The Islamic Awakening, The Brotherhood,
And The Arab Spring
22 March 2012
By Hamad Al-Majid
The "Islamic awakening" had been experiencing a
state of retreat, as expressed by my friend Dr. Ziyad
al-Darees in his article published in the London-based
"Al-Hayat" newspaper last Wednesday. However the
"Islamic awakening" woke up once more with the
outbreak of the Arab Spring revolutions. The seeds of
these revolutions were sowed by the Arab public
discontent over despotism and dictatorship; however
the fruit of these revolutions were and continue to be
reaped by Islamist trends. I agree with Dr. Ziyad that
the book "Awakening Islam: The politics of religious
dissent in contemporary Saudi Arabia" by French
researcher Stephane Lacriox, will provoke further
controversy and debate. I believe this book will
remind us of the debate provoked by the unique book
"Saudi Arabia: The biography of a state and society"
by renowned Saudi writer Abdul-Aziz al-Khedr.
Is the Islamic awakening the legitimate child of
the Muslim Brotherhood?
This appears to be the basis upon which the French
researcher builds his book. In my opinion, basing your
book on this hypothesis represents a dreadful mistake
which will inevitably lead to wrong conclusions. When
looking at the broader context, the Islamic awakening
is a call for a return to the practice of Islam. This
call has spread widely across the Arab and Islamic
world in response to the westernization brought about
by colonialism, which was later adopted by consecutive
despotic governments in a number of Arab and Muslim
states. The Islamic awakening is therefore an immense
human effort undertaken by a variety of Islamist
factions, from governments to clerics to individuals
to liberation movements. In brief, the Islamic
awakening, just like the Arab Spring revolutions, is
the result of joint collaboration on a wide-scale;
therefore nobody can claim a monopoly on this.
In my assessment, we would be distorting the facts
if we considered this huge Islamic awakening that is
taking place in the world today to be something
limited to the narrow confines of partisan politics.
This Islamic awakening cannot be attributed to any
specific political party or faction; not the Muslim
Brotherhood or the Salafists or anybody else. Evidence
of this can be seen in the fact that this Islamic
awakening – which is wide awake today – prevailed in
the Indian subcontinent and was adopted by such
figures as Abul Ala Maududi and Muhammad Iqbal and
others; however the Muslim Brotherhood does not have
any presence in that region, even if these figures and
the Brotherhood share some similar views and ideas.
This also applies to the Islamic awakening that is
prevailing in a number of other Islamic countries
around the world.
Therefore, we could say that the Islamic awakening
is a "cocktail" combining a number of old Islamic
reformative schools of thought with new schools of
thought, liberation movements and government efforts.
This is something that can be seen in the calls made
by Sheikh Muhammad ibn Abdul-Wahab, Jamal al-Din
al-Afghani, Mohamed Abduh, Rashid Rida, Abd al-Rahman
al-Kawakibi, Hassan al-Banna, Muhammad Nasiruddin al-Albani,
Abd al-Aziz ibn Abdullah ibn Baz and others. The above
list has been ordered according to the date of the
clerics' death, not the extent of their influence. In
addition to this list, we have the Senussi movement,
the Algerian Jurist Society, the Sudanese al-Mahdi
movement, the jihadist movements as well as the
peaceful Islamist movements, whether we are talking
about the Muslim Brotherhood, the Tablighi Jamaat, and
official and public Islamist groups and movements
across the Islamic word. These are all components
within the Islamic awakening "recipe". Indeed the
figures and organizations named above are but a
limited example of this. However since the Islamic
awakening is a major human effort it has undergone a
number of fractures and divisions resulting in a
number of hard-line ideologies. We might say that
these hard-line ideologies harm our Islamic awakening,
but only if we believe that the Kharijites [a term
embracing various Muslims who initially supported the
authority of the fourth caliph Ali Ibn Abi Talib, only
to later reject him] harmed the companions of the
prophet, whose era witnessed the spread of their
views. As God Almighty said, "nor does any bearer of
burden bear the burden of another." [Surat al-Anaam;
Verse 164]
The danger of limiting this Islamic awakening to
Islamist political trends is that this represents a
form of opposing or resisting the move towards
religion that is currently prevailing in the Arab and
Islamic world, which itself is a response and
rejection of moral and intellectual westernization.
Let us take, for example, Islamic Sharia law and the
prohibition of riba [usury]; which is something that
no single Islamist jurist can deny. The westernized
Arabs cannot reject this religious ordinance directly
otherwise they would be viewed as opponents of Islam,
therefore they claim that this prohibition against
riba is an outcome of the Islamic awakening and
Islamism, or they attribute this to the narrow-minded
Talabani school of thought, and this is a trick that
has worked with many people. In short, we need to wake
up to a genuine view about the Islamic awakening!
Dr. Hamad Al-Majid is a journalist and former
member of the official Saudi National Organization for
Human Rights. Al-Majid is a graduate of Imam Muhammad
Bin Saud Islamic University in Riyadh and holds an
M.A. from California and a Doctorate from the
University of Hull in the United Kingdom.