http://www.aawsat.net/2013/03/article55296452



Written by : Abdullah Al-Rashid 
on : Thursday, 21 Mar, 2013 
Democracy and the Caliphate 
How Salafi activists in the Gulf think
The story of the Srourists’ existential dilemmas with liberalism. 
 
An Egyptian man, living in UAE, casts his vote during the referendum for the 
Egyptian new constitution, at the Egyptian consulate in Dubai, UAE on 
Wednesday. Photo: EPA
An article entitled “Doctrines of People in Elections,” published on March 20, 
2005, on the website Islam Today , described elections as a “mishap” and 
presented the “correct” legal and political stance towards them. The article 
was written as a response to the first municipal elections in Saudi Arabia, 
which took place on February 10, 2005. Its author was Ibrahim Al-Nasser, one of 
the most prominent symbols of Saudi Salafist activism—also known as 
“Srourism”—and whose writings constitute a vision and an inspiration to the 
members of the movement. 
Nasser started his article by emphasizing that democracy is a modern Western 
ideology, and is based on the adoption of secularism and the exclusion of 
religion. Nasser stated that democracy is “a contradiction and violation of the 
law of Islam, and is inconsistent with the establishment of religion and 
monotheism.”

However, after he presented his ideological stance against democracy, Nasser 
wrote on his preferred political stance towards the existing democratic systems 
in the Islamic world. He stated that “democracy should be rejected as a 
philosophy, set of values and a mechanism, but should be accepted as a 
practice, within limits, seeing as it is in demand and is perceived as a 
necessity by the public. Those who hold such views use democracy as a mechanism 
not because it is permissible, but because of the damage that may occur if they 
do not.”

Thus, Nasser managed to strike a balance between his belief that democracy is 
an alien and un-Islamic phenomenon, and his belief that it is necessary to play 
a political role in societies that have adopted democratic features.
Revisiting the Arab Spring

The changing political landscape and the outcome of elections in the countries 
that experienced the Arab Spring have revealed an apparent alliance amongst the 
various political Islam groups, the Muslim Brotherhood, and the Salafists. 
These groups, who were once ideologically divided, have today joined forces in 
order to safeguard the ‘Islamist rule’ project. Led by the Muslim Brotherhood 
and blessed by the Srourists, they aim to secure the success of the project in 
the wake of the Arab Spring.

Salafist activism is also known as Srourism after one of its most prominent 
leaders, Muhammed Srour Zein El-Abidine, a teacher and a Syrian national who 
moved to Saudi Arabia in the mid-1960s. It is different to traditional or 
mainstream Salafism in its political ambitions. Salafist activism is generally 
described as a movement that combines traditional Salafi doctrine and dogma 
with the activism of the Muslim Brotherhood. As such, the visions of both Ibn 
Taymiyyah and Sayyid Qutb are important intellectual influences in the 
movement. On the other hand, traditional Salafism follows the historic approach 
of complete compliance with authority; opposition is forbidden, but offering 
guidance is permissible. However, it avoids political involvement and actively 
advocates for religious education, guidance and judiciary.

While the Muslim Brotherhood took an early stance in favor of democracy and put 
theory into practice when it won seats in parliament, Salafist activists—at 
least, those who embraced the events of the Arab Spring—faced a dilemma. If the 
movement were to directly approve of and support democracy and elections, it 
would have to break with its intellectual heritage, based on the rejection of 
modern Western political systems. On the other hand, if the movement strictly 
adhered to its beliefs, then it would give its rivals, the liberals and the 
secularists, free reign and it would not be able to assist the Brotherhood.

The stance taken by the Srourists towards the Egyptian constitution is a good 
illustration of how they solved this dilemma. Their position reflected a 
convergence between Salafist activism and the Muslim Brotherhood’s project. 
Clearly, the developments in the Egyptian political arena place the 
constitution at the center of the divide between the Islamists—the Muslim 
Brotherhood and the Salafists—who are in support of the constitution, and the 
liberals and the others who reject the new constitution and see it as a Trojan 
horse attempting to create a totalitarian religious state. However, another 
divide came to light amongst the Salafists, as some perceived the new Egyptian 
constitution as an instrument for “delusions” and “suspicions” and argued that 
it is “evoking contradiction in Islam.”

The Egyptian Salafi Sheikh Mustafa Adawi, for example, stressed to the Egyptian 
media that it is forbidden to vote in favor of the constitution, saying, 
“Whoever casts a positive vote for the constitution is a sinner. The 
constitution includes extreme violations to the Book of God and the Sunna of 
his Prophet, peace be upon him.”

In order to unite the Salafists and to deprive the liberals of a victory amid 
all this upheaval, Sheikh Nasser Al-Omar, a prominent Srourist leader in Saudi 
Arabia, wrote an article on his website, The Muslim, on the day of the 
constitutional referendum, December 15, 2012. In it, he explained the stance of 
Salafist activists towards the referendum, democracy and political 
representation in parliament. First, Omar emphasized that “liberal Western 
democracy is in opposition to Islamic law. Some, however, contemplate the 
situation in Egypt while under the impression that Shari’a is an accessible 
option and [its adoption] only requires for followers to advocate it to the 
public.”

He continued, “Disloyalty towards religion is not permissible except in the 
case of coercion. However, the Faqih [expert in Islamic law] is the one who can 
differentiate between the two corrupting vices—disloyalty and coercion—and 
would avoid the worst of the two. He realizes that failure [to cast a vote] 
would best serve to bring triumph to iniquity.”

Explaining the Srourists’ general stance on elections, Omar wrote:

  The electoral mechanisms could be adopted, in certain circumstances, then 
Islamized by imposing a number of restrictions—such as excluding women from 
candidacy in certain posts and excluding godless and promiscuous political 
parties . . . If participating in the elections will lessen the evils of the 
regime, oppose all legislations contrary to the rule of God, and call for the 
reformation of the constitution within an Islamic frame, then participating in 
the elections is permissible—although the constitution is not satisfactory.

Omar’s article came as a response to a well-known Saudi fatwa that confirmed 
that the Egyptian constitution includes godless material. However, the fatwa 
stated that voting “though not a duty, is permissible . . . Muslim voters have 
little choice—either this or accept a worse option. It is neither rational nor 
following Shari’a to completely withdraw from the matter, as this may offer an 
opportunity for the godless and the hypocrites to achieve their goals.”

Although this ruling deals with a particular Egyptian affair, it provides a 
model through which we can understand Srourism’s attitude to the developments 
of the Arab Spring, as well as modern political phenomena like democracy and 
political and societal representation in parliament and civic institutions. The 
fatwa provoked a wide range of reactions amongst Salafists. The issue that they 
all focused on, however, was how to acknowledge that the Egyptian constitution 
is, in fact, a heresy, while still portraying it as a necessary evil. In other 
words, does the end justify the means?

Sheikh Muhammed Al-Munjid, a Syrian preacher resident in Saudi Arabia, answers 
such uncertainties via his personal Twitter account: “The current constitution 
includes godless material that may not be approved of and should be eliminated 
whenever possible. However, to approve of this constitution means supporting 
the survival of the best leaders currently attainable. The alternative, in the 
case of the fall of the constitution, would be an anti-religious, secular rule 
that is dishonest and ignorant to the will of God.” He added, “Casting a 
positive vote for this constitution is the path towards a subsequent better one 
with complete endorsement by the Islamic Law.”

Similarly, Sheikh Bandar Al-Shweiqi, faculty member at Imam Muhammed ibn Saud 
Islamic University, quoted by The Path to Sunna Network, believes that everyone 
is in agreement over the fact that the constitution 

  …includes opposing material to the Islamic Law. However, this does not mean 
that voting for the constitution is a godless act. In order to justify my 
statement, I refer to the intentions of the rulers following this constitution; 
those with intent to rule in deviation to the Law of God, as well as those who 
claim to follow the word of God in theory but not in practice, are godless. 
Those with good intentions, but nonetheless unable to rule by the Law of God, 
are not a cause for concern. 

These opinions clearly illustrate that the position of Salafist activists on 
democracy and modern political systems has two aspects. The first is 
ideological and fixed. It sees democracy as a godless Western system that 
grants people the sovereignty and the right to decide legal action in place of 
the Islamic Law. In contrast, the second is politically pragmatic. It assesses 
the costs and benefits of participating in a “godless” system, and makes 
utilitarian calculations based on the balance of the two.

As a consequence, we can catch a glimpse of their objectives in advocating 
involvement in politics. The first objective is identifying the lesser of two 
evils and thus enduring lesser spiritual corruption. The second is ensuring 
that the decision achieves the intended benefit and opens up a gradual path 
towards implementing the rule of Islam. Finally, they seek to ensure that the 
result is temporary—when the need is no longer pressing, the ruling is annulled.
A return to the Caliphate

Al-Bayan, a London-based magazine and an influential Srourist mouthpiece, 
published a review of a book entitled The Islamists and the Illusion of 
Democracy: A Comprehensive Study of the Islamists’ Participation in 
Representative Councils in its September 1993 issue. The book was authored by 
Abdul Ghani Al-Rahal and the first edition was published in 1993. Rahal starts 
off his book with a historical narrative: “When the sun had set on the 
Caliphate, in 1924, the Islamic nation became an orphan of religion, scattered 
and fragile. The nation had to put the Law of God aside and adopt imported 
circumstantial human laws.” The author concludes, “Democracy is a blasphemous 
western methodology and representative councils are a contradiction of 
monotheism.”

In a more recent article entitled “Contradiction Between Democracy and Islam,” 
published by Al-Bayan in its August 2012 issue, the author, Ibrahim Al-Haqeel, 
confirms that democracy “is a secular political system that tackles worldly 
issues. It is not remotely concerned with the afterlife and has not the 
slightest connection with religion.”

As an alternative to democracy, Haqeel believes—in reference to a text by Ibn 
‘Ashour—that

  …humans are in need of a Caliph to govern them and resolve their disputes. 
They will not unite unless they find a system to achieve this. God had sent his 
messengers and had illustrated his laws in aid of this. Islam had tied the 
message with Caliphate. Therefore, following the death of Prophet Muhammad, 
peace be upon him, the Sahaba [companions of the Prophet] were of the opinion 
that establishing a Caliphate was crucial to safeguard the nation and implement 
the Islamic Law. 

Moreover, in the opening statement of its July 2012 issue, entitled “The 
Islamists Between the Tunes and the Mines of Democracy,” Al-Bayan magazine 
called for “the formulation of an alternative political system to democracy 
that is Islamic and supportive of the faith and that elevates from the status 
of Islamic Law. This is in order to slowly transform the legitimate rule from 
secularism to Islam.” This statement follows Al-Bayan’s conclusion that 
democracy is associated with the anti-religious secularism and that it has 
failed in the Arab and Islamic worlds.

Similarly, Hakim Al-Mteiri, a Kuwaiti national and a former secretary of the 
Salafist movement, stated that “democracy and what it ideologically stands for, 
i.e., granting the right to rule to the people, where they decide what to allow 
or deny, is, indisputably, a heresy amongst Muslims.” This statement was issued 
during a November 2001 interview by Sajid Al-Abdalli of the Arabs Forum 
website. Mteiri also co-founded The Nation, the first political party in Kuwait 
to call for the prohibition of political parties.

In his book, The Ways of the Prophet on Political Provisions and The Ways of 
Orthodox Politics, published in mid–2012, Mteiri presents the Islamic Caliphate 
as a comprehensive model for political ruling. He decided that “this model has 
been granted approval by scholars and reformers over the years. There is no 
dispute amongst the various denominations, with their many doctrines and Imams, 
concerning the Caliphate being the most comprehensive model to follow—contrary 
to old and recent political innovations, including those in the guise of Islam, 
such as the Faqih Mandate, and those imported, such as democracy, liberalism 
and socialism.” Thus, according to Mteiri, “The methodologies of the Prophecy 
and the Orthodox Caliphate should be comprehended in order for the nation to 
aptly implement them.”

At this juncture, it is worth mentioning that the Islamic Salvation Front in 
Algeria is considered one of the most well known Salafist models in history. 
The Islamic Salvation Front alternated between condemning democracy as a heresy 
and practicing it. In 1991, it invested all of its resources in the 
parliamentary elections in Algeria. Meanwhile, its second in command, Ali 
Bilhaj, had published a series of articles in The Front newspaper, under the 
title “The Bold Imprint of Heresy on the Sect of Democracy”—according to 
Egyptian writer Jamal Sultan in an article published by Al-Majalla. Bilhaj 
publically announced, “We want to clearly state that we are no democrats. I, 
personally, renounce democracy.” Yet again, in a second public address, he 
declared, “We do not believe in majority rule. Whoever gets to the top and 
rules by the Law of God is our ally, but who rules against the Law of God shall 
have to battle us until one of us meet their doom.” These statements are 
available on YouTube. Bilhaj is well accredited for his proclamation, “The rule 
in Algeria will be Islamic and the 1991 election shall be the last as the Front 
shall be victorious.”
We shall revolt at the closest opportunity

In an attempt to respond to the contradictions that arise from condemning 
democracy while practicing it, Nasser Omar published an article entitled “The 
Dilemma of the Correlation Between Approving of Democracy and Dealing With It” 
in the August 2012 issue of Al-Bayan. Omar concluded that practicing democracy, 
as well as running for parliament, is an instrument used to cope with the 
current circumstances. “Every Muslim should strive to eliminate evil whenever 
possible. However, if this cannot be achieved, then it is one’s duty to attempt 
to lessen the impact of that evil. One of the main principles of Shari’a Law is 
to lessen corruption when eradicating it is not an option.”

Omar also asserts that “when the opportunity arises, Muslims shall establish an 
orthodox Caliphate based on the Prophecy and its methodology.” Moreover, Omar 
justifies the use of democracy by treating it as a requirement of blocking the 
path of liberals and the secularists: “We are obliged to face this imposed 
reality; we either take part in democracy and play by its Western rules or the 
liberals, secularists and the atheists will take control.”

Omar argues that approving of democracy and consenting to its methodology and 
values is not the aim:

  Those who agree with the principles of democracy would attempt democratic 
action, so would those who aim to reform it. To clarify, think of it like you 
would a bar! You would have those who would enter the bar with full 
approval—with intentions of violating the Islamic Law. On the other hand, you 
would have those who visit it with the intentions of eradicating its practices, 
opposing its misconduct and violation of the Islamic Law, or calling for an 
alternative that God approves of. 

In his conclusion, Omar firmly and clearly determines that Salafist involvement 
in the elections is merely “the means towards dealing with the reality of the 
situation in order to improve it. The moment establishing an Islamic rule or an 
orthodox Caliphate—based on the Prophecy and its methodology—is at hand, the 
Salafists shall renounce the Western methodologies. Let whoever wishes to call 
it a ‘revolt against democracy.’”


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