SHIA
AND SUNNI SECTS
Currently
ISLAM is experiencing what CHRISTIANS experienced in 1529 when the tug of war
raged between ROMAN CATHOLICS and LUTHERAN PROTESTANTS
By SHAHID JAVED BURKI via Project Syndicate
Turmoil has seized much of the MUSLIM
world. In SYRIA, a brutal war has already taken 250,000 lives, displaced half
of the country’s 21 million people, and sent a million refugees to EUROPE
seeking asylum. In YEMEN, the HOUTHI tribe has risen up against the government,
and are now facing SAUDI-led airstrikes. Conflicts like these reflect a number
of factors, the most prominent of which are the conflicts between ISLAM’S two
sects, SUNNI and SHIA, and between fundamentalists and reformists.
Alewite Falg |
SYRIAN President BASHAR
AL-ASSAD’S ALAWITE regime enjoys the support of SHIA
powers, especially IRAN, whose regional influence depends on a SHIA regime
remaining in power. And that is precisely why SUNNI powers – most prominently SAUDI
ARABIA – are committed to toppling that regime. YEMEN’S government, by
contrast, is SUNNI-led, and thus has SAUDI ARABIA’S support, hence the bombings
of the IRAN-backed SHIA HOUTHIS. Unsurprisingly, tensions between IRAN and SAUDI
ARABIA have intensified lately, a trend that culminated in the severing of
diplomatic relations over SAUDI ARABIA’S execution of a popular SHIA cleric.
THE
SUNNI-SHIA SCHISM GOES BACK TO THE YEAR 632
The chaos fueled by these
conflicts – and by instability in other countries in the region, such as AFGHANISTAN
and IRAQ –has enabled the rise of some truly contemptible forces, beginning
with the Islamic State (ISIS). That group has gained so much influence that US
generals have asked President BARACK OBAMA to authorize additional troops to
join the fight against it. Moreover, there are reports that the UNITED STATES may
postpone the withdrawal of its troops from AFGHANISTAN, where an increasingly
brutal war against the government has enabled the TALIBAN to gain territory and
created an opening for ISIS to become active. ISIS has also penetrated PAKISTAN.
The religious element of the
conflicts raging in the Middle East today is a major reason why they have been
so difficult to defuse. The SUNNI-SHIA schism goes back to the year 632, when
the Prophet MUHAMMAD died without indicating how the fast-growing ISLAMIC
community should pick his successor. Those who became the SHIA believed that
the position should remain in the prophet’s immediate family and supported the
selection of ALI IBN ABI TALIB, the prophet’s cousin and son-in-law. Those who
became the SUNNI supported the choice of the community’s senior members: ABU
BAKR, who had served as a close adviser to MUHAMMAD.
Today, most of the world’s 1.6
billion MUSLIMS are SUNNIS. They are widely dispersed, spread over a vast swath
stretching from MOROCCO to INDONESIA. After decades of migration to EUROPE and NORTH
AMERICA, there are also strong SUNNI communities in several WESTERN countries.
THE
SUNNI-SHIA CRESCENT
The SHIA number 225 million and
are geographically much more concentrated. IRAN, with 83 million, is the
world’s largest SHIA-majority country, followed by PAKISTAN with 30 million and
INDIA with 25 million. The “SHIA crescent” – including IRAN and its immediate
neighbors AFGHANISTAN, AZERBAIJAN, IRAQ, PAKISTAN, and TURKEY – accounts for
70% of the sect’s total population.
A fresco painting from the Chehel Sotun Pavillion in Isfahan, Iran, depicts Persian warfare during the Safavid dynasty period. |
This geographic distribution is
the result of a series of historical accidents, a combination of conquests and
(often forced) conversions. Though ISLAM arrived in IRAN by way of conquest in
637-651, the country did not officially adopt SHI’ISM for nearly another
millennium, with SHAH ISMAIL I of the SAFAVID dynasty undertaking in 1501 the
forcible conversion of the country’s SUNNI population.
SHI’ISM spread through SOUTH ASIA
as a result of repeated military incursions by PERSIA’S rulers into AFGHANISTAN
and INDIA. Today, that region’s SHIA population is concentrated in urban areas,
and largely comprises the descendants of the soldiers and other state
functionaries who stayed behind in the conquered territories.
SUNNI ISLAM, for its part, was
first spread through SOUTH ASIA by the SUFI saints, most of whom came from CENTRAL
ASIA and preached a more tolerant and inclusive form of ISLAM than that of the ARABIAN
PENINSULA. But the rising influence of SAUDI ARABIA after the 1970s, when
skyrocketing oil prices boosted the country’s wealth considerably, helped to
spur the spread of the Kingdom’s dominant and austere WAHHABI sect.
Background
Information: ORIGIN OF WAHHABISM
Click here:
Beyond attracting millions of MUSLIM
workers from SOUTH ASIA, SAUDI ARABIA financed the establishment of WAHABBI
madrassas along the AFGHANISTAN-PAKISTAN border. The TALIBAN (which, in ARABIC,
means “students”) in both AFGHANISTAN and PAKISTAN are the products of these
seminaries, as are militias like LASHKAR-E-TAIBA and LASHKAR-E-JHANGVI, which
have mounted attacks on religious sites in INDIA.
TODAY’S
TURMOIL REFLECTS A CLASH OF WORLDVIEWS THAT IS BOTH THEOLOGICAL AND POLITICAL.
Conservative SUNNIS, such as
those who adhere to fundamentalist WAHHABISM, favor theocratic authoritarian
rule, whereas more moderate SUFI SUNNIS would prefer liberal and inclusive
political systems. The same is true of the SHIA. IRAN has long stuck to
theocratic rule, but now seems to be looking toward reform. Whether the
sectarian divide can ever be bridged most likely depends on whether reformists
can gain sufficient influence in both camps. If not, the conflict will continue
to rage, accelerating the breakdown of regional order we now see.
No comments:
Post a Comment