Algeria’s Brotherhood: Half a Century of Rivalry
Like in almost all other Arab states, the ideology of the
Muslim Brotherhood group also thrived in Algeria. The group had an Algerian
branch that embraced the vision of Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna.
The universities were fertile grounds for the Brotherhood
of Algeria to promote its ideas. It spread its ideas in the universities by
bringing professors affiliated to it together with students in a long series of
religious lectures and sessions.
In the 1960s, an Islamic group popped up in the North
African state. Called Al-Mohad, the new group was led by Mahfoud Nahnah and
Mohamed Bouslimani.
The public appearance of this group coincided with the approval
of the Agricultural Wealth Act in 1976 by then-Algerian president Houari Boumediene. The group considered the act a
conspiracy against poor families and the middle-class.
Some Algerian citizens were influenced by the group’s
rhetoric on the same issue.
The fledgling group then declared rebellion against the Boumediene regime. It rejected the 1976 constitution. The
group then issued a statement in which it called for the application of Islamic
law and incited Algerians against the new constitution.
Mutiny and Rivalry
Rifts started to appear within Al-Mohad. Some group
members stood up for amendments proposed to the constitution after talks with
the government. Other members opposed the amendments and took sides with
Nahnah, who joined the Muslim Brotherhood group in 1976, and Bouslimani. The
two of them were imprisoned until 1980 on charges of resorting to violence and vandalism.
Following Nahnah’s release from prison, the work of
Islamists started to be more organized than ever before. The International Organization
of the Muslim Brotherhood took sides with Nahnah in his struggle for leadership
of the branch of the Brotherhood in Algeria.
The leadership struggle was restricted to Nahnah and Sheikh
Abdullah Jaballah, the head of the Justice and Development Front later. Both
men claimed to be the legitimate leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood in Algeria.
Nahnah’s appointment as Muslim Brotherhood head in Algeria
by Brotherhood leaders in Egypt caused divisions within the Islamic movement in
the 1980s.
The Algerian regime recognized the Islamic Salvation Front
as a Salafist front in 1989. The front was headed by Sheikh Abbassi Madani and
had Ali Belhadj as its deputy head. It also formed an Islamic party that fielded
candidates in the legislative elections of December 26, 1991. Party candidates
won a supermajority of seats, turning into the main decision-making force in
the Algerian parliament during the rule of Algerian President Chazli Bennid
(1979-1992).
Al-Mohad changed its name in the early 1990s. Group called
itself the Movement of Society for Peace. It also gave itself the name "Hamas".
In January 1992, the Algerian army forced the president to
step down to spare his country the rise of the Islamists to decision-making positions.
Bennid bowed to the desire of the generals. This led to the cancellation of the
results of the legislative elections. The Islamic Front then won the subsequent
elections, which was why the electoral process was halted indefinitely.
The Salvation Front viewed these developments as a "military
coup". However, the Brotherhood had another point of view. Nahnah took
sides with the army. This opened the door for fighting between the front and
the government and among the Islamists. Battles in this regard left a
staggering 200,000 people dead.
Having accused the leader of Hamas of backing the regime
in abusing the leaders of the Islamic Salvation Front, Mahfoud said he wanted
to protect the Algerian state from collapse.
Rifts widened between the leaders of Algeria’s
Brotherhood, especially between the junior and senior members of Hamas
movement. After the death of Nahnah in 2003, Abu Jarrah Soltani, one of the
founders of the Islamic Movement in Algeria in the 1970s, was declared the head
of the movement. He was succeeded by Abdel Razek Makri, a close associate of
the founder of the movement Nahnah Mahfoud. Makri introduced major change to
the policy of the movement. He turned it into an opposition group.
This change was caused by the dissidence of several Hamas leaders
and the creation of other parties and movements that followed in the footsteps
of the Brotherhood.