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Geopolítica e Política

Lusa - Lusística - Mundial

Geopolítica e Política

Lusa - Lusística - Mundial

Guerra de Palma • Palma’s War

05.04.21 | Duarte Pacheco Pereira

Guerra de Palma • Palma’s War

 

A insurreição islâmica em Moçambique é um conflito em curso na província de Cabo Delgado, em Moçambique, entre militantes islâmicos que pretendem estabelecer um Estado islâmico em Moçambique e as forças de segurança moçambicanas. O conflito também inclui os ataques contra civis. Suspeita-se que grupos de bandidos armados tenham também aproveitado a confusão a seu favor.
Origem: Wikipédia, a enciclopédia livre. Esta página foi editada pela última vez às 04h49min de 4 de abril de 2021.

 

The Insurgency in Cabo Delgado is an ongoing conflict in Cabo Delgado Province, Mozambique, mainly fought between Islamist militants attempting to establish an Islamic state in the region, and Mozambican security forces. Civilians have been the main targets of attacks by Islamist militants. The main insurgent faction is Ansar al-Sunna, a native extremist faction with tenuous international connections. From mid-2018, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) has allegedly become active in northern Mozambique as well, and claimed its first attack against Mozambican security forces in June 2019. In addition, bandits have exploited the rebellion to carry out raids. The insurgency is thought to be intensifying, as in the first half of 2020 there were nearly as many attacks carried out as in the whole of 2019.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. This page was last edited on 4 April 2021, at 21:39 (UTC).

 

 

O Moçambique é a Nova Frente na “Guerra ao Terror” dos EUA

 

O Moçambique é
a Nova Frente na “Guerra ao Terror” dos EUA

A insurgência do Ansar Al-Suna, em Cabo Delgado, levou o governo moçambicano a uma dura e sangrenta guerra antiterrorista. Sem sucesso, Moçambique agora pede ajuda aos EUA que já enviaram forças especiais para a região. Mas o interesse principal dos EUA, na verdade, é combater a influência chinesa nessa parte da África e impedir a integração dos países da região na Iniciativa Cinturão & Rota.

Andrew Korybko • Nova Resistência • 04 de Abril de 2021

Muitos observadores perderam a designação, no início de março, do “Al Shabaab” moçambicano, pelos EUA, como uma organização terrorista global afiliada ao ISIS e seu subsequente envio de cerca de uma dúzia de Boinas Verdes ao país para ajudar os militares nacionais em suas operações antiterroristas, mas este desenvolvimento sinaliza que o Estado sul-africano se tornou a mais nova frente na “Guerra Global contra o Terror” dos EUA.

A mais nova frente dos EUA em sua “Guerra Global contra o Terror” foi oficialmente aberta no estado sul-africano do Moçambique após a designação pelo Departamento de Estado, no início de março, do “Al Shabaab” do país como uma organização terrorista global filiada ao ISIS e o subseqüente envio de cerca de uma dúzia de Boinas Verdes para ajudar as forças armadas nacionais em suas operações antiterroristas. Muitos observadores perderam esses desenvolvimentos, talvez por estarem muito ocupados prestando atenção às últimas reviravoltas do que descrevo como a Guerra Mundial C, ou a tentativa descoordenada do mundo de conter a COVID-19, que catalisou processos de mudança de paradigma de amplo espectro em todas as esferas da vida. Eu adverti em setembro passado que “Moçambique pode exigir assistência militar estrangeira para limpar o seu caos causado pelas guerras híbridas” depois que ficou claro que o país não poderia enfrentar esta tarefa urgente por si só, nem seus parceiros militares privados contratados (PMC) foram suficientemente capazes para este fim. Essa previsão acabou se concretizando em março.

Texto integral aqui.

 

 

Mozambique’s The Newest Front In The US’ So-Called Global War On Terror

 

Mozambique’s The Newest Front
In The US’ So-Called Global War On Terror

Many observers missed the US’ designation in early March of Mozambique’s “Al Shabaab” as an ISIS-affiliated global terrorist organization and its subsequent dispatch of roughly a dozen Green Berets to the country to aid the national military in its counter-terrorist operations, but this development signals that the Southern African state has importantly become the newest front in America's “Global War On Terror”.

Andrew Korybko • OneWorld • March 30, 2021

The US’ newest front in its “Global War On Terror” has officially opened in the Southern African state of Mozambique following the State Department's designation in early March of the country's “Al Shabaab” as an ISIS-affiliated global terrorist organization and the subsequent dispatch of roughly a dozen Green Berets there to aid the national military in its counter-terrorist operations. Many observers missed these developments, perhaps because they were too busy paying attention to the latest twists and turns of what I describe as World War C, or the world's uncoordinated attempt to contain COVID-19 which catalyzed full-spectrum paradigm-changing processes across every sphere of life. I warned last September that “Mozambique Might Require Foreign Military Assistance To Clean Up Its Hybrid War Mess” after it became clear that the country couldn't tackle this pressing task on its own, nor were its previously reported private military contractor (PMC) partners able to sufficiently assist it to this end. That prediction ultimately came to pass in March.

Full text here.

 

 

 

 

FIM • END

 

Donkey's Return

04.04.21 | Duarte Pacheco Pereira

Donkey's Return

Based on DonkeyHotey’s “Obama Biden 2012” cartoon.

 

 

The Return of the Democrats

and the Undead Past


By Martin Sief at Strategic Culture Foundation on November 2, 2020.

The partisan swallowing of ridiculous anti-Russia conspiracy theories by Democrats in Congress added to Hunter Biden’s truly sleazy business adventures in Ukraine have created an exceptionally dangerous brew to threaten and demonize Russia if former Vice President Joe Biden wins the U.S. national election on November 3. All the curses and bungles of America’s past 20 years will rise up anew to threaten the nation’s entire future.

If Joe Biden wins the election, we face an unprecedented situation in U.S. and global affairs since the beginning of the Atomic Age in 1945-49:

The problem is far deeper and more dangerous than any personal problem with Biden or his apparently sleazy son (Hunter Biden’s business dealings with both Ukraine and China cry out for serious honest congressional inquiries in the interests of sane and disinterested U.S. future relations with China and Ukraine – as well as with Russia.)

The real problem is that for eight years the Obama administration, in which Joe Biden was the putative Number Two figure engaged on a Helter-Skelter, crazed descent towards mindless confrontation with Russia and also institutionalized a reckless and plain wicked policy of toppling governments around the world in straight defiance of international law.

The true architect of these policies was neither Obama nor Biden but their first secretary of state Hillary Clinton. It was she who ordered the CIA to collect DNA samples of Latin American national leaders, an unprecedented seven of whom contracted cancers, some of them exceptionally rare and virulent, including two democratically elected presidents of Brazil and the late democratically elected president of Venezuela Hugo Chavez who died of his.

Clinton also unleashed the dogs of chaos and war across the Middle East by approving the undermining and successful toppling of the government of Libya and the undermining although unsuccessful efforts to topple the government of Syria. This unleashed a ferocious civil war, the greatest catastrophe the Middle East has seen since Iraq’s attack on Iran in 1980, also at the time recklessly supported by an ignorant and incompetent president Jimmy Carter.

Carter, like Obama after him was ludicrously ignorant of international affairs. Both presidents allowed themselves to be led by the nose through the region by Zbigniew Brzezinski who served as Carter’s national security adviser. Brzezinski’s eagerness to embrace and support the very worst Islamist genocidal extremist groups was exceeded only by his lifelong, unwavering hatred of Russia and all Russians.

Clinton was succeeded as secretary of state in Obama’s second term starting in January 2013 by a far more experienced, restrained and responsible figure, Senator John Kerry. Kerry rightly worked hard and well with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to prevent the reckless and destructive policies of the rest of the administration from totally destroying constructive communications between Washington and Moscow.

But Kerry could not control even his own State Department. He proved utterly unable to rein in the neo-conservative and neo-liberal super-hawks with whom Clinton had seeded the State Department led by Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Victoria Nuland. They joined forces with crazed right wing warmongers like the late Senator John McCain (now sanctified, but whose uncontrollable screaming rages were legendary in his days on Capitol Hill).

Together with ambitious plotters in the European Commission in Brussels they manipulated the toppling of the stable, democratically elected government of Ukraine in the 2014 violent Maidan coup in Kiev. McCain and Nuland actually addressed the violent revolutionaries and openly exhorted them to topple their own democratic and previously peaceful government.

The Kremlin moved – in reality with careful and considered restraint – to safeguard the democratically expressed wishes of the population of Crimea to rejoin Russia, and of the Russian ethnic majorities in the eastern provinces of Ukraine. But the Obama administration joined forces with the openly neo-Nazi movements that had seized undemocratic control in Kiev.

Over the following six years to the present, successive U.S. congresses have voted enormous sums of financial aid and sophisticated weapons systems to be sent to Ukraine with the express purpose of killing Russian soldiers and Russian-supported forces. It is no wonder that false and entirely undocumented reverse accusations have now been against Russia by the very same individuals who have supported the forces of violence, revolution and aggression for so long in Ukraine.

President Donald Trump, to his great credit, ran on for election in 2016 on a policy of reducing tensions with Russia and restoring a state of stable coexistence with the other main thermonuclear power on the planet. At no point did he advocate stripping the United States of its defenses.

On the contrary, Trump doubled up on Obama’s unprecedented more than $1 trillion nuclear weapons modernization program. He expanded spending on both conventional and strategic weapons on the biggest scale seen since the Reagan-Caspar Weinberger buildup 40 years before.

Nevertheless, Trump was then subjected to the most unfounded, ridiculous political witch hunt against a sitting national leader in U.S. history – at least since President John Kennedy was openly and repeatedly accused of treason for seeking to reduce the dangers of nuclear confrontation after the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Through all of this, hatred and unreasoning accusations against Russia were accompanied by attempted efforts even to destroy the property and economic security of the Russian people. Congress imposed punitive sanctions (they failed completely) with Democrats taking the lead.

Why revisit all this history? It is because, as the great and wise American novelist William Faulkner understood, “The past is not dead. In fact, it’s not even past.”

If the Democrats regain power in Washington, they will return with all the dire and insanely dangerous policies and obsessions they displayed for eight years under Obama and Biden. But those hatreds and prejudices will be superheated by four years of Russiagate fantasies and raving accusations against Russia unsupported by any serious evidence. Indeed, they have been coolly exposed and refuted indeed by many courageous and principled former senior U.S. officials and scholars.

Nevertheless, this Undead Past will rise up, more terrible and destructive than any fantasy of werewolves and zombies, to demolish our Present and horrifically curse our Future.

 

 

 

 

END

 

Decapitadores e Sunitas

03.04.21 | Duarte Pacheco Pereira

Theological Context: Situating al-Qa’ida

Theological Context: Situating al-Qa’ida 
Third poster in “Conceptual frameworks for understanding global jihadism

 

Distinguindo os actuais grupos violentos do Sunismo histórico

Ao contrário da crença popular o Islão Sunita é uma tradição histórica estabelecida, com marcadores de identidade característicos e princípios internos coerentes.

Aos olhos de um leigo esta afirmação pode parecer incongruente com a realidade pois podemos observar uma larga variedade de grupos – dos Jiadistas fanáticos e cortadores-de-cabeças aos Dervixes rodopiantes da Ordem Sufi Mevlevi – que têm muito pouco em comum para além do facto de se afirmarem Sunitas.

Mas a verdade é que uma tradição historicamente cristalizada – originalmente na primeira linha da modelação da história Islâmica – não perde necessariamente nem aceitação nem identidade substancial só porque algum filho degenerado de uma ideologia pós-moderna a sequestra e afirma ser o seu porta-bandeira.

Não importa quantos grupos se auto-proclamem Sunitas, se não tiverem as características essenciais de Sunismo histórico, não passarão de impostores vociferantes.

Se o colocar a palavra “federal” antes do nome de um negócio não o transforma em algo de governamentalmente aprovado, porque é que o facto de o ISIS, por exemplo, que se auto-denominar de “Sunita” deve ser considerado uma inquestionável e legítima reivindicação?

 

Amir Abdul Qadir

Amir Abdul Qadir

 

Superficiality as a Path to God: 
on conflating contemporary violent groups with historical Sunnism

Anwar Khan • The Vineyard of the Saker • September 26, 2016 • Original text and readers' comments here

Note by the Saker: I was recently contacted by a reader of this blog who, while praising the overall contents of the blog, also expressed regret at what he perceived was a pro-Shia bias resulting from what, both my correspondent and I agreed, were a number of objective circumstances, including many legitimate ones. Still, my correspondent expressed regret at this bias and I decided to offer him a chance to present his point of view on historical Sunnism. He kindly accepted and we have agreed that I would post here a 3-part series on historical Sunnism, the first one posted today. I am deeply grateful to Anwar for the opportunity to educate me and many others on historical Sunnism and to help us all to better appreciate the immense diversity and richness of traditional Islam (as opposed to the maniacal takfirism of the liver-eating “moderate terrorists” of Daesh & Co.).

My purpose in regularly posting contributions by Muslim authors is not to side with any group nor to endorse any Islamic sect or even Islam as a whole. My main goal is to debunk the crude and sophomoric depiction of Islam constantly instilled by the AngloZionists propaganda machine into the minds of western people. Ignorance and bigotry are never virtues, while understanding is distinct from endorsement and is even required to intelligently disagree with somebody.

It goes without saying that I invite members of other branches of Islam to present their own views on the topics discussed here.

The Saker

 

Superficiality as a Path to God:
on conflating contemporary violent groups with historical Sunnism

by Anwar Khan

Sunnī Islam is an established historical tradition with distinctive identity markers and coherent internal principles, contrary to popular belief. To the untrained eye that statement may look incongruent with perceived reality as one finds a spectrum of groups, from head-chopping Jihadi zealots to whirling dervishes of the Mevlavi Sufi Order who have very little in common other than the fact that both claim to be Sunnīs. But the fact remains that a historically crystallized tradition — primarily at the forefront of shaping Islamic history — does not necessarily lose currency and essential identity just because some bastard of post-modern ideology hijacks it and claims to be its flag bearer. No matter how many groups call themselves Sunnī, if they lack the essential features of historical Sunnīsm, then they are nothing more than sloganeers. If putting the name “federal” before a business does not make it government sanctioned, then why should ISIS, for example, calling itself “Sunnī” become, unquestionably, a legitimate claim? Which brings us to the following questions:

A) What are those essential features or principles that define Sunnīsm?

B) If there are such principles, then who determines them or in another words who speaks for Sunnī Islam?

C) And why is so much violence is perpetuated in the name of Sunnī Islam, as compared to other narratives within Islam because after all the Talebān, Al Qaʿida, ISIS, Muslim Brotherhood, Boko Haram, Al Shabāb, Abu Sayāf, among others, all claim to be Sunnīs?

But before we delve into these very crucial questions, we need to take a short historical and theological detour to bring some important issues — like some terms and nomenclatures — to the forefront. For without this, I do not think we can properly understand the challenges and complexities that this article will try to shed some light on. Most contemporary problems have their roots in historical developments. Knowing it to some degree is what differentiates a truth-seeker from partisan troll.

Caveat

I will not be going over the essentials of the Islamic faith as most of the readers will (or perhaps should) already have some prior knowledge of it. The purpose of this essay is to remove some very common-held misunderstandings regarding Sunni Islam — something I find even among my respected fellow truth seekers (in the alternative media world) and otherwise cautious observers, who often fall to “Sunnism, somehow, fosters violent tendencies” meme, without really understanding what “Sunnīsm” is all about.

Also, this is not an apologia for Sunnī Islam as the only form of Islam (but this does not mean that I hold all forms to be of equal value — a Free Mason vision responsible for the modern ecumenical movements). This much should be clear to even a passive reader. Islam as a religion has two major narratives within it that have dominated the rest from its early inception to our times. They are the Sunnī and Shiʿa narratives. (Both contain within them many splinter narratives which share some main features with the original school but also certain distinguishing characteristics which have led them to open their own shop after being marginalized by the mainstream). Within these two, the Sunnī narrative has been the dominant version in most Muslims lands, amongst the most Muslims, for most of the time. In other words, the Sunnis have been — until not too long ago — the real movers and shakers of Islamic history.

Nomenclature. What’s in a name?

Traditionally the Sunnis call themselves Ahl ul Sunnah wa al Jama’a (The People of Approved Way and the Group). It is important to understand why this name was chosen by the early mainstream Muslim generations to identify and distinguish themselves. Its not clear who or exactly at what point this name was officially adopted, but it is safe to say that two major schisms within the house of Islam in the decades following the death of the Prophet Muhammad (Peace and Blessings be upon him, hereby PBUH‎)[1], played a role in the adoption of this name, which continues to be used to this day.[2] Interestingly, before these schisms the word Sunni was not used. The first schism was the Shia challenge to the Muslim majority’s consensus on the validity of Khilāfa (literally: vicegerency, but in technical usage, ultimate spiritual and political authority) outside the Family of the Prophet PBUH‎.[3] In other words meritocracy superseded genealogy as the defining guide in leadership selection.

Though made into a much contentious issue after the fact, at the time, the passing of religious authority to someone other than the Prophet’s PBUH‎ family was not considered to be a matter calling for theological scrutiny by the overwhelming majority — the Group — of the Prophet’s Companions (ṣahāba) in the light of the fact that no clear instruction was left by the Prophet PBUH‎ on an issue no less important as Khilāfa despite being, otherwise, extremely detail oriented in his instructions even in the most mundane of undertakings like proper usage of a tooth brush (miswāk) and proper etiquettes of relieving oneself.[4]

The issue of Khilāfa, though political at first, become theological much later under the sway of rational scholasticism or Kalām — influenced by Greek dialectic philosophy — that was finding increasing currency among both the Sunni and Shiʿa hermeneutics as the result of Muslim expansion and contact with new people and dogmas. Now the debates where not so much about whether the Prophet PBUH‎ left a historical record about his will on the succession issue but rather whether is it rationally valid that an Ummah (Community) founded by an infallible Prophet can be lead by a fallible successor? How can the nature of things be truly known if infallibility — hitherto an attribute of Prophethood only — is not a condition anymore? What other sources, other than Divine Scripture, can be relied upon to deduce valid judgments? Is the intellect by itself reliable? How about the moral compass of the majority, that is, the consensus? Is there only one right way of doing something in the sight of God or variance in understanding and approach is equally valid? Can error be avoided in creed at all times?

The Shiʿa opinion — vis a vis succession to the Prophet, PBUH‎ — slowly crystallized into the view that the successor to the Prophet had to be infallible or else attaining Divine guidance is akin to shooting in the dark. And this infallibility — maintained the Shia scribes — is only limited to the Ahl al Bayt — the progeny of the Prophet Muhammad PBUH‎ through his only surviving daughter, Fatima, our Lady of Blessed memory. Therefore the ultimate spiritual authority or the Imāma (a term mostly used by the Shias) had to be from the Prophet’s family. How these conclusions were rationalized are beyond the scope of this short article. (A good introductory read in this and other related issues is The Emergence of Shiism and Shiites by Ayatollah Sayyid Muhammad Baqir al ṣadr. It exists in an English translation)

The Sunni narrative, on the other hand, arrived at substantially different conclusions. Again, the technicalities are beyond the scope of this article, but what is important to our purpose is that the mainstream narrative, while refusing to extend the principle of infallibility to any human agency other than the Prophets — of whom Muhammad PBUH‎ was the last — nonetheless reserved it for the the community as a whole [5]. In other words while individual Muslims — whether from the Ahl al Bayt or otherwise —, small groups and minorities could make error in creed, the majority of Muslims, as represented by their scholarly community, are immune from error (We will talk more about this scholarly community later because understanding this is at the crux of conflating traditional Sunnis with latter-day claimers like the Wahhabis). Some of the following Quran verses and statements of the Prophet PBUH‎, among many others, made a strong impression on the early Muslims regarding the sanctity of unity and avoidance of divisions :

“Be not like those who are divided amongst themselves and fall into disputations after receiving Clear Signs: For them is a dreadful penalty.” (3:105).[6]

“And (He commands you, saying): This is My straight path, so follow it. Follow not other ways, lest you be parted from His way. This hath He ordained for you, that you may ward off (evil).” (6:153).[7]

“Indeed Allah will not allow the consensus of my community to agree on an error. God’s hand (vote) is with the consensus, and whoever deviates, deviates to destruction.” (Reported in Tirmidhī, Bayhaqī and Hākim).[8]

“Whoever deviates from the group (consensus), he dies the death of the Age of Ignorance."— Ibn Umar’s famous narration found in Sahih Bukhari.[9]

The Sunnī mainstream’s inclusion of the scholarly consensus (build on the basis of the consensus of the Companions of the Prophet PBUH‎ ) as a valid source of knowledge in matters of religion is a defining feature that sets them apart from the Shiʿas, finding itself even in their official name — the People of Approved Way and the Group.

While the people of the Group—consensus of the Companionswas to distinguish them from the Shiʿa thought that was forming slowly among some segments of Muslim populace — but far from being a real threat and far from having the coherence that its proponents claimed for it in following centuries — the people of Approved Way was to distinguish the traditional Sunnis from a different type of challenge — the Muʾtazila sedition — which would almost have proved fatal to traditional Sunnism had it not been for the the efforts of one man, Abu al Hasan al Ashʿarī, to defeat it. The Muʿtazila controversy — though started somewhat innocuously around the 8th century and limited to some segments of Muslim intelligentsia, and treated as a minor nuance on the margins by the mainstream — gained crucial momentum and state support under the Abbasid Caliph Maʿmun. The Muʿtazila creed was heavily influenced by Greek philosophy (as were some of the Abbasid Caliphs) and saw Revelation in the light of a crude rationalism. Anything they considered irrational had to be downgraded from having having a “literal” meaning to being merely “metaphorical” if found in the Qurʾan. At the same time, the statements of the Prophet Muhammad PBUH‎, the Hadith, for all intended purposes, ceased being a genuine source of Muslim creed. It was treated as a mere historic corpus of sayings and traditions, retained for its purely historical and spiritual value.[10]

he Muʿtazila — among other things — denied God’s attributes of Sight, Hearing, Speech, and the Beatific Vision promised to the believers in the Hereafter — all issues explicitly stated in the Qurʾan and Traditions of the Prophet Muhammad PBUH and mainstays of Muslim creed —because these Qurʾanic verses and Prophetic statements were in stark contradiction to their version of rationalism as it implied anthropomorphic notions of God. In their quest to rid the Muslims of accrued traditional and “irrational” dogmas, the Muʿtazila set up inquisitions (minḥa) that employed torture, to extract “the right profession of faith”, most important among them the confession that the Qurʾan was a “created” word of God as opposed to uncreated and thus eternal Word of God, an unanimously held Sunni position at the time (and since). The Muʿtazilas claimed that if the Quran was eternal this would necessitate positing an additional eternal entity to the eternal Essence of God and such a position is “irrational” as it posits Taʿadud al Qudamāʾ (the Multiplicity of Eternals), implying plurality of Godhead and therefore constituting blasphemy. Many jurists and theologians were killed under their reign of terror, the most famous being Imām Aḥmed Ibn al Hanbal, the founder of the Hanbali School of Jurisprudence, one of the four schools of Sunni Jurisprudence. For him (and for the majority of the masses) the real basis for Muslim creed was the Qurʾan and Sunnah (the Approved Way) that went back to the first generations of Believers, not philosophical juggling acts of human reason.

It was Abu al Hasan Al Ashʿarī, however, who delivered the coup de grace to the Muʿtazila, by effectively using the very dialectics that the Muʿtazila employed, in defending traditional Sunni creed. He was after all a Muʿtazili himself before reverting back to the creed of the People of Approved Way and the Group (hereby we refer to them as orthodoxy). The story of his conversion and his efforts and methods to rest the Muslim creed from the commissars of this movement are famous and abundantly referenced in history books.[10] It did not take long after the efforts of al Ashʿari and his students — backed by Muslim masses as they were increasingly becoming discontented with the excessive rationalism that had infected religious discourses — for the Muʿtazila to be dislodged and their hold on the centers of powers arrested and religious narrative returned back to the center where it belonged. The Muʿtazila sedition taught the Muslim community many lessons. Most important among them: a) that reason must always be subservient to Revelation, and b) dialectic methods — though not a Muslim invention (in fact criticized by the early Muslim jurists like Imam Shafʾi) — could be, however, employed in theology as a tool to not only defend the creed but advance its cause because increasingly, as the Muslims were coming into contact with new civilizations, the Arabic Qurʾanic Revelation’s monotheism and egalitarianism had to be accommodated with robust dialectics for persuasive appeal.

All these points were to become the hallmark of the orthodoxy (something we will discuss in detail later). The Muʾtazila challenge to mainstream Islamic ethos was negotiated without too much damage, thanks to a large part to the effective use of Kalām or rational scholasticism. The crystallization of the orthodoxy creed was now complete. It accommodated both the manqūl (transmitted) and maʿqul (rational) sciences within its scholarship. The manqūl tradition was the approach of the early Muslim generations who had the direct experience of the fountainhead of Prophecy or the companionship of those who experienced his ministry, and therefore needed no dialectics to convince themselves of the Truth of Islam. The maʿqul approach was the necessity of the realities of Islamic expansion as its centers moved away from the Arabian Peninsula. Importantly there was — the orthodoxy declared — no dichotomy between the two approaches.

Many intellectual trends and groups would rise from time to time to challenge the orthodoxy but lacking mass support, political backing and sound intellectual foundations, they would fall short, pushed to the margins, being historical footnotes only.[12] From the demise of the Muʿtazila in the 10th century to the 20th century, the Muslim orthodoxy maintained its creedal integrity even when politically there were upheavals and seismic changes. Dynasties and empires would rise and fall in Muslim lands: the Abbasids, Seljuks, Ghaznavids, Khwarazmians, the Fatimids, the Mongol Golden Horde, Delhi Sultanate, Mamluks, Ottomans, the Safavids, and Moghuls, among others, but interestingly the creed of the orthodoxy maintained its integrity without undergoing much meaningful changes. This is an astonishing fact that is unknown to most (even Muslims), who have allowed modern identity discourses and divisions encompassing the Muslim world to form their judgments. From Morocco in North West Africa to Indonesia in South Pacific, from Somalia in East Africa to the Caucasus bordering Russia, the creed of Muslim orthodoxy was astonishingly homogeneous. How do we know this? Well, one way to tell is to take a look at the curriculums taught at the theological seminaries or madrasas of all these different lands and people and find an astonishing homogeneity in the material: the basic texts, the commentaries, the glosses on beliefs, jurisprudence, logic, rhetoric, grammar, Syntax, the hagiographic literature on the Pious Forefathers.[13]

One might think that it must be the work of strong political institutions that could have forced or at least guided this intellectual cohesion on the ʿulema or scholars of these lands for the sake of unitarianism and all the political conveniences that comes with it. The fact is that at no time was the the entirety of the Muslim territories (or even most of it) under one Caliphate or any other political entity for this uniformity to be accomplished. This was an exceptional development in human affairs. It is quite difficult to find another example of such unique intellectual cohesion that lasted so long within such varying terrains and cultures and despite very frequent political instabilities. It is as if Providence had shown the Prophet PBUH‎ the future and allowed him to declare “indeed God will not allow the consensus of my community to agree on an error”.

Now that we have briefly examined some relevant historical factors to understand how the Sunnis orthodoxy came into crystallization, now we can shed some light on questions raised at the onset of this article: what are the main features and principles of this orthodox Sunnism? Who speaks for it? And why is modern Jihadi violence singularly associated with Sunnism?

To be continued…

Notes and Readers' Comments (178 at this time) here.

 

Originalmente publicado, aqui, às 16:15 de 02 de Outubro de 2016.

 

Part II “Who are the Sunnis? A Lamentation” here.

 

 

 

 

FIM

 

 

Takfirismo? O que é?

01.04.21 | Duarte Pacheco Pereira

Takfirismo? O que é?

 

O Takfirismo: Uma Ideologia Messiânica


Syed Saleem Shahzad • Fundação Lauro Campos • 11 de Novembro de 2009

Crença antiga no mundo muçulmano, o takfirismo passou por um renascimento entre os militantes islâmicos egípcios depois da derrota para Israel, em 1967. Baseia-se na convicção de que o enfraquecimento da ‘Umma’ (a comunidade dos fiéis) é resultado dos desvios dos próprios muçulmanos, de seu afastamento da religião. Todo muçulmano não-praticante seria um infiel, um ‘kafir’. Os que aderem a essa doutrina são chamados a abandonar as sociedades muçulmanas existentes, a formar comunidades autônomas e combater os muçulmanos infiéis.

Alguns pequenos grupos isolados de militantes takfiristas pipocaram no mundo árabe durante os anos 1970. Reagruparam-se no Afeganistão nos anos 1980, ao lado dos ‘mujahidin’, durante a guerra contra a ocupação soviética. O egípcio Ayman Al-Zawahiri, o dirigente uzbeque Tahir Yaldeshiv e o xeque Essa, futuros membros do estado-maior da Al-Qaeda, já estavam entre os zelotas mais acirrados do takfirismo. A doutrina avançou no Iraque depois da invasão dos Estados Unidos, sendo Abu Mussab Al-Zarqawi, morto em 7 de junho de 2006, um de seus principais adeptos naquele país.

A partir de 2003, o takfirismo ganhou terreno rapidamente entre os dirigentes intermediários e os militantes de base da Al-Qaeda. Acreditando que a presença de infiéis no seio das sociedades muçulmanas fortalece o inimigo e constitui um perigo a ser eliminado, esses militantes não se definem mais somente em função de seu ódio ao militarismo norte-americano. O takfirista é inimigo de todo muçulmano não-praticante. Para que os indivíduos “desviados” do Islã possam ser reconduzidos à origem, são os dirigentes das sociedades muçulmanas “infiéis” que devem ser eliminados prioritariamente. As montanhas de difícil acesso do Waziristão do Norte e do Sul tornaram-se seu novo santuário.

Todos os militantes takfiristas perseguem um duplo objetivo, quer passem a aderir à Al-Qaeda, quer a um de seus grupos afiliados. Devem continuar a guerra contra os exércitos ocidentais, ao mesmo tempo em que lançam as bases de um Estado “islâmico” ortodoxo, garantindo a rigorosa disciplina dos fiéis. Sempre erguendo a bandeira da rebelião contra os Estados muçulmanos, declaram guerra a todos os reformistas moderados. Os takfiristas têm particular horror ao xiismo, desvio intolerável a seus olhos. A guerra contra os adeptos dessa corrente é muitas vezes considerada mais importante do que a própria jihad. Os takfiristas se atribuem um papel messiânico: a direção exclusiva do combate ao Ocidente infiel e aos muçulmanos “apóstatas”.


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http://www.laurocampos.org.br/2009/11/o-takfirismo-uma-ideologia-messianico/ 
Visitada à(s) 11:59 de 10 de Fevereiro de 2016. 


Na Wikipédia:
• Em Castelhano: https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takfirismo
• Em Francês: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takfirisme
• Em Inglês: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takfiri
• Em Português: não existe verbete sobre este tema. 

Originalmente publicado aqui, às 12:09 de 10 de Fevereiro de 2016.

 

 

 

 

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