29/04/2008

The local and the global in Saudi Salafism

Global Jihad is a constructed category, perpetuated in the discourse of academics, think tank consultants, politicians, policy makers, terror experts, and journalists on the one hand, and Jihadi ideologues and sympathisers on the other hand. The first group identify a global menace that requires the mobilisation of governments, military strategists, civil society activists, and media campaigns across the world to justify the global War on Terror. The second group endeavours to mobilise Muslims across cultures, nations and geographies in the pursuit of deterritorialised battles that nevertheless take place in specific localities, ranging from world financial centres, train stations, discos, expatriate residential compounds,  tourist resorts,  shrines, mosques and markets. Focusing on the contradictions and tensions within the Saudi Jihadi project is the subject of this short exposition(i).  I will argue that Saudi Jihadis represent  post-national non-state actors who draw on the rhetoric of the global Jihad, yet they remain immersed in the locality of Saudi Arabia.(ii)  Rather than selecting famous contemporary Jihadi ideologues, this paper draws on the messages of less known Saudi authors of jihadi texts to demonstrate the centrality of the local in the global project. The first author Faris al-Shuwayl wrote about the priority of local Jihad: the other Lewis Atiyat Allah glorified the global project. Both seem to exhibit the tension between the local and the global.

Contesting the local state

In al-Shuwayl and Lewis Atiyat Allah’s writings, the first Saudi state (1744-1818) is glorified as dawlat al-tawhid, the state of monotheism, a political entity unbounded by defined territorial boundaries, unrecognised by the international community, and uncontaminated by international treaties and legal obligations. The first state is a local political configuration that defied regional and international contexts and promised to make true Islam hegemonic.  They regard this state as a revival of the state of prophecy where the community was subjected to divine law. Membership was determined not by recognised frontiers but by submission to the rightful Imam, whose authority over distant territory was recognised by paying zakat, receiving his judges, and performing Jihad under his banner. In the first state, unity was expressed in belief in one God, applying his rule and swearing allegiance to his political authority on earth. oth al-Shuwayl and Lewis Atiyat Allah regard the main agent of this state to be Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab rather than Muhammad ibn Saud; the former was the interpreter of God’s words while the latter was the executive force that enforces these words.  This state had no name apart from dawlat al-tawhid, state of monotheism, a deterritorialised polity pursuing the ultimate message of Islam, subjecting the individual to the sovereignty of God. As such, this state cannot be confined to man made borders, cultural and historical factors, ethnic and linguistic considerations or any other attributes common in defining the modern nation state. As such it was the ideal Muslim state that rebelled against blasphemy, religious innovations, and man-made law. The collapse of this state in 1818 at the hands of Ottoman troops temporarily sealed the fate of dawlat al-tawhid whose advocates impatiently waited for its revival in the twentieth century.

23/01/2008

Islam and the Princes: Religion at the Service of Royal Power

Madawi Al-Rasheed

Inaugural lecture

The lecture will take place in the Great Hall, King’s College, London, Strand Campus at 5.30pm on Tuesday 12 February 2008.


Synopsis
Saudi royalty sanctions official Wahhabi discourse for obvious political reasons. This religious discourse is responsible for closing channels of political debate and delaying the emergence of calls for political reform and participation in the country. Together with state repression, this discourse enforces interpretations of religious texts that call upon pious Muslims to consent to political authority and show ultimate obedience to rulers. This discourse also prohibits any public criticism of rulers and criminalises (in a religious and political sense) discussion of their policies. Dominant Saudi religious interpretations create "consenting subjects" rather than free citizens who engage in public affairs. I will demonstrate that official Wahhabi discourse is responsible for mystifying the world under the guise of religion. Official Saudi religious scholars consolidate a specific religious discourse to ensure the emergence of an acquiescent society. This discourse facilitates regime efforts to domesticate and discipline the population without resorting to excessive use of force, a practise that other Arab regimes have mastered under the umbrella of the modern state. The role of religious discourse is often ignored in academic research, in particular political science perspectives, on Saudi Arabia. This research usually privileges the influence of oil revenues within the framework of the rentier state as a mechanism consolidating the tradition of political acquiescence. Yet the sum total of religious interpretations that are propagated by a large religious bureaucracy are equally important as factors contributing to this acquiescence that the population exhibited throughout the twentieth century. There is no doubt that the redistributive state that transforms oil revenues into services and consequently loyalty owes its survival to the intersection of politics and the economy. However, there are subtle ways that veil relations between rulers and ruled and mystify this relationship. Wahhabi religio-political discourse offers a mystifying umbrella.

31/12/2007

an Elected King in a Gerontocracy

The establishment of an Allegiance Committee, a closed circle of senior Saudi princes last year and the nomination of its members in December 2007 are desperate attempts to save the House of Saud, not from Jihadi violence, reformers’ pressure or external threats, but from the hazards of demography and natural aging.


30/10/2007

Saudi Arabia and the 1948 Palestine War beyond official history

A shorter version of this chapter will appear in Eugene Rogan and Avi Shlaim (eds.) The War  for Palestine: rewriting the history of 1948 War . 2nd edition  Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2007

Non-Saudis initially wrote the modern history of Saudi Arabia. Although chronicles, private papers, and primary sources existed inside and outside the country, until very recently Western and Arab historians produced modern Saudi historiography. Saudi Arabia was one of the latest countries to establish modern history departments and research centres. It was only in the 1960s that the ‘modern’ Saudi historian emerged after the profession was dominated by ulama who played the double role of religious scholar and chronicler. Up to the 1960s, the past was theological rather than historical, a reflection of the predominance of historical narratives propagated by religious scholars. 

It was only after the first oil boom of the 1970s that the Saudi government turned its attention to systematically producing the great historical narrative that most Arab regimes had already produced and propagated to consolidate the nascent nation states that emerged in the post World War II era. Unlike in other Arab countries, and with the exception of one or two Saudi historians, modern Saudi historical research centres relied on Arab scholars, who were either seconded from their own academic institutions or had settled in the country. Even then, and because of serious human resource shortage, Saudi school and university history text books, and even the religious curriculum, were often written by Arabs, mainly Levantine and Egyptians who were entrusted with the task of narrating Saudi Arabia.

The narration was meant to establish and enforce two important state legitimacy narratives, one reflected the need to legitimate the state internally, the other reflected the need to legitimate the state externally in the Arab and Islamic contexts.

The establishment of King Abdulaziz Foundation for Research and Archives in Riyadh (known as al-Dara) in1972 marked the beginning of institutionalised official historiography, after a long period of laisser-faire approach to narrating the past. The role of this research centre in shaping historical imagination became paramount. In the 1980s  an ambitious government scheme materialised in  sending at least thirty Saudi students to various American universities to write PhD dissertations on Al-Saud and Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, thus establishing modern Saudi historiography. The role of such students and that of al-Dara reached a climax with the 1999 centennial celebrations that coincided with the publication of hundreds of history books, foreign memoirs, translation of foreign testimonies, and official letters and sermons by King Abdulaziz ibn Saud (1876-1953) hereafter Ibn Saud, all marking ‘one hundred year of development, prosperity and political wisdom’.i The publication of selected documents and letters from various archival sources marked the beginning of documenting Saudi history from an official point of view.ii 


05/09/2007

Kingdom without Borders: Saudi Expansion in the World

Conference

‎ ‎  Kingdom without Borders: Saudi Expansion in the World

     ‎6-8 September 2007‎

     King’s College

    Attendance by invitation only ‎


Kingdom without Borders intends to explore a number of issues related to Saudi ‎political, economic, social, religious, media and cultural expansion in the World.


This expansion has recently become the subject of debate and controversy. The ‎conference aims to highlight the parameter of this expansion and its ‎consequences on the receiving societies, world politics, the intellectual and ‎religious public spheres, local social and cultural developments, and international ‎relations.  ‎


The conference brings together scholars and policy makers from Europe, the ‎USA, Asia and the Middle East. In two days of open discussions among ‎commentators from a variety of perspectives, contemporary trends of Saudi ‎expansion will be examined, exploring their roots as well as likely future ‎development and consequences. ‎


The multiplicity of perspectives and areas of expertise brought to bear on these ‎questions should allow a balanced understanding of the phenomenon. The ‎conference will no doubt re-evaluate and challenge many of the current literature ‎on Saudi expansion and connections with the world. ‎


This first conference will focus on the general aspects of Saudi expansion with ‎the hope that later more focused workshops will follow to map Saudi connections ‎in specific local contexts in the Arab-Muslim worlds and the West. ‎


PART I: SAUDI CONNECTIONS:  GENERAL OVERVIEW

This sections aims to provide a general forum that situates Saudi expansion in its ‎historical context. Relevant questions include

To what extent is Saudi expansion a product of local Saudi concerns for ‎legitimacy?‎

To what extend is Saudi expansion a product of the weakening of other regional ‎Arab powers that had in the past more acumen and intellectual heritage to play a ‎leading role in initiating political, social and religious connections?‎

To what extent is this expansion a product of the weakening of Arab society and ‎civil institutions in general and economic underdevelopment?‎

To what extent is this expansion a product of Western encouragement and ‎promotion of Saudi Arabia as a crucial player in regional, local and world politics?‎


The session focuses on the historical and structural factors both in Saudi Arabia ‎and the Arab, Muslim and Western worlds that paved the way for this unexpected ‎Saudi expansion. Furthermore, it assesses the receptiveness of constituencies ‎and the open door policies, allowing Saudi expansion unprecedented presence in ‎very distant locations. This sheds light on both old and new mediators (Western, ‎Arab, Saudi) through whom Saudi expansion is enforced in distant lands, for ‎example cultural brokers, economic and political entrepreneurs, intellectuals, and ‎other agencies.  ‎


04/07/2007

US-Saudi Relations: A Deadly Triangle? ‎


Rachel Bronson Thicker Than Oil America’s Uneasy Partnership with Saudi Arabia  Council of Foreign Relations, Oxford: Oxford University Press, hardback, 353pp, ISBN-13: ‎‎978-0-19-516743‎

Thicker than Oil investigates the U.S-Saudi relationship after this relationship became controversial in the aftermath of  9/11. It scrutinises the decision making process on both sides, ‎by necessity an account of the policies of kings, presidents, senior cabinet officials, royal confidants and chief intelligence officers (pp. 11). Bronson situates her narrative in between ‎two poles: Saudi bashing in America and anti-Americanism in Saudi Arabia. For fifty years, the partnership rested on shared interests, held responsible for sowing current radicalism ‎in the Muslim world. Yet because it was an uneasy partnership, the relation had to be conducted behind closed doors for over half a century.   ‎

Contemporary Islamic Thought

Ibrahim Abu Rabi’ (ed.) The Blackwell Companion to Contemporary Islamic Thought ‎Oxford: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2006 (Hardback), 675p. ‎

The Blackwell Companion to Contemporary Islamic Thought is a reference book that ‎introduces the reader to the diversity of Islamic intellectual tradition. The introduction ‎places Islamic intellectuals and their productions in the contemporary context of the ‎Muslim world. Diverse, fragmented, and unevenly developed, the Muslim world shares ‎common historical developments brought about by the experience of being drawn into ‎Western modernity in its various manifestations. Colonialism, capitalism, globalisation, ‎modernization, liberation struggles, the nation state, dictatorships, religious revivalism, ‎and fundamentalism are but few aspects of the arrival of modernity in Muslim lands. ‎

04/06/2007

Prohibiting Politics: Saudi Wahhabi Religious Discourse

  Saudi royalty sanctions official Wahhabi discourse for obvious political reasons.[1] This religious discourse is responsible for closing channels of political debate and delaying the emergence of calls for political reform and participation in the country. Together with state repression, this discourse enforces interpretations of religious texts that call upon pious Muslims to consent to political authority and show ultimate obedience to rulers. This discourse also prohibits any public criticism of rulers and criminalises (in a religious and political sense) discussion of their policies. Dominant Saudi religious interpretations create “consenting subjects” rather than free citizens who engage in public affairs. I will demonstrate that official Wahhabi discourse is responsible for mystifying the world under the guise of religion. Official Saudi religious scholars consolidate a specific  religious discourse to ensure the emergence of an acquiescent  society. This discourse facilitates regime efforts to domesticate and discipline the population without resorting to excessive use of force, a practise that other Arab regimes have mastered under the umbrella of the modern state. The role of religious discourse  is often ignored in academic research, in particular political science perspectives,  on Saudi Arabia. This research usually privileges the influence of oil revenues within the framework of the rentier state[2] as a mechanism consolidating the  tradition of political acquiescence. Yet the sum total of religious interpretations that are propagated by a large religious bureaucracy are equally important as factors contributing to this acquiescence that the population exhibited throughout the twentieth century. There is no doubt that the redistributive state that transforms oil revenues into services and consequently loyalty owes its survival to the intersection of politics and the economy. However, there are subtle ways that veil relations between rulers and ruled and mystify this relationship. Wahhabi religio-political discourse offers a mystifying umbrella.  


10/05/2007

Timid reformism not the way to address the issues about which Saudis feel most strongly

By Madawi Al-Rasheed


Fear may induce acquiescence. But Saudis still surprise many observers. While their participation in Jihadi adventurism at home and abroad has now become notorious, there is a small minority that does not get enough sound bites, simply because it consists of peaceful political activists who dream about a better future. While they live in the most closed political systems in the Arab world, they are not intimidated by real violence exerted on them by state agencies nor fear of imminent terrorist attacks, by which these agents hope to deter activism and silence daring voices. .


19/02/2007

Reflection key to writing Arabia’s diverse history

Narrating Saudi Arabia has two dimensions: one targets the local constituency and one targets outsiders. The first aims at generating consent among obedient subjects; the second aims at achieving legitimacy beyond borders.

07/12/2006

Saudis consider Iraq options as stakes rise amid fears of sectarian war

One thing is certain. When a Saudi security consultant makes policy recommendations, he is anything other than an independent voice.

Such recommendations are often described by unnamed Saudi officials as only representing the views of the people who express them. This is exactly what happened after Nawaf Obaid’s recent reflections on the Iraqi crisis.

Obaid’s article in the Washington Post (29 November 2006) addresses an American audience that is increasingly sceptical about its own military adventure in Iraq and which is beginning to search for exit strategies (the latest being the report of the Iraq Study Group, published on 6 December).

08/11/2006

The sting in globalisation’s tail leaves Saudis paying the price of plenty

By Madawi Al-Rasheed

Globalisation refers to structured flows from above, which are led by government agencies, large corporations, and other powerful state and non-state actors.

Saudi Arabia was both an importer and an exporter of global flows, whose economic, religious and cultural flows are a product of oil wealth. Since the discovery of oil in 1933, Saudi Arabia has been integrated into the world capitalist economy. Oil drew Saudi Arabia into global flows which were mainly under the control of global actors, specifically states, oil companies, financial services groups, and other conglomerates.

01/11/2006

Now in Bookshops

Contesting the Saudi State Islamic Voices from a New Generation Professor Madawi Al-Rasheed Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, November 2006A prince is always compelled to injure those who have made him the new ruler, subjecting them to the troops and imposing the endless other hardships which his new conquest entails Niccolo Machiavelli The Prince

Outsiders often refer to Saudis as Wahhabis or Salafis. In the twenty-first century Saudis themselves do not agree on the meaning of these terms. Contemporary Saudis debate religion and politics in traditional and novel public spaces, thus violating a well-established taboo. Under the influence of mass education, printing, new communication technology and global media, Saudis engage in formulating opinions that can generate both consent and contestation of official religio-political discourse. Modernity, together with state and oil wealth, consolidated official Wahhabi religious interpretations, especially those that generate social conservatism and political acquiescence. Yet the same forces that allowed this discourse to become hegemonic are now responsible for its contestation. Drawing on a plethora of classical religious sources, contemporary interpretations and interviews, this book presents an ethnography of consent and contestation. It highlights the fluidity of the boundaries of religious and political debate and the overlapping categories that dominate our thinking about so-called official, moderate and radical Islam. The book examines how state-initiated global religious flows develop their own momentum once they travel to distant locations. Bridging the gap between religious text and context, the author offers an understanding of the subtle ways in which states and citizens manipulate religious discourse for purely political ends and how this manipulation generates unpredictable reactions whose control escapes those who initiated them.

Hail: Gertrude Bell’s Images of an Arabian Oasis

Madawi Al-Rasheed

Contents

Preface

Introduction

Chapter One: Gertrude Bell: a biographical Note

Chapter Two: Hail in the Nineteenth Century

Chapter Three: The Journey and the Photographs

Chapter Four: Hail between Two Empires

Chapter Five: the End of an Era

Bibliography

Preface

On a rainy day in January 1987, I found myself in a narrow dusty basement in the photographic library of the Royal Geographical Society in Kensington, London. I was writing a thesis on the political and social history of the Rashidi emirate of Hail, a small state founded by one of my ancestors in the nineteenth century. Having spent months locating this history in various archives, diplomatic correspondence, and monographs of travellers, I was aware that images of Hail at the beginning of the twentieth century would be an invaluable record of a bygone era. My search for these images led to the Royal Geographical Society, where I came across the incredible collection of Gertrude Bell. Later I found out that the complete collection is held at the University of Newcastle. 

16/10/2006

The Birth of the Islamic Reform Movement in Saudi Arabia

Muhammad Ibn Abd al-Wahhab (1703-1792) and the Beginnings of Unitarian Empire in Arabia
by George Rentz. London Arabian Publishing, 2005 Pp.xlii+275, bibliography, index.  xxxxx(cloth), ISBN 09544792 2 X

Since the 11 September the Saudi regime launched a serious public relations campaign to rescue its reputation in the West and that of its religious establishment. While print and visual media remain the most important platform for this campaign in the West, Saudi sponsored academic conferences and annual lectures in English proved to be equally important as these quasi-academic activities influence a different audience.