The Muslim Brotherhood's Discontents

Posted By Michael J. Totten On August 11, 2011 

Is Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood moderate? That's what everyone wants to know
now that Hosni Mubarak is out of power and the Islamists are flexing their
muscles, not only against the military junta's transition authorities, but
also against the liberal activists who brought the autocratic president
down.

The Muslim Brotherhood's spokesmen have been waging a PR campaign in the
West for many years. They know exactly what to say and what not to say. They
tell Western reporters that they're activists for democracy and civil
society. They don't say they want to ban alcohol, force women to wear
headscarves or veils, or further restrict the rights of religious
minorities.

The term "moderate" is relative, though. Surely the Muslim Brotherhood is
moderate compared with the Taliban and al-Qaeda, but that's a meaningless
standard. The Taliban and al-Qaeda are the most politically extreme Islamist
organizations on earth. Fidel Castro is moderate compared with Pol Pot, and
the Ku Klux Klan is moderate compared with the Nazis, but so what?

It hardly matters at all that the Muslim Brotherhood is moderate compared
with mass-murdering totalitarians whose weapon of choice is the suicide
bomber. (Besides, its leadership supports the suicide bombers of Hamas,
which ought to go without saying since Hamas is the organization's
Palestinian branch.) The only question that matters is: what does the Muslim
Brotherhood actually stand for? What do they say when Western reporters
aren't in the room? The only way a Western reporter like me can know, short
of bugging their offices, is to interview former Muslim Brotherhood members
who will tell it to me straight. So that's what I did.

Mohammad Adel used to work for the Brotherhood's Web site, but he recently
quit and threw his support behind the April 6 labor movement instead.

"I was opposed to the editorial line," he told me in a tent his new comrades
erected inside the liberal activists' tent city in Cairo's Tahrir Square,
"so I created a parallel site. The party accused us of collaborating with
the ministry of the interior and the security forces. The Web site reflects
the ideas of the Brotherhood's leadership, and a lot of us felt it didn't
represent the group as a whole."

"How is the editorial line different from the views of the group as a
whole?" I said.

Former Muslim Brotherhood member Mohammad Adel

"It only publishes quotes and articles that are by and about the
leadership," he said. "It pays no attention to the rest of the members. It
prevents the publication of news items or press releases by any other
member. If someone from the Brotherhood was arrested, and that person had a
problem with any of the leaders, the Web site wouldn't publicize that
person's arrest even as a news item."

Theoretically he could still be an Islamist, albeit a disgruntled one, with
that list of complaints, but he doesn't sound like one. Not any more.

"They aren't going to do well in the upcoming elections," he said. "Most of
the votes they got before were protest votes against Mubarak's NDP rather
than votes for the Muslim Brotherhood. Now that the NDP has been dissolved,
they don't have that base to fall back on."

I've been told there are around 40 political parties in Egypt right now,
though I'm not sure anyone who gave me that number actually counted them or
could name them. Most of those parties are microscopic and irrelevant, but
some are serious and should do reasonably well in a free and fair election,
and they span the same ideological range that exists everywhere else, with
socialists on the left and capitalists on the right.

"Lots of parties are coming up quickly," Adel said, "and they're getting
popular. The Brotherhood is afraid of two parties in particular, the Free
Egypt Party and Mostafa El-Naggar's Justice Party."

The Free Egypt Party is a secular, anti-sectarian, and free market
capitalist party founded by a Coptic Christian businessman, though the party
is by no means a "Christian" party the way many Lebanese political parties
are Christian. The founder just happens to be a Christian. I saw a number of
women wearing Islamic headscarves in one of their offices when I went in
there for an interview. Their platform is as anti-socialist as it is
anti-Islamist.

The Justice Party, meanwhile, stresses "social justice," though it is
centrist and includes activists from both the left and the right, including
Mohamed El-Baradei's sister Mona, an Egyptian economist.

These parties are new and, unlike the Muslim Brotherhood, their platforms
are modern and products of the 21st century.

There are five main Islamist governance models that currently exist. The
Taliban in Afghanistan is, of course, the most extreme, and the Turkish AKP
is the least. The AKP has been in power in Turkey for years, and alcohol
sales have been restricted in some parts of the country, it hasn't been
banned. Women don't have to dress conservatively if they don't want to, and
huge numbers in the large cities don't. The other Islamist models include
the thoroughly reactionary Saudi Arabia, totalitarian Gaza under Hamas, and
Iran under the Islamic Republic. I didn't mention any of these to Adel, but
I had all of them in mind when I asked my next question.

"Is there a model of governance that exists somewhere in the world that the
Muslim Brotherhood wants to emulate here?" I said.

"Some of them went to Turkey to learn from that model," he said. "But the
Egyptian youth who would otherwise be similar to the youth in Turkey's
Islamist party have been expelled from the Brotherhood here. They were seen
as being too non-religious."

"Turkey's AKP isn't religious enough for the Brotherhood?" I said.

"The Brothers think of the AKP as liberal and they don't want that here," he
said. "They've expelled the liberal Islamists from the group."

I could only assume then that Gaza is what Egypt's Brotherhood has in mind,
or maybe a Sunni Arab version of what Persian Shia Islamists have built in
Iran.

"I would like for the Muslim Brotherhood to be more like Hamas," Adel said.

That stopped me cold. "You want the Brotherhood to be like Hamas?" I said.

"Yes," he said. "Because Hamas is more liberal. The Brotherhood here no
longer has any liberal members. Hamas is more willing to cooperate with
other movements than the Muslim Brotherhood is."

"I want to make sure I understand what you're saying," I said. "Your view is
that Hamas represent liberal Islamism."

"Not that they're liberal," he said, "but they have members who are. They
have a liberal Islamist element. The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood has chosen
to expel its liberal Islamists. The Brotherhood thinks dealing with anyone
who is a former member, someone who was expelled or who resigned, or someone
from other movements and parties, is like dealing with an infidel."

*

Abdul-Jalil al-Sharnouby also quit the Muslim Brotherhood recently, and I
had a lot more time to sit down and talk to him than I had with Mohammad
Adel.

Before he resigned he was the editor-in-chief of the Brotherhood's Web site,
Ikhwan Online <http://www.ikhwanonline.com/Ramadan/Default.aspx> . He even
got some serious attention in Western media for his high profile job before
he walked out. The Daily Beast described him
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2010/12/26/meet-radical-islams-tech-g
uru-the-muslim-brotherhood-creates-a-media-savvy-machine.html>  as "radical
Islam's tech guru," but he's not a radical Islamist anymore. He is a man in
transition with one part of his heart and his mind in his old ideology and
another part of his heart and his mind in something more liberal and open.
And the truth is he's been in transition for a while now and was very nearly
ready to bolt at the time the Daily Beast interviewed him, though no one had
any idea at the time. He wasn't even yet ready to admit it to himself, but
that would start changing - and fast - as soon as the revolution in Egypt
was on.

"I was a member of the Brotherhood for 23 years," he said.

I'm not sure how old he is, but he doesn't look a day over 40, and he said
he joined up in high school. He dedicated his entire adult life to the
organization before he quit just a few months ago. And its reactionary
rigidity is not what he says he found attractive. "Islam is a religion that
can also be a way of life," he said. "It's also adaptable and flexible in
ways that differ from what Al Azhar University teaches, which is where I
studied. I was actually expelled from Al Azhar as a means of preventing me
from being a representative of the organization on campus. All of my
experience with this gave me some credibility within the student body."

He worked as a journalist after graduating while moving up in the
Brotherhood's ranks. Eventually he became the editor-in-chief of the Web
site, though he began to chafe against the restrictions the leadership put
on him. "There were trends within the organization that indicated the
leadership lacked tools for dialogue. They were very stubborn and refused to
let go of their opinions. This was most clear in what touched upon my own
work involving the media and the arts."

Quitting wasn't an option, however. For one thing, his closest friends were
in the Brotherhood. The biggest reason he couldn't quit, though, was because
Hosni Mubarak was still in power. "He would not let more than five of us
gather in one house," he said. "And because of Mubarak's tyranny I couldn't
blame the Brotherhood or their leaders because it might justify his
oppression of them. The government could then argue that if one of their own
is criticizing them, then clearly we were justified in oppressing or banning
them."

Like just about everyone else I interviewed over there, he says the
Brotherhood had little to do with the anti-government uprising, that the
organization opportunistically joined up late before turning on the
revolutionaries altogether.

"The revolution was produced by people who didn't belong to any
organization," he said. "All those who were members of various organizations
at the time had some relationship with Mubarak's regime, and they made their
own calculations with him. The people who took to the streets on the 25th of
January were only upholding one banner, and that was a national one. The
real revolutionaries are those who were on the streets on the 25th of
January, not the people who followed in the days afterward."

He was one of the first people down there, so you might say his analysis is
a little self-serving, but it's worth pointing out that the Muslim
Brotherhood as an organization was absent. Even after the square filled with
tens of thousands and even hundred of thousands of people, the Brotherhood
hadn't shown up. They were too busy calculating. They did not see the
revolution coming - nobody did - and they had no idea what to do after it
started. They certainly were not its leaders.

"I was in Tahrir Square for the 18 days," he said. "One day I went down into
the streets with two French journalists. We left the Brotherhood office and
were subjected to a pre-meditated attack by thugs from the baltageya right
outside the building. They took all my papers and two mobile phones. Eight
days later a group of thugs followed by a group of soldiers stormed the
Brotherhood office at dawn and destroyed computers and arrested twelve
people."

For reasons that I can't explain, the Brotherhood leaders took this in
stride. They were strangely aloof from just about everything that was
happening in the country at the time. I find it odd. Al-Sharnouby found it
infuriating.

"I mention these attacks," he said, "because experiencing the emotional ups
and downs of the revolution, and being attacked the way I was, stood in such
contrast with the calm felt by the Muslim Brotherhood leadership. When we
were right in the middle of Tahrir, the Brotherhood announced that it would
negotiate with [military intelligence director and vice president] Omar
Suleiman. People in the square came to me and said, 'you're the
editor-in-chief of the Muslim Brotherhood's Web site. Why are you guys
negotiating with the army?' Talk of negotiations with Mubarak's government
was firmly rejected by everyone in Tahrir."

The Brotherhood has been doing that all along. Many of the liberals and
socialists I spoke to have the sense that the Islamists are against the
revolution or are at best waging their own parallel revolution, and they
seem to be right.

"There were calls for a second Friday of rage in May," Al-Sharnouby said.
"The Brotherhood leadership gave me a press release to publish on the Web
site, and it was very harsh. It said that anyone who went down to the second
Friday of rage was either betraying the nation or trying to trigger clashes
between the people and the army."

He published the press release, though, without editing it. He wasn't happy
about it, but that was his job. There was nothing the Brothers could do to
stop him from going down to Tahrir anyway, though, so he did.

"People who had become my brothers and sisters during the 18 days were
surprised to see me," he said. "They said to me, 'doesn't the Brotherhood
think we're all infiltrators and spies?' And I said, 'even if that's what
you are, then I would rather be on your side.'"

Tahrir Square, Cairo

His decision to leave the Brotherhood wasn't a snap one. His mind had been
changing slowly over time even if he wasn't always consciously aware of it,
like tectonic plates shifting an inch or so every year until the pressure is
released in an explosive earthquake. The epicenter of Al-Sharnouby's
personal earthquake was Tahrir Square during the revolution.

"I saw blood in the streets," he said. "I saw people die who didn't belong
to any organization. The people who died in the revolution weren't making
political calculations. They weren't entering into negotiations with the
regime. They died because they wanted to be free. So we should be with the
people."

He paused for a moment, then asked me a question.

"Are you with the people?" he said.

"Of course!" I said. At least I am with Egypt's liberals. I'm an American.
Who else could I possibly sympathize with? The anti-Western Islamists? The
military dictatorship that blames foreigners like me for everything wrong
with the country?

"Okay then," he said and smiled. "Have some coffee."

And he ordered me another coffee.

A graffiti artist near Tahrir Square makes a statement against a Lebanese-
or Iraqi-style militarization of politics

My colleague Armin Rosen and I interviewed Esam El-Erian, one of the
Brotherhood's senior officials, the day before. It was the strangest
interview I have ever conducted
<http://pajamasmedia.com/michaeltotten/2011/07/14/hanging-with-the-muslim-br
otherhood/> . El-Erian yelled at us for an hour. He said he hopes the Saudis
stop selling us oil so we will learn to respect the Arabs. He said the
United States is against the revolution in Libya, even though American
planes are bombing Qaddafi on behalf of the rebels. He says the United
States is against the revolution in Syria, even though Washington is
ratcheting up sanctions on Bashar al-Assad and mumbling about war crimes
indictments. He not so coyly suggests that the United States government,
rather than Osama bin Laden, is guilty of the crimes on September 11. And he
proudly supports suicide bombers in the West Bank and Gaza. He's an
unapologetic ally of mass-murderers and terrorists.

And it was this man, Esam El-Erian, who finally drove Abdul-Jalil
al-Sharnouby to resign from the Brotherhood.

Muslim Brotherhood executive bureau member Esam El-Erian

"Esam El-Erian said the reason people were angry at the Brotherhood was the
way the protests were covered on the Web site," he said, though it was, of
course, El-Erian and his colleagues in the leadership, not al-Sharnouby or
anyone else at the Web site, who denounced Egyptians for daring the
demonstrate in Tahrir. "When that happened," he continued, "I realized the
Muslim Brotherhood was not going to change, and I submitted my resignation."

The leadership tried to talk him into staying, but another problem he had
was its refusal to take a clear position on just about anything. I've had
the same experience with the Brothers myself. My recent interview with
El-Erian wasn't my first. I spoke to him in 2005, as well, and he was
slipperier than a buttered-up eel. He refused to provide a clear answer to a
single one of my questions. Would the Muslim Brotherhood like to ban
alcohol? Force women to wear headscarves? He wouldn't say yes and he
wouldn't say no.

This restaurant in Zamalek might not be able to continue serving alcohol if
the Muslim Brotherhood has its way

"I told the supreme guide that it was inappropriate for an organization with
the Brotherhood's history to be unable to take a clear position on
anything," al-Sharnouby said. "I knew the situation wouldn't be fixed or
clarified and announced my resignation on Facebook."

He ought to know what the Brotherhood leaders want, though, as he spent all
of his adulthood working with them and for them.

"Do you think the Muslim Brotherhood is culturally democratic?" I said. "Is
their objective to govern Egypt or to be one party of many?"

"Of course they're objective is to govern Egypt," he said.

I realized as soon as he answered that I didn't phrase my question the way I
should have. The Democratic and Republican parties hope to govern the United
States, but that hardly means they aren't democratic. They hope to govern
after winning elections, but they don't try to overthrow the government when
they lose.

"What I meant to ask," I said, "is if the Muslim Brotherhood's leaders want
to be Egypt's next pharaohs."

The organization's spokesmen don't tell American journalists that they wish
to impose an Islamist dictatorship. If anyone like me tries to get them to
confirm or deny this, they dodge the question. They are very well practiced
in dodging that question. But al-Sharnouby should know. He knows what they
say when people like me are not listening.

"If the Brotherhood in its current state takes power," he said, "it will be
a serious crisis. There will be a mixing of what is religious and what is
political. In its current state, the mixing of politics and religion, in my
opinion, is wrong and worrying. It's very worrying for me personally. We
have to give credit to what happened on the 25th of January. We accomplished
a feat which ensures that no one will ever rule Egypt again the way the
pharaohs did. No one in the Brotherhood understand this, though, because
they did not create the revolution. The Brotherhood as it exists now wants
to come to power and rule the way Hosni Mubarak did."

Sayyid Qutb, the Muslim Brotherhood's philosopher of Islamic terrorism

He still describes himself as an Islamist even though he finds the prospect
of political Islam, as he put it, worrying. Islamism is by definition
political Islam, however. I think he is confused, that what he meant to say
is that he's a Muslim, not an Islamist, but I am not entirely sure what he
was getting at. So I had to ask, "what exactly do you mean when you say
you're an Islamist?"

"I see Islam as a way of life that is beautiful," he said, "that understands
that people can be different, that people should communicate with each
other. The Koran says God created male and female, different populations and
tribes, so that we would know each other. To me this is the idea behind
Islam, that people are from different cultures and places, and that we
should know each other. God put me on earth not to point my finger at people
and say who is going to heaven and who is going to hell."

He sounds to me more like a like a liberal or moderate Muslim. Whatever
label best suits him, Islamist probably isn't it. But he's a man in
transition who only very recently broke with a movement he's been a part of
for more than half his life and his entire adulthood. Perhaps in a few years
he'll work out these contradictions. For all I know he could even end up
like the famous feminist and atheist Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who herself once
identified with the Brotherhood. He certainly interprets the Koran
differently than the likes of the Taliban.

"Look," he said, "at the rules about adultery. They were put there to make
it almost impossible to prove that adultery ever took place. You have to
bring four witnesses who saw it happen. Adultery takes place during a human
being's greatest moment of weakness. There is a hadith about a man who went
up to the prophet and said he found two people committing adultery. He was
very proud of himself. Yet the prophet said, 'what are you doing? Why are
you scandalizing them? What's it to you? You should have just covered them
up and left.' These conditions aren't put in there to punish people. They
are there to allow human weakness."

One of the biggest problems with his former Islamist colleagues is their
visceral detestation of any kind of art.

"The Brotherhood today doesn't have a reasonable mechanism for dealing with
the arts," he said. "What's the literary output of the Muslim Brotherhood?
Leftists under Nasser were just as oppressed as the Brotherhood, but they
managed to produce literature. They wrote plays and movies. The reason the
Brothers don't produce anything literary or artistic, unlike the leftists,
is because they have a serious intellectual problem with art."

A great deal of literature can be found at the new library at Alexandria
even if the Muslim Brotherhood doesn't appreciate it

"Would they want to impose a ban on art if they had the power to do so?" I
said.

"Yes," he said. "Of course."

Of course? I was slightly surprised to hear this, but only slightly. The
Taliban banned music and art, after all. It isn't unprecedented. "They might
not ban it directly," he continued, "but they would limit it and place
obstacles around art and artists."

He is still a conservative Muslim, even so, at least in some ways. "Every
freedom has its limitations," he said. "Americans who talk about freedom and
the oppression of women in different parts of the world don't recognize how
women in their own societies are oppressed by things like pornography."

He has, however, set off on a new trajectory, one that may eventually take
him very far indeed from where he began.

"I saw two paths before me," he said, "and had to decide which one to take.
One is the path of the Muslim Brotherhood, the other of humanism. I have
chosen to follow the path of humanism."

*

If you learned something from this dispatch, or even if you just enjoyed
reading it, please contribute something to offset my travel expenses as 100
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  _____  

Article printed from Michael Totten: http://pajamasmedia.com/michaeltotten

URL to article:
http://pajamasmedia.com/michaeltotten/2011/08/11/the-muslim-brotherhood%e2%8
0%99s-discontents/

 



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