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US Hamas policy blocks Middle East peace

Henry Siegman


Failed bilateral talks over these past 16 years have shown that a Middle East peace accord can never be reached by the parties themselves. Israeli governments believe they can defy international condemnation of their illegal colonial project in the West Bank because they can count on the US to oppose international sanctions. Bilateral talks that are not framed by US-formulated parameters (based on Security Council resolutions, the Oslo accords, the Arab Peace Initiative, the “road map” and other previous Israeli-Palestinian agreements) cannot succeed. Israel’s government believes that the US Congress will not permit an American president to issue such parameters and demand their acceptance. What hope there is for the bilateral talks that resume in Washington DC on September 2 depends entirely on President Obama proving that belief to be wrong, and on whether the “bridging proposals” he has promised, should the talks reach an impasse, are a euphemism for the submission of American parameters. Such a US initiative must offer Israel iron-clad assurances for its security within its pre-1967 borders, but at the same time must make it clear these assurances are not available if Israel insists on denying Palestinians a viable and sovereign state in the West Bank and Gaza. This paper focuses on the other major obstacle to a permanent status agreement: the absence of an effective Palestinian interlocutor. Addressing Hamas’ legitimate grievances – and as noted in a recent CENTCOM report, Hamas has legitimate grievances – could lead to its return to a Palestinian coalition government that would provide Israel with a credible peace partner. If that outreach fails because of Hamas’ rejectionism, the organization’s ability to prevent a reasonable accord negotiated by other Palestinian political parties will have been significantly impeded. If the Obama administration will not lead an international initiative to define the parameters of an Israeli-Palestinian agreement and actively promote Palestinian political reconciliation, Europe must do so, and hope America will follow. Unfortunately, there is no silver bullet that can guarantee the goal of “two states living side by side in peace and security.”
But President Obama’s present course absolutely precludes it.

Poliittinen kehitys muslimiveljeskunnan Egyptissä

Stephen Bennett

“Allah is our objective. The Prophet is our leader. Qur’an is our law. Jihad is our way. Dying in the way of Allah is our highest hope.”

Koska alkuvaiheessa Egyptin muslimiveljeskunnan on luonut paljon kiistoja, kuten jotkut väittävät, että järjestö kannattaa väkivaltaa islamin nimissä. According to Dr. Mamoun Fandy of the James A. Baker III Institute of Public Policy, jihadism and the activation of the views of the world of the house of Islam and the house of war are the ideas that emerged from the writings and the teachings of the Muslim Brotherhood” (Livesy, 2005). The primary evidence for this argument is notable member of the Brotherhood, Sayeed Qutb, who is credited with developing the revisionist and controversial interpretation of jihad that provided religious justifications for violence committed by offshoot organizations of the Brotherhood like al-jihad, al-Takfir wa al-Hijra, Hamas, ja al-Qaeda.

Yet that is still a debatable position, because despite being the ideological parent of these violent organizations, the Muslim Brotherhood itself has always maintained an official stance against violence and instead has promoted Islamic civil and social action at the grassroots level. Within the first twenty years of its existence the Muslim Brotherhood gained status as the most influential of all major groups in the Middle East through its popular activism. It also spread from Egypt into other nations throughout the region and served as the catalyst for many of the successful popular liberation movements against Western colonialism in the Middle East.

While it has retained most of its founding principles from its inception, the Muslim Brotherhood has made a dramatic transformation in some crucial aspects of its political ideology. Formerly denounced by many as a terrorist organization, as of late the Muslim Brotherhood has been labeled by most current scholars of the Middle East as politically “moderate”, “politically centrist”, and “accommodationist” to Egypt’s political and governmental structures (Abed-Kotob, 1995, p. 321-322). Sana Abed-Kotob also tells us that of the current Islamist opposition groups that exist today “the more ‘radical’ or militant of these groups insist upon revolutionary change that is to be imposed on the masses and political system, whereas… the new Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt, call for gradual change that is to be undertaken from within the political system and with the enlistment of the Muslim masses”

MUSLIM INSTITUTIONS AND POLITICAL MOBILIZATION

SARA Silvestri

In Europe, and most of the Western world, Muslim presence in the publicsphere is a recent phenomenon that characterised the last decade of the 20thcentury and has deeply marked the beginning of the 21st. This visiblepresence, which amounts to something between 15 ja 20 millionindividuals, can best be analysed if dissected into a number of components.The first part of this chapter illustrates where, when and why organisedMuslim voices and institutions have emerged in Europe, and which actorshave been involved. The second part is more schematic and analytical, inthat it seeks to identify from these dynamics the process through whichMuslims become political actors and how they relate to other, often incompeting political forces and priorities. It does so by observing theobjectives and the variety of strategies that Muslims have adopted in orderto articulate their concerns vis-à-vis different contexts and interlocutors.The conclusions offer an initial evaluation of the impact and of theconsequences of Muslim mobilisation and institution-formation forEuropean society and policy-making.

High Noon Egyptissä

Devika Parashar

F. Andy Messing


The parallels between President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and the deposed shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi of Iran, on huomiota herättävää. Vuonna 1979, prior to the notorious Islamic Revolution, which was instigated and controlled by radical Muslim cleric Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the shah wielded personal and authoritarian power in a manner comparable to the dictators of the time: Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines, Anastasio Somoza in Nicaragua, and earlier, Fulgencio Batista in Cuba. These rulers brandished their power with little restraint, unencumbered by the rule of law and basically insensitive to the needs of their populace. Unfortunately, Hosni Mubarak alarmingly resembles these former dictators in social, political, economic and security issues. He is inadvertently pushing his country towards an Islamic revolution. As an earlier example, the shah of Iran slowly strangled his country by reigning with a heavy-hand through his unfettered security force. He narrowed the sociopolitical base of his government and distorted the economy by monopolistic actions. This modus operandi reflects Mr. Mubarak’s current regime, whose survival depends on his ability to reverse these trends. Asianmukaisesti, Mr. Mubarak uses hisCentral Security Force,” that now consists of more than half of his entire military, to impose a measure of censorship on the mass media and ban most forms of political organization, activities and literary expression. Like the shah, he has established control over physical action, selectively executing opposition, imprisoning and exiling thousands of people who oppose his policies. Äskettäin, the leading English language newspaper Al-Ahram Weekly reported an upsurge in deaths due to police brutality. Another Arab news source reported the barring of human-rights groups from attending secret military trials. Economically, Mr. Mubarak monopolistically privatizes the highly regulated Egyptian economy, fostering creation of an exclusive industrial bourgeoisie. He invites only pro-Mubarak businesses to work within his development schemes. Like the shah, he has alienated large sections of the public and private sectors, thus suppressing any real economic growth. Politically, Mr. Mubarak cracks down on civil participation, essentially repressing political opposition; while his lack of government transparency practically guarantees rife corruption throughout the 4 million strong bureaucracy. Equally important, is the lack of government response to crises. Al-Ahram Weekly reported 20 train crashes between 1995 and August 2006. In each case, the government formed an ineffectual and disorganized crisis-management council that failed to correct
the problem. As the government failed to meet the needs of its people, the Muslim Brotherhood (al-Ikhwan) filled a void by establishing social services, such as health clinics and youth programs, to effectively respond to various situations. The first and best-known example of this was their mobilization after the 1992 earthquake struck Southern Cairo. The Muslim Brotherhood provided disaster relief then, and continues to do so, thereby enhancing its traction. Lisäksi, the Muslim Brotherhood has nonviolently taken control of 15 percent of major professional associations that form the greater part of Egypt’s middle class. In the most recent parliamentary election in 2005, the Muslim Brotherhood presented the largest threat to Mr. Mubarak’s National Democratic Party, securing an unprecedented 34 out of 454 seats. They demonstrated their ability to draw support despite government opposition. Mr. Mubarak unwittingly nurtured the regrowth of the essentially Fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood by alienating segments of the Egyptian populace and eliminating soft-line opposition (such as the secular Wafd and al-Ghad parties). He must seek more innovative methods to remain in power. Esimerkiksi, Chile managed to open the economy and encourage free enterprise under Augusto Pinochet, even though his government was considered authoritarian. Mr. Mubarak must tap into the tremendous energy of the Egyptian people by increasing the pace of capitalization and democratization, thereby improving their standard of living. If he succeeds, Mr. Mubarak could eventually create a legacy for himself as an Arab leader who effectively modernized and democratized thiskeystonenation. In doing so, he would secure major assets such as the Suez Canal, Egypt’s oil production and tourism, for not only his country but for the global economy, while providing a positive example for the entire Muslim world. Lisäksi, USA. ability to deal with Egypt will be enhanced, and our aid to that country will become completely justified. But if Mr. Mubarak fails, his regime will fall to the same type of radical elements that claimed the shah’s government in 1979, creating compounded turmoil for Egypt and the world. Devika Parashar spent eight months in Egypt into 2007 and is a research assistant at the National Defense Council Foundation. F. Andy Messing, a retired Special Forces officer, is NDCF’s executive director and met with a Muslim Brotherhood Representative in Cairo in 1994. He has been to 27 conflict areas worldwide.


Resolving America’s Islamist Dilemma

Shadi Hamid

USA. efforts to promote democracy in the Middle East have long been paralyzed by the “Islamist dilemma”: in theory, we want democracy, mutta, in practice, fear that Islamist parties will be the prime beneficiaries of any political opening. The most tragic manifestation of this was the Algerian debacle of 1991 ja 1992, when the United States stood silently while the staunchly secular military canceled elections after an Islamist party won a parliamentary majority. More recently, the Bush administration backed away from its “freedom agenda” after Islamists did surprisingly well in elections throughout region, including in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the Palestinian territories.
But even our fear of Islamist parties—and the resulting refusal to engage with them—has itself been inconsistent, holding true for some countries but not others. The more that a country is seen as vital to American national security interests, the less willing the United States has been to accept Islamist groups having a prominent political role there. Kuitenkin, in countries seen as less strategically relevant, and where less is at stake, the United States has occasionally taken a more nuanced approach. But it is precisely where more is at stake that recognizing a role for nonviolent Islamists is most important, ja, here, American policy continues to fall short.
Throughout the region, the United States has actively supported autocratic regimes and given the green light for campaigns of repression against groups such as the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, the oldest and most influential political movement in the region. In March 2008, during what many observers consider to be the worst period of anti-Brotherhood repression since the 1960s, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice waived a $100 million congressionally mandated reduction of military aid to Egypt.

Hasan al-Banna

Guilain Denoelcx

Hasan al-Banna was the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood or Society of the Muslim Brothers, thelargest and most influential Sunni revivalist organization in the 20th century. Created in Egypt in1928, the Muslim Brotherhood became the first mass-based, overtly political movement to opposethe ascendancy of secular and Western ideas in the Middle East. The brotherhood saw in theseideas the root of the decay of Islamic societies in the modern world, and advocated a return toIslam as a solution to the ills that had befallen Muslim societies. Al-Banna’s leadership was criticalto the spectacular growth of the brotherhood during the 1930s and 1940s. By the early 1950s,branches had been established in Syria, Sudan, and Jordan. Soon, the movement’s influence would be felt inplaces as far away as the Gulf and non-Arab countries such as Iran, Pakistan, Indonesia, and Malaysia. Drivingthis expansion was the appeal of the organizational model embodied in the original, Egypt-based section of thebrotherhood, and the success of al-Banna’s writings. Translated into several languages, these writings haveshaped two generations of Sunni religious activists across the Islamic world.

International Consultation of Muslim Intellectuals on Islam & Politiikka

Stimson Center & Institute of Policy Studies

This two-day discussion brought together experts and scholars from Bangladesh, Egypti, India,Indonesia, Kenya, Malesia, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sudan and Sri Lanka representing academia,non-governmental organizations and think tanks. Among the participants were a number of former government officials and one sitting legislator. The participants were also chosen to comprise abroad spectrum of ideologies, including the religious and the secular, cultural, political andeconomic conservatives, liberals and radicals.The following themes characterized the discussion:1. Western and US (Mis)Understanding There is a fundamental failure by the West to understand the rich variety of intellectual currents andcross-currents in the Muslim world and in Islamic thought. What is underway in the Muslim worldis not a simple opposition to the West based on grievance (though grievances there also are), but are newal of thought and culture and an aspiration to seek development and to modernize withoutlosing their identity. This takes diverse forms, and cannot be understood in simple terms. There is particular resentment towards Western attempts to define the parameters of legitimate Islamicdiscourse. There is a sense that Islam suffers from gross over generalization, from its champions asmuch as from its detractors. It is strongly urged that in order to understand the nature of the Muslim renaissance, the West should study all intellectual elements within Muslim societies, and not only professedly Islamic discourse.US policy in the aftermath of 9/11 has had several effects. It has led to a hardening andradicalization on both sides of the Western-Muslim encounter. It has led to mutual broad brush(mis)characterization of the other and its intentions. It has contributed to a sense of pan-Islamicsolidarity unprecedented since the end of the Khilafat after World War I. It has also produced adegeneration of US policy, and a diminution of US power, influence and credibility. Lopuksi, theUS’ dualistic opposition of terror and its national interests has made the former an appealing instrument for those intent on resistance to the West.

Naiset, work, and Islam in Arab societies

Yusuf Sidani

Arab societies are currently in a state of confusion. Problems of underdevelopment,inequity, institutional deficiencies, and illiteracy are rampant (Arab HumanDevelopment Report, 2002). Arabs seem to be in a futile search for a new identity ina world that is transforming: power structures are shifting, societal expectations arechanging, and male-female relations are developing. The Arabs seem to yearn for anew identity that does not displace them from their roots, and at the same timeconnects them to the future; the search seems incessantly fruitless. Even non-Arabsseem to be confused about the issue. Vivid movie images mostly portray the Arab maleas a primitive, fanatic, brutal, lunatic, vicious, and splendidly prosperous individualwhile the Arab woman is portrayed as a belly dancer or whore, a veiled submissivemember of a luxurious harem, or a speechless oppressed character with no identity(Boullata, 1990). The political developments of the past few years did not help bringabout a better image. The rise of Islamic activism, end of the cold war, Huntington’s“clash of civilizations” supposition, and the events of 11th September only reinforcedthe bewilderment and confusion.In addressing the notion of women’s participation in the business and politicalarenas in Arab societies, conflicting remarks are brought forward. Some refer to therole of culture and the prevailing religion in the area – Islam and interpretations ofIslam – as possible reasons for such lack of participation (El-Saadawi, 1997; Mernissi,1991). toteutettiin Baselin yliopistossa, it is asserted, is not merely a set of beliefs and rituals but is also a socialorder that has an all-pervading influence on its followers (Weir, 2000). This essayattempts to present varying discourses pertaining to women’s work and how it isimpacted by interpretations of Islam. We present current discourses from variousviewpoints including Muslim scholars on the one hand and active feminists on theother hand. We address the disagreements that exist in the camps of the religiousscholars in their interpretations of religious texts impacting women and their work. Inaddition, we tackle the feminist discourse pertaining to the role of Islam, orunderstandings of Islam, in their participation and development.

Islamic Movements and the Use of Violence:

Tuulista Kirdis

.


Despite recent academic and popular focus on violent transnational Islamic terrorist networks,there is a multiplicity of Islamic movements. This multiplicity presents scholars with two puzzles. The first puzzle is understanding why domestic-oriented Islamic movements that were formed as a reaction to the establishment of secular nation-states shifted their activities and targets onto a multi-layered transnational space. The second puzzle is understanding why groups with similar aims and targets adopt different strategies of using violence or nonviolence when they “go transnational.” The two main questions that this paper will address are: Why do Islamic movements go transnational? And, why do they take on different forms when they transnationalize? Ensimmäinen, I argue that the transnational level presents a new political venue for Islamic movements which are limited in their claim making at the domestic level. Toinen, I argue that transnationalization creates uncertainty for groups about their identity and claims at the transnational level. The medium adopted, i. use of violence versus non-violence, is dependent on type of transnationalization, the actors encounter at the transnational level, and leadership’s interpretations on where the movement should go next. To answer my questions, I will look at four cases: (1) Turkish Islam, (2) the Muslim Brotherhood, (3) Jemaah Islamiyah, ja (4) Tablighi Jamaat

Islamic Movements and Democratization

Ayşegül Kozak

Gulseren Henkilö

In recent years, many sociologists as well as political scientists argued over and offered theories about the factors that promote democracy. Some suggested that a country may more likely to become democratic if it becomes richer, if it redistributes the country’s wealth and income in an egalitarian manner.
To still others, becoming more capitalististic and rapidly converting its peasantry into proletarians is a condition of democratization. Being a former British colony and being a Protestant are also offered as factors that increase the likelihood of being a successful democracy (see Dahl, 1971; Bollen & Jackman 1985; Huntington 1991; Lipset, 1994; Moore, 1966; Muller, 1995).
Up to date, the majority of the studies on the democratization of the Islamic countries have dealt with the issue under the lenses of Islam’s adverse effects on the level of democratization in the Muslim countries. These studies, kuitenkin, mostly failed to notice the positive drive to democratization brought by the Islamic parties into the existing political system. This paper aims to address this deficiency within the democracy literature.
More specifically, the aim of the paper, via case studies of Turkey and Egypt, is to examine the effect of the inclusion or exclusion of the Islamic parties in the political system of Muslim countries’ transitions to democracy. We argue that, inclusion of the Islamic parties in the democratic system in Turkey increased the state’s legitimacy, diminished civil conflict, and encouraged liberalization of the Turkish political system, the parties and their constituency thus, promoted a drive to successful democratization.
Toisaalta, the exclusion of Islamists from the political system in Egypt weakened the state’s legitimacy, intensified the civil conflict, and radicalized the Islamic 4 movement and its constituency. The state gradually became more and more autocratic thus, hindered democratization.

In recent years, many sociologists as well as political scientists argued over andoffered theories about the factors that promote democracy. Some suggested that a countrymay more likely to become democratic if it becomes richer, if it redistributes thecountry’s wealth and income in an egalitarian manner. To still others, becoming morecapitalististic and rapidly converting its peasantry into proletarians is a condition ofdemocratization. Being a former British colony and being a Protestant are also offered asfactors that increase the likelihood of being a successful democracy (see Dahl, 1971;Bollen & Jackman 1985; Huntington 1991; Lipset, 1994; Moore, 1966; Muller, 1995).Up to date, the majority of the studies on the democratization of the Islamic countrieshave dealt with the issue under the lenses of Islam’s adverse effects on the level ofdemocratization in the Muslim countries. These studies, kuitenkin, mostly failed to noticethe positive drive to democratization brought by the Islamic parties into the existingpolitical system. This paper aims to address this deficiency within the democracyliterature.More specifically, the aim of the paper, via case studies of Turkey and Egypt, is toexamine the effect of the inclusion or exclusion of the Islamic parties in the politicalsystem of Muslim countries’ transitions to democracy. We argue that, inclusion of theIslamic parties in the democratic system in Turkey increased the state’s legitimacy,diminished civil conflict, and encouraged liberalization of the Turkish political system,the parties and their constituency thus, promoted a drive to successful democratization.On the other hand, the exclusion of Islamists from the political system in Egyptweakened the state’s legitimacy, intensified the civil conflict, and radicalized the Islamic4movement and its constituency. The state gradually became more and more autocraticthus, hindered democratization.

Arviointi islamistisen valtavirran Egyptissä ja Malesiassa

Beyond ‘Terrorism’ and ‘StateHegemony’: assessing the Islamistmainstream in Egypt and Malaysia

Tammikuu STRONGMalaysia-Islamists

International networks of Islamic ‘terrorism’ have served as themost popular explanation to describe the phenomenon of political Islam sincethe 11 September attacks.

This paper argues that both the self-proclaimeddoctrinal Islam of the militants and Western perceptions of a homogeneousIslamist threat need to be deconstructed in order to discover the oftenambiguous manifestations of ‘official’ and ‘opposition’ Islam, of modernity andconservatism.

As a comparison of two Islamic countries, Egypt and Malaysia,which both claim a leading role in their respective regions, shows, moderateIslamic groups have had a considerable impact on processes of democratisationand the emergence of civil society during the quarter century since the ‘Islamicresurgence’.

Shared experiences like coalition building and active participationwithin the political system demonstrate the influence and importance of groupssuch as the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamic Youth Movement of Malaysia (ABIM) or the Islamic Party of Malaysia (PAS).

These groups haveshaped the political landscape to a much larger extent than the current pre-occupation with the ‘terrorist threat’ suggests. The gradual development of a‘culture of dialogue’ has rather revealed new approaches towards politicalparticipation and democracy at the grassroots level.

Internet ja islamistisen Politiikka Jordaniassa, Marokko ja Egypti.

The end of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first saw a
dissemination of the Internet as a center of communication, information, entertainment and
commerce. The spread of the Internet reached all four corners of the globe, connecting the
researcher in Antarctica with the farmer in Guatemala and the newscaster in Moscow to the
Bedouin in Egypt. Through the Internet, the flow of information and real-time news reaches
across continents, and the voices of subalternity have the potential to project their previously
silenced voices through blogs, websites and social networking sites. Political organizations
across the left-right continuum have targeted the Internet as the political mobilizer of the future,
and governments now provide access to historical documents, party platforms, ja
administrative papers through their sites. Eikä toisin kuin perinteisessä antisemitismin asiakirjassa esitetyt syytökset, religious groups display their beliefs online
through official sites, and forums allow members from across the globe to debate issues of
eschatology, orthopraxy and any number of nuanced theological issues. Fusing the two, Islamist
political organizations have made their presence known through sophisticated websites detailing
their political platforms, relevant news stories, and religiously oriented material discussing their
theological views. This paper will specifically examine this nexus – the use of the Internet by
Islamist political organizations in the Middle East in the countries of Jordan, Morocco and
Egypti.
Although a wide range of Islamist political organizations utilize the Internet as a forum to
publicize their views and create a national or international reputation, the methods and intentions
of these groups vary greatly and depend on the nature of the organization. This paper will
examine the use of the Internet by three ‘moderate’ Islamist parties: the Islamic Action Front in
2
Jordan, the Justice and Development Party in Morocco and the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt.
As these three parties have increased their political sophistication and reputation, both at home
and abroad, they have increasingly utilized the Internet for a variety of purposes. Ensimmäinen, Islamist
organizations have used the Internet as a contemporary extension of the public sphere, a sphere
through which parties frame, communicate and institutionalize ideas to a broader public.
Secondly, the Internet provides Islamist organizations an unfiltered forum through which
officials may promote and advertise their positions and views, as well as circumvent local media
restrictions imposed by the state. Lopuksi, the Internet allows Islamist organizations to present a
counterhegemonic discourse in opposition to the ruling regime or monarchy or on display to an
international audience. This third motivation applies most specifically to the Muslim
Veljeys, which presents a sophisticated English language website designed in a Western
style and tailored to reach a selective audience of scholars, politicians and journalists. The MB
has excelled in this so-called “bridgeblogging” 1 and has set the standard for Islamist parties
attempting to influence international perceptions of their positions and work. The content varies
between the Arabic and English versions of the site, and will be examined further in the section
on the Muslim Brotherhood. These three goals overlap significantly in both their intentions and
desired outcomes; kuitenkin, each goal targets a different actor: the public, the media, and the
regime. Following an analysis of these three areas, this paper will proceed into a case study
analysis of the websites of the IAF, the PJD and the Muslim Brotherhood.
1

Andrew Helms

Ikhwanweb

The end of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first saw a dissemination of the Internet as a center of communication, information, entertainment and commerce.

The spread of the Internet reached all four corners of the globe, connecting the researcher in Antarctica with the farmer in Guatemala and the newscaster in Moscow to the Bedouin in Egypt.

Through the Internet, the flow of information and real-time news reaches across continents, and the voices of subalternity have the potential to project their previously silenced voices through blogs, websites and social networking sites.

Political organizations across the left-right continuum have targeted the Internet as the political mobilizer of the future, and governments now provide access to historical documents, party platforms, and administrative papers through their sites. Eikä toisin kuin perinteisessä antisemitismin asiakirjassa esitetyt syytökset, religious groups display their beliefs online through official sites, and forums allow members from across the globe to debate issues of eschatology, orthopraxy and any number of nuanced theological issues.

Fusing the two, Islamist political organizations have made their presence known through sophisticated websites detailing their political platforms, relevant news stories, and religiously oriented material discussing their theological views. This paper will specifically examine this nexus – the use of the Internet by Islamist political organizations in the Middle East in the countries of Jordan, Marokko ja Egypti.

Although a wide range of Islamist political organizations utilize the Internet as a forum to publicize their views and create a national or international reputation, the methods and intentions of these groups vary greatly and depend on the nature of the organization.

This paper will examine the use of the Internet by three ‘moderate’ Islamist parties: the Islamic Action Front in Jordan, the Justice and Development Party in Morocco and the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. As these three parties have increased their political sophistication and reputation, both at home and abroad, they have increasingly utilized the Internet for a variety of purposes.

Ensimmäinen, Islamist organizations have used the Internet as a contemporary extension of the public sphere, a sphere through which parties frame, communicate and institutionalize ideas to a broader public.

Secondly, the Internet provides Islamist organizations an unfiltered forum through which officials may promote and advertise their positions and views, as well as circumvent local media restrictions imposed by the state.

Lopuksi, the Internet allows Islamist organizations to present a counterhegemonic discourse in opposition to the ruling regime or monarchy or on display to an international audience. This third motivation applies most specifically to the Muslim Brotherhood, which presents a sophisticated English language website designed in a Western style and tailored to reach a selective audience of scholars, politicians and journalists.

The MB has excelled in this so-called “bridgeblogging” 1 and has set the standard for Islamist parties attempting to influence international perceptions of their positions and work. The content varies between the Arabic and English versions of the site, and will be examined further in the section on the Muslim Brotherhood.

These three goals overlap significantly in both their intentions and desired outcomes; kuitenkin, each goal targets a different actor: the public, the media, and the regime. Following an analysis of these three areas, this paper will proceed into a case study analysis of the websites of the IAF, the PJD and the Muslim Brotherhood.

Islamilainen liikkeet Lähi-idässä: Egypti tapaustutkimuksena

ÖZLEM TÜR KAVLİ

Akef

The Islamic challenge remains a central issue within the ongoing debate on the nature of Middle East
politics. As the main opposition to government policies, the Islamic movements enjoy widespread
popularity, especially among the lower echelons of those populations —people who are
economically or politically alienated. Egypt has been a pioneer of Arab countries in many aspects of
taloudellinen, political and cultural development. It has also been the pioneer in the rise of Islamic
movements and the state’s fight with these groups. The aim of this paper is to look at Egypt as a case
study in Middle East’s Islamist movements in general.
The first part of this paper looks briefly at nineteenth century Islamic reformers who had an impact
on the development of modern Islamic movements. In the second part, the focus will be on the
formation of the Islamic movements and their cadres and main ideologies. The third part looks at
contemporary movements and their position in Egyptian society.
ISLAMIC REFORMISTS
Islamic reformism is a modern movement that came into the scene in the nineteenth century as a
reaction to European supremacy and expansion. It was during this period that Muslim religious
leaders and politicians began to realise that their state of affairs was inferior to that of Europe and
was in steady decline. Although Islam has suffered many defeats by Europeans, it was in the
nineteenth century that Muslims felt for the first time their weakness and decline and the need to
borrow from their ‘enemy’. This painful awareness made Muslim intellectuals think about the
defects and the weaknesses they were suffering from and they started to search for a remedy.1 On the
one hand, Islamic reformists embarked on studies of Europe’s pre-industrial phase in order to trace
ways of building a strong state and economy. On the other, they sought viable cultural paradigms
capable of checking the dominance of Europe. The Islamic reformist movement was an urban
movement and tried to establish strategies for the development of the Muslim world. The frustration
of the early reformists with the status quo did not entail a demonising of the West or even a rejection
of modernisation per se. In their quest for progress, Jamal Al-Din Al-Afghani and Mohammad
Abduh looked upon the West both as a model and as a rival. They perceived the challenge the
Umma, the Muslim community, was facing as shaped by a need to readjust their worldview to the
realities of the approaching new age. The Muslim people were given priority as citizens, whereas
Islam as a normative system “assumed the role of a defensive weapon that had to be restored in order
to stop deterioration and check the decline”.2 Rashid Rida had more radical views about society as
being corrupt and the heads of Arab states as being the apostates of Islam and he supported the
implementation of Koranic punishments. These three reformists desired to bring back the glory of
Islam by embracing ijtihad, rejecting the superstitions of popular religion and the stagnant thinking
of the ulama. They aimed at “creating a synthesis of Islam and the modern West rather than a
purified society constructed primarily along Islamic lines”.3 It is ironic that these reformists became
the founding ideologues of the Islamic movements that demand strictly purified Islamic
communities.

The Islamic challenge remains a central issue within the ongoing debate on the nature of Middle East politics. As the main opposition to government policies, the Islamic movements enjoy widespread popularity, especially among the lower echelons of those populations —people who are economically or politically alienated.

Egypt has been a pioneer of Arab countries in many aspects of economic, political and cultural development. It has also been the pioneer in the rise of Islamic movements and the state’s fight with these groups. The aim of this paper is to look at Egypt as a case study in Middle East’s Islamist movements in general.

The first part of this paper looks briefly at nineteenth century Islamic reformers who had an impact on the development of modern Islamic movements. In the second part, the focus will be on the formation of the Islamic movements and their cadres and main ideologies. The third part looks at contemporary movements and their position in Egyptian society.

ISLAMIC REFORMISTS

Islamic reformism is a modern movement that came into the scene in the nineteenth century as a reaction to European supremacy and expansion.

It was during this period that Muslim religious leaders and politicians began to realise that their state of affairs was inferior to that of Europe and was in steady decline. Although Islam has suffered many defeats by Europeans, it was in the nineteenth century that Muslims felt for the first time their weakness and decline and the need to borrow from their ‘enemy’.

This painful awareness made Muslim intellectuals think about the defects and the weaknesses they were suffering from and they started to search for a remedy.On the one hand, Islamic reformists embarked on studies of Europe’s pre-industrial phase in order to trace ways of building a strong state and economy. On the other, they sought viable cultural paradigms capable of checking the dominance of Europe.

The Islamic reformist movement was an urban movement and tried to establish strategies for the development of the Muslim world. The frustration of the early reformists with the status quo did not entail a demonising of the West or even a rejection of modernisation per se.

In their quest for progress, Jamal Al-Din Al-Afghani and Mohammad Abduh looked upon the West both as a model and as a rival. They perceived the challenge the Umma, the Muslim community, was facing as shaped by a need to readjust their worldview to the realities of the approaching new age.

The Muslim people were given priority as citizens, whereas Islam as a normative system “assumed the role of a defensive weapon that had to be restored in order to stop deterioration and check the decline”. Rashid Rida had more radical views about society as being corrupt and the heads of Arab states as being the apostates of Islam and he supported the implementation of Koranic punishments.

These three reformists desired to bring back the glory of Islam by embracing ijtihad, rejecting the superstitions of popular religion and the stagnant thinking of the ulama. They aimed at “creating a synthesis of Islam and the modern West rather than a purified society constructed primarily along Islamic lines”.

It is ironic that these reformists became the founding ideologues of the Islamic movements that demand strictly purified Islamic communities.

Muslimiveljeskunta Yhdysvalloissa

MBusThe leadership of the U.S. Muslimiveljeskunta (MB, or Ikhwan) has said that its goal
was and is jihad aimed at destroying the U.S. from within. The Brotherhood leadership has
also said that the means of achieving this goal is to establish Islamic organizations in the
USA. under the control of the Muslim Brotherhood. Since the early 1960s, the Brotherhood has
constructed an elaborate covert organizational infrastructure on which was built a set of public or
“front” organizations. The current U.S. Brotherhood leadership has attempted to deny this history,
both claiming that it is not accurate and at the same time that saying that it represents an older
form of thought inside the Brotherhood. An examination of public and private Brotherhood documents,
kuitenkin, indicates that this history is both accurate and that the Brotherhood has taken
no action to demonstrate change in its mode of thought and/or activity.sss

Steven MerleyMBus

The leadership of the U.S. Muslimiveljeskunta (MB, or Ikhwan) has said that its goal was and is jihad aimed at destroying the U.S. from within.

The Brotherhood leadership has also said that the means of achieving this goal is to establish Islamic organizations in the U.S. under the control of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Since the early 1960s, the Brotherhood has constructed an elaborate covert organizational infrastructure on which was built a set of public or “front” organizations.

The current U.S. Brotherhood leadership has attempted to deny this history, both claiming that it is not accurate and at the same time that saying that it represents an older form of thought inside the Brotherhood.

An examination of public and private Brotherhood documents, kuitenkin, indicates that this history is both accurate and that the Brotherhood has taken no action to demonstrate change in its mode of thought and/or activity.

Muslimiveljeskunta: Hasan al-Hudaybi ja ideologia

Hasan ISMA>il al-Hudaybi johdolla seura muslimiveljeskunnan aikana
kriisin aikana ja purkaminen. Menestyminen Hasan al-Banna ", joka perusti
and fi rst leader of the organisation, al-Hudaybi piti sen pään yli
kaksikymmentä vuotta. Aikana hänen johdollaan hän kohtasi ankaraa kritiikkiä muilta Brothers.
Vallankumouksen jälkeen heinäkuussa 1952, Hän oli vastakkain vihamielisyys
ja >Abd al-Nasir, joka tuli yhä infl uential ja neuvoston
johtava vapaa Offi sertifioitujen. >Abd al-Nasir päättäväisyyttä tyhjäksi syyn
Brotherhood ja sen infl uence yhteiskuntaan oli osa hänen polku ehdoton sääntö.
Koska merkit nen merkitys al-Hudaybi n vuoden johtajana muslimi
Veljeys, On hämmästyttävää, että on vähän tieteellistä työtä aiheesta.
Kun otetaan huomioon, että hänen kohtalainen ajatukset ovat edelleen vahvat infl uence
koskeva politiikka ja asenne nykypäivän muslimiveljeskunnan, g. Hänen sovitteleva
suhtautumisesta valtion järjestelmä ja hänen kumottu radikaaleja ajatuksia, siitä
että niin vähän huomiota on kiinnitetty hänen kirjallisesti on vielä hätkähdyttävä. Varmasti, siellä
on kiinnostunut Muslimiveljeskunta. On varsin laajat tutkimukset
saatavilla Hasan al-Banna ": perustaja ja ensin, johtaja muslimiveljeskunnan
on kuvattu malli fi Gure islamilaisen kampanjoinnin; muut kuvaavat
hänet alulle uhkaa poliittista aktivismi islamin nimissä. Ei
on ollut vielä kiinnostusta ajatuksia Sayyid Qutb; jotkut pitävät häntä
ideologi radikalismi, jonka käsitteet koulutettu ääriryhmiä; muut
kuvata häntä uhri vainoa, joka on kehittänyt teologia vapautumisen
vastauksena hänen pahoinpitelystä. Epäilemättä, on tärkeää tutkia
työtä näiden ajattelijoiden, jotta ymmärtäisimme virtauksia islamistisen ideologian ja
Islamistiset liikkeet. Riippumatta tuomio al-Banna ja Qutb, se on tosiasia
että tiettyjä ajatuksia kahden ajattelijat on sisällytetty nykypäivän
Muslimiveljeskunta. Kuitenkin, Tämä lähestymistapa on johtanut virheelliseen käsitykseen, että
islamilainen liike välttämättä radikaali sen ajattelu-ja / tai militantti sen
tekoja, oletus, joka on, viime vuosina, kyseenalaistaneet useita
oppineita, joukossa John L. Edwards, Fred Halliday, Francois Burgat, ja
Gudrun Krämer. 1 Seuraavat tutkimus Egyptin muslimiveljeskunnan alle
johtajuus Hasan al-Hudaybi muodostavat näiden lisäksi opinnäytetöitä, puuttua
ja arvioitava uudelleen näkökulmasta, että poliittinen islam on yhtenäinen lohko, kaiken kaikkiaan
suhtautuu väkivaltaisin keinoin.
2 Johdanto
On syitä, miksi al-Hudaybi tuskin mainitaan kirjallisuudessa
Muslimiveljeskunta. Ensin, että tulee mieleen, on havainto, että islamistinen
liikkeet ovat, mennessä määritellä nition, nähdään pohjimmiltaan radikaali, epädemokraattisen ja
anti-Länsi. Tämä päättely kysymykset eroa kohtalainen islamismin
ja sen radikaali vastine. Väite menee, että molemmat ovat tavoitteen
perustamisesta islamilaisen valtion järjestelmä, että ne molemmat on tarkoitus korvata nykyiset
maallisen hallinnon ja että ne siis eroavat toisistaan vain siinä, miten niiden menetelmien,
mutta ei periaatteessa. Tämä kirja, kuitenkin, selvästi liittyy tieteellisiä ympyrän
poliittisen islamin, which identifi es arguments such as these as neo-Orientalist. Koska
Esposito näyttää, Tämän lähestymistavan poliittisen islamin perustuu siihen, mitä hän ehdoin "maallinen
fundamentalismi ".
Ulkoista näkymää poliittisen islamin koskee lähinnä radikaali ajatus,
ja tämä voi johtua luominen, taholta valtapolitiikan, ja pelko
Islamin uskonto, joka on erilainen, outo ja näennäisesti vastustaa
Länsimaisen ajattelun. Vaihtoehtoisesti, syynä voi olla radikaali tai jopa aseellisten ryhmien
jatkuvasti esiintyy tiedotusvälineissä vuoksi niiden toimien. Itse asiassa, aktivisti
Islamistit itse hakea tällainen julkisuus. Vaikka radikaali ajatus ja militantti toiminta
olla tarpeen tutkia ääriryhmiä, keskitytään terrorismin nimissä
Islamin marginaalisia kohtalainen islamisteja. Se myös tekee vaikeita selittää
erot radikaali ja maltillinen islamismi. Voimassa, tieteellinen painopiste
on radikaali tai aseellisten ryhmien vahvistaa yleensä kielteinen yleinen käsitys
Islamin lännessä.
Toinen syy, miksi al-Hudaybi erityisesti ei ole tutkittu länsimaisten
tutkijat liittyy sisäisiin asioihin veljeskunnan. On hämmästyttävää,
että hänen nimensä ei mainita juurikaan kirjoittajat muslimiveljeskunnan
itse. Ei ole yksinkertaista selitystä. Yksi syy voi olla se, että jäsenet
korostaa erityisesti niiden myötätuntoa al-Banna ", kuvaavat häntä ihanteellinen
johtaja, joka kuoli hänen aktivisti tuomioita. Kuitenkin, niin monta Brothers kokeneet
vankeus, pakkotyötä ja jopa kidutuksen sisällä >Abd al-Nasir vankiloissa ja
leirit, heidän henkilökohtainen historiansa johtanut niukasti diskurssi Hasan
al-Hudaibiyah. Näin, on taipumus muistaa al-Hudaybi n ajan johtajuus
koska aika lähellä tappion ja hävittäminen. Edelleen, kokemuksia
vainotaan ovat kiinni epäselvä suhde unohtamatta ja uudelleenarviointi.
Monet henkilökohtaiset tilit aika on julkaistu luvun puolivälistä lähtien
1970s, 2 kertomisen tarinoita kidutuksen ja korostaa tiukkuutta uskon. Vain
muutamia kirjoja kirjoittanut muslimien Brothers ottamaan laajempaa lähestymistapaa, joka
sisältää keskustelua kriisin organisaation sisällä ja al-Hudaybi on osa
siinä. Ne tekijät, jotka eivät tämän kysymyksen ratkaisemiseksi ei ainoastaan paljastaa yhteiskunnan heikko
asemaa suhteessa muihin nähden >Abd al-Nasir, mutta myös paljastaa merkkejä hajoamisesta sisällä
Muslimiveljeskunta. 3 Tämä on johtanut erilaisiin asenteet al-Hudaybi, kanssa
Useimmissa kuvaamalla hänet epäpäteväksi johtaja puuttuu karismaattinen persoonallisuus
Hänen edeltäjänsä, al-Banna ". Erityisesti, häntä syytettiin ei käskevä
viranomainen yhdistää eri siivet muslimiveljeskunnan
tai antaa vahva asema suhteessa autoritaarisen valtiojärjestelmän. Vuonna
jälkimmäistä näkemystä sijaitsee epäselvyys, se näyttää näyttää al-Hudaybi ole yhtä
Johdanto 3
vika, mutta myös uhri poliittinen tilanne. Lopuksi, nämä tilit osoittavat
ideologinen ero, joka avattiin alussa vainon
1954. Jossain määrin, Sayyid Qutb fi lled tämän puutteen. Hänen vankeutta
hän kehitti radikaalin lähestymistavan, hylättiin sitten valtiojärjestelmän laittomina
ja "un-islamilaisen. Kehittäessään vallankumouksellinen käsite ja selittää siten
perustelut vainon, Hän kääntyi kunnon uhriksi
johonkin ylpeys. Näin, Hän antoi monta vangittiin muslimi Brothers, erityisesti
nuorten jäsenten, ideologia, että he voivat pitää kiinni.
On todettava, että al-Hudaybi ei reagoinut päättäväisesti tilanteeseen
sisäiseen kriisiin ja purkaminen. Todellakin, jossain määrin hänen epäröinti käynnistyvät
tämä tilanne. Tämä oli erityisen ilmeistä aikana vainon
(1954–71), kun hän on jättänyt anneta mitään auttaa selviytymään
tunne toivottomuuden tieteenalojen kehityksen >Abd al-Nasir painon vangitsemiset. Hänen
reaktio radikaaleja ajatuksia, joita fl ourished vankiloissa ja leireillä kesken
tiettyjen, Erityisesti nuorille, jäsenet tulivat melko myöhään. Vaikka sitten, hänen tieteellisiä ja
juridinen argumentointi ei ole sama lakaistaan vaikutus kuin Sayyid Qutb n
kirjoituksia. Vuonna 1969, al-Hudaybi ehdotti maltillinen käsite hänen kirjallisesti Du<klo
Qudat (Saarnaajat eivät tuomarit). 4 Tämä kirjallinen, joka oli salaa jaettu
keskuudessa mies Brothers, katsotaan ensin, merkittävä kumottu Sayyid
Qutb ideoita. 5 Qutb, joka hirtettiin 1966, silloin oli pidetty
marttyyri, hänen ajatuksensa jo nyt huomattava infl uence. Tämä ei tarkoita
että suurin osa muslimien Brothers ei harjoittamaan maltillista lähestymistapaa, mutta
suuntaviivojen puute jätti heidät soinniton ja vahvisti käsitystä al-Hudaybi
niin heikko johtaja.
Kuitenkin, al-Hudayb'is kohtalainen juuri ollut vaikutusta hänen kollegansa
Muslimi Brothers. Kun yleinen armahdus ja 1971, al-Hudaybi oli merkittävä
osa palauttamaan organisaation. Vaikka hän kuoli 1973, Hänen maltillinen
ja sovitteleva ideoita edelleen merkitystä. Se, että lähellä seuralaiset
such as Muhammad Hamid Abu Nasr, >Umar al-Tilmisani ja Muhammad
Mashhur, joka kuoli hiljattain, seurasi häntä johtajat osoittavat jatkumisen hänen
Vaikka. Lisäksi, Hänen poikansa Ma'mun al-Hudaybi on ollut merkittävä rooli
hänen ominaisuudessa veljeskunnan sihteeri ja tiedottaja. Toinen syy, miksi
hänen ajattelunsa oli tärkeää sijaitsee muuttunut suhtautuminen muslimien
Brotherhood koska Anwar al-Sadat puheenjohtajakaudella. Al-Sadat, joka onnistui >Abd
al-Nasir, vapautetaan vangitut veljet ja tarjosi järjestön puoli-oikeudellinen
joskaan ei virallisesti sesti tunnustettu asema. Kestäneen uudelleenjärjestelyn (1971–77) jälkeen,
jona hallitus nosti sensuroinnin kirjoittamia kirjoja
Muslimi Brothers. Monet muistelmat aiemmin vangittuna jäsenistä julkaistiin,
such as Zaynab al-Ghazali’s account or al-Hudaybi’s book Du<että anna Qudat
(Saarnaajat eivät tuomarit). Että menneisyyden käsitteleminen, näistä kirjoista ei ole vain säilyttää
muisto julmuuksista >Abd al-Nasir vainosta. Al-Sadat jälkeen
hänen omaa ohjelmaansa, kun hän saa nämä julkaisut fi ll markkinoille; Tämän
oli harkittu poliittinen salajuoni, mikä suunnanmuutosta ja pyritään
etäännyttää hallitus vanhasta uutta. Postuumisti julkaistu
al-Hudaybi kirjoituksia ei pelkästään tavoitteena on antaa ideologisen ohjauksen
4 Johdanto
muslimi Brothers; ne jaettaisiin koska heidän lausunnoistaan vastaan
radikaali ajatus, ja olivat siis käsitellä uusia ja kasvavia ongelmia, eli
perustaminen islamistiryhmät, joka alkoi fi GHT aktiivisesti vastaan
poliittisen järjestelmän 1970-luvun alussa. Näin mitattuna, Sekä<La Qudat edelleen
tärkeä kritiikin radikaalin ajattelun.
Hasan al-Hudaybi päätavoitteena oli muuttaa yhteiskuntaa, i. Egyptin yhteiskunnan,
joka, Hänen mielestään, ei ollut tietoinen poliittinen luonne islamilaisen uskon. Näin,
todellinen muutos voi saada aikaan ainoastaan luomalla tietoisuutta ja
ongelman ratkaisemiseksi on islamilainen identiteetti (toisin kuin Länsi käsitys). Vain
kehittämällä tunnetta islamilaisen tietoisuuden voisi lopullisena tavoitteena
luomista islamilaiseen yhteiskuntaan päästään. Koska tämä lähestymistapa, al-Hudaibiyah
kiisti vallankumouksellinen kaataa, vaan saarnaaminen asteittain kehittämiseen
sisällä. Tärkeä asia oli siis koulutuksen ja sosiaalisen osallistumisen, sekä
osallistuminen poliittiseen järjestelmään, houkutteleva avulla tehtävän ( ja<wa ) ja
tietoisuutta yksilöstä uskovan.
Tämä polku hänen nyt seuraa päivän Muslim Brotherhood, joka pyrkii
on tunnustettu poliittinen puolue ja joka infl uences poliittinen päätös
päätöksentekoa infi ltrating poliittisen osallistumisen rakenteiden (eduskunta, hallinto,
kansalaisjärjestöt). Tämä tutkimus muslimiveljeskunnan
1950 asti 1970-luvun alussa, vuoksi, ei ole vain pala tutkimusta
modernin poliittisen historian Egyptin ja analyysi uskonnollinen ideologia, mutta
Myös suhde nykyiseen politiikkaan.

Barbara HE. ZÖLLNER

HasanHasan Ismail al-Hudaybi led the Society of the Muslim Brotherhood during a time of crisis and dissolution. Menestyminen Hasan al-Banna ", who was the founder and first leader of the organisation, al-Hudaybi was to be its head for more than twenty years. Aikana hänen johdollaan hän kohtasi ankaraa kritiikkiä muilta Brothers.

Vallankumouksen jälkeen heinäkuussa 1952, he was pitted against the antagonism of Abd al-Nasir, who became increasingly infl uential in the council of leading Free Officers. Abd al-Nasir’s determination to thwart the cause of the Brotherhood and its infl uence on society was part of his path to absolute rule. Considering the signifi cance of al-Hudaybi’s years as leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, On hämmästyttävää, että on vähän tieteellistä työtä aiheesta.

When taking into account that his moderate ideas continue to have a strong infl uence on the policy and attitude of today’s Muslim Brotherhood, g. his conciliatory position towards the state system and his refutation of radical ideas, the fact that so little attention is paid to his writing is even more startling. Varmasti, there has been interest in the Muslim Brotherhood.

There are quite extensive studies available on Hasan al-Banna’: the founder and fi rst leader of the Muslim Brotherhood has been described as a model figure of Islamic campaigning; others depict him as the originator of threatening political activism in the name of Islam.

There has been even more interest in the ideas of Sayyid Qutb; some see him as the ideologue of Islamist radicalism, jonka käsitteet koulutettu ääriryhmiä; others describe him as a victim of state persecution who developed a theology of liberation in reaction to his maltreatment.

Epäilemättä, it is important to examine the work of these thinkers in order to understand currents of Islamist ideology and Islamist movements. Riippumatta tuomio al-Banna ja Qutb, it is a fact that certain ideas of the two thinkers have been incorporated into the modern-day Muslim Brotherhood.

Kuitenkin, this focus has led to an incorrect perception that the Islamic movement is necessarily radical in its thinking and/or militant in its deeds, oletus, joka on, viime vuosina, been questioned by a number of scholars, joukossa John L. Edwards, Fred Halliday, Francois Burgat, and Gudrun Krämer.

The following study of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood under the leadership of Hasan al-Hudaybi will form an addition to these theses, addressing and reassessing the viewpoint that political Islam is a monolithic block, all in all disposed towards violent means.

There are reasons why al-Hudaybi is hardly mentioned in the literature on the Muslim Brotherhood. The fi rst that comes to mind is the observation that Islamist movements are, mennessä määritellä nition, nähdään pohjimmiltaan radikaali, anti-democratic and anti-Western.

This reasoning questions any distinction between moderate Islamism and its radical counterpart. The argument goes that both have the objective of establishing an Islamic state system, that they both aim to replace existing secular governance and that they therefore differ only in the degree of their methods, mutta ei periaatteessa.

Tämä kirja, kuitenkin, clearly joins the scholarly circle on political Islam, which identifi es arguments such as these as neo-Orientalist. As Esposito shows, this approach to political Islam is based on what he terms ‘secular fundamentalism’.

Ulkoista näkymää poliittisen islamin koskee lähinnä radikaali ajatus, ja tämä voi johtua luominen, taholta valtapolitiikan, of a fear of Islam as a religion, joka on erilainen, outo ja näennäisesti vastustaa

Länsimaisen ajattelun. Vaihtoehtoisesti, it may be because radical or even militant groups are constantly appearing in the media by reason of their actions. Itse asiassa, militant Islamists actually seek such publicity.

While radical thought and militant action make it necessary to study extremist groups, the focus on terrorism in the name of Islam marginalises moderate Islamists.

It also makes it difficult to explain the differences between radical and moderate Islamism. Voimassa, the scholarly focus on radical or militant groups reinforces the generally negative public perception of Islam in the West.

A further reason why al-Hudaybi in particular has not been studied by Western scholars has to do with the internal affairs of the Brotherhood. It is astonishing that his name is not mentioned much by the writers of the Muslim Brotherhood itself. Ei ole yksinkertaista selitystä.

One reason may be that members particularly stress their sympathies for al-Banna’, depicting him as an ideal leader who died for his activist convictions. Kuitenkin, as many Brothers endured imprisonment, hard labour and even torture insideAbd al-Nasir’s prisons and camps, their personal histories have resulted in a dearth of discourse on Hasan al-Hudaybi.

Näin, there is a tendency to remember al-Hudaybi’s period of leadership as a time of near defeat and destruction. Edelleen, the experiences of the persecuted are caught in the ambiguous relationship between forgetting and reappraisal.

Many personal accounts of the time have been published since the mid 1970s, 2 kertomisen tarinoita kidutuksen ja korostaa tiukkuutta uskon. Only a few of the books written by Muslim Brothers take a broader approach, which includes discussion of a crisis within the organisation and of al-Hudaybi’s part therein. Those authors who do tackle this issue not only reveal the society’s weak position vis-à-vis Abd al-Nasir, mutta myös paljastaa merkkejä hajoamisesta sisällä

Muslimiveljeskunta. 3 Tämä on johtanut erilaisiin asenteet al-Hudaybi, with most portraying him as an incompetent leader lacking the charismatic personality of his predecessor, al-Banna ". Erityisesti, he was accused of not commanding the authority to bring together the different wings of the Muslim Brotherhood or to adopt a strong position in relation to the authoritarian state system.

In the latter view lies an ambiguity, for it would appear to show al-Hudaybi not just as a failure, mutta myös uhri poliittinen tilanne. Lopuksi, these accounts reveal an ideological gap which opened at the beginning of the period of persecution in 1954.

Jossain määrin, Sayyid Qutb fi lled tämän puutteen. During his imprisonment he developed a radical approach, rejecting the then state system as illegitimate and ‘un-Islamic’. In developing a revolutionary concept and explaining thereby the reasons underlying the persecution, he turned the condition of victimisation into one of pride.

Näin, Hän antoi monta vangittiin muslimi Brothers, particularly young members, ideologia, että he voivat pitää kiinni.

It has to be said that al-Hudaybi did not react decisively to the situation of internal crisis and dissolution. Todellakin, to a certain extent his indecisiveness triggered this situation.

Tämä oli erityisen ilmeistä aikana vainon (1954–71), when he omitted to provide any guidelines to help in overcoming the feeling hopelessness ushered in by Abd al-Nasir’s mass imprisonments. His reaction to the radical ideas which fl ourished in the prisons and camps among certain, Erityisesti nuorille, jäsenet tulivat melko myöhään.

Vaikka sitten, his scholarly and juridical argumentation did not have the same sweeping effect as Sayyid Qutb’s writings. Vuonna 1969, al-Hudaybi proposed a moderate concept in his writing Duat la Qudat (Saarnaajat eivät tuomarit).

Tämä kirjallinen, which was secretly distributed among fellow Brothers, is considered the fi rst substantial refutation of Sayyid Qutb’s ideas. 5 Qutb, joka hirtettiin 1966, was by then considered to be a martyr, hänen ajatuksensa jo nyt huomattava infl uence.

This does not mean that the majority of Muslim Brothers did not pursue a moderate approach, but the lack of guidelines left them voiceless and reinforced the perception of al-Hudaybi as a weak leader.

Kuitenkin, al-Hudayb’is moderate thought had an impact on his fellow Muslim Brothers. Kun yleinen armahdus ja 1971, al-Hudaybi played a major part in the re-establishment of the organisation. Vaikka hän kuoli 1973, his moderate and conciliatory ideas continued to be relevant.

The fact that close companions such as Muhammad Hamid Abu Nasr, Umar al-Tilmisani and Muhammad Mashhur, joka kuoli hiljattain, succeeded him as leaders shows the continuance of his thought.

Lisäksi, his son Ma’mun al-Hudaybi has played a major role in his capacity as the Brotherhood’s secretary and spokesman.

Another reason why his thinking became important lies in the changed attitude towards the Muslim Brotherhood since Anwar al-Sadat’s presidency. Al-Sadat, who succeeded Abd al-Nasir, released the imprisoned Brothers and offered the organisation a half-legal though not offi cially recognised status.

Kestäneen uudelleenjärjestelyn (1971–77) jälkeen, during which the government lifted the censorship of books written by Muslim Brothers. Monet muistelmat aiemmin vangittuna jäsenistä julkaistiin, such as Zaynab al-Ghazali’s account or al-Hudaybi’s book Du<että anna Qudat (Saarnaajat eivät tuomarit).

Että menneisyyden käsitteleminen, these books did not merely preserve the memory of the cruelties of Abd al-Nasir’s persecution.

Al-Sadat followed his own agenda when he allowed these publications to fi ll the market; this was a deliberate political stratagem, implying a change of direction and aimed at distancing the new government from the old.

The posthumous publication of al-Hudaybi’s writings was not merely aimed at providing ideological guidance to the Muslim Brothers; they were distributed because of their statements against radical thought, ja olivat siis käsitellä uusia ja kasvavia ongelmia, namely the establishment of Islamist groups, which began to fi ght actively against the political system in the early 1970s. Näin mitattuna, Duat la Qudat remains an important critique of radical thought.

Hasan al-Hudaybi päätavoitteena oli muuttaa yhteiskuntaa, i. Egyptin yhteiskunnan, joka, Hänen mielestään, ei ollut tietoinen poliittinen luonne islamilaisen uskon. Näin, real change could only be brought about through creating awareness and by tackling the issue of Islamic identity (toisin kuin Länsi käsitys).

Only through developing a sense of Islamic consciousness could the ultimate goal of the establishment of an Islamic society be reached. Koska tämä lähestymistapa, al-Hudaybi refuted revolutionary overthrow, instead preaching gradual development from within. Tärkeä asia oli siis koulutuksen ja sosiaalisen osallistumisen, as well as participation in the political system, houkutteleva avulla tehtävän ( Dawa ) to the consciousness of the individual believer.

Tämä polku hänen nyt seuraa päivän Muslim Brotherhood, which endeavors to be recognised as a political party and which infl uences political decision making by infi ltrating the political participatory structures (eduskunta, hallinto, kansalaisjärjestöt).

This study of the Muslim Brotherhood from the 1950s until the early 1970s, vuoksi, is not only a piece of research into the modern political history of Egypt and an analysis of a religious ideology, but has also a relationship to current politics.

Goldstone Raportti Israelin sota Gazassa

Goldstone in Gaza

1. On 3 April 2009, the President of the Human Rights Council established the United Nations
Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict with the mandate “to investigate all violations of
international human rights law and international humanitarian law that might have been
committed at any time in the context of the military operations that were conducted in Gaza
during the period from 27 Joulukuu 2008 ja 18 January 2009, whether before, during or
after.”
2. The President appointed Justice Richard Goldstone, former judge of the Constitutional Court
of South Africa and former Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunals for the former
Yugoslavia and Rwanda, to head the Mission. The other three appointed members were:
Professor Christine Chinkin, Professor of International Law at the London School of Economics
and Political Science, who was a member of the high-level fact-finding mission to Beit Hanoun
(2008); Ms. Hina Jilani, Advocate of the Supreme Court of Pakistan and former Special
Representative of the Secretary-General on the situation of human rights defenders, who was a
member of the International Commission of Inquiry on Darfur (2004); and Colonel Desmond
Travers, a former Officer in Ireland’s Defence Forces and member of the Board of Directors of
the Institute for International Criminal Investigations.
3. As is usual practice, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
(OHCHR) established a secretariat to support the Mission.
4. The Mission interpreted the mandate as requiring it to place the civilian population of the
region at the centre of its concerns regarding the violations of international law.
5. The Mission convened for the first time in Geneva between 4 ja 8 May 2009. Lisäksi,
the Mission met in Geneva on 20 May, on 4 ja 5 Heinäkuu, and between 1 ja 4 Elokuu 2009. The
Mission conducted three field visits: two to the Gaza Strip between 30 May and 6 June, ja
between 25 June and 1 Heinäkuu 2009; and one visit to Amman on 2 ja 3 Heinäkuu 2009. Several staff of

1. On 3 April 2009, the President of the Human Rights Council established the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict with the mandate “to investigate all violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law that might have been committed at any time in the context of the military operations that were conducted in Gaza during the period from 27 Joulukuu 2008 ja 18 January 2009, whether before, during or after.”

2. The President appointed Justice Richard Goldstone, former judge of the Constitutional Court of South Africa and former Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, to head the Mission. The other three appointed members were Professor Christine Chinkin, Professor of International Law at the London School of Economics and Political Science, who was a member of the high-level fact-finding mission to Beit Hanoun (2008); Ms. Hina Jilani, Advocate of the Supreme Court of Pakistan and former Special Representative of the Secretary-General on the situation of human rights defenders, who was a member of the International Commission of Inquiry on Darfur (2004); and Colonel Desmond Travers, a former Officer in Ireland’s Defence Forces and member of the Board of Directors of the Institute for International Criminal Investigations.

3. As is usual practice, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) established a secretariat to support the Mission.

4. The Mission interpreted the mandate as requiring it to place the civilian population of the region at the centre of its concerns regarding the violations of international law.

5. The Mission convened for the first time in Geneva between 4 ja 8 May 2009. Lisäksi, the Mission met in Geneva on 20 May, on 4 ja 5 Heinäkuu, and between 1 ja 4 Elokuu 2009. The Mission conducted three field visits: two to the Gaza Strip between 30 May and 6 June, and between 25 June and 1 Heinäkuu 2009; and one visit to Amman on 2 ja 3 Heinäkuu 2009. Several staff ofthe Mission’s secretariat were deployed in Gaza from 22 May to 4 Heinäkuu 2009 to conduct field investigations.

6. Notes verbales were sent to all Member States of the United Nations and United Nations organs and bodies on 7 May 2009. On 8 June 2009 the Mission issued a call for submissions inviting all interested persons and organizations to submit relevant information and documentation to assist in the implementation of its mandate.

7. Public hearings were held in Gaza on 28 ja 29 June and in Geneva on 6 ja 7 Heinäkuu 2009.

8. The Mission repeatedly sought to obtain the cooperation of the Government of Israel. After numerous attempts had failed, the Mission sought and obtained the assistance of the Government of Egypt to enable it to enter the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing.

9. The Mission has enjoyed the support and cooperation of the Palestinian Authority and of the Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations. Due to the lack of cooperation from the Israeli Government, the Mission was unable to meet members of the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. The Mission did, kuitenkin, meet officials of the Palestinian Authority, including a cabinet minister, in Amman. During its visits to the Gaza Strip, the Mission held meetings with senior members of the Gaza authorities and they extended their full cooperation and support to the Mission.

10. Subsequent to the public hearings in Geneva, the Mission was informed that a Palestinian participant, Mr. Muhammad Srour, had been detained by Israeli security forces when returning to the West Bank and became concerned that his detention may have been a consequence of his appearance before the Mission. The Mission is in contact with him and continues to monitor developments.