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Ennahda

The Ennahda Movement (Arabic: حركة النهضة, romanizedḤarakatu n-Nahḍah;[7] French: Mouvement Ennahdha), also known as the Renaissance Party or simply known as Ennahda, is a self-defined Islamic democratic[8][9][10][11] political party in Tunisia.

Ennahda Movement
حركة النهضة
Hizbu Ḥarakatu n-Nahḍah
Mouvement Ennahda
PresidentRached Ghannouchi
General SecretaryZied Ladhari
FounderRached Ghannouchi (co-founder)
Founded6 June 1981; 42 years ago (1981-06-06)
Legalized1 March 2011
Headquarters67, rue Oum Kalthoum
1001 Tunis
NewspaperEl-Fajr
IdeologySocial conservatism[1]
Economic liberalism[2]
Islamic democracy[3][4]

Conservative democracy[5]
Political positionCentre-right[6] to right-wing
ReligionSunni Islam
Assembly of the Representatives of the People
0 / 161
Website
www.ennahdha.tn

Founded as the Movement of Islamic Tendency in 1981,[12] Ennahda was inspired by the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood[13] and through the latter, to Ruhollah Khomeini's own propelled ideology of "Islamic Government"[14]

In the wake of the 2011 Tunisian revolution and collapse of the government of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, the Ennahda Movement Party was formed,[15] and in the 2011 Tunisian Constituent Assembly election (the first free election in the country's history),[16] won a plurality of 37%[16] of the popular vote[17][18][19][20] and formed a government. Uproar in the traditionally secular country over "Islamization" and assassinations of two secular politicians however, led to the 2013–14 Tunisian political crisis, and the party stepped down[21] following the implementation of a new constitution in January 2014.[22] The party came in second with 27.79% of the vote, in the 2014 Tunisian parliamentary election, forming a coalition government with the largest secular party, but did not offer or endorse a candidate in the November 2014 presidential election.[23]

In 2018, lawyers and politicians accused Ennahda of forming a secret organisation that has infiltrated security forces and the judiciary. They also claimed the party was behind the 2013 assassinations of Chokri Belaid and Mohamed Brahmi, two progressive political leaders of the leftist Popular Front electoral alliance. Ennahda denied the accusations and accused the Popular Front of slandering and distorting Ennahda. It said that the Popular Front was exploiting the two assassination cases and using blood as an excuse to reach the government after failing to do so through democratic means.[24]

Ideology edit

Robert F. Worth, following 2011 and the "Arab Spring" mainstream media reports, calls it "the mildest and most democratic Islamist party in history"[25] but omits the ideological adoption of the velayat-i feqih[26] by the movement's founder Rached Ghannouchi,[27] who has remained its president for 38 years without interruption. The expert on Islamic Jurisprudence and Shia Political Thought, Rana Rashid Mudhaffer (University of Baqir al-Olum University) refers to him in an article published in the personal website of Iran's supreme leader Ali Khamenei, making an apologetical commentary of Kheridji-Ghannouchi's publication "Participation in Non-Islamic Government in Liberal Islam", when referring to Islamic Government.[28] Rached Ghannouchi says textually in his book: "The Islamic government is one in which: 1- supreme legislative authority is for the shari'a, which is the revealed law of Islam, which transcends all laws. (...)" [29]

According to Sebnem Gumuscu, there were competing views within the party about liberal democracy in its early years, but since the 1990s, liberali Islamists pulled Ennahda towards democratic principles.[30]

History edit

Early years edit

Succeeding a group known as Islamic Action, the party was founded under the name of "Movement of Islamic Tendency" (French: Mouvement de la Tendance Islamique (MTI), Arabic: حركة الاتجاه الإسلامي Ḥarakatu l-Ittijāhu l-Islāmī) in 1981.[12][31] After the Tunisian bread riots in January 1984 the government suspected the MTI of involvement in the disturbances, and arrested many of its supporters. The MTI leaders had encouraged their followers to join in the riots, but the government produced no proof that they had organized them. The persecution of the MTI enhanced its reputation as an organization committed to helping the people.[32] In 1989, it changed its name to Ḥarakat Ennahḍha.[33]

The party has been described as one of many parties/movements in Muslim states "that grew up alongside the Iranian revolution",[34] and it was originally inspired by the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood.[13] The group supported the 1979 takeover of the U.S. embassy in Tehran, claiming that "It was not an embassy, but a spy centre".[34][35] Their influence in 1984 was such that, according to Robin Wright, a British journalist living in Tunisia, stated that the Islamic Tendency was "the single most threatening opposition force in Tunis. One word from the fundamentalists will close down the campus or start a demonstration."[36] The group, or some of its members, were also responsible for the bombing of some tourist hotels in the 1980s.[37]

 
Rached Ghannouchi speaking at an Islamist rally around 1980.

Although traditionally shaped by the thinking of Islamist thinkers Sayyid Qutb and Maududi, the party began to be described as "moderate Islamist" in the 1980s when it advocated democracy and a "Tunisian" form of Islamism recognizing political pluralism and a "dialogue" with the West. Its main leader Rached Ghannouchi, has been criticized for calling for jihad against Israel[38] and "openly threatened U.S. interests, supported Iraq against the United States and campaigned against the Arab-Israeli peace process".[39] Others described him as "widely considered ... a moderate who believes that Islam and democracy are compatible".[40]

In the 1989 elections, President Ben Ali banned the party from participating but allowed some members to run as independents. These received between 10% and 17% of the vote nationally according to official figures of the regime,[41] and despite what some observers thought was "widespread fraud".[40] Allegedly surprised by Ennahda's popularity,[40] two years later Ben Ali banned the movement and jailed 25,000 activists. Ennahda activists attacked the ruling party headquarters, killing one person and splashing acid in the faces of several others.[37] Many Ennahda members went into exile.[40]

Ennahda's newspaper Al-Fajr was banned in Tunisia and its editor, Hamadi Jebali, was sentenced to sixteen years imprisonment in 1992 for membership in the un-authorized organisation and for "aggression with the intention of changing the nature of the state". The Arabic language television station El Zaytouna is believed to be connected with Ennahda. The party was strongly repressed in the late 1980s and early 1990s and almost completely absent from Tunisia from 1992 until the post-revolutionary period.[42] "Tens of thousands" of Islamists were imprisoned or exiled during this time.[18]

Revolution and return to political scene edit

In the wake of the Tunisian Revolution, thousands of people welcomed Rached Ghannouchi on his return to Tunis. The party was described as moving "quickly to carve out a place" in the Tunisian political scene, "taking part in demonstrations and meeting with the prime minister."[43] Earlier Ghannouchi announced that the party had "signed a shared statement of principles with the other Tunisian opposition groups".[44] The New York Times reported mixed predictions among Tunisians for the party's success, with some believing the party would enjoy support in the inland part of Tunisia, but others saying Tunisia was "too secular" for the Ennahda Party to gain broad support.[44] On 22 January 2011, in an interview with Al Jazeera TV, Rached Ghannouchi confirmed that he is against an Islamic Caliphate, and supports democracy instead, unlike Hizb ut-Tahrir, (whom Ghannouchi accuses of exporting a distorted understanding of Islam).[45]

 
Members of the Ennahda Party, 2011

The party was legalised on 1 March 2011.[46] A March 2011 opinion poll found the Ennahda Party ranked first among political parties in Tunisia with 29%, followed by the Progressive Democratic Party at 12.3% and the Ettajdid Movement at 7.1%.[47] It was also found that 61.4% of Tunisians "ignore political parties in the country."[47] This success has caused some secularist to call for the postponing of elections in what many described as "secularism extremism" who were hellbent on denying Ennahda forming the government despite what election observers described as free and fair democratic process.

In May 2011 Ennahda's General Secretary Hamadi Jebali traveled to Washington, D.C., on the invitation of the Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy[48] He also met U.S. Senators John McCain and Joe Lieberman.[49]

Ennahda's leaders have been described as "highly sensitive to the fears among other West about Islamic party". "We are not an Islamist party, we are an Islamic party, that also gets its bearings by the principles of the Quran." Moreover, he named Turkey a model, regarding the relation of state and religion, and compared the party's Islamic democratic ideology to Christian democracy in Italy and Germany.[50]

On a press conference in June 2011 the Ennahda Party presented itself as modern and democratic and introduced a female member who wore a headscarf and a member who didn't, and announced the launching of a youth wing. Süddeutsche Zeitung noted that, unlike leftist parties of Tunisia, the moderately Islamic party is not against a market economy.[51]

On 31 December 2021, Ennahda claimed in a statement that the party's Vice President and member of the Tunisian Parliament, Noureddine El-Beheiry, had been abducted by “security forces with civilian clothes and taken to an unknown destination.”[52][53] On 2 January 2022, AFP reported that El-Beheiry had been rushed to intensive care at a hospital in the northern town Bizerte and was in a "critical condition".[54] The speaker of Tunisia's suspended parliament, Rached Ghannouchi wrote to President Kais Saied asking him to reveal the whereabouts and condition of El-Beheiry.[55]

2011 Constituent Assembly election edit

 
Ennahda members in the Constituent Assembly

Ahead of the Constituent Assembly election on 23 October 2011, the party conducted extensive electoral campaign, extensively providing potential voters, especially from the lower class, with promotional gifts, meals for the end of Ramadan feasts, and sponsoring events.[56]

In the 23 October 2011 Tunisian Constituent Assembly election, the first free election in the country's history with a turn out of 51.1% of all eligible voters,[16] the Ennahda Party won 37.04% of the vote (more than the next four biggest vote-getters combined) and 89 of the 217 seats,[57] making it by far the strongest party in the legislature.

According to scholar Noah Feldman, rather than being a "puzzling disappointment for the forces of democracy", the Ennahda victory is a natural outcome of inevitable differences between revolution's leaders and the fact that "Tunisians see Islam as a defining feature of their personal and political identities." Rached Ghannouchi, the party's leader was one of the few "voices of resistance to the regime in the last 20 years."[17]

Subsequently, it agreed with the two runners-up, the centre-left secular Congress for the Republic (CPR) and Ettakatol, to co-operate in the Assembly and to share the three highest positions in state.[58] Accordingly, Ennahda supported the election of Ettakatol's secretary-general Mustapha Ben Jafar as President of the Constituent Assembly,[59] and of CPR-leader Moncef Marzouki as Interim President of the Republic. The latter, in exchange, immediately appointed Ennahda's secretary-general Hamadi Jebali as Prime Minister.[60]

2011–2014 Troika government edit

Ennahda was part of the Troika government, along with Ettakatol, and CPR.[61] The government was criticized for mediocre economic performance, not stimulating the tourism industry, poor relations with Tunisia's biggest trading partner France. In particular it was criticized for not monitoring and controlling radical Islamists (such as Ansar al-Sharia) who were blamed for, among other things, attempting to Islamise the country, the 2012 ransacking and burning of the American embassy.

The Troika government faced many challenges domestically and regionally including reviving an economy that had contracted by 1.9% after the Revolution,[62] rising unemployment, managing the influx of over a million Libyan refugees due to the Libyan war,[63] and a wave of social protests.   The Troika government reasserted state control over 80 percent of the mosques that had been taken over by extremists in the chaotic period immediately after the revolution.[64]

On 19 February 2013, following the assassination of Chokri Belaid and ensuing protests, Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali resigned from his office,[65] a move which was deemed unprecedented by analysts.[66] The move followed his attempt to form a technocratic government. Ennahda, however, rejected his resignation insisting on a government of politicians and Jebali formally resigned after a meeting with President Moncef Marzouki saying it was in the best interests of the country. He said: "I promised if my initiative did not succeed I would resign as head of the government, and this is what I am doing following my meeting with the president. Today there is a great disappointment among the people and we must regain their trust and this resignation is a first step."[67]

Party leader Rached Ghannouchi then suggested a government of politicians and technocrats, while Jebali suggested that if he was tasked with forming a new government it would have to include non-partisan ministers and a variety of political representation that would lead to a new election.[67] Unnamed opposition figures welcomed the resignation. The same day, Standard & Poor's downgraded Tunisia's credit rating.[68] However, the IMF said that it was still in talks for a US$1.78 billion loan to the country.[69] On 14 March 2013, Ali Larayedh was elected as Ennahda's new Secretary General and officially took over as Tunisia's new Prime Minister.[70]

Ennahda ceded control of key ministries to technocrats, including foreign affairs, defence and the interior. Ennahda made up 28% of the government, down from 40% in the previous coalition, with independents forming 48% of the new cabinet.[71]

After stabilization of the political situation, the assassination of Mohamed Brahmi, member of the Assembly, in July 2013, led to turmoil and political deadlock. Following a National Dialogue and recognizing the continued need for national unity, on 5 October a "road map" was signed,[72] and in January 2014, Ennahda, CPR and Ettakattol stepped down and handed power to a caretaker technocratic government, led by Mehdi Jomaa, to prepare and organize the second democratic elections. Ghanouchi worked with secularist leader Beji Caid Essebsi to forge a compromise agreement, both were heavily criticized by their party rank and file and Ghanouchi received agreement from the Ennahda shura council after threatening to resign.[73] Outside observers called it a "model transition".[74]

In January 2014, after the new Tunisian Constitution was adopted by popular vote, Ennahda came second in the October 2014 parliamentary election with 27.79% of the popular vote and formed a coalition government with the larger secularist party Nidaa Tounes.

Ennahda did not put forward or endorse any candidate for the November 2014 presidential election.[23] Ghanouchi "hinted broadly" that he personally supported Beji Caid Essebsi,[75] (who won with over 55% of the vote).

2014–present edit

In the 2014 Tunisian parliamentary election, Ennahda candidate Jamilia Ksiksi became Tunisia's first black female MP.[76]

Ennahda became the largest party in parliament in the 2019 election, but with just 52 of 217 seats, Ennahda attempted to court supporters of Kais Saied, the first-round winner of the presidential elections.[77] Ennahda not only backed Saied in the runoff elections, but also attempted to persuade Saied voters that Ennahda was their best opportunity for building a government supportive of a Saied president.[78] In February, 2020 Ennahdha issued an official statement saying it will grant confidence to Fakhfakh's new government.[79]The Fakhfakh administration had 32 members, six of whom were from Ennahda.[80]

In 2021, Ennahda faced widespread public anger as the country experienced a political crisis due to 2021 Tunisian protests. President Kais Saied dismissed the government and froze parliament, a move labeled a coup by Parliament Speaker Rached Ghannouchi.[81]

The Tunisian government has detained at least 17 current or former members of the party, including its head, and closed its offices around the nation since December 2022.[82] Tunisian authorities apprehended Ghannouchi and searched his headquarters in April 2023.[83]

Ennahda announced on the occasion of its 42nd anniversary that it would be unable to hold its eleventh congress due to "oppressive retaliatory measures taken by the authorities against the party's leader, some of its leaders, and its headquarters, which hinder the party's work and institutions.[84]

Chairmen edit

During its first ten years of existence, presidency of Ennahda changed very often, while its leading figure Rached Ghannouchi was jailed until 1984 and then again in 1987. After going to exile he remained the party's "intellectual leader".[17] In November 1991 he also took back the formal presidency.

Following is a list of all former presidents of the party:[85]

  • June–July 1981: Abderraouf Bouabi
  • July–October 1981: Fadhel Beldi
  • October 1981 – August 1984: Hamadi Jebali
  • November 1984 – August 1987: Rached Ghannouchi
  • August 1987 – April 1988: Salah Karker
  • April–October 1988: Jamel Aoui
  • October 1988 – March 1991: Sadok Chourou
  • March 1991: Mohamed Kaloui
  • March 1991: Mohamed Akrout
  • April–June 1991: Mohamed Ben Salem
  • June–September 1991: Habib Ellouze
  • October 1991: Noureddine Arbaoui
  • October –November 1991: Walid Bennani
  • since November 1991: Rached Ghannouchi

Political positions edit

In the wake of the compromise worked out by Ghanouchi and Beji Caid Essebsi, the party (or at least its leader), has been complimented for it willingness to compromise,[86] protecting Tunisia's democracy and civil peace from Egyptian style violence. However some Islamists see the party as having lost an opportunity to reverse the "social framework" of secularism in the country.[86][87]

The party is generally described as socially centrist with mild support for economic liberalism and has been compared to European Christian democrats.[66] However, liberals accuse its leaders of "doublespeak" in this regard.[88] The party wishes to revise the strong secular, Arab nationalist, and socialist principles that predominate among the other parties, and instead allow Islam into public life and be more accommodating to other viewpoints such as closer relations with the West and greater economic freedom. The party currently rejects radical Islamism as a form of governance appropriate for Tunisia, nevertheless Islam remains an important feature of the party;[89] in a debate with a secular opponent Ghannouchi stated, "Why are we put in the same place as a model that is far from our thought, like the Taliban or the Saudi model, while there are other successful Islamic models that are close to us, like the Turkish, the Malaysian, and the Indonesian models; models that combine Islam and modernity?"[90]

Political scientist Riadh Sidaoui explains that the Ennahda leader models his approach on the moderate Islamism of Turkey; he says: "The leadership was forced into exile in London for a long time [because of harassment by Tunisian police] and understood about the need to have a balanced outlook... No one wants a repeat of the 1991 Algerian scenario."[91]

On 13 November 2011, the party's secretary-general Hamadi Jebali held a joint rally in Sousse together with a parliamentary deputy of the Palestinian Hamas party. Jebali referred to the occasion as "a divine moment in a new state, and in, hopefully, a 6th caliphate," and that "the liberation of Tunisia will, God willing, bring about the liberation of Jerusalem." While the tone was said do be sharply in contrast to official statements of the party,[92] Jebali was appointed Prime Minister of Tunisia a mere month later.

When in January 2012, Hamas leadership arrived for another visit to Tunisia, people at the airport were heard shouting "Kill the Jews." Tunisian Jews said Ennahda leadership was slow to condemn the shouting.[93]

Ahmed Ibrahim of the Tunisian Pole Democratique Moderniste political bloc complained to a foreign journalist that Ennahda appears "soft" on television, "but in the mosques, it is completely different. Some of them are calling for jihad".[37] The general manager of Al Arabiya wrote an editorial expressing the opinion that Ennahda is fundamentally a conservative Islamist party with a moderate leadership.[94] Ennahda has been described as a mixed bag with moderate top layers and a base defined by "a distinctly fundamentalist tilt".[95]

Although the party has expressed support for women's rights and equality of civil rights between men and women, the party chose to place only two women at first position out of 33 regional lists for the Tunisian Constituent Assembly. Ghannouchi noted that women have not held any de facto leadership positions under Ben Ali's governments and that it is a reality that only a few women are currently suited to leadership posts.[96]

The party is more moderate in urbanized areas such as Tunis, where secular and socially liberal beliefs predominate. However, Ennahda's compromises and abandoning of political Islam has made their core supporters lose faith in them.[66] Perhaps as a result, in 2018, the party declared that it would vote down a bill that would end gender discrimination and implement inheritance equality between men and women,[97] justifying its position because the bill proposed by the Tunisian president Beji Caid Essebsi is against the Quran and the beliefs of Tunisian people. The position sparked outrage among Tunisian progressives and liberals who accused the party of lying about its embrace of democracy, and turning back to its Islamic radical origins.

According to a 2020 study, members of parliament in the Ennahda movement who had lived abroad in secular democracies had more liberal voting records than their counterparts who had only lived in Tunisia.[98]

Homosexuality edit

The party and its leaders have taken very hostile positions against homosexuality. In 2012, Samir Dilou, then minister of human rights and leader of Ennahda, said the LGBT people have no right to free speech, and they should respect the religion and heritage of Tunisia, he also said that homosexuality is a sexual perversion and a mental illness.[99] Amnesty International said that it was deeply disappointed by the comments of Dilou, especially that he's responsible for the respect of human rights.[100]

The presidential candidate of Ennahda in 2019, Abdelfattah Mourou, stated that homosexuality is a personal choice and that we must respected individual freedoms, but at the same time he said that he announced his support for the continuation of criminalization of homosexuality in Tunisia, where sodomy is criminalized by 3 years of imprisonment.[101]

In 2021, Fathi Layouni, Ennahda mayor of Le Kram, declared to a local radio station that the natural place for homosexuals is either prisons or psychiatric hospitals and that they are forbidden from entering his city, he also demanded the closure of the Association Shams, which is a Tunisian organization for LGBT rights.[102]

Election results edit

Election year # of total votes % of overall vote # of seats Government
Constituent Assembly of Tunisia
2011 1,501,320 37.04%
89 / 217
Coalition(2011–2014)
Technocratic Government (2014–2015)
Assembly of the Representatives of the People
2014 947,034 27.79%
69 / 217
Coalition
2019 561,132 19.63%
52 / 217
Coalition

See also edit


Notes edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • (in Arabic) Official website
  • Bruce Maddy-Weitzman, MERIA: Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 1, No. 2 (July 1997)
  • Andrew F. March, What Is "Muslim" about Tunisia's "Muslim Democrats"?. May 2021. No. 142.

ennahda, movement, arabic, حركة, النهضة, romanized, Ḥarakatu, nahḍah, french, mouvement, ennahdha, also, known, renaissance, party, simply, known, self, defined, islamic, democratic, political, party, tunisia, movement, حركة, النهضة, hizbu, Ḥarakatu, nahḍah, m. The Ennahda Movement Arabic حركة النهضة romanized Ḥarakatu n Nahḍah 7 French Mouvement Ennahdha also known as the Renaissance Party or simply known as Ennahda is a self defined Islamic democratic 8 9 10 11 political party in Tunisia Ennahda Movement حركة النهضة Hizbu Ḥarakatu n Nahḍah Mouvement EnnahdaPresidentRached GhannouchiGeneral SecretaryZied LadhariFounderRached Ghannouchi co founder Founded6 June 1981 42 years ago 1981 06 06 Legalized1 March 2011Headquarters67 rue Oum Kalthoum1001 TunisNewspaperEl FajrIdeologySocial conservatism 1 Economic liberalism 2 Islamic democracy 3 4 Conservative democracy 5 Political positionCentre right 6 to right wingReligionSunni IslamAssembly of the Representatives of the People0 161Websitewww ennahdha tnPolitics of TunisiaPolitical partiesElectionsFounded as the Movement of Islamic Tendency in 1981 12 Ennahda was inspired by the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood 13 and through the latter to Ruhollah Khomeini s own propelled ideology of Islamic Government 14 In the wake of the 2011 Tunisian revolution and collapse of the government of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali the Ennahda Movement Party was formed 15 and in the 2011 Tunisian Constituent Assembly election the first free election in the country s history 16 won a plurality of 37 16 of the popular vote 17 18 19 20 and formed a government Uproar in the traditionally secular country over Islamization and assassinations of two secular politicians however led to the 2013 14 Tunisian political crisis and the party stepped down 21 following the implementation of a new constitution in January 2014 22 The party came in second with 27 79 of the vote in the 2014 Tunisian parliamentary election forming a coalition government with the largest secular party but did not offer or endorse a candidate in the November 2014 presidential election 23 In 2018 lawyers and politicians accused Ennahda of forming a secret organisation that has infiltrated security forces and the judiciary They also claimed the party was behind the 2013 assassinations of Chokri Belaid and Mohamed Brahmi two progressive political leaders of the leftist Popular Front electoral alliance Ennahda denied the accusations and accused the Popular Front of slandering and distorting Ennahda It said that the Popular Front was exploiting the two assassination cases and using blood as an excuse to reach the government after failing to do so through democratic means 24 Contents 1 Ideology 2 History 2 1 Early years 2 2 Revolution and return to political scene 2 3 2011 Constituent Assembly election 2 4 2011 2014 Troika government 2 5 2014 present 3 Chairmen 4 Political positions 4 1 Homosexuality 5 Election results 6 See also 6 1 Notes 7 References 8 External linksIdeology editRobert F Worth following 2011 and the Arab Spring mainstream media reports calls it the mildest and most democratic Islamist party in history 25 but omits the ideological adoption of the velayat i feqih 26 by the movement s founder Rached Ghannouchi 27 who has remained its president for 38 years without interruption The expert on Islamic Jurisprudence and Shia Political Thought Rana Rashid Mudhaffer University of Baqir al Olum University refers to him in an article published in the personal website of Iran s supreme leader Ali Khamenei making an apologetical commentary of Kheridji Ghannouchi s publication Participation in Non Islamic Government in Liberal Islam when referring to Islamic Government 28 Rached Ghannouchi says textually in his book The Islamic government is one in which 1 supreme legislative authority is for the shari a which is the revealed law of Islam which transcends all laws 29 According to Sebnem Gumuscu there were competing views within the party about liberal democracy in its early years but since the 1990s liberali Islamists pulled Ennahda towards democratic principles 30 History editEarly years edit Succeeding a group known as Islamic Action the party was founded under the name of Movement of Islamic Tendency French Mouvement de la Tendance Islamique MTI Arabic حركة الاتجاه الإسلامي Ḥarakatu l Ittijahu l Islami in 1981 12 31 After the Tunisian bread riots in January 1984 the government suspected the MTI of involvement in the disturbances and arrested many of its supporters The MTI leaders had encouraged their followers to join in the riots but the government produced no proof that they had organized them The persecution of the MTI enhanced its reputation as an organization committed to helping the people 32 In 1989 it changed its name to Ḥarakat Ennahḍha 33 The party has been described as one of many parties movements in Muslim states that grew up alongside the Iranian revolution 34 and it was originally inspired by the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood 13 The group supported the 1979 takeover of the U S embassy in Tehran claiming that It was not an embassy but a spy centre 34 35 Their influence in 1984 was such that according to Robin Wright a British journalist living in Tunisia stated that the Islamic Tendency was the single most threatening opposition force in Tunis One word from the fundamentalists will close down the campus or start a demonstration 36 The group or some of its members were also responsible for the bombing of some tourist hotels in the 1980s 37 nbsp Rached Ghannouchi speaking at an Islamist rally around 1980 Although traditionally shaped by the thinking of Islamist thinkers Sayyid Qutb and Maududi the party began to be described as moderate Islamist in the 1980s when it advocated democracy and a Tunisian form of Islamism recognizing political pluralism and a dialogue with the West Its main leader Rached Ghannouchi has been criticized for calling for jihad against Israel 38 and openly threatened U S interests supported Iraq against the United States and campaigned against the Arab Israeli peace process 39 Others described him as widely considered a moderate who believes that Islam and democracy are compatible 40 In the 1989 elections President Ben Ali banned the party from participating but allowed some members to run as independents These received between 10 and 17 of the vote nationally according to official figures of the regime 41 and despite what some observers thought was widespread fraud 40 Allegedly surprised by Ennahda s popularity 40 two years later Ben Ali banned the movement and jailed 25 000 activists Ennahda activists attacked the ruling party headquarters killing one person and splashing acid in the faces of several others 37 Many Ennahda members went into exile 40 Ennahda s newspaper Al Fajr was banned in Tunisia and its editor Hamadi Jebali was sentenced to sixteen years imprisonment in 1992 for membership in the un authorized organisation and for aggression with the intention of changing the nature of the state The Arabic language television station El Zaytouna is believed to be connected with Ennahda The party was strongly repressed in the late 1980s and early 1990s and almost completely absent from Tunisia from 1992 until the post revolutionary period 42 Tens of thousands of Islamists were imprisoned or exiled during this time 18 Revolution and return to political scene edit In the wake of the Tunisian Revolution thousands of people welcomed Rached Ghannouchi on his return to Tunis The party was described as moving quickly to carve out a place in the Tunisian political scene taking part in demonstrations and meeting with the prime minister 43 Earlier Ghannouchi announced that the party had signed a shared statement of principles with the other Tunisian opposition groups 44 The New York Times reported mixed predictions among Tunisians for the party s success with some believing the party would enjoy support in the inland part of Tunisia but others saying Tunisia was too secular for the Ennahda Party to gain broad support 44 On 22 January 2011 in an interview with Al Jazeera TV Rached Ghannouchi confirmed that he is against an Islamic Caliphate and supports democracy instead unlike Hizb ut Tahrir whom Ghannouchi accuses of exporting a distorted understanding of Islam 45 nbsp Members of the Ennahda Party 2011The party was legalised on 1 March 2011 46 A March 2011 opinion poll found the Ennahda Party ranked first among political parties in Tunisia with 29 followed by the Progressive Democratic Party at 12 3 and the Ettajdid Movement at 7 1 47 It was also found that 61 4 of Tunisians ignore political parties in the country 47 This success has caused some secularist to call for the postponing of elections in what many described as secularism extremism who were hellbent on denying Ennahda forming the government despite what election observers described as free and fair democratic process In May 2011 Ennahda s General Secretary Hamadi Jebali traveled to Washington D C on the invitation of the Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy 48 He also met U S Senators John McCain and Joe Lieberman 49 Ennahda s leaders have been described as highly sensitive to the fears among other West about Islamic party We are not an Islamist party we are an Islamic party that also gets its bearings by the principles of the Quran Moreover he named Turkey a model regarding the relation of state and religion and compared the party s Islamic democratic ideology to Christian democracy in Italy and Germany 50 On a press conference in June 2011 the Ennahda Party presented itself as modern and democratic and introduced a female member who wore a headscarf and a member who didn t and announced the launching of a youth wing Suddeutsche Zeitung noted that unlike leftist parties of Tunisia the moderately Islamic party is not against a market economy 51 On 31 December 2021 Ennahda claimed in a statement that the party s Vice President and member of the Tunisian Parliament Noureddine El Beheiry had been abducted by security forces with civilian clothes and taken to an unknown destination 52 53 On 2 January 2022 AFP reported that El Beheiry had been rushed to intensive care at a hospital in the northern town Bizerte and was in a critical condition 54 The speaker of Tunisia s suspended parliament Rached Ghannouchi wrote to President Kais Saied asking him to reveal the whereabouts and condition of El Beheiry 55 2011 Constituent Assembly election edit nbsp Ennahda members in the Constituent AssemblyAhead of the Constituent Assembly election on 23 October 2011 the party conducted extensive electoral campaign extensively providing potential voters especially from the lower class with promotional gifts meals for the end of Ramadan feasts and sponsoring events 56 In the 23 October 2011 Tunisian Constituent Assembly election the first free election in the country s history with a turn out of 51 1 of all eligible voters 16 the Ennahda Party won 37 04 of the vote more than the next four biggest vote getters combined and 89 of the 217 seats 57 making it by far the strongest party in the legislature According to scholar Noah Feldman rather than being a puzzling disappointment for the forces of democracy the Ennahda victory is a natural outcome of inevitable differences between revolution s leaders and the fact that Tunisians see Islam as a defining feature of their personal and political identities Rached Ghannouchi the party s leader was one of the few voices of resistance to the regime in the last 20 years 17 Subsequently it agreed with the two runners up the centre left secular Congress for the Republic CPR and Ettakatol to co operate in the Assembly and to share the three highest positions in state 58 Accordingly Ennahda supported the election of Ettakatol s secretary general Mustapha Ben Jafar as President of the Constituent Assembly 59 and of CPR leader Moncef Marzouki as Interim President of the Republic The latter in exchange immediately appointed Ennahda s secretary general Hamadi Jebali as Prime Minister 60 2011 2014 Troika government edit This section needs expansion with major events 2011 2014 You can help by adding to it November 2014 Ennahda was part of the Troika government along with Ettakatol and CPR 61 The government was criticized for mediocre economic performance not stimulating the tourism industry poor relations with Tunisia s biggest trading partner France In particular it was criticized for not monitoring and controlling radical Islamists such as Ansar al Sharia who were blamed for among other things attempting to Islamise the country the 2012 ransacking and burning of the American embassy The Troika government faced many challenges domestically and regionally including reviving an economy that had contracted by 1 9 after the Revolution 62 rising unemployment managing the influx of over a million Libyan refugees due to the Libyan war 63 and a wave of social protests The Troika government reasserted state control over 80 percent of the mosques that had been taken over by extremists in the chaotic period immediately after the revolution 64 On 19 February 2013 following the assassination of Chokri Belaid and ensuing protests Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali resigned from his office 65 a move which was deemed unprecedented by analysts 66 The move followed his attempt to form a technocratic government Ennahda however rejected his resignation insisting on a government of politicians and Jebali formally resigned after a meeting with President Moncef Marzouki saying it was in the best interests of the country He said I promised if my initiative did not succeed I would resign as head of the government and this is what I am doing following my meeting with the president Today there is a great disappointment among the people and we must regain their trust and this resignation is a first step 67 Party leader Rached Ghannouchi then suggested a government of politicians and technocrats while Jebali suggested that if he was tasked with forming a new government it would have to include non partisan ministers and a variety of political representation that would lead to a new election 67 Unnamed opposition figures welcomed the resignation The same day Standard amp Poor s downgraded Tunisia s credit rating 68 However the IMF said that it was still in talks for a US 1 78 billion loan to the country 69 On 14 March 2013 Ali Larayedh was elected as Ennahda s new Secretary General and officially took over as Tunisia s new Prime Minister 70 Ennahda ceded control of key ministries to technocrats including foreign affairs defence and the interior Ennahda made up 28 of the government down from 40 in the previous coalition with independents forming 48 of the new cabinet 71 After stabilization of the political situation the assassination of Mohamed Brahmi member of the Assembly in July 2013 led to turmoil and political deadlock Following a National Dialogue and recognizing the continued need for national unity on 5 October a road map was signed 72 and in January 2014 Ennahda CPR and Ettakattol stepped down and handed power to a caretaker technocratic government led by Mehdi Jomaa to prepare and organize the second democratic elections Ghanouchi worked with secularist leader Beji Caid Essebsi to forge a compromise agreement both were heavily criticized by their party rank and file and Ghanouchi received agreement from the Ennahda shura council after threatening to resign 73 Outside observers called it a model transition 74 In January 2014 after the new Tunisian Constitution was adopted by popular vote Ennahda came second in the October 2014 parliamentary election with 27 79 of the popular vote and formed a coalition government with the larger secularist party Nidaa Tounes Ennahda did not put forward or endorse any candidate for the November 2014 presidential election 23 Ghanouchi hinted broadly that he personally supported Beji Caid Essebsi 75 who won with over 55 of the vote 2014 present edit This section needs expansion with 2014 to present You can help by adding to it August 2022 In the 2014 Tunisian parliamentary election Ennahda candidate Jamilia Ksiksi became Tunisia s first black female MP 76 Ennahda became the largest party in parliament in the 2019 election but with just 52 of 217 seats Ennahda attempted to court supporters of Kais Saied the first round winner of the presidential elections 77 Ennahda not only backed Saied in the runoff elections but also attempted to persuade Saied voters that Ennahda was their best opportunity for building a government supportive of a Saied president 78 In February 2020 Ennahdha issued an official statement saying it will grant confidence to Fakhfakh s new government 79 The Fakhfakh administration had 32 members six of whom were from Ennahda 80 In 2021 Ennahda faced widespread public anger as the country experienced a political crisis due to 2021 Tunisian protests President Kais Saied dismissed the government and froze parliament a move labeled a coup by Parliament Speaker Rached Ghannouchi 81 The Tunisian government has detained at least 17 current or former members of the party including its head and closed its offices around the nation since December 2022 82 Tunisian authorities apprehended Ghannouchi and searched his headquarters in April 2023 83 Ennahda announced on the occasion of its 42nd anniversary that it would be unable to hold its eleventh congress due to oppressive retaliatory measures taken by the authorities against the party s leader some of its leaders and its headquarters which hinder the party s work and institutions 84 Chairmen editDuring its first ten years of existence presidency of Ennahda changed very often while its leading figure Rached Ghannouchi was jailed until 1984 and then again in 1987 After going to exile he remained the party s intellectual leader 17 In November 1991 he also took back the formal presidency Following is a list of all former presidents of the party 85 June July 1981 Abderraouf Bouabi July October 1981 Fadhel Beldi October 1981 August 1984 Hamadi Jebali November 1984 August 1987 Rached Ghannouchi August 1987 April 1988 Salah Karker April October 1988 Jamel Aoui October 1988 March 1991 Sadok Chourou March 1991 Mohamed Kaloui March 1991 Mohamed Akrout April June 1991 Mohamed Ben Salem June September 1991 Habib Ellouze October 1991 Noureddine Arbaoui October November 1991 Walid Bennani since November 1991 Rached GhannouchiPolitical positions editIn the wake of the compromise worked out by Ghanouchi and Beji Caid Essebsi the party or at least its leader has been complimented for it willingness to compromise 86 protecting Tunisia s democracy and civil peace from Egyptian style violence However some Islamists see the party as having lost an opportunity to reverse the social framework of secularism in the country 86 87 The party is generally described as socially centrist with mild support for economic liberalism and has been compared to European Christian democrats 66 However liberals accuse its leaders of doublespeak in this regard 88 The party wishes to revise the strong secular Arab nationalist and socialist principles that predominate among the other parties and instead allow Islam into public life and be more accommodating to other viewpoints such as closer relations with the West and greater economic freedom The party currently rejects radical Islamism as a form of governance appropriate for Tunisia nevertheless Islam remains an important feature of the party 89 in a debate with a secular opponent Ghannouchi stated Why are we put in the same place as a model that is far from our thought like the Taliban or the Saudi model while there are other successful Islamic models that are close to us like the Turkish the Malaysian and the Indonesian models models that combine Islam and modernity 90 Political scientist Riadh Sidaoui explains that the Ennahda leader models his approach on the moderate Islamism of Turkey he says The leadership was forced into exile in London for a long time because of harassment by Tunisian police and understood about the need to have a balanced outlook No one wants a repeat of the 1991 Algerian scenario 91 On 13 November 2011 the party s secretary general Hamadi Jebali held a joint rally in Sousse together with a parliamentary deputy of the Palestinian Hamas party Jebali referred to the occasion as a divine moment in a new state and in hopefully a 6th caliphate and that the liberation of Tunisia will God willing bring about the liberation of Jerusalem While the tone was said do be sharply in contrast to official statements of the party 92 Jebali was appointed Prime Minister of Tunisia a mere month later When in January 2012 Hamas leadership arrived for another visit to Tunisia people at the airport were heard shouting Kill the Jews Tunisian Jews said Ennahda leadership was slow to condemn the shouting 93 Ahmed Ibrahim of the Tunisian Pole Democratique Moderniste political bloc complained to a foreign journalist that Ennahda appears soft on television but in the mosques it is completely different Some of them are calling for jihad 37 The general manager of Al Arabiya wrote an editorial expressing the opinion that Ennahda is fundamentally a conservative Islamist party with a moderate leadership 94 Ennahda has been described as a mixed bag with moderate top layers and a base defined by a distinctly fundamentalist tilt 95 Although the party has expressed support for women s rights and equality of civil rights between men and women the party chose to place only two women at first position out of 33 regional lists for the Tunisian Constituent Assembly Ghannouchi noted that women have not held any de facto leadership positions under Ben Ali s governments and that it is a reality that only a few women are currently suited to leadership posts 96 The party is more moderate in urbanized areas such as Tunis where secular and socially liberal beliefs predominate However Ennahda s compromises and abandoning of political Islam has made their core supporters lose faith in them 66 Perhaps as a result in 2018 the party declared that it would vote down a bill that would end gender discrimination and implement inheritance equality between men and women 97 justifying its position because the bill proposed by the Tunisian president Beji Caid Essebsi is against the Quran and the beliefs of Tunisian people The position sparked outrage among Tunisian progressives and liberals who accused the party of lying about its embrace of democracy and turning back to its Islamic radical origins According to a 2020 study members of parliament in the Ennahda movement who had lived abroad in secular democracies had more liberal voting records than their counterparts who had only lived in Tunisia 98 Homosexuality edit The party and its leaders have taken very hostile positions against homosexuality In 2012 Samir Dilou then minister of human rights and leader of Ennahda said the LGBT people have no right to free speech and they should respect the religion and heritage of Tunisia he also said that homosexuality is a sexual perversion and a mental illness 99 Amnesty International said that it was deeply disappointed by the comments of Dilou especially that he s responsible for the respect of human rights 100 The presidential candidate of Ennahda in 2019 Abdelfattah Mourou stated that homosexuality is a personal choice and that we must respected individual freedoms but at the same time he said that he announced his support for the continuation of criminalization of homosexuality in Tunisia where sodomy is criminalized by 3 years of imprisonment 101 In 2021 Fathi Layouni Ennahda mayor of Le Kram declared to a local radio station that the natural place for homosexuals is either prisons or psychiatric hospitals and that they are forbidden from entering his city he also demanded the closure of the Association Shams which is a Tunisian organization for LGBT rights 102 Election results editElection year of total votes of overall vote of seats GovernmentConstituent Assembly of Tunisia2011 1 501 320 37 04 89 217 Coalition 2011 2014 Technocratic Government 2014 2015 Assembly of the Representatives of the People2014 947 034 27 79 69 217 Coalition2019 561 132 19 63 52 217 CoalitionSee also editList of Islamic political parties Notes editReferences edit Ennahda feiert sich als Wahlsieger Tunesien hat den Islam gewahlt Politik Stern De 25 October 2011 Retrieved 2 January 2014 Kaminski Matthew 26 October 2011 On the Campaign Trail With Islamist Democrats The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 26 October 2011 Ennahda leader Ghannouchi We are Muslim democrats not Islamists Middle East Eye Retrieved 23 August 2017 Agence France Presse 16 September 2011 Erdogan tells Tunisians that Islam and democracy can work Retrieved 17 July 2015 Agence France Presse 16 September 2011 Erdogan tells Tunisians that Islam and democracy can work Retrieved 17 July 2015 Tunisia s Ennahda discusses local elections Middle East Monitor 28 January 2017 Retrieved 27 July 2022 The word حركة movement is the official term which is used by this political party Ennahdha Archived from the original on 22 December 2011 Retrieved 28 October 2011 Tunisian president fires premier after violent protests AP NEWS 25 July 2021 Retrieved 27 July 2021 Ennahda is Leaving Political Islam Wilson Center 20 May 2016 Retrieved 23 August 2017 Muslim Democrats Tunisia s Delicate Experiment Foreign Policy Blogs 30 September 2016 Retrieved 23 August 2017 Ennahda leader Ghannouchi We are Muslim democrats not Islamists Middle East Eye Retrieved 23 August 2017 a b Teyeb Mourad 27 January 2011 What role for the Islamists Al Ahram Weekly archived from the original on 19 January 2012 retrieved 6 November 2011 a b Lewis Aidan 25 October 2011 Profile Tunisia s Ennahda Party BBC Retrieved 28 October 2011 REUNION DU CEMAM 9 Mai 1987 I Le Mouvement de la Tendance Islamique en Tunisie J Loiselet PDF Free Download docplayer fr Retrieved 27 July 2021 Tunisia s Islamists to form party Al Jazeera 1 March 2011 Retrieved 1 March 2011 a b c Decree of 23 Nov 2011 about the Final Results of the National Constituent Assembly Elections in Arabic 2011 archived from the original on 18 November 2011 a b c Feldman Noah 30 October 2011 Islamists Victory in Tunisia a Win for Democracy Noah Feldman Bloomberg Retrieved 31 October 2011 a b Tunisia s New Ennahda Archived 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Marc Lynch 29 June 2011 Bay Austin Tunisia and its Islamists The Revolution Phase Two Retrieved 2 March 2012 Totten Michael No to America and No to Radical Islam Archived from the original on 24 March 2012 Retrieved 22 March 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Worth Robert F 2016 A Rage for Order The Middle East in Turmoil from Tahrir Square to ISIS Pan Macmillan pp 199 204 ISBN 9780374710712 Retrieved 31 July 2016 Prime Minister Larayedh Announces Resignation Tunisia Live 9 January 2014 archived from the original on 20 January 2014 retrieved 27 January 2014 a b Tunisia s main Islamist party to stay out of presidential election Reuters 8 September 2014 Archived from the original on 24 October 2015 Retrieved 20 September 2014 Tunisia Ennahda denies formation of secret organisation and condemns attempts to link it to terrorism Middle East Monitor 5 October 2018 Worth Robert F 2016 A Rage for Order The Middle East in Turmoil from Tahrir Square to ISIS Pan Macmillan p 198 ISBN 9780374710712 Retrieved 31 July 2016 Aarabi Kasra March 2019 What Is Velayat e Faqih Institute for Global Change Retrieved 27 July 2021 Iranian diplomats and news media heralded the return of fundamentalist preacher Rashid Ghannouchi to Tunis after more than two decades in exile Having established ties with Ghannouchi during his years in London Iran s mullahs are counting on him to propel the Harakat al Nahda al Islamiya or Islamic Renaissance Movement to the forefront of Tunisian politics Essentially Tehran seeks an outcome through Ghannouchi like that of Ayatollah Khomeini s return to Iran from Paris in February 1979 a fundamentalist takeover Pr 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21 February 2012 Tunisia at a Crossroads FPIF Retrieved 4 October 2012 Chrisafis Angelique 20 October 2011 Tunisia s women fear veil over Islamist intentions in first vote of Arab spring The Guardian London Retrieved 22 October 2011 Tunisia Ennahda Rejects Inheritance Equality Human Rights Watch 6 September 2018 Grewal Sharan 2020 From Islamists to Muslim Democrats The Case of Tunisia s Ennahda American Political Science Review 114 2 519 535 doi 10 1017 S0003055419000819 ISSN 0003 0554 S2CID 208262133 Tunisie Le coming out homophobe du ministre des droits de l homme Slate Afrique 20 February 2012 Amnesty International invite Samir Dilou a revenir sur ses propos sur l homosexualite Kapitalis le portail d informations sur la Tunisie et le Maghreb Arabe Tunisie Homosexualite le candidat islamiste pour le respect de la liberte individuelle mais Le360 Afrique 10 September 2019 فتحي العيوني المثليين شواذ و مكانهم الطبيعي السجن أو المستشفى arabesque tn External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ennahda in Arabic Official website Bruce Maddy Weitzman The Islamic Challenge in North Africa MERIA Middle East Review of International Affairs Vol 1 No 2 July 1997 Andrew F March What Is Muslim about Tunisia s Muslim Democrats May 2021 No 142 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ennahda amp oldid 1186910749, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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