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Jordan’s Muslim Brotherhood on the Verge of a New Phase
Jordan’s Muslim Brotherhood on the Verge of a New Phase - Interview with Salem Falahat, The General Regulator of the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan.
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| Friday, January 12,2007 00:00 | |||||||||
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Jordan’s Muslim Brotherhood on the Verge of a New Phase - Interview with Salem Falahat, The General Regulator of the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan. (Part II of II) At the main entrance to the Islamic Hospital in Abdali in Amman, between the old men wearing kuffiehs and flocking to the hospital accompanied by fully-veiled women, you can also read a banner that points to the Jordanian Islamic Bank, and another to the popular Souq al-Fadl market, next to the hospital, and the "Islamists’ Bank." The area gathers many institutions belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood; also located there is the office of the General Regulator of the Brotherhood. There are also commercial institutions and a bus stop from which people in Amman can travel to various parts of the country. It is an area with many gradations in the new, and contemporary Amman. If the area conforms to the spirit and architecture of the city, it also makes you feel - due to the hospital and bus stop - that it’s a place where Amman rubs shoulders with people from far-off cities and desert areas of Jordan. The souq and the hospital are set up for this purpose, while Amman is not dramatically different from its outlying areas like the badiya (desert steppe), except for the cement and metal signs of urbanization. In Abdali, where the Muslim Brotherhood institutions are gathered, one can tell how strongly-rooted the Brotherhood’s "society" is. There has been more than one rise in the influence of Islamist currents. It is a society whose symbols and signs have taken shape for many decades, as it anchors the relationship with the state and the wider society, going beyond the false borders that are usually set down by parties and currents for their own constituent groups. The Brotherhood in Jordan behaves and organizes based on the idea that it is a "society" and that the State, which had been accepted and dealt with, is an apparatus that belongs "less" to society than the Brotherhood does. While in other states, one must search for Islamist groups and currents in areas of political activity and religious propagation, and sometimes in the "arenas of jihad," in Jordan one searches for the Brotherhood in areas of real, contemporary life, in hospitals, schools and markets, in the (Palestinian) refugee camps, and among the tribes. While moving between their institutions and places in which they have a presence in Jordan, one feels that there is a shadow state set up by the Brotherhood. The feeling grows when one learns that the budgets for their various activities far exceed the money allocated by the government for similar activities. During the decades of the group’s alliance with the Kingdom, Brotherhood members reached positions with little impact on public life; however, they are positions that create such tendencies, such as the Brotherhood’s traditional hold on the Education Ministry, where they have written school curricula and cemented their presence in Parliament, to defend these curricula. The most important aspect of the Brotherhood’s presence in Jordan has been the ease with which its values and demands have merged with the values of the Badiya [desert] and its tribes and cities. The Brotherhood was easily able to claim that it was a part of local, Jordanian culture, which is true to a great extent, while other political projects had to wait for generations of products of modern education, social or economic elites wishing to leave behind local culture, or the waves of those coming from the outside. The Secretary General of the Islamic Action Front, Zaki Saad, relates his beginnings in the Muslim Brotherhood, which took place thanks to imams at mosques in the town of Zarqa, where he resides. He is from a conservative, religious Jordanian family, but one that was never supportive of the Brotherhood. In this sense, Saad did not make a big jump when he decided to join the Brotherhood. The elements of this affiliation were the mosque imams, traditional belief, and social conservatism. These elements were present to a great extent in his party and family environment. This natural channel of feeding its presence in Jordan did not suffice for the Brotherhood; the channel was one of considerable unity between the traditional social structure and the group’s political program. The Brotherhood created many channels to perform this task and help spread their influence, until it became possible to talk about a completely "Brotherhood-based" area of life in Jordan, beginning with schools and moving to charitable and sporting associations, and not ending at the borders of the job market, commercial firms and health institutions. It has been accompanied by the growth of Brotherhood tastes in Islamic clothing. Associations for the preservation of heritage, learning the sayings of the Prophet Mohammed, and teaching the Quran are spread throughout the Kingdom, with the number of students reaching around 100,000, not to mention the huge schools affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, also located throughout the Kingdom, such as the Arqam, Hisad and Rashad schools, as well the realm of higher education, such as the Civil University of Zarqa and the Islamic Society Faculty, and other sub-university faculties. These institutions are also a point of attraction for the Brotherhood environment, a source of revenue for the movement’s budget, which is said to top $1 billion a year. Although Jordan’s Muslim Brotherhood has focused on a presence in the educational sphere for decades, the group has not neglected other areas. Regarding health, the Islamic Hospital in Amman, affiliated with the Islamic Center Charitable Association, is considered one of the best in Jordan, with 342 beds and 1,350 doctors and staff, offering treatment that is not available at many other hospitals in the region. The Association has other hospitals and a network of clinics and health centers, exceeding the number of those owned by the state, according to Brotherhood leader Rahil Gharaibeh. In the realm of charitable work, the Brotherhood’s activities have spread to both the east and west banks of the Jordan River. The Afaf Charitable Association, which encourages young people to marry, holds a collective wedding every year for about 400 young men and women, and helps them furnish their new marital residences. It also funds small-scale productive projects for young people. The Brotherhood’s associations are also active in Islamic dress. Gharaibeh says that "we encourage the role of Islamic clothing through artistry, and making different types of hijabs [veil], for different tastes. We guide individuals in setting up establishments of this kind, and many have succeeded." The Brotherhood’s activities have extended to sports and the scouting movement. The group has the Yarmouk Sporting Club and other small clubs, and the Khaled bin Walid Scout Troop. It is certain that the Brotherhood’s pragmatism in Jordan is linked to the group’s involvement in various facets of life. But moving this "daily life" pragmatism to the realm of politics will clash with the harshness of Jordan’s political institutions, which won’t tolerate this pragmatism. Asking about the group’s aspirations to form a government if they win the next elections won’t find an answer, if compared to the degree to which they are prepared to deal with peace agreements with Israel and accept the principle of disengagement with the West Bank. Their acceptance, if it takes place, will be a losing card, since the Brotherhood’s influence springs from its rejection of normalization and disengagement. Perhaps the group’s experience in professional associations and unions they control was a model for what their performance will be in the difficult mission they seek in the Cabinet.
The General Regulator of the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan Criticizes How Some Islamists Interpret Texts… Salem Falahat: I Don’t Expect the Brotherhood to Gain a Majority in the Coming Elections Salem Falahat was elected General Regulator of the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan some two months ago. He was born in Madaba, south of the capital, and joined the Brotherhood in 1968, when he was a Sharia [Islamic jurisprudence] student at the University of Amman. His recent election has reassured Brotherhood circles, due to what he represents within the organization in terms of being considered part of the centrist faction. Full transcript of the interview: Al-Hayat: You were elected General Regulator of the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan during a period in which Islamist movements are readying themselves to get involved politically, in more than one place. Are you preparing yourselves for this phase? Al-Hayat: In Jordan, you are concerned with Hamas, based on its Constitution and yours; however, Hamas’ victory has forced you to confront national Palestinian concerns that you are assumed to be distant from. Al-Hayat: Can we conclude that you are still searching when it comes to your position on disengagement? Al-Hayat: There is considerable talk about the rise of moderate Islam to power in more than one place, which might respond to a US desire to support moderate Islam against extremist currents. How do you see this? AL-Hayat: In Iraq there are plans to head toward ending the ban on parties like the Islamic Party. The Egyptian government is pressured to allow the Brotherhood to run in elections, and there’s talk about a role for Islamic moderates in Morocco. And Hamas won in elections supervised by the international community. Al-Hayat: Do you aspire to form a government if you win in parliamentary elections next year? Al-Hayat: The election of an IAF Secretary General who is close to Hamas provoked reactions and debates in the media. How do you see this matter? Al-Hayat: Do you feel yourselves threatened by extremism, like other segments of Jordanian society? Al-Hayat: Some say that the moderate Islamist movement finds itself forced to take hard-line positions as a result of its feeling that the general mood supports this. Al-Hayat: Are you a Jordanian, nationalist group? Al-Hayat: Do you respect civil institutions that were established on the basis of Jordan being a State with its own institutions? Don’t your aspirations go beyond this, and involve establishing the institutions of Islamic rule? End (Part II of II) Also Read: |
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tags: Jordan’s MB / Verge / Salem Falahat / Amman / women / Amman / Cement / Metal
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