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AF
J:
daawa
(Arabic: invitation, religious call,
summons) (also
dawa, Persian dawat, or
Indonesian/Malaysian
dakwah)
Daawa is a term that has acquired a number of
meanings in the history of Islam, but it is mainly
thought of as religious outreach for purposes of
conversion
or bringing lapsed Muslims back into
the faith. In the q
Uran
, it is God’s invitation to
humans to worship and believe in him (Q 14:10;
10:25) and humans’ calling upon God to hear
their prayers (Q 14:33; 7:180). In the Quranic
view, the
prophets
are the ones who effectively
transmit God’s call to their peoples to sway them
from praying to false gods or idols and to guide
them on the monotheistic path to salvation.
Prophets and others who undertake the challeng-
ing task of conveying God’s daawa are called dais
(“inviters” or “summoners”). Moreover, according
to the Quran, the whole community of believers
is charged with “calling to goodness, commanding
the right and forbidding the wrong” (Q 3:104). In
other contexts, Muslims used the word daawa as
a synonym for the call to prayer (
adhan
) and as an
alternate name for the first chapter of the Quran,
the F
atiha
(Q 1), which is a verbal prayer for
God’s assistance, guidance, and mercy.
During the eighth century, leaders of the
Abbasid movement in i
raq
and i
ran
gave
daawa
an overt political meaning by making it a form of
religious propaganda. They called upon faithful
Muslims to help them bring the community back
to the “true” Islam by overthrowing the U
mayyad
c
aliphate
in s
yria
. Their efforts proved success-
ful; they ended Umayyad rule and created the
a
bbasid
c
aliphate
(750–1258) in b
aghdad
. At
about the same time as the Abbasid movement,
early Shii groups, several of which had supported
the Abbasids until the Abbasids turned against
them, called upon Muslims to accept the authority
of their imams, the descendants of Muhammad’s
family (
ahl
al
-
bayt
) whom the Shia believed to be
the divinely chosen leaders of the Muslim com-
munity. The Ismailis, a minority sect of the Shia,
used daawa to challenge the claims of their rivals,
the t
Welve
-i
mam
s
hia
, undermine Sunni rulers,
and win support for their own leaders, whom they
believed to be divinely guided and possessors of
secret knowledge (
batin
) from God. The Ismaili
rulers of the F
atimid
dynasty
(909–1171) in
North Africa and e
gypt
organized a daawa move-
ment to promote their claims
to divine authority
and to oppose the Abbasid Caliphate with one
of their own. Their dais (missionaries) were sent
from c
airo
to far reaches of the
dar
al
-i
slam
,
where they spread Ismaili doctrines publicly and
covertly, recruiting support for the imams. The
D
Nizari Ismailis in Iran, known as the a
ssassins
,
also made extensive use of daawa on behalf of
their leaders. Today, some branches of the Ismailis
even call themselves “the Dawat.”
In the modern period, the meaning of reli-
gious outreach has undergone further develop-
ment. Daawa has become a keystone for many
contemporary Islamic organizations and institu-
tions in countries with Muslim majorities and also
in those where they are minorities. The collapse
of the last Islamicate empires (the Ottomans,
Safavids, and Mughals) after the 17th century,
combined with the onset of European colonial
domination in many Muslim lands, led Muslims
to use religious outreach in order to achieve
unity among themselves, to convert others, and
to engage non-Muslims in intercultural and inter-
faith
dialogUe
, especially in Europe and North
America. The Ottoman sultan Abdulhamid II (r.
1876–1901) and other promoters of
pan
-i
slamism
used
daawa in an attempt to unify all Muslims
under his religious and political authority. The
Ottoman Empire came to an end after World War
I, but the task of fostering Muslim unity through
daawa has been taken
up anew by organizations
such as the m
Uslim
W
orld
l
eagUe
and the o
rga
-
nization
oF
the
i
slamic
c
onFerence
.
The increased Christian missions in Muslim
lands that accompanied European colonization
caused Muslims to organize their own mission-
ary activities in response. Since the early decades
of the 20th century, significant effort has been
dedicated to educating Muslims about the core
elements of their religion so as to encourage an
internal religious revival and help them contend
either with Christian missionaries or with the
influence of modern ideas and non-Islamic life-
styles and customs. The governments of s
aUdi
a
rabia
, Kuwait, Libya, Egypt, and Pakistan have
created institutions to train imams and commu-
nity leaders, develop modern methods for propa-
gating Islam, hold conferences, and publish daawa
literature. Their outreach campaigns have been
conducted in African countries and the newly
independent Central Asian republics of the former
Soviet Union, as well as the Middle East and parts
of Asia. Activist Islamist organizations, such as the
m
Uslim
b
rotherhood
, also regard outreach as an
important part of their strategy for achieving their
religious and political goals. The d
aaWa
p
arty
oF
i
raq
was created by Shii religious leaders to
oppose the spread of
commUnism
and secular Arab
nationalism. After the fall of s
addam
h
Usayn
’s
b
aath
p
arty
government in 2003, it became one
of Iraq’s leading political parties. The t
ablighi
J
amaat
, founded in 1927
in India, is a very popu-
lar nongovernmental Sunni missionary movement
that carries its message of simple religious piety
door-to-door in many parts of the world.
Like Christian missions, Muslim daawa orga-
nizations engage in charity and relief efforts.
Their mission also includes building neighbor-
hood mosques, opening medical clinics, and
establishing printing presses. Pious
Women
, many
of them veiled, have been increasingly visible in
such activities. Mosque-based organizations in
non-Muslim countries undertake daawa activities
in their communities to attract lapsed Muslims
and to educate non-Muslim leaders, officials, and
the wider public about Islam. Such efforts have
been particularly successful in pluralistic coun-
tries such as the United States. Muslim organiza-
tions have made extensive use of publications,
electronic media, and most recently the Internet
to conduct their outreach campaigns.
See also a
hmadiyya
;
almsgiving
; c
hristianity
and
i
slam
;
dar
al
-i
slam
and
dar
al
-
harb
;
dialogUe
;
edUcation
;
imam
;
madrasa
; s
hiism
.
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