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ID090410
Title ProperFrom sufism to fundamentalism
Other Title Informationthe Mahdiyya and the Wahhabiyya
LanguageENG
AuthorWarburg, Gabriel R
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Both the Wahhabiyya and the Mahdiyya were based on different styles of tajdid (renewal). The Mahdiyya was based on the charisma of its leader and was a leader oriented tajdid movement. The Wahhabiyya, on the other hand, was a message oriented movement, which viewed Sufism with hostility. In contrast to Sufi traditions, which embraced al-Mahdi al-Muntazar, who claimed that he was _Khalifat Rasul Allah, Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab embraced tawhid (Unitarianism), as his guiding message. Consequently, the neo-Mahdiyya, which emerged during the twentieth century, shied away from radicalism, and became part of the Sudanese Political establishment. The Wahhabiyya, on the other hand, maintained its tajdid message, and gradually emerged as part of the Jihad oriented, Islamic fundamentalism.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 45, No. 4; Jul 2009: p.661 - 672
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 45, No. 4; Jul 2009: p.661 - 672
Key WordsSufism ;  Fundamentalism ;  Mahdiyya ;  Wahhabiyya ;  Islamic Fundamentalism ;  Jihad