Al-BANNA, FROM ADVOCATING ISLAMIC ATTIRE TO ALLIANCE WITH A BULLY
Leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood
(MB) surround the memory of Hassan al-Banna with the aura of a prophet.
Al-Banna was the man who, in 1928, founded the MB organization that developed,
over the years, into a world network of terrorist franchise groups. This man,
often described by his followers as the leader of an Islamic Risorgimento, was,
according to those who knew him well, a man whose deeds belied his words. It is
curious how his followers, even now, after almost seven decades of his death,
never think of what he said and then went back on, only because his own
interests dictated a change of mind.
In his book 'Memoirs of the Call
and the Caller', al-Banna stated that he was committed to wearing an Islamic
dress, which he described as being similar to the dress of Ihram, or the attire
of a Muslim pilgrim. He said that in the course of a rather rough give-and-take
that went on, between him and the Director of Education, in Damanhour (Behaira
province, Egypt), when he walked into school donning a white imama (turban)
with a dangling tail, a white cloak over his jilbab (garment) and a pair of sandals
that left his feet half- covered, he looked so much like Sufis because he
himself had once been a member of the Hassafi Sufist order.
This happened when he was hardly
sixteen years old, in a school training young men to be teachers of Primary Education,
al-Banna tells us, in his Memoirs. The Director of Education, Hassan Ragheb,
insisted on the need for Hassan al-Banna, like all other students, to go by the
school dress code. He asked the young al-Banna' :'Why are you dressed up like
this?' Hassan al-Banna replied: 'This is Sunna.' The Director asked: 'And have
you done everything the Sunna tells you to do, before coming to this? Al-Banna
said 'No. We are all to blame for not being committed enough to Sunna, but, at
least I'm trying.' Ragheb said:' You are breaking the school-rules with this
kind of dress.' Al-Banna asked: 'why, sir?'
A noisy argument erupted, as
al-Banna insisted on his traditional garb, claiming that this was not a
violation of any rules. Ragheb gave him this piece of advice:' If you insist on
this garb, even after you finish this school, the provincial Education Council
will not give you a teaching job, because you will look strange, to your own
students.' In a challenging tone, al-Banna said that only God provides and that
it was too early to think of getting a job. When the time comes, he said, the Directorate
would be free to accept or refuse the way he chose to dress up.
A change of attire by the Quranic Man
After joining Dar al –Uloom Academy
in Cairo, the Quranic Man, as Hassan al-Banna was described by American
Journalist Robert Jackson, changed attire. He committed the 'sin' of wearing a
suit and a tarbush (fez), after having, for several years, condemned others for
doing just that. He gave up the imama and jilbab that had been, a few years
before, the reason behind the dispute with the Director of Education. He would
be seen, in this dress, in Egypt and abroad, for many years to follow.
The 'Imam' and the bully
Another episode in the life of
Hassan al-Banna, according to ikhanwiki, the online encyclopedia recording
events of MB history, features a man named Ibrahim Kroom, referred to by MB
members as the 'repentant thief who became attached to al-Banna'. This man is
said to have given up terrorizing and extorting people, only to become a member
of the group, serving the faith and the community.
Kroom, who had been known to
people in the Cairo districts of Boulack and Sabtiyya (Cairo North) as Fetowwa (bully) who imposed
levies on them, joined the Brotherhood, at a certain point of his life and
became a friend of al –Banna. His Son, Mostafa Kroom said in a videotaped
interview, broadcast in 2015, that his father' Never went without his nabbout
(cudgel), the instrument that helped him garner money from the well-off, in his
neighborhood and beyond. He gained the title Fetowwa in 1926, when he managed
to kill with his nabbout a number of people that tried to stand up to him. In
ikhwanwiki, Kroom features as a completely different person, as a businessman
dealing in scrap metal and owning a coffee-house who used both his house and
his coffee-house as places where he solved people's problems. This made his
house and his coffee-house a Justice Diwan.
According to a testimony by the
founder of the MB secret intelligence group, Mahmoud Assaf, Kroom won the
admiration of al-Banna when the latter saw how Kroom managed to force
shop-keepers to make donations to al-Banna's organization. Al-Banna greatly
admired Kroom and used to receive him in his private house. In his book, 'With
Imam Shaheed, Hassan Al-Banna', Assaf
says that Kroom was as strongly attached to Imam and to the Brotherhood as Imam
himself was attached to him.' So, the Quranic Man had no qualms about extorting
people, as long as the money resulting from this extortion found its way to the
coffers of his organization.