Showing posts with label parties. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parties. Show all posts

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Resurgent Arab Islam need not be unsettling

Resurgent Arab Islam need not be unsettling


By Emile Nakhleh and Augustus R. Norton


[Cross-posted with "Informed Comment: Global Affairs" and Boston Globe's "The Angle", where it was first published December 11, 2011]

In the wake of the youth-directed “Arab Spring,” which rocked the Middle East to its core and felled autocratic governments in several countries, Islamic political parties are poised for an historic resurgence across the region — and that is neither surprising nor necessarily alarming.

Popular mass demonstrations, “Days of Rage,” have been the hallmarks of the season that dislodged dictators in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya, and exposed the fragility of fierce but unpopular regimes across the Arab world. Youthful demonstrators in quest of dignity, hungry for jobs, and fed up with corruption formed the vanguards.

But because Arab rulers did not allow serious opposition parties, the best organized opposition groups were often Islamist movements. While they did not launch the Arab Spring, they lent resilience and discipline to the demonstrations. These movements are deeply insinuated in the contours of daily life in Arab societies, and now are emerging as early victors in what Arabs are calling al-sahwa (the awakening).

The successes of Islamic parties inspire consternation and alarm in some US policy circles. Daniel Byman of the Brookings Institution worries that these parties will not embrace democracy. Like former Israeli defense minister Moshe Arens, he suggests that the Arab Spring is likely to become a long Arab Winter as Islamic parties gain power and then thwart hopes for substantial reforms and freedom. But these groups are not the extremists that critics fear, and Islamist political parties deserve the opportunity to deliver on the mandate they’ve been granted at the polls.

Thursday, March 03, 2011

Informative NPR segment on political parties beginning to organize in Egypt

For much more background on the Center Party--one of the party's discussed on the NPR piece--see my earlier post and download (for free) my essay on the party.

[Related WSJ piece.]

Sunday, February 20, 2011

No longer thwarted: Egypt's Hizb al-Wasat finally gains legal status

One of the interesting developments of the 1990s in Egypt was that a group of younger members of the Muslim Brotherhood, as well as other independently minded Muslims and Christians, attempted to create a Party of the Center, or Hizh al-Wasat.  They were thwarted both by the government and the Muslim Brotherhood. Indeed, the leadership of  the Brotherhood was infuriated.  There were several interesting aspects of this enterprise: it revealed generational differences within the Brotherhood, provided visibility to moderate Muslim thinkers (notably Muhammad Salim al-'Awaa), and presented an attempt to exemplify toleration, women's rights, pluralism and a circumscribed role for Shari'a in civil law.

Initially, the government saw this initiative as camouflage for the Brotherhood to gain legal status. However, after it was plain that that was not the case, I am sure that the enduring problem with al-Wasat was precisely that it was "too reasonable" and would thereby undermine the consistent efforts of the government to demonize Islamism. 


"Thwarted Politics" is my 2005 study of Hizb al-Wasat.  The study appears in Remaking Muslim Politics, a volume edited by Robert W. Hefner, and published by Princeton University Press.

Also see this al-Hayat article (Arabic) and this earlier post.