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The Pope in Egypt: Tiptoeing through a minefield

The Pope in Egypt: Tiptoeing through a minefield

By James M. Dorsey

2nd May 2017

Billed as a bid to stimulate inter-faith dialogue, Pope Francis, on a visit to Egypt, is tiptoeing through a religious and geopolitical minefield.

Designed to improve the fragile position of Christians and other minorities in the Middle East, North Africa and the larger Muslim world, the Pope is walking a tightrope amid Saudi-inspired Sunni Muslim ultra-conservatism that fuels intolerance and sectarianism across the region, and a power struggle between Egyptian general-turned-president Abdul Fattah Al-Sisi and Al Azhar, one of the world’s oldest and foremost seats of Islamic learning.

In a boost to Orthodox Christian morale, Pope Francis paid homage to the scores of victims of the bombing earlier this month of two Coptic churches shortly after becoming the first head of the Vatican to set foot in Egypt in 17 years. The bombings were the latest jihadist attacks on religious minorities in the Middle East and North Africa that has persuaded Christians and others to flee their home countries, if not the region.

Saudi-inspired Islamist supremacism and intolerance

The jihadist campaign is rooted in an intolerant, supremacist interpretation of Islam that traces its roots to the Arabian Peninsula long before Saudi Arabia was established as a state, offshoots of which have turned their violence as much on the kingdom as on others. It is further fuelled by increased Islamophobia abetted by the rise of anti-Muslim and anti-migration nationalism and populism across the globe.

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It also feeds on autocratic leaders like President Al-Sisi whose rule is based on brutal repression designed to mask its failure to deliver public services and goods or manage complex, politically risky, transitions towards a post-oil era. These leaders have often abetted massive, decades-long Saudi funding of an ultra-conservative Sunni Muslim worldview that has embedded itself in Muslim communities across the globe, including Al Azhar.

Addressing a peace conference at Al Azhar, the Pope urged his audience to “say once more a firm and clear ‘No!’ to every form of violence, vengeance and hatred carried out in the name of religion or in the name of God”. Pope Francis issued his call as Al Azhar was resisting efforts by Mr Al-Sisi to persuade the institution to cut its ties to ultra-conservatism and reform its teachings.

Battles for the soil of Islam

In doing so, the Pope was shining a spotlight on multiple complex battles for the soul of Islam as well as the survival of autocracy in the Middle East and North Africa. These battles include Saudi efforts to distance ultra-conservatism from its more militant, jihadist offshoots; resistance to reform by ultra-conservatives who no longer are wholly dependent on support of the kingdom; and strains in relations between Saudi Arabia and some of its closest Arab allies, including Egypt and the United Arab Emirates, and are fought in part over ultra-conservativism and political Islam.

Resistance to Mr Al-Sisi’s calls for reform of Al Azhar is rooted not only in Saudi-inspired ultra-conservatism, but also an ingrained animosity towards government interference and the president’s high-handed approach. Al-Sisi, often prone to hyperbole and self-aggrandisement, threatened the university’s scholars in 2015 that he would complain to God if they failed to act on his demand for reform. “Allah Almighty be witness to your truth on Judgment Day concerning that which I’m talking about now,” Mr Al-Sisi said.

Speaking months later to a German Egyptian community, Mr Al-Sisi asserted that “God made me a doctor to diagnose the problem, he made me like this so I could see and understand the true state of affairs. It’s a blessing from God.”

Mr Al-Sisi’s campaign against Al Azhar highlights the pitfalls of Saudi Arabia’s long-standing use of religious ultra-conservatism backed by its financial muscle as a soft power tool and the kingdom’s more recent efforts to shave off the rough edges of its ideology rooted in both religion and an austere Bedouin culture, and project it as open-minded, tolerant and peace-loving…

Among the Pope’s interlocutors in Egypt was the former Egyptian grand mufti, Ali Gomaa, an advocate of a Saudi-propagated depoliticised form of Islam that pledges absolute obedience to the ruler, an opponent of popular sovereignty, and a symbol of the tension involved in adhering to both Saudi-inspired ultra-conservatism that serves the interests of the Saudi state, and being loyal to the government of his own country.

A prominent backer of Mr Al-Sisi’s grab for power, Mr Gomaa frequently espouses views that reflect Saudi-inspired ultra-conservatism. In an interview with MBC, a Saudi-owned media conglomerate, Mr Gomaa recently asserted that women did not have the strength to become heart surgeons, serve in the military or engage in sports likes football, body building, wrestling and weightlifting.

Mr Gomaa’s remarks came as Saudi Arabia’s ultra-conservative religious establishment was fighting a rearguard battle against efforts by Deputy Crown Prince Muhammad Bin Salman to slightly loosen the kingdom’s austere social and moral codes, as part of an effort to upgrade Saudi autocracy and take it into the 21st Century as well as diversify and rationalise the economy.

Prince Muhammad’s plans, laid out in his Vision 2030, involves a degree of greater inclusion of women in the workforce as well as greater sporting opportunities for women in a country that does not include physical education for girls in the curriculum of public schools, has no public sports facilities for women and bans women from driving.

Beholden to Saudi intolerance and largesse

Pope Francis’s interlocutors in Cairo also included the imam of Al-Azhar Grand Mosque, Ahmed El-Tayeb. A prominent Islamic legal scholar who opposes ultra-conservatism and rejected a nomination for Saudi Arabia’s prestigious King Faisal International Prize, recalls Mr El-Tayeb effusively thanking the kingdom during panels in recent years for its numerous donations to Al Azhar. Al Azhar scholars, the legal scholar said, compete “frantically” for sabbaticals in the kingdom that could last anywhere from one to 20 years, paid substantially better, and raised a scholar’s status.

“Many of my friends and family praise Abdul Wahab in their writing,” the scholar said, referring to Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab, the 18th Century religious leader whose puritan interpretation of Islam became the basis for the power sharing agreement between the kingdom’s ruling Al Saud family and its religious establishment. “They shrug their shoulders when I ask them privately if they are serious… When I asked El-Tayeb why Al Azhar was not seeing changes and avoidance of dogma, he said: ‘my hands are tied.’”

To illustrate Saudi inroads, the scholar recalled being present when several years ago Muhammad Sayyid Tantawy, a former grand mufti and predecessor of Mr El-Tayeb as imam of Al Azhar mosque, was interviewed about Saudi funding. “What’s wrong with that?” the scholar recalls Mr Tantawy as saying. Irritated by the question, he pulled a cheque for US $100,000 from a drawer and slapped it against his forehead. “Alhamdulillah (Praise be to God), they are our brothers,” the scholar quoted Mr Tantawy, who was widely seen as a liberal reformer despite misogynist and anti-Semitic remarks attributed to him, as saying.

In an illustration of the sometimes contradictory pressures emanating from ties to ultra-conservatism at a time that the Saudi-inspired worldview is on the defensive, Mr El-Tayeb together with Mr Gomaa last year attended a UAE and Russian-backed conference in the Chechen capital of Grozny that had Mr Al-Sisi’s tacit support. The conference put Saudi Arabia on the spot with its condemnation of ultra-conservatism as deviant and its excluding of it from its definition of Sunni Islam.

The conference and Mr Al-Sisi’s self-serving kickback at ultra-conservatism illustrate the tightrope the Pope walks as he seeks to further inter-faith dialogue in a bid to counter the threat to Christians and other minorities in the Middle East, North Africa and the Muslim world, and position the church as a bastion in the fight against Islamophobia.

The Pope’s problem in Egypt is manoeuvring between problematic partners: Mr Al-Sisi with his brutal repression that threatens to enhance rather than limit ultra-conservatism and militancy or Islamic scholars torn between the influence of Saudi Arabia’s ultra-conservative religious establishment and their adherence to Saudi-backed notions of obedience to the ruler that dictates as well as complicates their relationship with an Egyptian leader who positions himself somewhere between them and God.


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