Copts in the Mind of "Al-Banna" … From Building Bridges to Break-up
The most prominent
reference to the status of the Copts in the policy of the founder of the Muslim
Brotherhood (1928) Hassan al-Banna (1906-1949), can be the "diaries of the
preaching and the preacher," which represents his biography, and is
considered by the Muslim Brotherhood as a theoretical reference whenever they
disagree.
Strangely, the pages
of these diaries leaned towards building bridges and dialogue with the Copts when
a need for their money exists. When the Muslim Brotherhood group could do
without them, they abandoned them.
Al-Banna did not
reject the donation he received from Edouard Empain (a Belgian engineer who
founded Heliopolis Company) and was a Christian. Empain saw the mosque and
school project initiated by the Muslim Brotherhood in Ismailia in 1928. He
offered to help the Muslim Brotherhood group with a sum of LE500. In his
memoirs, the Muslim Brotherhood General Guide documented his position on this
amount, saying: "I thanked him for this, and I understand that this amount
is very small, and was not expected from the company because at the time it was
building with its own money a church costing five hundred thousand Egyptian pounds,
it gave the mosque only five hundred Egyptian pounds. So, he was convinced with
my point of view and asked me to accept the money.”
On the rejection of
the members of the group to build the mosque and the school with foreign funds,
the General Guide responded by saying: "This is our money not foreign
funds. The channel is ours, the sea is ours and the land is ours. Those people
are angry in a lapse of time. God wanted the mosque to be established. No
foreign money has been put in the mosque. The money was put in the building of
the Muslim Brotherhood group (And God was capable of everything). Thus, this is
crooked jurisprudence. He also did not address the religion of Edouard Empain known
Baron Empain.
Serving Islamic
Wealth
In 1936, al-Banna
mentioned in his diaries the text of a speech by Anba Yunes, the then Patriarch
of the Coptic Orthodox Church in Egypt, asking him to donate money from the
church to support the Palestinian cause. The speech began with "Dear Anba
Yunes, The head of the Palestine Assistance Committee in the Muslim Brotherhood
group in Cairo is pleased to submit this request to your majesty, inspired by
what is entrusted to your majesty of the highest noble feelings of mercy and
righteousness."
"You know, O
Blessed One, that dear brotherly Palestine is the cradle of the laws and the
prophets. It has been subjected to the brutal force. The blood of its sons,
Muslims and Christians alike has been shed. Its homes have been destroyed. In
Egypt, we can offer those heroes money. We hope that you will embrace these
heroic Mujahideen with your fatherly kindness. We also hope that you will order
the sons of Palestine be provided with the remainder of the funds of the Al-Ahbash
Assistance Committee to the Higher Arab Committee in Jerusalem. Moreover, kindly
invite Egyptian philanthropists to donate for this noble purpose. Thank you a
lot. "
In the third pillar of allegiance, al-Banna
speaks in the "message of the teachings" about work. He says:
"Reforming the government is needed until it is truly Islamic. The
government is an Islamic entity as long as its members were Muslims who obeyed
the provisions of Islam and were not disobedient. We use non-Muslims when
necessary in other positions of the general mandate.”
Thus, the founder of
the group defined the government as an Islamic entity that only accommodates
Muslims in normal circumstances and expands to include non-Muslims when
necessary in non-state positions. This means that the presence of a non-Muslim
in the Islamic government is temporary and has taken place because of a need
more than a right to participate in power positions.
Al-Banna's view of the Copts is
not too far from the viewpoints of the group's members, such as Sayyed Qutb and
Muhammad Abdullah al-Khatib (the mufti of the group), who incited against the
Copts and recommended the demolition of their churches and not burying them in
Muslim graves. They have also said that the Copts should be greeted. Al-Banaa
only got close to the Copts to request a donation for the group.