http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/islam_4334.jsp#

 

 

 

 


 


Sunni, Shi’a and the “Trotskyists of Islam” 
Fred
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/articles/ViewPopUpArticle.jsp?id=6&articleId=4
334##>  Halliday 
9 - 2 - 2007 



The tensions between Islam's two major traditions are rooted more in current
geopolitics than in differences of faith, says Fred Halliday. 




------------------------------------------








 

 

The conflict now besetting the middle east is, like all major international
conflicts, multidimensional. It involves not just one major axis of violence
(Israel/Arabs, United States/terrorism, west/Iran) but several overlapping
conflicts that draw states and armed movements into their arena. The major
concern of strategists and analysts remains the polarisation between the US
and its foes in Iraq and, increasingly, in Iran. But there is another
important, ominous, conflict accompanying these that has little to do with
the machinations of Washington or Israel, and is less likely to be contained
by political compromise: the spread, in a way radically new for the middle
east, of direct conflict between Sunni and Shi'a Muslims. 

Many generalisations and simplifications accompany the whole issue of Sunni
and Shi'a Islam. In the aftermath of the Iranian revolution, when Ayatollah
Khomeini produced a radical, populist, third-world rhetoric that denounced
the west and the "golden idols" or taghut who served imperialist interests
in the region (among them the Shah of Iran, Anwar Sadat, Saddam
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/article_1673.jsp>  Hussein, and
the Gulf rulers), it was claimed by many that Shi'ism, the belief of around
10% of all Muslims, was inherently militant. 

Unlike the Sunni, who had historically accepted the legitimacy of Islamic
rulers, the caliphs, and who paid their clergy from state funds, thereby
controlling them, the Shi'a refused to accept the Muslim credentials of
their rulers and produced a clergy, paid for by the subscriptions of the
faithful, that were closer to the people and so more radical. 

I recall a conversation with Ibrahim Yazdi
<http://www.iranvajahan.net/cgi-bin/news.pl?l=en&y=2005&m=09&d=21&a=3> , the
first foreign minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran (who after Ayatollah
Khomeini's death spent years under virtual house arrest in Tehran). As he
sat under the enormous chandeliers of what had been the Shah's foreign
ministry, he exclaimed with pride: "We are the Trotskyists of Islam!" 

The logic of Yazdi's
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/people/features/mycentury/transcript/wk51
d5.shtml>  characterisation - with its echoes of the Russian revolutionary
leader's theory of "permanent revolution" - was to spread Iran's radical
anti-imperialism across the region: a force far superior, in his view, to
the then vacillating as well as pro-Soviet ideology of the secular left. 

Much of this was simplistic and one-sided: like all bodies of religious text
and tradition, Shi'a and Sunni beliefs are liable to many interpretations.
Iran has chosen, however, to put a militant stamp on its beliefs and, in a
revolution that has far from run its course, to promote these values across
the Muslim world. Today, this international radicalism of the Iranian
revolution has come to be an explosive
<http://www2.wwnorton.com/catalog/spring07/032968.htm>  force in the middle
east: directed on one side against the United States, but in a dangerous
inflaming of communal relations, against Sunni Muslims as well. 

 









Fred Halliday is professor of international relations at the LSE, and
visiting professor at the Barcelona Institute of International Studies
(IBEI). His books include Islam and the Myth of Confrontation (IB Tauris,
2003 <http://www.palgrave-usa.com/catalog/product.aspx?isbn=1860648681> )
and 100 Myths About the Middle East (Saqi, 2005
<http://www.saqibooks.com/ItemsStore.asp?sku=0863565298&prd=1> )

Fred Halliday's "global politics" column on openDemocracy surveys the
national histories, geopolitical currents, and dominant ideas across the
world. The articles include: 

"America <http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization-iraq/article_1900.jsp>
and Arabia after Saddam"
(May 2004) 

"Iran's
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization-vision_reflections/iran_2642.jsp
>  revolutionary spasm" (July 2005)

"Political <http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/cold_war_2753.jsp>
killing in the cold war" (August 2005) 

"Maxime <http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/Rodinson_2819.jsp>
Rodinson: in praise of a 'marginal man'" 
(September 2005) 

"A <http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/umma_2904.jsp>  transnational
umma: myth or reality? " (October 2005) 

"The <http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/barcelona_3019.jsp>
'Barcelona process': ten years on" (November 2005) 

"Iran
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization-irandemocracy/again_3267.jsp>
vs the United States – again" (February 2006) 

"A <http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/hizbollah_3757.jsp>  Lebanese
fragment: two days with Hizbollah" (July 2006) 

"Fidel <http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/castro_3855.jsp>
Castro's legacy: Cuban conversations" (August 2006) 

"España: <http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/spain_memory_3974.jsp>
memory for the future"
(20 October 2006) 

"The <http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/benedict_4156.jsp>  end of
the Vatican" (5 December 2006) 

"Expecting
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/letter_jerusalem_4189.jsp>
rain: a letter from Jerusalem" 
(15 December 2006) 

"A <http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/worst_ideas_4228.jsp>  2007
warning: the twelve worst ideas in the world"
(8 January 2007) 

"Auschwitz's
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/holocaust_memorial_4287.jsp>
21st-century legacy" (26 January 2007) 











The paths of conflict

This communal conflict is evident most of all in Iraq. What began in 2003 as
a largely Sunni and former Ba'athist rising against the American forces and
their Iraqi allies had by mid-2006 developed into a multi-sided conflict in
which Sunni and Shi'a forces were in conflict with the Americans but also
increasingly with each
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraq/war_elimination_3839.jsp>
other. By early 2007 it is estimated that up to 2 million people have been
displaced by the war, equally divided between those fleeing to other parts
of Iraq and those forced into exile. 

This Iraqi sectarian war has echoes - if the consequences are as yet far
less bloody - elsewhere in the region:

*       in the Gulf states, notably Kuwait and Bahrain
<http://www.isn.ethz.ch/news/sw/details.cfm?id=17219> , where relations
between the Shi'a and Sunni populations of these states (respectively a
quarter and a half of the total population) have worsened

*       in Lebanon, where the forward advance of Hizbollah
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/hizbollah_3757.jsp>  during and
after the summer 2006 war led to worsened relations with the Sunni
population, although not - even amid political tumult - to direct conflict

*       in Palestine, where there are no Shi'a, supporters of Fatah
nonetheless took to denouncing the supporters of Hamas
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-middle_east_politics/hamas_3982.jsp>
as "Shi'a" on account of the movement's links to Iran. 

In Syria matters are less overt, but it is no secret that for decades the
Sunni majority of the population had resented rule by an Alawi elite of
Shi'a origin, represented in the Ba'ath party
<http://www.damascus-online.com/se/hist/baath_party.htm> , who had
controlled the country since 1963. The one direct challenge to the
Ba'athists by the Sunni, in the form of a Muslim Brotherhood insurrection
centred on the city of Hama, was crushed with great brutality by Hafez
al-Assad's forces in 1982; but two decades later, the Muslim Brotherhood
have regained considerable influence
<http://www.mideastmonitor.org/issues/0604/0604_2.htm>  in the country,
especially amongst the Sunni middle classes. The movement would be the main
beneficiary of any fatal crisis of the Bashar
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-middle_east_politics/syria_4081.jsp>
al-Assad regime.

Against this background it was not surprising that some Arab leaders -
notably those of Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia - began to warn of the
dangers of the advance of Iranian and Shi'a power and to present themselves
as a "moderate" Muslim bulwark against the advance of the revolutionary
Shi'a alliance. 

At the level at which it has been developing in 2006 and early 2007, it is
possible to envisage this conflict between Sunni and Shi'a as becoming the
dominant regional fracture in the ensuing period - especially amidst a
withdrawal, at whatever pace, of American forces from Iraq. 

In such conditions, there are many analysts or propagandists who resort to
the notion that this sectarianism is a "deep structure", reflecting a latent
atavism that has long underlain the politics of the region. The implication
is that the overt violence of 2006-07 involves the emergence to the surface
of deep and ever-present, hatreds. (Similar arguments about "ancient ethnic
hatreds" were heard
<http://www.picadorusa.com/product/product.aspx?isbn=0312424930>  repeatedly
in the context of the wars in Yugoslavia, Sri Lanka, and Northern Ireland). 

However, another analysis is more persuasive. This sees the Sunni-Shi'a
conflict as essentially a recent development, a product of the middle-east
political crisis in recent decades and, in the case of Iraq, of the spiral
of violence released by the United States invasion of 2003. In this
perspective, the origins of the conflict - and more generally of the
Arab-Persian conflict - lie not in ancient hostility and grievance, but in
the modern history of the region; in particular, the ways in which the twin
revolutions of Iraq (1958
<http://www.saqibooks.com/saqi/display.asp?K=9780863565205&sf=KEYWORD&sort=s
ort_title&st1=batatu&m=1&dc=1> ) and Iran (1979
<http://www.iranchamber.com/history/islamic_revolution/islamic_revolution.ph
p> ) set in motion rivalry and insecurity between states and peoples that
exploded first in the Iran-Iraq war
<http://www.iranchamber.com/history/iran_iraq_war/iran_iraq_war2.php>  of
1980-88, and again, inside Iraq, from 2003. 

The twist of modernity 

At the same time, two cautionary observations are in order. First, in terms
of religious belief there is no deep divide
<http://www.islamfortoday.com/shia.htm> , because there is little to be
divided about. The actual religious, theological, distinctions between Sunni
and Shi'a are small, far less than those between Catholics and Protestants
within Christianity. 

They revolve not so much around questions of belief or even interpretation
of holy texts, but around rival claims to legitimacy and succession in the
aftermath of the Prophet
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/faith-europe_islam/mohammed_3866.jsp>
Mohammed's death in 632 CE, with Sunni favouring the "successors" or
"caliphs" and Shi'a seeing succession in the prophet's son-in-law Ali, the
latter's son Hussein, and those who come after them. 

The death of Hussein at the battle of Karbala (661) at the hands of the
Umayyad caliph Yezid is taken as the founding moment of Shi'ism, to which
all later historical legitimation, and annual mourning
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/debates/article-5-57-88.jsp>  ceremonies,
refer. One of the major complaints of Sunni against Shi'a is that preachers
in the latter's mosques curse the early successors of the prophet, the
caliphs revered by Sunni. But this 7th-century division does not account for
the major conflicts of the Islamic
<http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/06/wap/ht06wap.htm>  world then or later,
in a way that wars between Catholic and Protestant were to do in
early-modern Europe. 

There were, moreover, forms of coexistence and interaction between the two
which find little parallel in Europe. These include widespread intermarriage
(in Iraq as elsewhere), and the use even of places of worship associated
with one confession by followers of the other group. The Sayyidna al-Hussein
mosque in Cairo, built by the Fatimid
<http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/fati/hd_fati.htm>  medieval Shi'a dynasty
that ruled Egypt at the time is also revered by Sunni; the Umayyad mosque in
Damascus, the most historically important in the Sunni world, has a section
devoted to the commemoration of Hussein, to which Shi'a visitors from Iran
regularly make pilgrimage. 

Second, actual and direct conflict between Sunni and Shi'a (as distinct from
suspicion and communal difference) has until recently been remarkable by its
absence. What is more evident is differential political loyalty between the
communities, in relation to (for example) Arab nationalism, secularism, or
the Iranian revolution. It has moreover, been possible to identify
particular Muslim ruling elites as either Sunni or Shi'a: Sunni in most
cases, but Shi'a in Iran, Yemen, and Syria. 

Yet even here, where a sectarian element clearly entered into the
distribution of power, it did not spark a revolt based on sectarianism
itself. Thus the Kurds in Iran are mainly Sunni, a fact that no doubt
contributed to their resistance to the Shi'a state created by Khomeini after
1979. In Iraq, the Shi'a rose up in 1991 against Saddam, but this was in
conjunction with the Kurds, on a mainly national political basis - and even
as Saddam replied by crushing the uprising under the slogan La Shi'a Ba'ad
al Yaum (No Shi'a From Today). In the case of Iraq, the Sunni monopoly was
partly broken once before 2003, in the person of the first president after
the revolution of 1958, Abd
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraqivoices/article_825.jsp>
al-Karim Qasim, who was half Sunni, half Shi'a, but seen as favouring the
latter. 

Where it has occurred in recent decades, overt conflict and sectarian
violence between Sunni and Shi'a originated first not in the Arab world or
Iran, but further east, in Pakistan and Afghanistan. In the former, its
encouragement became in the 1970s part of the ideology of militant Sunni
groups associated with guerrilla action in Kashmir, and later in
Afghanistan, to promote hostility to Shi'a; from the 1980s onwards there
were regular attacks on Shi'a mosques in different parts of Pakistan. In the
Afghan wars of the 1980s and 1990s, the militant Sunni groups who dominated
the mujahideen came to attack the Shi'a community of Afghanistan as enemies
of their cause (see "America
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/globalization/article_1900.jsp>  and Arabia
after Saddam", 13 May 2004). 

This radical Sunni rhetoric charged that, because they worshipped the
shrines of imams and other holy men, the Shi'a were defectors from the
monotheism of Islam and, in effect, "polytheist". Indeed in some bizarre
versions, the term for polytheist, moshrik ("one who shares") came to be
used as a synonym for "communist", in the sense of someone who shared
property in common. 

The final twist in this saga involved the creation of a cult, by the Taliban
in Afghanistan, of the 10th-11th-century leader Sultan Mahmud
<http://www.afghanan.net/biographies/mahmudghaznavi.htm> , a man whose main
claim to fame was that he had invaded India "a hundred times": his grave in
Ghazni was used as a shrine for young Taliban soldiers being sent to fight
Shi'a, where, they were told, Sultan Mahmud "was killing communists, even in
the time of the prophet". Such ideological invention and redefinition is
central to the contemporary conflict of Sunni and Shi'a. It involves the use
on both sides of terms of abuse and historical delegitimation that, while
they have historical precedent, have needed to be recreated as bearers of
modern identity and confrontation. 

The worst of all

Modernity, and the use of communal or religious differences for contemporary
political ends, are however no barrier to the spread of hatred and violence.
These fires, once lit, can destroy forms of coexistence that have existed
for centuries. This is clearly the case in the "war of elimination" in
Baghdad today (a city from which, it may be recalled, the Jewish
<http://www.bh.org.il/communities/Archive/Baghdad.asp>  community who had
lived there for over two millennia experienced a mass exodus in the early
1950s). 

Moreover, while at the beginning states may seek to control such sectarian
loyalties, as both Iran
<http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/articles/eav020707b.shtml>
and Saudi Arabia have done, such control may not last: today Iran has much
less influence over the Shi'a of Iraq than it had three or ten years ago.
How far these flames will spread is anyone's guess, but it would seem that
the invasion of Iraq has set off a dangerous dynamic that could affect much
of the region. The US and its allies are certainly wondering which way the
Arab and Sunni world will jump in the event of an attack
<http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-irandemocracy/blowback_4317.jsp>  on
Iran. 

Some may take comfort from the dire warning that issued from a conference of
Sunni and Shi'a clergy recently held in Qatar. As representatives of each
side promised to stop preaching suspicion of the other, and Shi'a committed
themselves to stop cursing the caliphs, a prominent Iraqi cleric warned that
if this conflict were to continue, the direst of all consequences would
follow: namely that young people in the Muslim world would be tempted ... to
turn to secularism. 

 



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