Encyclopedia of Islam



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Salafism

  

601  J




Salafis are also vehemently opposed to s

hiism


, as 

well as Sufism.

These two branches of Salafism, the modernist 

and the Wahhabist, have evolved in different and 

complex ways during the 20th and early 21st cen-

turies. The modernists have emphasized reforms 

that were intended to reconcile religion with 

science


 and modernity. They have called for mod-

ernizing the educational system (but still keep-

ing Islamic subjects in the curriculum), creating 

democratic governments, and liberating 

Women

from shackles of tradition. In promoting these 



ideals, Salafists portrayed the Islam’s civilizational 

heritage as superior to that of the West, redefin-

ing traditional concepts in conformity with their 

progressive outlook. In their publications consul-

tation between a ruler and his advisors (shura

became parliamentary 

democracy

, the consensus 

of jurists in matters of law (

ijmaa

) became pub-

lic opinion, and swearing allegiance to a ruler 

(bayaa) became the right to vote.

Although modernist Salafism was opposed by 

traditionalist Sunni ulama, it spread rapidly from 

Egypt to other Arab countries, and eventually to 

non-Arab ones. In a

lgeria

 it was promoted by 



Abd al-Hamid ibn Badis (d. 1940), a religious 

scholar and a leader of the resistance against the 

French colonialists. A Tunisian Salafist, Abd al-

Aziz al-Thaalibi (d. 1944), founded the Destour 

Party, which sought to create a constitutional 

democracy in that country. Salafism also devel-

oped roots in m

orocco


. As part of their political 

activism, Salafists in these countries campaigned 

against Sufi orders, which they thought were det-

rimental to their reformist agenda. In i

ndonesia

the Muhammadiyah reformist movement was 

founded in 1912 by Ahmad Dahlan (d. 1923), 

a Javanese scholar who had been influenced by 

Abduh. Egyptian Salafism has also been credited 

with influencing the religious outlook of the m

Us

-

lim



 b

rotherhood

 and the J

amaat


-

i

 i



slami

 in Indo-

Pakistan, although the influence of the d

eoband


school was greater in the case of the latter.

Wahhabi Salafists are closely allied to Saudi 

rulers and, unlike the modernist Salafis, they 

have become embedded in the authoritarian gov-

ernment of Saudi state that was created by a

bd

al



-a

ziz


 

ibn


 s

aUd


 (d. 1953) in the first decades of 

the 20th century. They control the judiciary and 

education, and are in charge of strictly enforcing 

public morality in accordance with their conser-

vative understanding of the sharia. This official 

Wahhabi Salafism, because it is so closely tied to 

a regime that holds great wealth from its 

oil


 reve-

nues and because millions of pilgrims visit m

ecca

and Medina each year, has had widespread influ-



ence on Muslims around the world. Its rigid ide-

ology of rule by religious law has inspired violent 

Sunni 

Jihad


 

movements

  like Hamas in Palestine, 

Egyptian Islamists, the Taliban in Afghanistan, and 

similar groups elsewhere. The close connection of 

Wahhabi Salafism with the Saudi state, however, 

has also undermined its legitimacy in the eyes of 

many, including Saudi dissidents. These critics and 

opponents view the royal family as authoritarian, 

corrupt, and materialistic, and resent its close ties 

with the United States and its allies. Some of these 

opponents have been pushing for gradual democ-

ratization and greater respect for 

hUman


 

rights


,

like modernist Salafis have done elsewhere. Others, 

however, have embraced what some have called 

neo-Wahhabism, and call for the violent overthrow 

of the Saudi state and the establishment of one that 

they maintain truly conforms to the sharia. The 

seizure of the Grand Mosque in Mecca in 1979 was 

an early manifestation of this militant trend. It also 

contributed to the shaping of Usama bin Ladin’s 

worldview and the creation of al-Qaida’s global ter-

rorist network in the 1980s and 90s.

See also  c

ompanions

 

oF

 



the

  p


rophet

;  i


bn

  a


bd

al

-W



ahhab

, m


Uhammad

; i


slamism

al



-q

aida


; r

ashid


r

ida


, m

Uhammad


; s

aUdi


 a

rabia


; U

sama


 

bin


 l

adin


.


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