Western Sahara before Palestine: King’s decision forces Moroccan Brotherhood to submit to ‘nation-state’

The agreement that US President Donald Trump announced,
reached between Morocco and the Israeli occupation, in the second half of December
still casts a shadow over the Moroccan political reality, specifically the
Brotherhood-affiliated Justice and Development Party (PJD), which found itself
forced to accept the agreement approved by the king, or rather even completing the
procedures, as it is the party responsible for the government.
Wide criticism
While the PJD received widespread criticism after agreeing
to the agreement due to its inconsistency with the slogans it had long raised
against normalization, last Sunday the party held a special meeting of the
General Secretariat chaired by the Secretary-General and Head of the Moroccan
Government, Saad Eddine El Othmani, in which he clarified the party’s position.
Moroccan newspapers reported that the PJD concluded by stressing that the party
stands behind the decisions of King Mohammed VI, and that Western Sahara comes
before the Palestinian cause.
The Moroccan Hespress website quoted a PJD leader as saying,
“All members of the party's General Secretariat agreed on the slogan of the national
issue first and the Palestinian cause always,” and that they emphasized the
need to confront the rush to normalization and set up mechanisms for that.
Patriotism or Islamism?
Besides that the position of the Moroccan Brotherhood is
inconsistent with the position of the international Brotherhood, which attacked
the recent Arab normalization agreements with Israel and considered it leniency
and an abandonment of the agreed foundations, the party’s position, which is
summarized in the “national issue first and the Palestinian issue always,”
reopens the file of the nation-state and its position in the Brotherhood’s
understanding.
Although all references and studies have argued that the
Brotherhood has always rejected the concept of the nation-state and placed
before it the concept of the nation and the Islamic state, PJD statements
indicate that the party places the interests of the nation-state before the
Islamic ummah, which contradicts the Brotherhood’s understanding.
According to the WikiBrotherhood website, Brotherhood
founder Hassan al-Banna explained the differences between the Brotherhood’s
understanding of patriotism and its general concept, saying, “The face of the
disagreement between patriotism, as understood by the Brotherhood and advocates
of abstract patriotism, comes at the forefront of the disagreements that the
basis of Muslim patriotism is the Islamic creed and Islam.” He made the
national feeling a creed, not a sexual fanatic, and his goal was to work for
good for the sake of human beings.
A recent study by the Trends Center for Research and
Consultation, which dealt with the concept of patriotism among the Brotherhood,
warned of the group’s threat to the foundations of the nation-state and a coup
against it. Banna had a clear vision for building a parallel state, and despite
Banna's description of his group upon its founding as a movement seeking to
bring about social change and having no interest in politics, a decade after
its founding, specifically in May 1938, it announced its entry into the
political arena and adopted positions hostile to the government and the
existing political elites. It even worked to form groups within the army, the
police, and the judiciary, in addition to establishing the Special System in
the late 1930s, specifically in May 1938.
The center added that the idea of governance and the
administration of the state continued to entice Banna, but when he chose the
way to pass that, he advised controlling the curricula and systems of
education, media, and charitable institutions, leading to control of the state
and penetration of official institutions.
The study went on to state that hatred of the nation-state
is the most important pillar of the Brotherhood project. Members of the
Brotherhood have been brought up to antagonize the state as an ignorant state
that must be changed by all means, just as the nation-state does not constitute
to them any importance compared to the realization of the dream of "world
mastership", so they understood what they believe to be the only
legitimate form of society in Islam as a transnational caliphate.
This refers to the dilemma that the Moroccan Brotherhood is
going through to the extent that it made them contradict the international
group’s position and one of its foundations, which Badriya al-Rawi talked about
in a study entitled "The State Among the Thinkers of the Muslim
Brotherhood."
Rawi explained, “The Brotherhood’s wings are used to
manipulating positions, so they see them in a regional and international axis
here and an axis hostile to it in another region.”