http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/15/world/middleeast/15yemen.html?ref=global-home

Tarim Journal 
Crossroads of Islam, Past and Present 
 
Bryan Denton for The New York Times
Most of the students at Dar al-Mustafa, the local religious school in Tarim, 
Yemen, are between 18, the minimum age, and 25. More Photos > 



By ROBERT F. WORTH
Published: October 14, 2009 
TARIM, Yemen - This remote desert valley, with its towering bluffs and ancient 
mud-brick houses, is probably best known to outsiders as the birthplace of 
Osama bin Laden's father. Most accounts about Yemen in the Western news media 
refer ominously to it as "the ancestral homeland" of the leader of Al Qaeda, as 
though his murderous ideology had somehow been shaped here. 

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Bryan Denton for The New York Times
Tarim, Yemen, has a rich heritage of religion and trade. More photographs at 
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The New York Times
Tarim is a historic center of Sufi Islam, a mystical strand. More Photos > 

But in fact, Tarim and its environs are a historic center of Sufism, a mystical 
strand within Islam. The local religious school, Dar al-Mustafa, is a 
multicultural place full of students from Indonesia and California who stroll 
around its tiny campus wearing white skullcaps and colorful shawls.

"The reality is that Osama bin Laden has never been to Yemen," said Habib Omar, 
the revered director of Dar al-Mustafa, as he sat on the floor in his home 
eating dinner with a group of students. "His thinking has nothing to do with 
this place." 

Lately, Al Qaeda has found a new sanctuary here and carried out a number of 
attacks. But the group's inspiration, Mr. Omar said, did not originate here. 
Most of the group's adherents have lived in Saudi Arabia - as has Mr. bin Laden 
- and it was there, or in Afghanistan or Pakistan, that they adopted a jihadist 
mind-set. 

Mr. Omar set out 16 years ago to restore the ancient religious heritage of 
Tarim. It is an extraordinary legacy for an arid, windswept town in the far 
southeast corner of the Arabian Peninsula. 

About 800 years ago, traders from Tarim and other parts of Hadramawt, as the 
broader area is known, began traveling down the coast to the Arabian Sea and 
onward in rickety boats to Indonesia, Malaysia and India. They thrived, and 
they brought their religion with them. Nine especially devout men, all with 
roots in Tarim, are now remembered as "the nine saints," Mr. Omar said, because 
of their success in spreading Islam across Asia. 

"This town, with its thousand-year tradition, was the main catalyst for as many 
as 40 percent of the world's Muslims' becoming Muslim," said John Rhodus, a 
32-year-old Arizonan who has studied at Dar al-Mustafa off and on since 2000. 
Tarim's Sufist tradition also appears to have helped shape the relatively 
moderate Islam practiced in much of South Asia.

Hadrami merchants remained an extraordinarily intrepid and successful network 
until well into the 20th century. Some made their fortune in Saudi Arabia - 
including Muhammad bin Laden, Osama's father, who became a construction magnate 
- and remained there. Others returned home and built flamboyant palaces as 
monuments to their success. Dozens of palaces remain, in a variety of styles - 
Mogul, modernist, British colonial - that contrast oddly with Tarim's 
traditional mud-brick homes and mosques. 

Most of the merchants fled after a Communist junta seized power after the 
British withdrawal from south Yemen in 1967. Now their palaces are abandoned 
and decayed, too grand even for the state to maintain in this desperately poor 
country. 

The Communist years, which lasted until North and South Yemen unified in 1990, 
were even worse for those who refused to accept the new government's enforced 
secularism. 

"Some religious scholars were tortured, others murdered," Mr. Omar said. "Some 
were tied to the backs of cars and driven through the streets until they were 
dead." Mr. Omar's father, who had been a renowned religious teacher in Tarim, 
was kidnapped and killed. 

In 1993, Mr. Omar began teaching Sufi-inspired religious classes in his home. 
Three years later, he moved into a two-story white school building, with a 
mosque attached. There are now about 700 students, at least half of them South 
Asians, with a rising number of Americans and Britons.

Most of the students are between 18, the minimum age, and 25. They usually 
spend four years studying here before returning to their homes. Mr. Omar 
encourages them to pursue careers and spread their beliefs quietly rather than 
becoming religious scholars.

But even as the school grew, a more militant Islam was gaining followers across 
the region. Saudi Arabia, on Yemen's northern border, was financing 
ultraconservative religious schools and scholars in an effort to shore up its 
influence here. In 1991 the Saudi king, angered by Yemen's public support for 
Saddam Hussein, abruptly sent home a million Yemeni laborers, many of whom had 
lived in Saudi Arabia for decades and had been shaped by it. 

The Yemeni president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, accommodated the Saudis and welcomed 
many Arab jihadists who had fought in Afghanistan. Later, he enlisted the 
jihadists to fight his political enemies at home, incurring a political debt 
that has complicated his efforts to fight Al Qaeda. 

Some of the former fighters resettled in Hadramawt. Two years ago, one of Al 
Qaeda's top regional commanders was killed, along with two lieutenants, in a 
fierce gun battle with the Yemeni military just a few blocks from Dar 
al-Mustafa. 

And in March a suicide bomber wearing an explosive belt killed four Korean 
tourists and their Yemeni guide in the nearby city of Shibam. Al Qaeda's 
Arabian branch claimed responsibility. The small trickle of adventure tourism 
that had remained in Hadramawt (it may not help that the name means "death 
came" in Arabic) slowed to almost nothing. 

Several students at Dar al-Mustafa said there was concern about possible 
conflict with hard-line Islamists in Hadramawt, though the school itself has 
not been attacked or threatened.

On a tour of Tarim, one of the school's teachers, Abdullah Ali, pointed to the 
house where the Qaeda leaders had been killed. They had been there for some 
time, he said, escaping scrutiny by disguising themselves as women under thick 
black gowns. A trove of explosives and weapons was found in the house. 

"We are mulaataf," Mr. Ali said, using an Arabic term that describes a divine 
rescue from danger. 

Mr. Omar acknowledged, somewhat reluctantly, that his own, milder approach to 
Islam had enemies in Hadramawt. 

"There are differences," he said. "But we find the appropriate way to deal with 
these people is to remind them of Islamic principles, not to speak ill of 
them." 


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