Encyclopedia of Islam


renewal and reform movements



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renewal and reform movements

  

587  J




was the one initiated by Muhammad 

ibn


  a

bd

 



al

-

W



ahhab

 (d. 1792) in Arabia, which was directed 

against what he regarded to be un-Islamic practices 

such as shrine visitation, folk magic, and Shii ven-

eration of their Imams. The Wahhabis (who call 

themselves the muwahhidun “Unitarians”) assisted 

in the creation of Saudi Arabia and subsequently 

benefited from the vast oil revenues reaped by that 

country in the latter part of the 20th century. Reviv-

alist reformism directed against aspects of popular 

Sufism and the esoteric doctrines and mystical 

teachings of i

bn

 

al



-a

rabi


 (d. 1240) emerged among 

members of the n

aqshbandi

  s


UFi

  o


rder

, which 


was based in India and spread afar from there. 

Among its early proponents were Ahmad Sirhindi, 

Shah Wali Allah (d. 1762), and Ghulam Ali (or 

Abd Allah Dihlavi, d. 1824). Reform-minded Sufi 

groups and leaders subsequently conducted armed 

attacks against European colonizers as well as 

against un-Islamic practices in their own societies. 

In India these included the movement of a

hmad

b

arelWi



 (d. 1831), which also attacked Sikhs, and 

the F


araizi

 

movement



. Russian imperial expansion 

in the Caucasus was opposed by the Naqshabandi 

shaykh  s

hamil


 (d. 1871). Similar movements of 

non-Naqshabandi reformist Sufis, combined with 

renewalist elements, arose in West Africa to create 

new states. They opposed Anglo-Egyptian expan-

sion in the s

Udan


 and Italian colonization of l

ibya


.

During the 20th century both the modern-

ist and the revivalist versions of renewal and 

reform continued to develop. The shift from 

colonial regimes to nation-states led to new chal-

lenges, adaptations, and forms, which became 

embedded in the nation-state, as in Saudi Arabia, 

Libya before 1969, and Iran (after 1979). These 

included peaceful participation in national poli-

tics, as in Pakistan, Sudan, Lebanon (especially 

after 1993), Jordan, Turkey, and Iraq (after 2003) 

as well as opposition to secular or authoritarian 

governments, as in Egypt, Palestine, Iran (before 

1979), and Iraq (before 2003). The relationship 

between these movements and established gov-

ernments often changes with the political climate 

in the country.

A good example of this is the m

Uslim

 b

rother



-

hood


, considered to be the first modern Islamic 

mass movement. Created in 1928 by h

asan

 

al



-

b

anna



 (d. 1949), an Egyptian schoolteacher, as 

an Islamic renewal organization emphasizing reli-

gious education and social welfare projects, it 

opposed both traditional ulama and British colonial 

rule. It participated in the nationalist movement 

that finally succeeded in wining independence for 

Egypt in 1952, but it fell into disfavor with J

amal


a

bd

 



al

-n

asir



 (d. 1970) and the “Free Officers,” 

who wanted to establish a government based on 

secular Arab nationalism rather than the sharia. 

The Muslim Brotherhood conspired against Abd al-

Nasir and was harshly suppressed by the Egyptian 

government in the 1950s and 1960s. However, after 

Egypt’s shocking defeat in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, 

it began to regain influence and was allowed some 

degree of freedom in the 1970s. Since that time its 

fortunes have fluctuated depending on the amount 

of opposition the Egyptian government is willing 

to tolerate, but it has been able to elect supporters 

to the Egyptian parliament. The Muslim Brother-

hood also exemplifies two other characteristics of 

contemporary renewal and reform movements. 

One of these is transnationalism—offshoots have 

established themselves in many Muslim-majority 

Arab countries. The other is that its oppositional 

aspect, including the jihadist doctrines of its chief 

ideologue s

ayyid

 q

Utb



 (d. 1966), has given rise to 

more radical Islamic movements, such as the Jihad 

Group that assassinated Egyptian president a

nWar


al

-s

adat



 in 1981, h

amas


 in p

alestine


, and even 

al

-q



aida

.

The modernist type of Islamic renewal and 



reform also continues to develop, as reflected in 

the writings of figures such as F

azlUr

  r


ahman

,

Muhammad Said al-Ashmawi, m



Uhammad

  a


rk

-

oUn



, F

atima


 m

ernissi


, Abdullahi An-Naim, k

halid


a

bU

 F



adl

, Abd al-Karim Soroush, Shireen Ebadi, 

F

ethUllah


  g

ülen


, Tariq Ramadan, n

asr


  h

amid


a

bU

  z



ayd

, Maher Hathout, Muhammad Shahrur, 

K  588  


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