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ID163058
Title ProperRegulating religious authority for political gains: al-Sisi’s manipulation of al-Azhar in Egypt
LanguageENG
AuthorBano, Masooda
Summary / Abstract (Note)The shedding of blood is a serious matter in Islamic law; disregard for human life negates the very essence of just rule. By standing by General al-Sisi as he suppressed the Muslim Brotherhood, the popular legitimacy of al-Azhar – the oldest seat of Islamic learning – was called into question. This article shows how the al-Sisi government skilfully deployed the two other state-controlled religious establishments, the Ministry of Awqaf (Religious Endowments) and Dar-ul-Ifta, to boost al-Azhar’s popular legitimacy in this context. Existing scholarship highlights the importance of competition within the Egyptian religious sphere to explain how the Egyptian state co-opts the al-Azhari official establishment. This article instead shows how the state, equally skilfully, uses state institutions to boost al-Azhar’s popular legitimacy – albeit to ensure that it remains useful for the purposes of political legitimisation. Political authority and religious authority in Egypt thus remain closely entangled.
`In' analytical NoteThird World Quarterly Vol. 39, No.8; Aug 2018: p.1604-1621
Journal SourceThird World Quarterly Vol: 39 No 8
Key WordsReligion and politics ;  Egypt ;  Post-Arab Spring ;  General Al-Sisi ;  Al-Azhar


 
 
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