http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2011/1042/op1.htm

 7 - 13 April 2011
Issue No. 1042
Opinion
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

  The Islamist challenge
  As Islamists enter post-revolutionary politics, they may not be able to 
control the outcome as they wish, writes Ayman El-Amir* 

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

  Protests and revolutionary movements that rocked several Arab countries in 
the past four months had Islamist partners who are poised to play an important 
role in the post-revolutionary system. Like other members of the wider protest 
community that toppled decadent autocracies, they have more than an equal stake 
in scrapping the regimes that oppressed and persecuted them and in shaping a 
new era of political change. However, unlike other partners they are largely 
captive of a single- minded ideology that places them at odds with the more 
liberal forces of society, the challenge they face is whether they should stick 
persistently to their time- honoured ideological dogma and try to dominate the 
new momentum for socio-political change or accept being a team player in a 
large field and the compromises that go with it.

  Revolutions have been consummated in Egypt and Tunisia, are in full swing in 
Libya and Yemen, are making progress in Syria, Algeria and Jordan, and are 
still lurking in Bahrain despite setbacks. The Islamist factor is strongly 
present and is sometimes leading the protest movement. In Egypt it is the 
Muslim Brotherhood; in Tunisia it is the Islamic Renaissance Movement; in 
Jordan it is the Islamic Action Front; in Yemen it is the National Coalition 
for Reform; in Algeria it is the Islamic Salvation Front; in Morocco it is the 
Justice and Development Party, and in Syria the clandestine Muslim Brotherhood 
is on the frontline. In the state of revolutionary fervour all forces coalesced 
around the paramount objective of overthrowing the old regime. When the dust 
settles they will eventually pursue their separate orientations of implementing 
the change they sought. As was the case in previous revolutions they may clash, 
split or compromise on their way to develop the new society they aspire to. 

  Police state regimes exemplified by the case of Egypt and Tunisia, and 
ideologically stiff secular regimes as in Syria and previously in Iraq, blocked 
political Islam for decades. Islamic forces lay in abeyance, or were secretly 
active until the revolution gave them a legitimate voice. When they emerged on 
the scene they found themselves partners in a revolutionary coalition creating 
a new political direction. They can either merge with broader governments of 
national unity to steer their relative countries or try to dominate the scene 
and forge a national consensus led by their religious ideology. They are better 
organised, hardened by experience, competent in mobilising the masses and have 
wide networks of followers and sympathisers. Islamic precepts have broad appeal 
at the grassroots level that is readily available to build on. The former 
Mubarak regime in Egypt was incensed by and strictly banned the Muslim 
Brotherhood's election slogan "Islam is the Solution" although it hardly 
translated into any meaningful political programme. On occasion, they found it 
convenient to strike a deal with the ruling National Democratic Party as they 
did during the first round of parliamentary elections organised in November 
2010 before they found they were cheated and boycotted the second round in 
December. Compromise is not part of the political ideology of hard-line Muslims 
today any more than it was to old-time communists of the past or the 
contemporary Baathists of Syria. The ideology of a single party that professes 
to represent the consensus of the broad masses still persists. 

  The Islamic faith has its sway in the Arab region and in some non-Arab 
countries in Asia and Africa. It remains the fastest growing religion in the 
world, particularly in Europe. In the Arab world it has clearly replaced the 
political ideology of Arab nationalism of the 1960s, relegating it to the realm 
of romantic mythology. It has developed into the most effective antithesis to 
Western imperialist globalism and to coercive socialist dictatorship at home. 
Nationalism has been wrapped in a religious mantle that is more inclusive and 
more resilient. That partly explains why its manifestations are so vehemently 
resisted in the West while it was mobilised to confront and eventually expel 
the Soviet occupation force in Afghanistan in the 1980s. The question to come 
will be what shade of political Islam will dominate in the post-revolutionary 
era?

  Sunni Islam has long been the dominant religious doctrine and background 
political culture in the Arab world. However, fundamentalist Wahhabism, 
jihadist Al-Qaeda and the retrospective Salafis are part of Sunnism. When it 
comes to political competition, the more radical Sunnis will tend to upstage 
moderate ones, casting those who differ with their radical interpretations of 
Islamic theology and worldly affairs as apostates. This is what happened in 
Egypt in the 1980s and 1990s when fundamentalist groups like Islamic Jihad, 
Islamic Group and Takfir wal Hijira argued that the state and society were 
living in a state of jahiliyyah or in ignorance of divine guidance. That was 
accompanied by a wave of assassinations and political violence to restore 
society back to the state of true religion. In Algeria, the military abolished 
the 1992 parliamentary elections that were swept by Islamists, unleashing a 
decade of bloodshed in which political opponents and state figures were 
assassinated and innocent farmers in outlying areas were indiscriminately 
slaughtered in their sleep. In recent weeks, the Salafis who have long been 
dormant in Egypt staged a strong political and religious comeback, taking -- in 
some examples -- the law into their own hands. A group of Salafis meted out 
cruel punishment to individuals they believed have offended society and 
deserved the enforcement of their interpretation of Sharia justice. 

  Muslims in general, including those who live in secular states like Syria, 
are not opposed to governance guided by Islamic code. Intellectual debate on 
the merits of the secular state does not go far beyond think tanks and closed 
circles of political analysts. In this context, the relatively moderate Muslim 
Brotherhood has historically taken the lead in matters of religion and was an 
influential force in matters of politics and social affairs since it was 
founded in the late 1920s. That is not to say that it was not, at times, 
amenable to political pressure or compromise. During the 25 January Revolution 
it announced in advance that it would not participate in the uprising. It was 
not until 2 February, during the Battle of the Camel that the Muslim 
Brotherhood's young elements showed up in force to organise protesters and 
defend Tahrir Square's tumultuous gathering from pro-Mubarak hoodlums. 

  The Muslim Brotherhood has recently founded its first political organisation, 
the Freedom and Justice Party. This proposition has one advantage and two 
disadvantages. First, it will be able to contest elections like any other 
secular party but with a religious silhouette that assures it of a huge 
following of the faithful. However, it will be playing a political game on a 
levelled field, unprotected by the guiding dictum of "conformity and obedience" 
-- the controlling principle of the members of the Brotherhood. It will be 
subject to political challenge, criticism, opposition and internal controversy. 
Secondly, as a political party with a balanced programme for political, social 
and economic change it will be the target of theological snipers from other 
ultra-religious organisations, both public and clandestine. Its religious 
springboard for a non-religious party, as the newly issued Electoral Code 
insists, will prove both a liability and a restrictive factor.

  Even in decades old secular Tunisia and Baath- controlled autocratic Syria 
Muslims organisations, usually an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, find in 
the mass protests and new revolutionary spirit a liberating factor. They are 
tempted to lead, mobilise and influence the direction of the revolution or 
rebellious movement. In the current state of revolutionary turmoil 
religious-oriented mass organisations are stepping into uncharted territory 
where they will be judged by unconventional political standards they may not be 
able to control.

  * The writer is former Al-Ahram correspondent in Washington DC. He also 
served as director of United Nations Radio and Television in New York. 


© Copyright Al-Ahram Weekly. All rights reserved

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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

Post message: [email protected]
Subscribe   :  [email protected]
Unsubscribe :  [email protected]
List owner  :  [email protected]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Kirim email ke