http://www.jamestown.org/programs/gta/single/?tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=38004
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Salafists, Copts and Sectarianism in Egypt after the Revolution

Publication: Terrorism Monitor Volume: 9 Issue: 22

June 2, 2011 05:08 PM Age: 1 hrs

Category: Terrorism Monitor, Global Terrorism Analysis, Home Page,
Domestic/Social, Middle East 

By: Hani Nasira
<http://www.jamestown.org/articles-by-author/?no_cache=1&tx_cablanttnewsstaf
frelation_pi1%5Bauthor%5D=595> 

 
<http://www.jamestown.org/index.php?eID=tx_cms_showpic&file=uploads%2Fpics%2
F0520-STORY-Salafi-muslim-cairo-christians-copts_full_600.jpg&md5=60b678483a
d3db9eadc8617d72d16f7dabea8035&parameters%5b0%5d=YTo0OntzOjU6IndpZHRoIjtzOjQ
6IjUwMG0iO3M6NjoiaGVpZ2h0IjtzOjM6IjUw&parameters%5b1%5d=MCI7czo3OiJib2R5VGFn
IjtzOjI0OiI8Ym9keSBiZ0NvbG9yPSIjZmZmZmZmIj4i&parameters%5b2%5d=O3M6NDoid3Jhc
CI7czozNzoiPGEgaHJlZj0iamF2YXNjcmlwdDpjbG9zZSgpOyI%2B&parameters%5b3%5d=IHwg
PC9hPiI7fQ%3D%3D> http://www.jamestown.org/typo3temp/pics/d41e5db25f.jpg

Protesting Copts in Egypt

Egypt's Salafist movement has made good use of the liberties won in the
January 25 Egyptian Revolution, despite its small role in the demonstrations
that deposed Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak. 

The Egyptian Salafists held conferences countrywide to determine their
course in an uncertain future. [1] Salafist youth, blessed by the elders,
sought to create the "Nour Islamic Party," a significant change in a
movement known for its rejection of party politics as a Western innovation,
and something for which they used to criticize other Islamic movements such
as the Muslim Brotherhood. [2] As the new law on political parties forbids
religious parties, the Salafists have been careful to deny al-Nour is a
religious party (Ahram Online, May 25). Like new political parties created
by the Brotherhood and the formerly banned al-Gama'a al-Islamiya, al-Nour
maintains that it is open to membership from the Coptic community. 

Salafists have witnessed remarkable transformations in their approach
recently, including changes to their earlier stance against al-Qaeda by
lamenting the death of the terrorist group's leader. Following the death of
Osama bin Laden, Shaykh Yasser Borhamy was among a number of Salafist
leaders who denounced the assassination, making a May 2 speech entitled
"Bless you Osama, Bless You Mujahideen," congratulating Bin Laden for his
martyrdom and emphasizing that the American action was part of a larger
crusade, as Bin Laden and his followers had said. [3] Shaykh Yasser's
position contradicted that of most Salafist shaykhs and views outside Egypt
as well as the history of the Egyptian Salafist call itself and its previous
criticism of al-Qaeda. 

The Salafists' intellectual hostility to secular and civil trends as well as
the Copts was obvious during the battle over constitutional amendments
leading up to the referendum of March 19, described by one of them as "the
battle of ballots." [4] After the referendum, the Salafists criticized their
exclusion from the national dialogue and denounced the post-referendum
statements made by Deputy Prime Minister Dr. Yahya al-Gamal, who suggested
changing the second article of the Egyptian constitution, which says
"Islamic Shari'a is the principal source of legislation," to "Islamic
Shari'a is a principal source of legislation." Salafists saw the suggested
change as a concession to Coptic demands for recognition of Christian law in
the second article and called for his dismissal because of his "secular"
views (alqanat.com, March 25; al-Masry al-Youm, March 26). 

They also rejected the views of Coptic businessman Naguib Sawiris, who
likened the veil to the Iranian chador and described Christians as
persecuted. Salafists, on the contrary, see Sawiris' views as manifestations
of sectarian sedition. [5] For Salafists, the most serious issue is what
they describe as the Copts' continued and increasing sectarian inclination,
both before and after the revolution.

The most dangerous stances of the Salafists, although acquitted of various
sectarian incidents after the revolution, are their hard-line religious
views regarding the ongoing sectarian incidents and their justifications for
Muslim participation in religious violence.
However, Salafist leaders denied participating in a series of incidents,
beginning with the March 8 burning of St. George Church in Atfih, Giza
Governorate, through to the severing of the ear of a Coptic man in Qena
Governorate in late March and the sectarian incidents in the Cairo suburb of
Imbaba on May 8. 

Leading Salafist Abdel Moneim al-Shahat wrote a defense of the movement
after some members cut off the ear of a Coptic teacher named Ayman Anwar
Mitry in Qena Governorate, describing the incident as a lie and saying that
the truth is that he was accused of shameful sexual behavior and that those
who accused the Salafists are giving in to Christian sectarianism which, to
him, equals religious sedition, as they "coddle Christians and persecute
Muslims." [6]

The Salafists' antagonism towards the Copts was also displayed after the
appointment of a Christian governor, General Emad Mikhail, for Upper Egpty's
Qena governorate last April. General Mikhail, as former deputy head of
Central Security in Giza, was also associated with the violent response of
the security services to the late January demonstrations against the Mubarak
regime.  Salafist followers of Sayed Qurasy were enraged by the appointment
and played a leading role among those who staged a sit-in (including Muslim
Brothers) to cut the rail-line passing through the governorate to support
their demands for a Muslim governor. The Salafist call states that "an
unbeliever has no mandate over a Muslim." The Salafists believe Copts should
be ineligible for senior positions to reflect respect for the religion of
the majority as well as to avoid coddling the minority. [7]

Concerning the destruction of St. George Church in Giza Governorate, the
Salafists issued a statement on March 13, in which they called for the
rejection of "Christian bullying" from abroad and the disarmament of all
parties. They also called for avoiding provocative deeds and statements and
delegating lawyers to assist detainees held in the destruction of the
church. The Salafists also urged local Muslims not to hinder the army in the
rebuilding of the demolished Church. [8]

Again, there was similar behavior regarding Imbaba incidents; the group's
spokesman Shaykh Ali Hatem gave a statement denying what happened and
warning the country may be driven into the ditch of sedition. He also
highlighted the importance of peaceful coexistence between Muslims and
Copts, whom he described as partners in the homeland.

Hatem also condemned the stance of the tendentious media, asserting the
seriousness of external bullying and the crime of calling for foreign
interference in Egypt's affairs. The solution, he added, comes through the
extension of state authority over all places and individuals, legal
accountability and the necessity of getting rid of the practices of the
former regime, which stirred the flames of sedition by extraditing citizens,
searching mosques and churches and confiscating arms to prevent crime. [9]

A number of Salafists have founded a coalition to defend new male and female
converts from Christianity to Islam after the incidents that followed the
alleged conversions of Wafaa Constantine (2004) and Camilla Shehata, and the
rumors spread by the Salafists that they were detained by the Church.
Demonstrations demanding the "release" of Camilla escalated in early May
until she appeared on Egyptian television on May 7 to deny her alleged
conversion to Islam, insisting on her Christianity. A number of Salafists
remained skeptical of her status. Among the Salafists who have joined the
coalition are their secretary-general, Hossam Abul Bukhari, (founder of the
CamillaShehata.com website), Shaykh Abdel Moneim al-Shahat and Dr. Muhammad
Abdel Maksoud, all prominent symbols of the Salafist call in Egypt. The
coalition has also attracted a number of Islamist activists from various
other groups, including Shaykh Hafiz Salama, one of the most prominent
Islamist veterans in Egypt, the group of Shabab Muhammad, a leading
dissident from the Muslim Brotherhood, and Nizar Ghorab, the lawyer for
Abboud and Tarek al Zomor, cousins who were jailed for their role in the
assassination of President Anwar Sadat and released by the ruling military
council after the overthrow of Mubarak. [10]

One day after Camilla Shehata appeared on television to assert her
Christianity, Salafists gathered outside Cairo's Mar Mina Church following
rumors another alleged female convert, Ameer Fakhry, was being held against
her will inside. The church is located in the Imbaba district of northwest
Cairo, a battleground between security forces and radical Islamists in the
1990s. Attacks on the church later spread to the nearby Church of the Virgin
Mary, which was torched, and a nearby apartment building, resulting in the
death of 15 people and the wounding of 186 others (Daily News Egypt, May 11;
Reuters, May 27).  According to military officials, 191 people detained in
the violence would face military tribunals. 

Salafists maintain that the Coptic Church, after the revolution, must differ
from the Church in the era of Mubarak, during which Salafists insist the
Coptic Pope, Shenouda III, the clerics and Copts in general were allowed to
detain converts to Islam. Yasser Borhamy, the leader of Salafists in
Alexandria, described these alleged activities as an extreme provocation by
the Church. [11]

Making use of the problems of religious converts and hostility towards the
Church are not new tactics for the Salafists. It is a dogmatic call in
origin that focuses on defending its vision regarding the right doctrine in
the light of Ibn Taymiyya's 14th century teachings. Though Salafists
generally remained aloof from the events of the revolution, there is no
doubt that the revolution has provided the Salafist call with a new impetus
and allowed the movement to carry out provocations in the name of preventing
"sectarian coddling" of Egypt's Christian community.


Notes:

1. www.anasalafy.com/play.php
<http://www.anasalafy.com/play.php?catsmktba=26303> .
2.
ar-ar.facebook.com/pages/%D8%AD%D8%B2%D8%A8-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%86%D9%88%D8%B1-%
D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A7%D8%B3%D9%84%D8%A7%D9%85%D9%8A/198097886894880
<http://ar-ar.facebook.com/pages/%D8%AD%D8%B2%D8%A8-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%86%D9%88
%D8%B1-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A7%D8%B3%D9%84%D8%A7%D9%85%D9%8A/198097886894880?sk=w
all> .
3. www.anasalafy.com/play.php
<http://www.anasalafy.com/play.php?catsmktba=25906> .
4. www.anasalafy.com/play.php
<http://www.anasalafy.com/play.php?catsmktba=25036> .
5. www.anasalafy.com/play.php
<http://www.anasalafy.com/play.php?catsmktba=25227> .
6. www.anasalafy.com/play.php
<http://www.anasalafy.com/play.php?catsmktba=25687> .
7. Akher Kalam program on OnTv channel, April 19, 2011:
www.youtube.com/watch <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yD4paQI1oik> .
8. www.forsanelhaq.com/showthread.php
<http://www.forsanelhaq.com/showthread.php?t=216820> .
9. www.anasalafy.com/play.php
<http://www.anasalafy.com/play.php?catsmktba=26031> .
10. www.forsanelhaq.com/showthread.php
<http://www.forsanelhaq.com/showthread.php?p=1443540> .
11. www.anasalafy.com/play.php
<http://www.anasalafy.com/play.php?catsmktba=19693> .

 



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