Further reading: Muhammad Khalid Masud, Brinkley
Messick, and David S. Powers, Islamic Legal Interpre-
tation: Muftis and Their Fatwas (Cambridge, Mass.:
Harvard University Press, 1996); Rudolph Peters, Islam
and Colonialism: The Doctrine of Jihad in Modern History
(The Hague: Mouton, 1979).
Faysal ibn Abd al-Aziz Al Saud
(King
Feisal)
(1906–1975) king of Saudi Arabia from
1964 to 1975 who inaugurated a significant program
of economic, governmental, and social modernization
and strove to unite Muslims against the spread of
socialism and communism during the cold war era
Faysal was the fourth son of Saudi Arabia’s first
king, Abd al-Aziz ibn Saud (r. 1926–53) and a
direct descendant on his mother’s side of m
Uham
-
mad
ibn
a
bd
al
-W
ahhab
(d. 1792), the founder
of the puritanical Wahhabi movement. Faysal
was himself a religiously minded man, no doubt
shaped by his early upbringing in the household
of his maternal grandfather, a leading Wah-
habi authority. At the age of 14, he was the first
member of the Saudi family to visit England and
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