http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=OTg4NjIzNDUy

Egypt's Sufis see Islamist threat after Mubarak
Published Date: June 15, 2011 

CAIRO: Down the narrow alleyways of Cairo's Sayidda Zeinab neighborhood, 100 
men sway their heads and clap in rhythm as they invoke God's name. "O how you 
have spread benevolence," chant the men, some dressed in ankle-length galabeya 
robes, to celebrate the birth of Fatima al-Zahraa, the daughter of the Prophet 
Mohammed. The men are followers of the centuries-old Azaimiya Sufi order who 
seek to come closer to God through mystical rites. Some say their traditions 
are now threatened by Islamists elbowing for influence after the overthrow of 
Egypt's veteran leader Hosni Mubarak.

Tensions have long rumbled between the country's estimated 15 million Sufis, 
attached to some 80 different orders, and ultra-conservative Salafists who see 
Sufi practices such as the veneration of shrines as heresy. The ousting of 
Mubarak in February has loosened state control over Islamist groups that he 
suppressed using an emergency law in place since 1980. As Sufis seek to defend 
traditions dating back centuries, what began as a loose religious identity 
could be gelling, gradually, into a political movement.

If the Sufis stood side by side, they could be an important voting bloc ... but 
their political and organizational power is less than their numerical power," 
said political analyst Nabil Abdel Fattah. Alaa Abul Azaim, sheikh of the 
Azaimiya Sufi order, says moves by Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood and Salafi groups 
to enter formal politics endanger religious tolerance and oblige Sufis to do 
the same. "If the Salafists or Muslim Brotherhood rise to power, they could 
well cancel the Sufi sheikhdom, so there has to be a party for Sufis," Abul 
Azaim said.

SLEDGEHAMMERS
Shrines dedicated to saints are central to Sufi practice and can be found in 
towns and villages across Egypt, but they are frowned upon by Salafists. Many 
are built inside mosques and contain the tombs of saints. They are often highly 
decorated, using wood and mother-of-pearl. Some religious conservatives also 
dislike Sufi moulids- festivals celebrating the birthdays of saints that have 
become carnival-like events popular even among non-Sufis in Egypt.

Moulid music has found its way into pop culture, such as the well-known puppet 
operetta "El Leila El Kebira" (The Big Night). Fears for the future of Sufi 
traditions were underlined in April, when two dozen Islamists wielding crowbars 
and sledgehammers tried to smash a shrine used by Sufis in the town of Qalyoub 
north of Cairo. Their plan failed when residents rallied to defend the site 
revered for generations.

Salafist leaders denied their followers were behind the shrine attack and 
condemned it, while making it clear that they oppose the shrines. "The Salafi 
call does not reject Sufism," said Sheikh Abdel Moneim el-Shahat, official 
spokesperson for the Salafi movement in Alexandria. "We reject (the practice 
of) receiving blessings from tombs and shrines because it is against Sharia 
law." He said Salafis believe religious blessings can only be sought from the 
Black Stone of the Kaaba in the Saudi city of Mecca. Millions of Muslims circle 
the stone during the Hajj pilgrimage.

NO SUFI PARTY YET
Egypt's constitution forbids political parties formed on overtly religious 
lines. That has not stopped Salafist groups such as al-Gama'a al-Islamiya and 
the once-banned Muslim Brotherhood moving to create parties to compete in 
September elections.

No overtly Sufi party has emerged-adepts of Sufism, with their emphasis on 
personal development and inner purification, have till now seen little sense in 
forming a political movement. But one nascent party, al-Tahrir (Liberation), 
has pledged to defend their interests and, by doing so, has built most of its 
membership from among the Sufi community. "There is no doubt that the 
(Islamist) flood that's coming ... scares them," said the party's founder 
Ibrahim Zahran.

Affirmative political action would mark a departure for Egypt's Sufis, who have 
tended to submit to the will of Egypt's political leaders since the 12th 
century. "From Sultan Saladin Al-Ayubi until Mubarak, Sufism was used by the 
state to reinforce its legitimacy," said sociologist Ammar Aly Hassan. In a 
sign they are more ready to challenge authority, sheikhs of 13 Sufi orders have 
staged a sit-in since May 1 calling for the removal of Sheikh Abdel Hadi 
el-Qasabi, the head of the Sufi Sheikhdom who was appointed by Mubarak in 2009.

They say Qasabi broke a tradition of ordaining the eldest sheikh to the 
position and they refuse to have him as their leader as he was a member of 
Mubarak's disbanded National Democratic Party. Many Sufis oppose the idea of an 
Islamic state promoted by Islamists who take the Iran's theocracy or the 
Wahhabi ideology of staunchly conservative Saudi Arabia as a model. Sufi Sheikh 
Gaber Kassem of Alexandria criticized the political ambitions of the Muslim 
Brotherhood and its slogan 'Islam is the Solution'. "This is a devotional 
matter, a religious call ... so how are they entering politics? Is this 
hypocrisy?" he said. - Reuters

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