Function Transformations of the Mosque in the Thought of Islamic Movements in Egypt

In Muslim thought, mosques were associated with the Sultan. The style of mosques in the state was characterized by administration and speech. However, with the expansion of Islam and its spread, other types of mosques emerged, such as waqf mosques, government-owned mosques, among others. In this context, the idea of establishing mosques has become popular among the Islamic movements, which have worked to develop the functions of the mosque in order to play a preaching, religious role as well as awareness, social and charitable functions.
This
paper examines the evolution of the mosque's functions, which can be seen in
public spaces where it provides services to the entire society without
distinction, such as hospitals, charities attached to mosques, private spaces
that are limited to the Muslim community, such as the mosque courtyard and event
halls that limit their services to Muslims. In this context, Islamic movements
such as the Muslim Brotherhood, the Salafists and others have taken control of
the mosques' spaces and even expanded their roles to ensure that they dominate
the communities from the gate of the mosques, be it ideological, political or
social.
The
mosque: conceptual reading
The
mosque is the most important Islamic religious buildings. Since the 11th
century, a new system has been introduced to benefit from the mosques within
the framework of transforming the functions of the mosque and expanding them to
serve the Muslim community. They have emerged as schools for the teaching of
Islamic jurisprudence, Quran, Hadith, religious doctrines and different
sciences.
On
the other hand, the mosque is the essence upon which the groups of Islamic
movements rely on their political practices for the purpose of political
employment, whether on society or politics. The mosque is known as the place
where Muslims gather to pray (2). In the view of the jurisprudent Muhammad Ibn
Abdullah al-Zarkashi, the mosque means in the language a place that originates
from the place of "prostration", and in this way it is purification
and sanctification. In Islamic jurisprudence, prostration has its implications as
man is closer to his Lord.
It
is also called a "mosque" meaning the place where people gather for
Friday prayers. Islam urges volunteering to build mosques, and to make it a
great addition, which explains the rush of people to donate and participate in
the construction of mosques. The Prophet (peace be upon him) said in a Hadith:
"Whoever built a mosque, will have a house in paradise" (4).
In
both meanings, the word "mosque" can be utilized and employed as an
effective tool whether spiritually (prostration) or materially (gathering). This
is what Dr. Khalil Al-Anani said in his interpretation of the religious
phenomenon in the events of the Arab Spring, especially with regards to its use
as points for the gathering of demonstrators in the 2011 events in Syria and
Egypt (5).
The
concept of "mosque" is related to other concepts such as "the pulpit";
it is a mirror of the knowledge and rules of Islam. The message of the pulpit
is regarded as the most influential one on the people as it is derived from the
essence of religion and its origins. Sheikh Mansour al-Rifai (former undersecretary
of the Ministry of Waqfs for the affairs of preaching and mosques) also sees that
the pulpit is the most important media center that helps in the manufacture of
public opinion in the case of countries with a Muslim majority. All this led
the political players to control it as the Islamists in Egypt after 2011 tried
to dominate its rhetoric away from the authorities of the state and its
employees.
The
Mosque: Function Transformations
The
Mamluks in Egypt monopolized the construction of mosques and spending on them
to strengthen their relations with the Egyptian people, with whom they have
only religious links. So, they strengthened such links through the construction
of mosques. The mosques in the Mamluk period played a great political and
social role. They were used as pulpits for preaching to appoint Mamluks and
dismiss others in addition to its role as courtyards of the judiciary and
various events. This is reflected in the recent development of mosques. It has
become a place for practicing various political and social activities such as
hospitals, educational centers or event halls.
1-
The political role
The
political role of the mosque dates back to the era of the Prophet and the
Caliphate. It was taken as a headquarters for governance. The mosque later played
an important role in establishing the foundations of the government. In this
context, the movements of political Islam exploited the religious authority of
the mosque to influence people's lives, as happened in the constitutional
elections that followed the January 25 revolution in Egypt and the recruitment
of members. Many members of the Muslim Brotherhood pointed out that the stages
of their recruitment into the group began from the space of the mosque and
especially from the seminars of religious lessons that take place after prayers
in what called "chasing the prey" (7).
The Salafist, Sheikh Hazem
Salah Abu Ismail, has worked on the political employment of the Asad ibn
al-Furat Mosque in Dokki (Giza governorate) as a stronghold to preach his
political project, during which he fought a long struggle with the Supreme
Council of the Armed Forces with a view to pressure the public to enable him to
contest the Egyptian presidential elections held in 2012.
2-
Cultural and scientific role
The
mosque played a major role in the dissemination of science, especially
religious. Scientific seminars emerged within the great mosques, which
witnessed the teaching of the sciences of the Qur’an, Hadith, and
jurisprudence. In this context, Al-Maqrizi's plans referred to the use of the
Ahmad Ibn Tulun Mosque in Cairo as a scientific institution. The idea of universities
and higher education emerged from mosques such as Zaytouna in Tunisia, Qarawein
in Fez and Al-Azhar Mosque in Cairo. The Islamic movements, especially the
Muslim Brotherhood, sought the help of the preachers and the sheikhs to recruit
new members. The group relied on the mosque to give lessons and religious
sermons to improve its image in the mass media to counter negative propaganda against
them.
According
to Islamic movements, the project of supporting classes for students is a means
of connecting Muslim youth to the mosque as well as a natural extension of the
intellectual role that the mosque must play in society.
3.
Social role
The
mosque was not only a place of worship in the ideology of Islamic movements,
but it was used as a tool to enter society. There is a comprehensive concept of
the function of the mosque. This concept is concerned with meeting the needs of
the people. The model of "Islamic compounds" attached to hospitals,
charities, private classrooms and centers, event halls and educational
incubators that serve the geographical area surrounding the mosque has emerged.
Although these complexes play a charitable role in the community, especially
the poor ones, this activity may be related to political employment attempts,
especially after it emerged in the wake of the 2011 events. The Islamic
movements used mosques and their activities to serve the politicians. For
example, the Board of Directors of the Islamic Association, which has more than
6000 mosques in Egypt, supported the candidate with the Islamic background,
Mohamed Morsi, at the expense of Ahmed Shafik. That was considered by some as a
political deviation for those who carry out the activities of the Association,
which dates back to 1912.
Any
researcher will never be concerned about the positive role played by the mosque
in the society, but he or she will try to understand the dynamics of relations
that arise in the vicinity of its spaces, especially in cases of political
control over its activities, which generate social dynamics. This can be seen
in the political polarization such as the post-2011 Egypt
crisis and the ousting of former President Mohamed Morsi in June 2013. These
spaces were used as a space for political action, either to support these
groups or to take up space for recruitment and mobilizing mass gatherings. The
denial of radical currents from these gatherings is one of the most important
determinants of state policy towards mosques.
The
Mosque in the Thought of Islamic Movements
Through
studying the thought of the Islamic movements towards the mosques, it can be
conceived that their idea emerges from an overall perception of the role of the
mosque as a scientific center in Muslim communities. In his sermon during the
opening of a mosque affiliated to the group in Ismailia city, Hassan al-Banna,
the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, called for donating to build mosques as
they are considered public schools and popular universities visited by children,
youth and old people. He also demanded its generation and the expansion of its
activities to go beyond religious lessons and prayer to the annexation of
hospitals and educational centers.
This
view emerged effectively in the list of the formation of mosque reconstruction
councils approved by the Muslim Brotherhood in the era of former president
Morsi, where the Minister of Waqfs Mohammad Afifi announced his decision No. 75
for the year 2013 on the formation of "Councils for the Reconstruction of
Mosques. The decision gave the mosque reconstruction councils a special
importance as it guaranteed for them the powers to practice religious lessons
and the Holy Quran workshops in the mosque as well as their responsibility in
furnishing the mosque library and preparing the mosque for the exercise of its
social role in its geographical environment, such as the formation of literacy
classes, the establishment of medical complexes and the launch of workshops for
teaching handicrafts such as knitting among others. They were also given the powers
to direct supervision of the donation collection.
Resolution
No. 75 of 2013 showed to a large extent the vision of the Islamic movements for
the functions of the mosque, in terms of administration and supervision being
the right of the Muslim community associated with the mosque. The media
spokesman of the Waqfs Ministry considered that the decision restores to the
mosques their historical role. On the other hand, the diversification of the
activity within the mosque spaces is a re-establishment of its role in its
neighboring geographical environment by providing daily and living services to
the people, represented by its social activities, as well as a way of
re-linking the people with the mosque.
Salafists
have recently been playing the role of the Brotherhood in attracting young
people through charitable activities in rural communities to polarize people.
Among the services provided by the Salafists is the provision of private
tutoring in the educational centers with the mosques they still hold, and the
running of medical and veterinary convoys to provide free treatment to poor
places. Their role also emerged in the floods that swept through the Ras Ghareb
region in the Red Sea in 2016 as members of the Nur party launched relief
campaigns from mosques near the party headquarters.
The
mosque and the philosophy of space
The
activity of the mosque may transcend its religious and spiritual functions, as
well as its religious boundaries, in the service of the Muslim community to
charitable and social functions to serve its surrounding community without
discrimination, especially in the case of poor communities. This takes place particular
with the decline of the pastoral state's roles which can be more concerned with
living conditions than ideologies.
The
idea of the
mosque's spaces in Islamic political thought stems from the role played by the
mosque in the life of Muslims. It was not a place to perform prayers only, but
it was the seat of government and a place of education and judiciary in
controversial issues and a platform for preaching for jihad and mobilizing
armies in the state of the Prophet Muhammad. In this context, the Egyptian
Minister of Waqfs, Hussein al-Shafei, adopted at a meeting of the Council of
Ministers in 1968 the idea of exploiting the
spaces of mosques for the exercise of service and community roles, in order to
block the Islamic groups from carrying out this role.
Al-Shafei
said there is a need for mosques to expand their activities and serve the
surrounding communities, such as participation in the provision of education,
health and medical services, as well as social welfare. Al-Shafei said that the
integration of the trilogy of the state, the mosque and the local community
serves the goals of the state (then) in achieving social justice and enables
the institution of the mosque to perform new functions within the framework of
modernity.
The
social spaces that are confined to the mosque stand out in two parts. The first
is the Society Service Center, which means a semi-public space for the
provision of social services, charitable activities and the attached event
halls. The revenues of such halls are considered one of the major sources of
income for the government-owned mosques and the Ministry of Waqfs. The second
is the Religious Service Center, which is a private space. Its services are
limited to Muslims, such as practicing religious rituals and other religious
services such as zakat committees or burial services for the Muslim individuals.
This
is illustrated in Figure 2, where the public spaces of the mosque expand to
include the most sought-after services of the Egyptian community, such as the
most popular health care centers in the case of rural communities, which suffer
from poverty and decline in services or the most demanded educational centers
in the case of big cities, especially with the decline in the role of public
schools in favor of private lessons and educational centers.
In
this context, the current Minister of Waqfs, Mohamed Mukhtar Jumaa, announced
the signing of a protocol of cooperation with the Ministry of Supply to provide
900 tons of foodstuffs to be distributed at an affordable cost for the poor and
the needy. In this regard, the minister ordered the opening of 900 outlets to
sell food commodities in mosques and unused spaces. This blocks the way for the
exploitation of the Islamic movements of poverty in Egyptian society. (10)
The
researcher is concerned about the role of the public and semi-public spaces of
the mosques in directing these services to the society as a whole without discrimination,
as long as they allow themselves to emerge from private spaces (worshiping and
spiritual activities) to the public spaces (social activities) in relation to
their public activities. This consolidates the values of citizenship away from
the idea of the chosen category.
Finally,
the Islamic movement groups have recognized the importance of religion as an
essential component of people's lives. So, they have exploited it to achieve
their interests. This vision confirms that most of the Islamic movements were
established in mosques, such as the Muslim Brotherhood, the Salafists, and the
Tabligh and Da'wa groups. This proves that the mosque has been and continues to
be an important instrument of the Islamic groups to dominate society.
Therefore, the state policies, especially after the ousting of former president
Mohamed Morsi, are working on preventing these movements from controlling the spaces
of the mosque and its activities, as well as limiting its social role by
preventing them from reaching the grassroots.
List
of references
1.
Nabil Abdel Fattah, The Religious Situation in Egypt, Fifth Edition (Cairo:
Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, 1995), p 379.
2.
For further information, Look: JALE NEJDET, ERZEN, "Reading Mosques:
Meaning and Architecture in Islam. "The Journal of Aesthetics and Art
Criticis 69, no. 1 (2011), P.126.
3.
Mohammed bin Abdullah al-Zarkashi, Information on the Provisions of Mosques,
fifth edition (Cairo: Ministry of Waqfs, 1996), pp. 26-28. See also: Amr Ezzat,
Who has the Pulpits Today?: Analysis of State Policy in Mosques Management,
First Edition (Cairo: Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, August 2014).
4.
Al-Zarkashi, op. Cit., P. 36.
5.
Khalil al-Anani, The Role of Religion in the Public Domain in Egypt After the
January 25 Revolution, Research Papers, Pp. 2-4, Available at: https:
//goo.gl/ZSkXKb
6.
Mansour Al-Rifai Obaid, Preachers and Social Development, First Edition (Cairo:
Library of the Arab Book House, 1997), pp. 56, pp. 73-75.
7.
Khalil al-Anani, Inside the Muslim Brotherhood: Religion, Identity, and
Politics, 1sted, Oxford University Press, 2016.
8.
Hassan al-Banna, Memoirs of the Call and Preacher, Mohammed al-Baz (study and presentation),
third edition (Cairo: treasures of publication and distribution, 2013), p
173-177.
9.
Morroe Berger, "The Mosque: Aspects of Governmental Policy towards
Religion in Egypt Today." Middle Eastern Studies 6, no. 1 (1970), P.29.
10- Fadi El Sawy, Waqfs: Food Outlets
Are not for Profit and We Recognize the Sanctity of Mosques, Masr el-arabiya(18/4/2017),
the link: https://goo.gl/1JyUOW, see also: Mahmoud Ashab, Protocol of Cooperation
between Supply and Waqfs Ministries to Provide Free Ramadan Packages for the Poor,
Al-Ahram Gate (16/4/2017), the link: https://goo.gl/YilSI5