Preview

Islam in the modern world

Advanced search

Political Islam in Afghanistan: Origins and Ideology

https://doi.org/10.22311/2074-1529-2023-19-1-169-190

Abstract

Any political, especially religious movement or ideology, should have its historical predecessors, whose views and ideas would somehow affect them. Understanding the origins and sources contributes to a more realistic and objective view of modern phenomena, especially in such traditional countries as Afghanistan, where tradition indelibly leaves its mark on everything. The purpose of the article is to attempt to give a comprehensive and chronological description of the ideas and ideologies that formed the basis for the emergence of Islamist political parties in Afghanistan. The materials used are the works of domestic and foreign orientalists, including Afghan ones, as well as sources in the national languages of Afghanistan. The research is based on the method of consistent description of the source and its characteristics to demonstrate its connection with the modern phenomenon of political Islam. The paper presents a list of alleged ideological sources and precursors of political Islam in Afghanistan in the mid-20th century. Their historical and ideological characteristics are given. The main representatives and supporters of certain ideas, their social status and attitude to other movements and ideologies are described. Political Islam in Afghanistan did not arise as something exclusively external, but had under it, in addition to the external form and external borrowings (the ideology of “deobandism”, “Muslim Brotherhood”), also internal sources peculiar to Afghan society in the form of tribal chiefdom, which became a kind of general organizational beginning of any political and religious movement. The complexity of Islamism in Afghanistan lies in its mixed structure, which is especially evident at the moment, in the ideology and practice of the Taliban Movement, which, on the one hand, is based on the provisions of «deobandism», pan-Islamism, to a lesser extent the ideology of the Muslim Brotherhood, but on the other hand, it completely contradicts them, which is purely due to tribal traditional features of the social structure and worldview of the backbone of the movement. 

About the Author

E. А. Belkov
E. M. Primakov Research Institute of World Economy and International Relations
Russian Federation

Evgeny A. BELKOV, junior researcher 

23, Profsoyuznaya Str., Moscow, 117997



References

1. Korgun. V. G. (2004). Istorija Afganistana v XX v. [History of Afghanistan in XXst century]. Moscow: «Craft+». 528 p.

2. Lavrov A. Y. (2010). Politicheskij islam v Afganistane [Political Islam in Afghanistan]. Moscow: Institut vostokovedenija RAN. 179 p.

3. Razhbadinov M. Z. (2004). Egipetskoje Dvizhenije «Bratijev-musulman» [Egyptian Movement of the Muslim Brotherhood]. Moscow: Institut izuchenija Izraelia i Blizhnego Vostoka. 431 p.

4. Romodin V. A. (1990). Afganistan vo vtoroi polovine XIX — nachale XX v. [Afghanistan in the Second Half of XIX — the Beginning of XX]. Moscow: Nauka. 143 p.

5. Saidov H. (2010) K voprosu o vlijanii amanulistskih reform na etnonatsionalnii protsesi v afganskom obshestve [On the issue of the influence of Amanulla reforms on the ethno-national processes in Afghan society]. Vestnik RUDN. 2010. Iss. 3. Pp. 145–164.

6. Sikoev R. R. (2010). Panislamizm: Istoki i sovremennost’. Jamaluddin Afgani i ego religiozno-politicheskije posledovateli XX — nachala XXI veka [Pan-Islamism: Origins and Modernity. Jamaluddin Afghani and his religious and political followers of the XX — early XXI century]. Moscow: Aspekt-Press. 286 p.

7. Slinkin M. F. (2020). Afghanistan: oppozitsija i vlast’ (60–70 XX v.) [Afghanistan: Opposition and power (60–70s of the XX century)]. Moscow: “Izdatel’stvo MBA”. 723 p.

8. Spol’nikov V. M. (1990). Afghanistan. Islamskaya oppozitsija. Istoki i tseli. [Afghanistan. The Islamic opposition. Origins and goals]. Moscow: Nauka. 192 p. Stepan’ants M. T. (1982) Musul’manskije kontseptsii v filosofii i politike XIX–

9. XX vv. [Muslim concepts in Philosophy and Politics of the XIX–XX centuries]. Moscow: Nauka. 248 p.

10. Khalfin H. A. (1960). Politika Rossii v Sredney Azii (1857–1868) [Russia’s Policy in Central Asia (1857–1868)]. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo vostochnoy literaturi. 272 p. Choueiri Y. M. (1993). Theoretical Paradigms of Islamic Movements // Political Studies. Vol. 41. No. 1. Pp. 108–116.

11. Dupree L. (1980). Afghanistan. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. 804 p.

12. Gregorian V. (1967). Mahmud Tarzi and Saraj-ol-Akhbar: Ideology of Nationalism and Modernization in Afghanistan. The Middle East Journal. Vol. 21. Iss. 3. Pp. 345–368.

13. Gregoryan V. (1969). The Emergence of Modern Afghanistan. Politics of Reform and Modernization, 1880–1946. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 606 p.

14. Kakar M. Hassan. (1995). The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response, 1979– 1982. University of California Press, California. 379 p.

15. Mitchell R. P. (1993). The Society of Muslim Brothers. New York: Oxford University Press. 392 p.

16. Roy O. (1990). Islam and Resistance in Afghanistan. New York: Cambridge University Press. 253 p.

17. Thomas Ruttig. (2006). Islamists, Leftists — and a Void in the Center. Afghanistan’s Political Parties and where they come from (1902–2006). Kabul/Berlin: Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung. 47 p.

18. Zadran Gulzarak. (1983). Da Afghanistan tarikh. 1747–1982 [The History of Afghanistan. 1747–1982]. V. 1. Peshawar.

19. Gulbedin Hekmatiyar. (1988). Mosoheba-e berodar Hekmatiyar bo talwizyun-e torki [Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s interview to Turkish television]. Peshawar: Hezb-e eslomi-e Afghanestan. 96 p.

20. Mohammad Hasan Kakar. (2010). Watan ta yaw safar. Taliban au islami bansatpalana [A Trip to the Homeland. The Taliban and Islamic Fundamentalism]. Germany: Danesh khparendoya tolana. 460 p.

21. Mohammad Yunus Khalis. (1998). Da Afghanistan mojahed ulus ta yaw paygham [A Message to the Selfless People of Afghanistan]. Peshawar: da hezb-e islami chapzay. 44 p.

22. Mohammad Sadeq al-Modjadedi. (1396). Az Qahera ba Kobol [From Cairo to Kabul]. Qahera: bakhsh-e farhangi-e seforat-e jomhuri-e Afghanestan. 120 p.


Review

For citations:


Belkov E.А. Political Islam in Afghanistan: Origins and Ideology. Islam in the modern world. 2023;19(1):169-190. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22311/2074-1529-2023-19-1-169-190

Views: 754


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2074-1529 (Print)
ISSN 2618-7221 (Online)