http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2006/824/op3.htm

       14 - 20 December 2006
      Issue No. 824
     
          
      Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875 


Third generation political Islam
In the Arab world there exists a range of centrist Islamist parties that have 
harmonised democratic aspirations with the moral foundations of Islam, writes 
Khalil El-Anani* 

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"Centrist" Islamist parties have yet to receive anywhere near the same share of 
attention that has been devoted to militant Islamist trends, such as radical 
fundamentalist and jihadist movements. The scant attention Islamist centrism 
has received since the mid- 1970s has rarely gone beyond discussion of 
religious/doctrinal aspects and individual exponents. Assessment of its general 
socio- political impact is missing.

Yet over the past two decades, Islamist centrism has tangibly grown across the 
Arab world. We have, for example, the Tunisian Nahda (Revival) Party, founded 
in 1981; the Justice and Development Party (JDP) in Morocco whose membership 
consists largely of a blend of members of the Popular Constitutional and 
Democratic Movement, founded in 1967, and of the Moroccan Reform and Renovation 
Movement; Jordan's Islamic Centre Party, founded in 2001; and, in Egypt, the 
New Centre Party whose members have been struggling for 10 years now to obtain 
official approval for their party, though without success. 

Moreover, this trend has introduced changes of such a magnitude into the 
contemporary Islamist ideological map that it is possible to identify it as the 
"third postulate" in the nearly century-long life of political Islam (the first 
two being represented by the Muslim Brotherhood, founded in 1928, and the 
breakaway radical and militant Islamist trends that rose to prominence in the 
1970s and 1980s). 

Several concrete factors compel us to devote study time to this phenomenon, in 
the hope that this will contribute to legitimising its experience, promoting 
its political presence and producing a possible resolution to the church and 
state problematic that has long occupied a large and influential space in the 
realm of Arab epistemological debate. 

First, the Islamist centrist parties can boast a subtle and sophisticated 
"Islamic" political awareness, which has been sorely lacking in the Arab 
political arena since the emergence of the modern state a century and a half 
ago. Or, if it existed, it was grossly distorted in the course of the vicious 
confrontation between the state and radical fundamentalist movements that raged 
for nearly three decades towards the end of the last century and that raised 
considerable scepticism over the possibility of a civil Islamist experience 
ever being able to evolve.

Second, these parties defy being placed on that customary spectrum of 
"moderate" to "extreme", normally used to categorise Islamist groups. They 
offer new criteria for categorisation -- notably political competence, or the 
ability to grasp the concepts of democracy and civil action and to interact 
with them in a way that keeps "religion" at arm's length from political 
practice. The centrist Islamist parties, like moderate ones such as the Muslim 
Brotherhood, have a religious frame of reference that governs their outlook 
towards themselves and others, but rather than dominating their practice of 
politics to the extent that politics becomes a springboard for proselytising, 
religion is a "civilisational incubator" that can accommodate political, 
ideological and religious differences within a single nation.

It is in this spirit that these parties have formulated a unique and 
sophisticated vision on the relationship between state and society. Their 
propositions on legal custodianship, women's rights and citizenship, in 
particular, indicate that they have come a long way towards resolving the 
historical dichotomy that has long plagued all trends of political Islam, 
including "moderate" ones.

Fourth, these parties have a "modernist" project for Arab societies and it 
appears better poised to succeed where modernist projects advanced by 
secularist, Arab nationalist and other ideological schools have failed over the 
past five decades. Thus they appear to have resolved a dilemma that has taxed 
Islamist thought over the past century; the relationship between Islam and 
modernity and the subsidiary question of cultural identity and its relationship 
with others.

Finally, these parties enjoy a high degree of intellectual flexibility, 
enabling them to develop their ideas and mechanisms for interacting with 
society. Perpetual fluidity gives them the ability to deal freshly and 
innovatively with current issues, in contrast with other Islamist trends that 
have recoiled behind scriptural literalism and whose consequent political and 
intellectual rigidity has reduced the likelihood of their assimilation into 
civil life.

In a very strong sense, therefore, it is possible to view Islamist centrist 
parties as an extension of the Arab awakening movement pioneered in the late 
19th and early 20th century by the likes of Al-Tahtawi, Al-Tunsi, Al-Afghani, 
Mohammed Abduh and Rashid Rida and that had been interrupted in the 1930s by 
radicalism in its various Marxist, secularist, Arab nationalist and Islamist 
currents.

It is not odd, therefore, that the notion of the "universality" of Islam, as a 
civilisational framework, should acquire such a central position in the 
platform of these parties. Indeed, it is this very notion that has freed them 
from having to reconcile by force the demands of self-identity and cultural 
specificity and the challenges of globalisation and modernisation, because it 
embraces "the common humanity of man," as is stated in the platform of Egypt's 
Wasat (Centrist) Party.

Despite this approach, with the exception of the Moroccan JDP, which has gained 
increasing ground since its parliamentary victories of 2002, the Islamist 
centrist parties are weak and marginalised. It can not be overstated how urgent 
it is to legitimise and lend them support, not only because most have managed 
to decipher the codes of Islamist civic action, the meaning of which has eluded 
other Islamist movements, but also because they represent the true line of 
defence against the systematic assault that the West has been waging against 
Islamic values and culture.

The Egyptian New Wasat (Centre) Party's decade-long struggle to obtain a permit 
allowing it to pursue its political activities is proof of the immense 
obstacles that the Islamist centrist parties must contend with in order to take 
root as an alternative to extremist Islamist trends, on the one hand, and to 
"moderates" that are still fuzzy and confused over the nature and values of 
real democracy.

Since 1996, the founders of the Wasat Party -- most of who had come from the 
ranks of the Muslim Brotherhood -- have waged an uphill battle to legitimise 
their party in accordance with the provisions of the Political Party Law. Yet 
even during the many years that its leaders have been submitting paperwork and 
haunting the corridors of courts, the party has continued to develop its ideas 
and to expand its base to include prominent intellectual and political figures, 
such as the celebrated thinker Abdelwahab Elmessiri. 

In addition, the party clearly located itself within the theoretical framework 
of the new reform parties, describing itself as a "civil political party with 
an Islamist background whose membership is open to all Egyptian citizens 
(Muslims and non-Muslims alike)." The preamble to the party's charter further 
states that it operates in accordance with a political programme "whose 
theoretical underpinnings are framed by civilians in accordance with the rules 
of civil polity, rather than by ulema (Muslim theologians) on the Iranian model 
or by clergymen on the model of the Western church-dominated state of the 
Middle Ages." 

Also, over the past 10 years, the party's founders have succeeded in developing 
bridges of trust with a broad range of political groupings and in gaining a 
reputation as an "unblemished" party whose dedication to the project of a civil 
state is above question. In addition, its charter and political platform have 
won the admiration of individuals from across the political and ideological 
spectrum. Nor is it a wonder that the New Wasat has been lauded as the first 
Islamist movement to advocate a truly civil programme which emanates from 
religious foundations that, nonetheless, do not impede the fulfilment of the 
provisions of full citizenship. The party, for example, sees no theoretical 
impediment to the access of women or Copts to all positions of government, 
including the presidency. 

The Political Parties Commission -- the body charged with offering an opinion 
on the New Wasat Party's charter -- commended the party for presenting a new, 
distinct and comprehensive vision. Yet the government remains reluctant to 
recognise the party. This reluctance can only stem from a culture of suspicion 
and scepticism towards everything Islamist, even if, as is the case with the 
New Wasat, Islamist represents no more than the moral outlook governing a civil 
political enterprise. It is a culture that betrays pitiful ignorance with 
regard to the degree of political maturity such Islamist movements as the New 
Wasat Party have attained.

Because of the ongoing negativism towards the Islamist centrist parties, an 
important segment of society is being kept from lending its skills and 
ingenuity to the advancement of the general wellbeing of society. This is all 
the more regretful because this segment, in particular, can play a crucial role 
in defending the civilisational aims of Islam and of Islamic culture in its 
existential contest with "the other."

* The writer is a political analyst with Al-Siyasa Al-Dawliya magazine 
published by Al-Ahr

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