| What
Sect Does Osama Bin Laden Really Belong to?
"
But
if one man deserves the title of intellectual grandfather
to Osama bin Laden and his fellow terrorists, it is probably
the Egyptian writer and activist Sayyid
Qutb."
-
Robert Worth, The New York Times
As
a result of the wealth which the Bin Laden Corporation generated,
Osama Bin Laden used his family's money to live a carefree
and luxurious lifestyle. Because of this, he never managed
to exert himself to sit with any of the Muslim scholars, really
seek knowledge, or ground himself in the fundamentals of Islamic
beliefs. This state of ignorance continued even after he became
religious and went to Afghanistan to fight against the Soviets.
The fact that he failed to take advantage of studying under
the guardianship of the elder scholars of Saudi Arabia led
him to mix instead with the Qutbists,
a newly arisen sect.
Eventually,
he completely dismissed the methodology of the "Wahhabis"
and expelled many of its people from the fold of Islam. Therefore,
how could it be considered correct to say that Osama Bin Laden
is a "Wahhabi"?
In actuality, Osama Bin Laden and his al-Qaeda movement are
not "Wahhabis",
but rather, Qutbists.
Confirming
this important link, the New York Times' Robert Worth said,
"
But if one man deserves the title of intellectual
grandfather to Osama bin Laden and his fellow terrorists,
it is probably the Egyptian writer and activist Sayyid
Qutb."
The
Existence of Qutbism as an Ideology
In
an article titled "Terror, Islam and Democracy,"
Ladan and Roya Boroumand correctly state that "Most
young Islamist cadres today are the direct intellectual and
spiritual heirs of the Qutbist
wing of the Muslim Brotherhood."
They
state that: "When the authoritarian regime of President
Gamel Abdel Nasser suppressed the
Muslim Brothers in 1954 (it would eventually get around
to hanging Qutb in
1966), many went into exile in Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Iraq,
Syria and Morocco. From there, they spread their revolutionary
Islamist ideas - including the organizational and ideological
tools borrowed from European totalitarianism."
Expanding
upon the link between European revolutionary ideologies and
the dogma of Qutbism,
The Independent's John Gray argues in an article entitled
"How Marx turned Muslim" that Qutbism
is not rooted in the Islamic tradition, but rather, is very
much a Western based ideology.
He
explains that Sayyid Qutb
"incorporated many elements derived from European ideology
into his thinking," and as such, Qutbism
should be seen as an "exotic hybrid, bred from the encounter
of sections of the Islamic intelligentsia with radical western
ideologies."
Gray
explains that Qutbism
is a modern revolutionary movement and unrepresentative of
the orthodoxy of true Islam:
"The
inspiration for Qutb's
thought is not so much the Quran, but the current of western
philosophy embodied in thinkers such as Nietzsche, Kierkegaard
and Heidegger. Qutb's
thought -- the blueprint for all subsequent radical Islamist
political theology -- is as much a response to 20th-century
Europe's experience of 'the death of God'
as to anything in the Islamic tradition. Qutbism
is in no way traditional. Like all fundamentalist
ideology, it is unmistakably modern."
Speaking
about the incontestable link that exists between Bin Laden
and Qutbism,
the Arab News' Amir Taheri said: "In time, Maudoodo-Qutbism
provided the ideological topos in which Bin Ladenism could
grow." 
Shaykh
Rabee' ibn Haadee al-Madkhalee, the renowned Salafi
scholar who has written several books refuting the mistakes
of Sayyid Qutb, concludes
the following about Qutbism:
"The Qutbists
are the followers of Sayyid
Qutb
everything you see of the tribulations, the
shedding of blood and the problems in the Islamic world today
arise from the methodology (of this man)." 
-
abridged from the book: The 'Wahhabi' Myth
The Qutbists
are those who adhere to the ideology of Sayyid
Qutb, a modern proponent of revolutionary thought. This
particular ideology has been termed al-Qutbiyyah (Qutbism).
Robert Worth, The deep intellectual roots of Islamic terror,
The New York Times, 13th October 2001.
Ladan and Roya Boroumand, Terror, Islam and Democracy, The
Journal of Democracy, April 2002. Note: Since the Boroumands
have correctly linked Qutbism
with European totalitarianism, we can say that it is not correct
for these people to be referred to as Islamists. Rather, it
would be more accurate to refer to them as Muslim activists.
Although they are Muslims, their revolutionary ideology cannot
be attributed to Islam.
Robert Worth of the New York Times mentioned the following
regarding the European influence of the Qutbists,
"As Fathi Yakan, one of Qutb's
disciples, wrote in the 1960's: 'The groundwork for the French
Revolution was laid by Rousseau, Voltaire and Montesquieu;
the Communist Revolution realized plans set by Marx, Engels
and Lenin
The same holds true for us as well.'"
(Robert Worth, The Deep Intellectual Roots of Islamic Terror,
The New York Times, 13th October 2001.)
Revolutionary thinkers such as Abu
Alaa Maududi, Sayyid
Qutb, Hasan Turabi of Sudan and the Iranian philosopher
Ali Shariati became ideologically influenced by the West after
having resided there. Although they rejected Western lifestyle
and refuted it, they also became very influenced by it, formulating
radical ideologies of reform. They were ignorant of Islam
and its creed, and thus made their political thought and analysis
the basis of their doctrine, and then sought to Islamicize
it.
The concept of attributing death to the Creator, whether it
be expressed literally or symbolically, is absurd in the extreme.
Allah said in the Quran:
"And
put your trust in the Ever-Living Who dies not, and glorify
His Praises"
(Quran 25:58)
It would have been more accurate for Gray to have said, "Like
all extremist ideology, it is unmistakably modern," instead
of using the ambiguous term "fundamentalist."
John Gray, How Marx turned Muslim, The Independent, 27 July,
2002.
Taheri is referring to the link between Abu
Alaa Maududi, the South-Asian Muslim "thinker,"
and Sayyid Qutb, who
was heavily influenced by Maududi's
writings. Confirming this, the Telegraph stated the following
regarding Qutb: "Egyptian
writer and thinker. Took up the idea of Abu
al-Alaa al-Maududi (1903-79) that much of the Muslim world
had returned to ungodly ignorance (jahiliyah)." (A-Z
of Islam, The Telegraph, November 15, 2001.)

Amir Taheri, Bin Laden no longer exists: Here is why. The
Arab News, August 29, 2002.

Shaykh Rabee' ibn Haadee on Imaam al-Albaanee and Irjaa' (Source:
11th January, 2002 Tele-link from the UK, www.salafipublications.com
- Article ID: MSC060014).
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