Sufism viable alternative to extremism in Arab countries
The Prophet Muhammad birthday celebrations which were held in a number of Arab countries at the end of November this year carried many political messages.
This was particularly
true to the countries where operative Islam reigned for a while. People in
these countries apparently were eager to get rid of the legacy of the Islamist
movements.
Libya
In Libya, the
celebrations were exceptional this year. Thousands of people descended on the
streets to mark the occasion in scenes unprecedented since the 2011 uprising.
The Facebook page
Libyan Sufis contained photos of street marches by people of all ages. The page
administrators considered the large number of people who participated in the
marches a strong message to operative Islamist movements in Libya, first of
which al-Qaeda and the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) which overran
Libyan cities in the past years.
The celebrations were
strong and different this year, one of the page administrators told al-Marjie.
The administrator who
requested anonymity added that a large number of people participated in the
celebrations this year in a clear challenge to Islamist movements that
prevented the Libyans from expressing love to the People of the House, namely
the relatives of Prophet Muhammad.
He said ordinary
Libyans succeeded in delivering a message about their desire to get rid of
extremist Islamist movements.
"The Libyans are
also reviving their religious culture, the one they were about to lose because
of developments in their country," the administrator said.
Iraq
This was where ISIS
established its presumed caliphate. Nevertheless, Sufi groups organized
marches, seminars and lectures on the merits of love to Prophet Muhammad and
the blessings that come with celebrating his birthday.
Such celebrations were
inconceivable under ISIS. The venomous organization used to destroy Sufi
mausoleums and punish Sufis.
Spokesman of Iraq's
Supreme Council of Sufism Soheib al-Rawi said Sufis show up deliberately in
order to bring back the past glories of Sufism in Iraq.
"We also want to
get rid of the legacy ISIS left behind in Iraq," al-Rawi said.
He told al-Marjie that
Iraq's Sufis work hard to cope with the changes taking place in their country.
The Sufis, he added,
organize marches and also seminar and lectures on Sufism.
Syria
Sufi celebrations were
rampant in Syria before 2011. This year, there were video clips on social media
of Syrian women who met at a hotel and danced against the background of Sufi
music.
This raised question
marks in the Syria media. The media asked about whether the Syrian government
wanted to give Sufis more space on Syria's political stage.
Some Syrian researchers
suggested that the government might depend on the Sufis in the future to
tighten the noose around the Salafists.
Syria, they said,
needed a new norm of pity that helps the government get rid of the legacy of
the terrorists.