Encyclopedia of Islam



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Introduction

  

xxvii  J

from the control of non-Muslim governments 

and influence. In justifying their violent actions, 

they often make use of the traditional Islamic 

concept of jihad, which is based on an Arabic 

word meaning “to struggle or make an effort” 

on behalf of one’s religion and community. Many 

Muslims criticize the way they interpret this con-

cept, which was elaborated in the Islamic legal 

tradition before the modern era. Some jihadist 

organizations, despite their violent tactics, win 

popular support by providing needed social ser-

vices that legitimate governmental agencies fail 

to provide. This is the case, for example, with the 

Palestinian Hamas organization and Hizbullah 

in Lebanon. Most of these groups act indepen-

dently, with logistical and economic assistance 

from foreign sources. Al-Qaida, the organiza-

tion founded by Usama bin Ladin (b. 1957) and 

Ayman al-Zawahiri (b. 1951), began in 1984 as a 

service office for Arabs fighting against the Soviet 

army in Afghanistan. After the Soviet withdrawal 

in 1989 and the fall of the Communist-led gov-

ernment, al-Qaida turned its attention to fight-

ing the United States and its allies, especially 

Israel. To accomplish its objectives, it created a 

loosely organized global network of cells, which 

were involved in planning and executing attacks 

against U.S. embassies in Africa, the USS Cole,

and the 9/11 attacks on the U.S. mainland. Years 

later, however, al-Qaida has still not been able 

to win widespread support among Muslims, and 

it remains at odds with other Islamist groups in 

terms of both ideology and tactics.

The estimated number of Muslims in the 

world today is second only to the number of 

Christians (about 2.2 million) and larger than 

other religiously defined communities, including 

Hindus and Buddhists. Muslims represent more 

than 20 percent of the world’s population (one 

out of every five people on Earth). Like members 

of these other religious communities, they also 

think of themselves in terms of ethnicity and 

nationality. Indeed, many may put their ethnic 

and national identity ahead of their religious one, 

especially those who are more secular in outlook. 

Muslims belong to more than 60 different ethnic 

groups consisting of a million or more members. 

In addition, there are also 55 nation-states that 

have Muslim-majority populations. As minorities 

in countries like the United States, Britain, India, 

and Australia, many think of themselves in terms 

of the nationality of the country in which they 

hold citizenship, or the one from which they have 

emigrated.

The first generations of Muslims were pre-

dominantly Arab, and today Arabs still constitute 

the single largest Muslim ethnic group. (It should 

be noted, however, that not all Arabs are Muslims. 

There are also Arab Christians and Jews.) By the 

11th century, large numbers of Berbers, Persians, 

and Turks had converted to Islam; together with 

Arabs, they composed much of classical Islamic 

civilization in the Middle East and North Africa. 

Today only about one in four Muslims is an Arab, 

and when all the Middle Eastern ethnic groups to 

which Muslims belong are added, they amount to 

less than half of the total of the world’s Muslims. 

Other major ethnic groups include the Javanese of 

Indonesia, the Bengalis of India and Bangladesh, 

and the Punjabis of Pakistan and India. More-

over, the nation-states with the largest Muslim 

populations are located east of the Middle East, in 

Indonesia (207 million), Pakistan (160 million), 

India (between 138 million and 160 million), 

and Bangladesh (132.5 million).

1

 Large Muslim 



populations also live in the countries of sub-Saha-

ran Africa (Nigeria, for example has about 67.5 

million Muslims) and Central Asia (Afghanistan 

has about 31.5 million Muslims; Uzbekistan 24.5 

million).

Muslims can therefore present themselves as 

members of a united community of the faithful, 

as members of particular Islamic subgroups (Sun-

nis, Shiis, Sufis, etc.), or as members of different 

1

 These figures are based on 2007–08 estimates in the CIA 



World Fact Book.




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