize
in the battle for the soul of Islam, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer,
30 July 2020,
https://mideastsoccer.blogspot.com/2020/07/indonesia-major-prize-in-battle-for.html
↝
49 Bayt Ar-Rahma, NU and netizens demand Saudi
ambassador to Indonesia leave the country over pro-212 tweet, 4 December 2018,
https://www.baytarrahmah.org/media/2018/coconuts-jakarta_nu-netizens-demand-saudi-ambassador-indonesia-leave-country-pro-212-tweet_12-04-18.pdf
↝
50 IDC-CDI, Draft resolution on promoting a
rules-based international order founded upon universal ethics and humanitarian
values, 23 January 2020,
https://www.idc-cdi.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Resolution-on-promoting-a-rules-based-international-order-founded-uponuniversal-ethics-and-humanitarian-values.pdf
↝
51 Muhammad Abu Fadil, Political Horizons for
Indonesian Islam (آفاق سياسية أمام "الإسلام الإندونيسي"), 15 June 2015, Al Arab, https://alarab.co.uk/آفاق-سياسية-أمام-الإسلام-الإندونيسي ↝
-----
Original Headline: The Battle for the Soul of
Islam
Source: The Hudson Institute
URL: https://newageislam.com/the-war-within-islam/battle-muslim-religious-soft-power/d/123318
New Age Islam, Islam Online, Islamic Website, African Muslim News, Arab World News, South Asia News, Indian Muslim News, World Muslim News, Women in Islam, Islamic Feminism, Arab Women, Women In Arab, Islamophobia in America, Muslim Women in West, Islam Women and Feminism