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Cover image for The muslim brotherhood : Hasan Al-Hudaybi and ideology
Title:
The muslim brotherhood : Hasan Al-Hudaybi and ideology
Personal Author:
Series:
Routledge studies in political Islam
Publication Information:
New York : Routledge, 2009
Physical Description:
202 p. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780415435574

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30000010219072 BP10.J383 Z64 2009 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

The Muslim Brotherhood is one of the most influential Islamist organisations today. Based in Egypt, its network includes branches in many countries of the Near and Middle East. Although the organisation has been linked to political violence in the past, it now proposes a politically moderate ideology.

The book provides an in-depth analysis of the Muslim Brotherhood during the years of al-Hudaybi's leadership, and how he sought to steer the organization away from the radical wing, inspired by Sayyid Qutb, into the more moderate Islamist organization it is today. It is his legacy which eventually fostered the development of non-violent political ideas.

During the years of persecution, 1954 to 1971, radical and moderate Islamist ideas emerged within the Brotherhood's midst. Inspired by Sayyid Qutb's ideas, a radical wing evolved which subsequently fed into radical Islamist networks as we know them today. Yet, it was during the same period that al-Hudaybi and his followers proposed a moderate political interpretation, which was adopted by the Brotherhood and which forms its ideological basis today.


Author Notes

Barbara Zollner is Associate Lecturer in Islamic Studies, Birkbeck College


Table of Contents

Acknowledgementsp. ix
Introductionp. 1
1 The Muslim Brotherhood during the years 1949-73p. 9
1.1 The Brotherhood in disarray: the legacy of Hasan al-Bannap. 9
1.2 The struggle for new leadership: al-Hudaybi and his competitorsp. 16
1.3 The Brotherhood and the Revolution: cooperation, contention, clashp. 25
1.4 The time of persecution: dissolved but not dispelledp. 36
2 The discourse of the prison years: radical ideas and moderate responsesp. 50
2.1 The discourse of the prison years: radical ideas and moderate responsesp. 50
2.2 Qutbists and their world-viewp. 55
3 Preachers not Judgesp. 64
3.1 Text, composition and authorshipp. 64
3.2 The Ultimate Question: Muslim or Kafir?p. 71
3.3 Sin and crimep. 86
3.4 Shari'a - divine law or human construct?p. 97
3.5 The theology of an Islamic governmentp. 106
3.6 Obedience or opposition?p. 129
Conclusionp. 146
Notesp. 152
Bibliographyp. 185
Indexp. 199
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