salafi:reply 
  TERRORISM
People ask - What is the definition of terrorism anyway?What is Terrorism?
Were Wahhabis behind the 9/11 attacks?Were the 9/11 Hijackers Salafis/'Wahhabis'?
Does Wahhabism support suicide bombings?  What do the 'Wahhabis' themselves say?Do 'Wahhabis' Support Suicide Bombings?
Wahhabism and Terrorism?  Do Wahhabis endorse terrorism?Do 'Wahhabis' Support Acts of Terrorism?
Wahhabism and 9/11 - What do the Wahhabis think?What do 'Wahhabis' Think About 9/11?

WAHHABISM
Orthodox Islam and Wahhabism - is there a difference?Does the Creed of 'Wahhabism' Differ From That of Orthodox Islam?
Does Wahhabism endorse suicide bombings?  What do the Wahhabis say themselves?Do 'Wahhabis' Support Suicide Bombings?
Wahhabism and terrorism - Do Wahhabis support terrorism?Do 'Wahhabis' Support Acts of Terrorism?
Wahhabism - Are Wahhabis dangerous?
Are 'Wahhabis' a Dangerous and Treacherous People?
Osama bin Laden and the Wahhabis - Is his sect Wahhabism?Does Osama Bin Laden Like 'Wahhabis'?
Do Wahhabis even like Osama bin Laden?Do 'Wahhabis' like Osama Bin Laden?

Wahhabism and 9/11 from the words of the Wahhabis
What do 'Wahhabis' Think About 9/11?
Stephen Schwartz and Wahhabism - Does he speak justly about the Wahhabis?Has Stephen Schwartz Spoken Justly About 'Wahhabism'?

OSAMA BIN LADEN
Is Osama bin Laden a Saudi Wahhabi?Is Osama Bin Laden Really a 'Wahhabi'?
Is Osama bin Laden's real affiliation with Wahhabism or something else?What Sect Does Osama Bin Laden Belong to?
The Difference Between Osama bin Laden's sect and WahhabismWhat Kind of Effect has Osama Bin Laden's Sect Had on the World?
Does Osama bin Laden even like Wahhabis and Wahhabism?Does Osama Bin Laden Like 'Wahhabis'?
Do Wahhabis even like Osama?Do 'Wahhabis' Like Osama Bin Laden?

What is Osama bin Laden's real objective?Is Fighting the U.S. Osama Bin Laden's Front for a Different Objective?

WHO'S WHO?
Is Allah a foreign god?Who is Allah?
All about Wahhabis and WahhabismWhat is a 'Wahhabi' and What is 'Wahhabism'?
All about Salafis and SalafismWhat is a Salafi and What is Salafism?
The Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt - al-Ikhwan al-MuslimunThe Group: al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun (The Muslim Brotherhood) of Egypt
Sayyid Qutb a Wahhabi?Who was Sayyid Qutb?
Who was Abu Alaa Maududi?Who was Abu Alaa Maududi?
Who is Hasan al-Banna?Who was Hasan Al-Banna?
Sufis and SufismWhat is a Sufi and What is Sufism?
The Khariji sect, also called the Khawarij, Kharijites, or KhawaarijWhat is a Khariji and Who are the Khawarij?


The Wahhabi Myth - Web design by BELDA-1424
 

What Kind of Effect has Qutbism Had on the World?

"Bin Laden's kind of extremism has much more in common with Stalin, Hitler, and Mao than it does with Islamic tradition. Like those state terrorists, Bin Laden is at war with his own people. And finally, I have boldly asserted that Bin Laden and his extremists are evil, pure and simple, and Islam is not."

- David F. Forte, The National Review

Commenting on the effects of Sayyid Qutb's writings in the Muslim world, the New York Times' Judith Shulevitz writes,

"…Anyone who doubts that literary critics can play a part on the bloody stage of history should consider the example of Sayyid Qutb. Qutb, born in Egypt in 1906 and university educated, was a Western-style literary critic until he devoted himself to Islam after spending two years in the United States, exposed to what he viewed as our decadence. He died in 1966, when he was hanged along with other Muslim radicals by the government of Gamal Abdel Nasser. Qutb's books of hard-line political theology have had a direct influence on the Saudi Arabian Muslim opposition; the Islamic Salvation Front in Algeria; the Palestinian group Hamas; the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, Jordan, Iraq and Lebanon; Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, the Egyptian cleric jailed for several thwarted terrorist plots and linked to the 1993 World Trade Center bombing; and the Iranian writer Ali Shariati, who helped foster the Islamic revolution in Iran."

In a National Review article entitled "Religion is Not the Enemy," David F. Forte accurately describes the link between contemporary radical movements within the Muslim world and the writings of Sayyid Qutb:

"In other writings, I have asserted that this form of extremism has been inspired by the writings of influential modernist radicals, such as Sayyid Qutb of Egypt, who believe that virtually all Islam is in a state of unbelief and needs to be reconquered. Thus, in its modern form, Bin Laden's kind of extremism has much more in common with Stalin, Hitler, and Mao than it does with Islamic tradition. Like those state terrorists, Bin Laden is at war with his own people. And finally, I have boldly asserted that Bin Laden and his extremists are evil, pure and simple, and Islam is not."

Although Forte's understanding of "Wahhabism" is rather limited, unlike many other writers, he was able to distinguish between the methodology of Osama Bin Laden and the methodology of the "Wahhabis" when he said, "Osama bin Laden's version of Islam is different even from Wahhabism."

- abridged from the book: The 'Wahhabi' Myth

 


Shulevitz has accurately identified the ideological source of those who live within Saudi Arabia and are opposed to its scholars and creed as being the ideology of Qutbism, and not the native creed of "Wahhabism".

Judith Shulevitz, Some ideas demand rebuttal, The New York Times, 21st October 2001.

David F. Forte, Religion is not the enemy, The National Review, 19th October 2001.