Egypt's Salafi Surge

These guys make the Muslim Brotherhood look like latte liberals.

BY SARAH A. TOPOL | JANUARY 4, 2012

MANSOURA, Egypt — It's the morning of the third and final round of Egypt's parliamentary elections and Ammar Fayed, an activist for the Muslim Brotherhood's political party, is nervous as hell.

The 28-year-old marketing manager, who sits on the executive board of the youth branch of the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) in the governorate of Dakahlia, sports a tiny FJP pin on the lapel of his gray blazer and a thumb stained blue from voting. He explains the situation: Thirty-six seats are up for grabs in this province in the fertile Nile Delta. The conservative region is in the Brotherhood's heartland -- it should have been a cakewalk.

There's just one problem, Fayed admits: "We made a fundamental miscalculation."

The Brotherhood has found itself outflanked on the right by the Salafi al-Nour Party, which has challenged the movement's religious credentials and gained a surprising degree of traction in the process. The Salafis appear poised to claim between 25 and 30 percent of the vote, though the Brotherhood could still win an outright majority and will certainly become the largest party in the new parliament.

Who could have predicted that the Salafis -- adherents to a fundamentalist version of Islam that until Egypt's revolution eschewed politics as un-Islamic -- would morph into an electoral powerhouse? Even the Brotherhood, whose vote-counting abilities would impress the likes of Karl Rove, never saw it coming, and the Salafis' success threatens to upend the movement's carefully laid plans for dominating Egypt's post-revolutionary political scene.

After decades of trying to convince Egypt's liberals, leftists, and other activists of their seriousness in solving the country's titanic economic problems, the Brothers suddenly find themselves forced to talk about how and when they will implement Islamic law. Not only do their efforts to bolster the movement's religious credentials promise to cause tensions with the other parliamentary blocs, but conflicts with the al-Nour Party will also provide useful fodder for Egypt's calculating military rulers, who could exploit the rivalry to keep themselves in power and above scrutiny.

The Brotherhood can't afford to ignore the Salafis' rise. Nour is "directly attacking our core," Fayed complains, "saying the Brotherhood is a party like any other, that it is playing politics instead of being a guardian of Islam."

The two Islamist factions are already trading barbs over the most divisive issue: legislating Islamic law. To get the Salafis' perspective, I met Ibrahim AbdulRahman, the bushy-bearded Nour spokesman in Dakahlia governorate. He names the place: an upscale coffee shop in the center of the city of Mansoura.

It was a difficult interview: The Salafis don't seem particularly keen on explaining themselves to foreign reporters. AbdulRahman slumped in his chair and spent most of his time averting any attempt at a genuine conversation, at first denying Nour was a religious party and feigning confusion as to why Christians weren't running on its ticket, despite public statements by its leaders that their party would never support a Christian president.

After about 20 minutes of useless chatter, AbdulRahman finally stuck the knife into his competitors. "I would say that Salafis and the Nour Party are more aware of the religious sciences and know religion more than the Muslim Brotherhood," he said.

The parties' disagreement over how quickly to implement sharia law, AbdulRahman explained, is at the center of their conflict. "For the Nour Party, one of the primary major goals is to implement sharia at the nearest possible opportunity," he said.

KHALED DESOUKI/AFP/Getty Images

 SUBJECTS:
 

Sarah A. Topol is a Cairo-based journalist. Follow her on twitter: @satopol.

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WALTSWRONGWITHTHISPICTURE

8:37 PM ET

January 4, 2012

but tom friedman said it couldnt happen! what happened tom?

lol...

you see tom any where on the media cocktail circuit making his mea culpa?

nope...tom's conveniently MIA.

 

KBC

9:17 PM ET

January 4, 2012

Arab spring or Islamic spring

Arab spring was for democracy and if this was the case, then Arab spring is a failure. The reason for this whole Arabian tale 2011 was to change the status quo. It was against the tyrants who ruled and it was never for democracy.

Look how good Islamic spring has turned out to be. Tunisians have their lesser democratic and more Islamic government. Attacks have started on universities for Islamization of curriculum.

Libya is soon going to be the Sharia country. Don't worry about Muslim brotherhood and fear the Salafists. Welcome to the Political Islam era....

 

RYAN66

10:22 AM ET

January 5, 2012

 

COMETLINEAR

1:22 PM ET

January 5, 2012

The real cause behind Arab unrest

...is the meager slice of the global economic pie, they are currently consuming.

 

CRAIG CALVIN JONES

9:22 PM ET

January 4, 2012

html house keeping...sorry

Just a boring code comment, FP please feel free to delete this. The article includes that box, "The Beards of January " with link to

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/01/04/salafi_photos

 

CRAIG CALVIN JONES

9:52 PM ET

January 4, 2012

as I was saying

For some reason, my post was incomplete. There was an partial tag after the /salafi_photos, the end tag, it leads to a dead page. Remove the tag end and the page loads up, it the the end link tag,

 

COMETLINEAR

1:20 PM ET

January 5, 2012

 

HECTORGREG11

12:49 PM ET

January 31, 2012

that would be a long time

Good thing you are not holding your breath, because you might run out of air. Lets be honest, the Arab spring has been eventful, but the long term effects of it will not be known or seen for a couple of years. It takes a while for these revolutions to stabilize and these will be no different. One thing is for sure though, change has come and will continue to come to the region. These places are no longer immune to the winds of change, so lets see how things end up. I'm rooting for complete change, so these people can start living more free than they have in the past under these dictators plumber palm beach gardens lets see how things shake out soon.

 

BING520

2:03 PM ET

January 5, 2012

Arab Spring

All the regimes toppled in Arab Spring are not Islamic fundamntalistic. Even the most brutal Libya government was more socially modern than Saud Arabia or Iran. Now it seems to be evident that people wanted a regime change, not necessarily democracy.. The Turkey model may not apply.

I was misled by the buoyant optimism our media fed us on a daily basis. I can't recall reading an in-depth news analysis suggesting that the majority of people might want is the return to Islamic fundamentalism, not a Western-style democracy. Yes Muslim Brotherhood might gain more power, as it was reported, but nobody came out to say that people might want only Islamic Fundamentalism. I should have dwelled deeper on the issue myself.

 

COMETLINEAR

3:07 PM ET

January 5, 2012

Jewish stars next to caricatures of Mubarak

I saw quite a few photos of these from the protests in Tarhir Square, but I never heard it mentioned by any of the pundits.

 

B3050612

8:53 PM ET

January 9, 2012

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INTERNETMILIJUNAS

2:55 PM ET

January 5, 2012

Very good

These guys make the Muslim Brotherhood look like latte liberals.
internet milijunas

 

JAMSB3

9:01 PM ET

January 5, 2012

Are We Not Ready?

Uncertainty and conflict compel resolution, particularly amongst the Sunni. Egypt's lurching democracy awaits a worthy leader. Strong sure and true, Mitt or Barack?

 

YUSEF101

11:25 AM ET

January 6, 2012

REsult of Dictatorship

This is what happens in US backed Dictatorships

all the main stream parties get killed off, and only the extreme can survive underground

if the Muslim Brotherhood had been allowed to be a legal party in the 90s, the salafist would never be born

 

EFFEMINATE

3:04 PM ET

January 6, 2012

I fear the worst for Egypt

I think that bad days are awaiting Egypt's liberals, secularists and non-Muslims. Women's rights will suffer badly too.

There is even a chance that democracy might be shelved in the near future. Islamists might build a strictly Islamist regime and do away with democratic parliamentary elections.

It is a sad fact that full human rights and full democracy are 'foreign' to almost all Muslim-majority countries. Bosnia and Turkey might be considered as two exceptions but even in those two counties, human rights and democracy situation is not that good ; and even in Turkey, Islamist domination is a threat (although of course not in the scale of Egypt).

 

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7:45 PM ET

January 6, 2012

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