Islamic Activists , livre ebook

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In the hysteria surrounding Political Islam, it is difficult to find analysis that doesn't justify the existence of Islamic leaders or react to the West's fear of 'extremists'. In Islamic Activists, Deina Ali Abdelkader shows us what Islamic leaders and activists believe and what they think about just governance.



Explaining and comparing Islamist ideas, including those about leadership, justice and minority rights, Abdelkader explains how these have been represented in the writings of important historical and contemporary Islamists. In doing so, Abdelkader reveals that democracy is not the sole preserve of those who support Enlightenment values, offering the reader a chance to understand the populist non-violent side of Islamic activism.



The book includes an examination of the ideas of the leaders of the populist Islamist movements in Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco.
1. Orientalism, Islamic Activism and Rational Thought?

2. The Rudiments of an Islamic Just Society: The Contribution of Abu-Ishaq al-Shatibi

3. Qaradawi: Modernization is Key

4. Ghannouchi: Minorities and Equality

5. Yassin: The Just Ruler

6. Reason and Faith: The Islamists versus the 'Stillborn God'

Notes

Index
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Date de parution

04 mars 2011

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0

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9781783714063

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English

Islamic Activists
Islamic Activists
The Anti-Enlightenment Democrats
Deina Ali Abdelkader
 
 
 
First published 2011 by Pluto Press
345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA and
175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010
www.plutobooks.com
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
Copyright © Deina Ali Abdelkader 2011
The right of Deina Ali Abdelkader to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her 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    978 0 7453 2217 9    Hardback ISBN    978 0 7453 2216 2    Paperback ISBN    978 1 8496 4580 5    PDF ebook ISBN    978 1 7837 1407 0    Kindle ebook ISBN    978 1 7837 1406 3    EPUB ebook
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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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Simultaneously printed digitally by CPI Antony Rowe, Chippenham, UK and Edwards Bros in the USA
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
To my parents: Cheridan and Ali Abdelkader, to Hany, and my one and only Aida
 
Contents
Preface 1. Introduction: Orientalism, Islamic Activism and Rational Thought? 2. The Rudiments of an Islamic Just Society: The Contribution of Abu-Ishaq al-Shatibi 3. Yusuf al-Qaradawi: Modernization is Key 4. Rachid al-Ghannouchi: Minorities and Equality 5. Abdessalam Yassine: The Just Ruler 6. Conclusion: Reason and Faith: The Islamists versus the “Stillborn God”
Glossary
Notes
Bibliography
Suggested Reading
Index
 
Preface
After teaching about Islamic activism for around ten years, it came to my attention that, although much has been written about the topic since 9/11, we have very few works that address the leaders of populist Islamic movements. A handful of literature addresses their writings but fewer still compare and contextualize these leaders. Because I have been unable to find a book aimed at the general public and students of the Muslim world that transfers this knowledge in a succinct and clear way, I have attempted in this book to fill this gap in the literature.
The objective of this book is twofold: First, to familiarize its audience with popular Islamist leaders, their ideas, and their writings. The three leaders were chosen because they combined “moderate” political activism with ideological activism. Second, to analyze one of the main controversies between Western secular democratic theory and contemporary Islamist writing about governance. The Enlightenment’s emphasis on the inevitable conflict between reason and faith underlies the stress on secularism as a prerequisite for democratization. One of the most important components of this book is to compare the Islamists’ ideas and how they diverge from the dichotomy between reason and faith that is accepted in Western political thought. This book is designed to fill a gap in the literature on Islam and politics; it should be useful to students and general readers who want to know more about the Middle East as a region and about contemporary Muslim political ideology.
The purpose of this book lies in its attempt to clarify and present a discourse unfamiliar to the Western world, but on its own terms.
Chapter one introduces the reader to the ideological differences that exist between Western liberal thought and Muslim thought. It also clarifies the purpose of the book and its emphasis on Islamic political thought. The second chapter provides an historical example of a Muslim jurist who ties reason to faith. The third, fourth, and fifth chapters discuss and present the lives and ideas of three contemporary Islamists: Qaradawi (a leader of the Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt), Ghannouchi (the leader of the Renaissance Movement in Tunisia), and Yassine (the leader of the Justice and Benevolence Party in Morocco). The final chapter binds the book in a discussion of democracy and whether it is preclusive of faith.
The conclusion therefore ties all the chapters in its pursuit of a definition of democracy or its semblance in the Muslim world.
It is impossible for the breadth of this study to discuss everything that pertains to Islamic governance and therefore women’s issues are not presented. The focus of the book is on the general ideological and legal principles that could potentially later be used to decipher the position of women in society and other equally important issues in the details of an Islamic just society. However the rudiments of those details lie in the theoretical analyses and this is where the book’s emphasis lies.
The book offers insights into what and how Islamists think about the shape of an ideal government based on their own writing. The uniqueness of this book lies in presenting the Islamists’ ideas in their own words to the Western audience. The chapters about Qaradawi, Ghannouchi, and Yassine, enable the reader to experience the Islamists’ points of view directly in their own words. A comparison of the roots of democratic ideology with the Islamists’ ideal government also sheds light on the semblance of important issues such as the meaning of justice and equality without having to render faith.
I am indebted to Pluto Press for their support and suggestions. I am also hugely indebted to John Voll for his comments when this manuscript was just an idea. My friend and colleague Emad Shahin also guided me along they way. I would also like to thank Mohamad El-Doufani, the BBC editor who edited my work and Roger van Zwanenberg for constantly challenging me and seeing this work through.
I would also like to thank my family for their endless support in this endeavor and the hours they spent on proof-reading the manuscript.
 
1
Introduction Orientalism, Islamic Activism and Rational Thought?
Historical events have regularly shifted the normative bases for the study of Islamic activism. For example, the stance of scholars and the public towards Islamic activism following the 1979 Iranian Revolution was quite different from that during the Afghan resistance to the Russian occupation. The events of September 11, 2001, precipitated yet another tectonic shift in attitudes toward Islamic activism. Once again, public construction of Islamic activism as monolithic—and, in this case, malevolent—challenges any nuanced study of Islamic movements.
Scholars must revitalize research agendas to discern differences among movements and leaders. Furthermore, it is essential to recognize the importance of moderate Islamic activists who are reshaping and redefining certain views and legal precepts in the Islamic faith. The age of scientific revolution in Europe came hand in hand with an assumed supremacy of rational thought. The West equated modernity with all things rational. Hence the divergence in today’s world between Islamic thought (contemporary and classical) and the constructs of Western modernity.
For example, Ernest Gellner (1992) writes about being an “Enlightenment Rationalist Fundamentalist” as opposed to an “Islamic Fundamentalist”. In his writing, he emphasizes that 1

Sociologists have long entertained and frequently endorsed the theory of secularization. It runs as follows: [in] the scientific-industrial society, religious faith and observance decline. One can give intellectualist reasons for this: the doctrines of religion are in conflict with those of science, which in turn are endowed with enormous prestige, and which constitute the basis of modern technology, and thereby also of modern economy. Therefore, religious faith declines. Its prestige goes down as the prestige of its rival rises.
(Gellner 1992: 4)
The binary division between rational versus irrational has continuously represented the strongest point of contention between Western and Islamic thought. The Islamists’ call for a return to sharia law, or for following the days of “ al-Salaf al-Salih ” (the righteous predecessors) has been assumed to mean a return to a historical golden age, an idea that reeks of romanticism, the arch-opponent of rationalist thought and the very symbol of irrationality.
This binary view of the rational versus the irrational, the Western versus the Islamic, the modern versus the traditional, has led to isolation and detachment in the contemporary analysis of Islamic political movements. However, more importantly—as I am arguing in this book—it has also dismissed the argumentation methods and the use of human reason that Islamic jurisprudential thought has left as a legacy. Fiqh is a relevant if not crucial part of contemporary Muslim society whether it is political or apolitical in nature.
Roxanne Euben’s Enemy in the Mirror critiques the Western theoretical discourse for its total disregard for the relevance of metaphysics in contemporary political life (Euben 1999: 14). Euben states:

For the reflex to dismiss fundamentalism as irrational or pathological is not merely a product of the almost habitualized prejudices and fears operative in the relationship between ‘the West’ and ‘Islam’ but, as I have argued, also a function of the way a post-Enlightenment, predominantly rationalist tradition of scholarship countenances foundationalist political practices in the modern world.
(Euben 1999: 14)
Euben’s contribution and purpose in her book centers on the argument that fundamentalism is becoming more rather than less powerful, and that those who are worried about the challenge funda

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