The Contemporary Arab Reader on Political Islam
345 pages
English

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345 pages
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Description

The Contemporary Arab Reader on Political Islam brings together the writings of highly influential figures in the field of Islamism in the contemporary Arab world, many of whose writings have never been available before in English.



Addressing the key issues such as human rights, civil society, secularism, globalisation and ummah, and the impact of the West on the modern Arab world, this is the perfect starting point for students and academics looking to understand 'Political Islam' in contemporary Arab and Muslim societies.



The contributors include such important Islamist thinkers and activists as Abdullah Azzam, central to the spread of Islamism in Afghanistan, Sayyid Muhammad Hussain Fadlallah, a major Shiite figure in contemporary Lebanon and Ahmad Bin Yousuf, a political advisor to Akram Haniyya in Gaza.
List of Contributors

Editor's Introduction

Part I: Toward a Theoretical Appreciation of Islamism in the Contemporary Arab World

1. Muhammad Sa‘id Ramadan al-Buti, Salafism is a Blessed Historical Phase Rather Than an Islamic Legal School

2. Fathi Yakan, Toward a Unified and Universal Islamic Movement

3. Ahmad Kamal Abu’l Majd, Towards a Modern Islamic Perspective Declaration of Principles

4. Muhammad al-Ghazali, Women Between the People of Hadith and the People of Fiqh

Part II: Islamism, Jihad, and Martyrdom

5. Abdullah Anas, The Birth of ‘Afghan-Arabs’: An Algerian Perspective

6. Abdullah Azzam, What Jihad Has Taught Me!

7. Muhammad Sa‘id Ramadan al-Buti, Jihad in Islam: How to Understand and Practice it?

8. Sayyid Muhammad Hussain Fadlallah, Islam and the Question of Power

Part III. Islamism and the Question of Israel/Palestine

9. Ismail R. Faruqi, Islam and Zionism

10. Mustafa Abu Sway, From Basel to Oslo: Zionism and the Islamic Narrative

11. Mohsen Saleh, Palestine/Lebanon], The Role of the Israeli Lobby

Part IV: Contemporary Islamism: Trends and Self-Criticism

12. Abdul Qadir Awdah, Islam Between Ignorant Followers and Incapable Scholars

13. Ramadan Abdallah Shallah, The Islamic Movement and the Contemporary Challenges

14. Umar Abdel Rahman, On the Present Rulers in the Muslim World

15. Sami al-Arian, The Islamic Movement and Contemporary Crises: An Assessment and Correction

16. Rashid Ghannoushi, Islamic Movements: Self-Criticism and Reconsideration

17. Yusuf al-Qaradawi, Islamic Awakening Between Rejection and Extremism

18. Jamil Hamami, The Islamic Movement: Hopes and Aspirations;

Part V: Islamism, the West, the United States and 9/11

19. Abdel Wahab al-Masiri, Imperialism and the Contemporary Muslim world

20. Ahmad Bin Yousuf, Islamists and the West: From Confrontation to Cooperation

21. Munir Shafiq, Islam and the Challenges of Contemporary Decline

22. Kamal Habib, Transformation of the Islamic Movement and the Current American Strategy

23. Yasser Za‘atira, The United States and Islamism: Before and After 9/11

24. Muhammad Hussain Fadlallah, Muslim Youth and the West: Between Original and Contemporary Values

Part VI: Islamism in the Contemporary Arab World

25. Fahd al-Qahtani, Islam and Saudi Paganism

26. Muhammad al-Masa‘ari, Conclusive Evidences for the Illegality of the Saudi State

27. Abdel Qadim Zalloum, How to Revive Islamic Caliphate?

28. Zaki Ahmad, Recent Changes in the Arab-Islamist Movements

29. Ahmad al-Raysouni, The Islamic Movement in Morocco: Resurgence or Decline?

30. Shaykh Ali al-Bayanuni, The Syrian Muslim Brotherhood

31. Ishaq al-Farhan, The Future of Islamist Work: The Islamist Movement in the Context of International Transformations and the Gulf Crisis;

32. Yahia H. Zoubir, Islamist Political Parties in Contemporary Algeria

33. Sami Abdallah, The Islamic Movement in the Gulf Region

34. Tarik Hamdi Al-Azami, The Islamic Movement in Modern Iraq, Sunni Dimension

35. Malik Bennabi, The Ideational World and Its Impressed and Expressed Ideas

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 06 août 2010
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781849645492
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 2 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0000€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

The Contemporary Arab Reader on Political Islam
THE CONTEMPORARY ARAB READER ON POLITICAL ISLAM
Edited and with an Introduction by Ibrahim M. AbuRabi’
First copublished 2010 by Pluto Press 345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA and 175 Fifth AVenue, New York, NY 10010 www.plutobooks.com and The UniVersity of Alberta Press Ring House 2 Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2E1 www.uap.ualberta.ca
Distributed in the United States of America exclusiVely by PalgraVe Macmillan, a diVision of St. Martin’s Press LLC, 175 Fifth AVenue, New York, NY 10010
Distributed in Canada exclusiVely by The UniVersity of Alberta Press Ring House 2 Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2E1
Copyright © Ibrahim M. AbuRabi’ 2010
The right of the indiVidual contributors to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is aVailable from the British Library
ISBN ISBN ISBN
978 0 7453 2890 4 978 0 7453 2889 8 9780888645579
Hardback Paperback Pluto Press Paperback The UniVersity of Alberta Press
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data applied for
Library and ArchiVes Canada Cataloguing in Publication Data  The contemporary Arab reader on political Islam / edited and with an introduction by Ibrahim M. AbuRabi’.
Copublished by Pluto Press. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 9780745328898
 1. Islam and politics. 2. Islamic fundamentalism. 3. Islam and world politics. 4. Arab nationalism. 5. IslamRelations. 6. Arab countriespolitics and goVernment. I. AbuRabi’, Ibrahim M.
BP173.7.C65
2010
297.2'72
C20109027779
This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the enVironmental standards of the country of origin.
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Designed and produced for Pluto Press by Chase Publishing SerVices Ltd, 33 LiVonia Road, Sidmouth, EX10 9JB, England Typeset from disk by Stanford DTP SerVices, Northampton, England Printed and bound in the European Union by CPI Antony Rowe, Chippenham and Eastbourne
Contents
Editor’s Introduction: Islamism from the Standpoint of Critical Theory vii
PART I TOWARD A THEORETICAL APPRECIATION OF ISLAMISM IN THE CONTEMPORARY ARAB WORLD  1. Muhammad Sa’id Ramadan alButi,Salafiyyah is a Blessed Historical Phase rather than an Islamic Legal School 2. Fathi Yakan,The Islamic Movement: Problems and Perspectives 3. Ahmad Kamal Abu alMajd,Toward a Modern Islamic Perspective: A Declaration of Principles 4. Muhammad alGhazali,The Headscarf Battle
PART II ISLAMISM, JIHAD, AND MARTYRDOM  5. Abdullah Anas,The Birth of Afghan Arabs 6. Abdullah Azzam,What Jihad Taught Me 7. Muhammad Sa’id Ramadan alButi,Preparing the Appropriate Climate for Jihad 8. Sayyid Muhammad Hussain Fadlallah,Islam and the Logic of Power
3 6
21 28
37 42
4
8
56
PART III—ISLAMISM AND THE QUESTION OF ISRAEL/PALESTINE  9.Ismai’l Raji alFaruqi,Islam and Zionism 65 10.Mustafa Abu Sway,From Basel to Oslo: Zionism and the Islamic Narrative 70 11. Ataullah Bogdan Kopanski and Mohsen Saleh,The Role of the Israeli Lobby 85
PART IV CONTEMPORARY ISLAMISM: TRENDS AND SELFCRITICISM 12. Abdul Qadir Awdah,Islam between Ignorant Followers and Incapable Scholars13. Ramadan Abdallah Shallah,The Islamic Movement and the Tasks of the Current Period14. Shaykh Umar Abdel Rahman,The Present Rulers and Islam15. Sami alAryan,The Islamic Movement’s Performance in Crisis: Assessment and Strategic Outlook16. Rashid alGhannoushi,Islamic Movements: SelfCriticism and Reconsideration17. Yusuf alQaradawi,Extremism: The Accusation and the Reality18. Jamil Hamami,The Islamic Movement: Hopes and Aspirations
111
119 124
127
130 135 139
V iI S L A MO N P O L I T I C A L A R A B R E A D E R H E C O N T E M P O R A RY  T
PART V ISLAMISM, THE WEST, THE UNITED STATES, AND 9/11 19.Abdul Wahab alMasseri,The Imperialist Epistemological Vision 149 20. Ahmad Bin Yousuf,Islamists and the West: From Confrontation to Cooperation 160 21. Mounir Shafiq,On Modernity, Liberalism, and Islamism 173 22.Kamal Habib,The Islamic Movement’s Approach to Understanding Shari’ah 178 23. Yassir Zaatira,The Islamic Movement Before and After September 11, 2001 185 24. Sayyid Muhammad Hussain Fadlallah,Muslim Youth and the West 193
PART VI ISLAMISM IN THE CONTEMPORARY ARAB WORLD 25. Fahd alQahtani,Islam and Saudi Paganism26.Muhammad alMasa’ari,Definite Proof of the Illegitimacy of the Saudi State27. ’Abd alQadim Zalloum,How Was the Caliphate Destroyed?28. Zaki Ahmad,Recent Changes in the ArabIslamist Movements29. Ahmad alRaysouni,The Moroccan Islamic Movement: Rising or Declining?30.Shaykh Ali Sadr alDin alBayanuni,The Syrian Muslim Brotherhood: Experiences and Prospect31.Ishaq alFarhan,Toward a Common Arab and Islamic Strategy for the Middle East32. Yahia H. Zoubir,Islamist Political Parties in Contemporary Algeria33. Salem Abdallah,The Islamic Movement in the Gulf Region34.Tarik Hamdi AlAzami,The Islamic Movement in Modern Iraq: The Sunnite Dimension35. Malik Bennabi,The Ideational World and its Impressed and Expressed Ideas
List of ContributorsBibliographyIndex
203
208 215 218
225
231
241
247 272
283
292
303 306 308
Editor’s Introduction Islamism from the Standpoint of Critical Theory
Islamic resurgence is unique as well as universal, because in Islam there is unity with diversity and variation that does not destroy uniqueness. Islam is a universal religion. There is nothing like Arab Islam, Pakistani Islam, Iranian Islam or Turkish Islam. Within Islamic universalism, there is unity 1 but not uniformity. Much of the desolation of the contemporary Muslim panorama is the result of the almost total absence of vigorously independent and devoted intellectuals. There are, however, indications that intellectuals who are true to the worldview of Islam are coming to the fore; but their number is below the critical mass for takeoff. However, if the Islamic movement ideologues, who dominate the reformist scene and the Islamization debate, could change a few of their character traits, the number of genuine Muslim intellectuals would swell beyond the critical mass and they could begin to make their presence 2 felt in both Muslim society and contemporary Muslim thought. We, as critical theorists, need to make Western audiences aware that Islamism as a political discourse embraces far more than the dogmatic fundamentalism and terrorist violence that dominate in the Western press. It is also a powerful source of critical debate in the struggle against the undemocratic imposition of a new world order by the United States, and against the economic and ecological violence of neoliberalism, the fundamentalist orthodoxies of which 3 fuel the growing divide between rich and poor.
INTRODUCTION
4 Islamism is a bewildering, multifaceted phenomenon in the contemporary Arab world intent on challenging the postWorld War II political order in the region. The articles included in this volume have been written primarily by Arab Islamist thinkers and activists during the past three decades. They present a wide range of views on such issues as the transformation of the New World Order since the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s; the impact of this transformation on the Arab world and, specifically, the Islamic movement; selfcriticism in the Islamic movement since the 1980s; the current ruling elites in the Arab world; and the present status and active currents of the Islamic movement. This volume seeks to achieve the following objectives: first, to present Islamist arguments on the issues detailed above and on other subjects, without mediation. In spite of the fact that Islamism has replaced Communism as the
V i i
V i i i T A R A B R E A D E R H E C O N T E M P O R A RY I S L A MP O L I T I C A L O N
West’s public enemy number 1, there aren’t many original Islamist writings in European languages. Instead, there is much written by Western social scientists and Orientalistsaboutthe Islamic movement, in some of which the authors fail even to consult original Islamist sources. The time has come to hear the complex Islamist arguments about history, education, politics, the New World Order, and the future of Islamism from the proponents themselves, so that we can begin to engage with these arguments and, from this foundation, concur or not with the conclusions drawn. Second, the Islamic movement in the contemporary Arab world is the product of local, national, and international factors and causes. We need to understand what is behind its emergence in the modern Arab world, why it has persisted through the past three decades, and whether or not Islamism, in its complex varieties, has replaced the former Soviet Union to become the most significant enemy of the New World Order. Third, we need to understand the social and economic composition of Islamism. Is it a movement of the poor or the alienated middle classes in contemporary Arab societies? In other words, what are the social and economic reasons that make Islamism such a challenge to the status quo in most Arab states? How is it that Islamism is at loggerheads with most Arab regimes? Is it because most of these regimes are secular or unIslamic, or because they have failed to articulate the Islamist vision of social justice and effect a more or less equal distribution of wealth? Fourth, we need to understand the complex relationship between state and religion in contemporary Arab societies and 5 where Islamism fits in this. In spite of some Western reflection on the matter, I believe it is important to highlight Arab and Islamist voices of the political elite in the Arab world, their relationship to the international system, and their treatment of the local forces in their societies, notably Islamism. Fifth, these articles prove that Islamism, far from being a passing phenomenon, occupies center stage in intellectual debates about a number of significant issues and challenges facing the Arab world. At present, most academic discussion about Islamism is critical of the Islamist movement without necessarily succeeding in engaging complex Islamist discourses and their modern historical formations. The events of September 11, 2001 seem to have resulted in an intensification of criticism of the Islamic movement without helping us to understand its arguments, its persistence on the political and social stage in the contemporary Arab and Muslim worlds, and its challenge to the ruling elites. All fingers simply point to Sayyid Qutb, the leading theoretician of Arab Islamism, to the extent that we are led to believe that Qutb, who was executed by the Egyptian regime 6 in 1966, is solely responsible for those tragic attacks on the United States. Many Western politicians and commentators argue that they do not have a problem with Islamper sebut do have a problem with what they call “political Islam” or the “Islamic movement.” This position is best represented by former US president George W. Bush. However, as Susan BuckMorss reminds us, “By attempting to silence Islam as political discourse, by reducing it to a religious practice, Bush is in effect closing off public discussion of how the many varieties of Islamism are challenging and extending the discursive field
E D I TO R ’ S I N T R O D U C T I O Ni x
7 of political resistance.” Coming to grips with the conceptual framework of the “many varieties of Islamism” is precisely the major objective of this volume. In Edward Said’s words, we need to understand the many “political 8 actualities” that the “return to Islam” embodies. Without going into too much detail about the historical origins of Islamism in the modern Arab world, it suffices to say at this point that Islamism emerged in response to the following major factors:
1. The failure of the PanIslamic movement of the nineteenth and early part of the twentieth centuries to achieve its vision of a total renaissance of the Ottoman Empire, often referred to as “Tanzimat” in Ottoman historiog raphy, and consequently of the Muslimummah. 2. The emergence of a new colonial order in the former Arab territories of the Ottoman Empire, which coincided with the division of the modern 9 Arab world amongst new imperialist masters (mainly French and British). 3. The emergence of nationalism in most of the Arab countries in North Africa and the Middle East in the interwar period, the struggle against imperialism, and the Islamist response to or engagement with the various nationalist movements in the Arab world. 4. The rise of the US to world dominance after the end of World War II and the onset of the Cold War.
Modern Islamism was primarily the product of the modern capitalist system created by several Western powers over the past two centuries. From the very beginning, Islamism revolted against the modern Western system and sought alternative ways of imagining and building new Arab and Muslim societies. According to Wallerstein, Islamism “is simply one variant of what has been going on everywhere in the peripheral zones of the worldsystem. The basic interpretation of these events has to revolve around the historic rise of antisystemic movements, their seeming success and their political failure, the 10 consequent disillusionment, and the search for alternative strategies.” It is only within this historical and political context that we can truly understand the intellectual formulations of modern and contemporary Islamism in the Arab world (or, for that matter, in the entire Muslim world). In other words, 11 the Islamist political imagination, contrary to Olivier Roy’s argument, is not driven by the historical events of the distant past (i.e., early Islam) as much as by the events taking place in the modern world, such as the creation of the modern world system, the emergence of imperialism, and the moral and political bankruptcy of most, if not all, of the rulings elites in the postwar 12 Arab world. Take the issue of reform. A good number of Muslim thinkers have reflected on this from a theological perspective. However, that reflection was never carried out in isolation from the political and social dynamics of the modern Arab and Muslim worlds. That is to say, most Muslim thinkers conceived of theological reform in the context of their response to and understanding of such issues or challenges as imperialism, nationalism, and other social and
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