beliefs
and practices of the
umma
. Even though
condemned in the
hadith
, kafir became a polemi-
cal term used more by Muslim elites against other
Muslims than against non-Muslims during the
Middle Ages. Among those accused of unbelief
were leading Muslim philosophers such as i
bn
s
ina
(d. 1037), “intoxicated”
Sufis such as Man-
sur al-h
allaJ
(d. 922), and members of various
branches of the Shia.
Drawing on this tradition and promoting a
rigid doctrine of absolute monotheism, the central
Arabian revivalist Muhammad
ibn
a
bd
al
-W
ahhab
(d. 1798) called any Muslim who failed to enact
the requirements of believing in one God a kafir.
This included Muslims who practiced fortune-
telling, magic, astrology, wearing amulets, exces-
sive mourning of the dead, Sufi shrine pilgrimage,
and who followed Shii teachings about the Imams.
The conquest of much of the Arabian Peninsula
by the Saudis in alliance with the followers of
Ibn Abd al-Wahhab’s teachings, Saudi control of
Islam’s most sacred centers in Mecca and Medina,
and
oil
revenues have given significant weight
to the influence of the Wahhabi understanding
of Islam and disbelief well beyond the borders of
s
aUdi
a
rabia
.
In the modern period Islamist ideologists such
as Abu al-Ala m
aWdUdi
(d. 1979) of Indo-Pakistan
and Sayyid q
Utb
(d. 1966) of e
gypt
have extended
the polemics of unbelief to include condemna-
tions of Western-style
secUlarism
and the mate-
rialist understandings of society. They considered
the 20th century to be Jahiliyya time, recalling
the era that preceded Islam’s appearance when
unbelief prevailed. The main difference between
the jahiliyya of ancient Arabia and today was that
the modern jahilyiya was one when Muslim soci-
eties were being corrupted by Western laws and
governments based on Western models that vio-
lated the
sharia
. Mawdudi and Qutb called upon
a faithful corps of true Muslims, what Qutb called
a “unique quranic generation,” not only to reject
the modern jahiliya, but to conduct jihad against
it to bring about its destruction. They quoted the
Quran in support of their radical ideology, espe-
cially the verse, “Those who judge not (or rule
not) by what God has revealed are the kafirs” (Q
5:44). Even though rejected by most Muslims, this
ideology was used by the Jihad Group of Egypt to
justify the assassination of Egyptian president
Anwar al-s
adat
in 1981 and it inspired radical
movements in many Muslim countries during the
1980s and 1990s. U
sama
bin
l
adin
used it in his
fatwas and speeches against the United States and
Israel, both of whom he accused of invading and
occupying sacred Muslim lands.
Lastly, the term Kaffir is derived from kafir. It was
originally used by Arabs for the indigenous peoples
of Africa, then adopted by European slave traders.
Eventually it became a racial slur, used particularly
by whites in South Africa against the blacks.
See also
apostasy
;
bidaa
;
blasphemy
; c
hristian
-
ity
and
i
slam
;
crime
and
pUnishment
;
dhimmi
;
her
-
esy
;
Jihad
movements
; J
Udaism
and
i
slam
;
prophets
and
prophecy
; s
hiism
; t
akFir
Wa
-h
iJra
; W
ah
-
habism
;
ziyara
.
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