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Islamic schools and branches

Islamic schools and branches have different understandings of Islam. There are many different sects or denominations, schools of Islamic jurisprudence, and schools of Islamic theology, or ʿaqīdah (creed). Within Islamic groups themselves there may be differences, such as different orders (tariqa) within Sufism, and within Sunnī Islam different schools of theology (Atharī, Ashʿarī, Māturīdī) and jurisprudence (Ḥanafī, Mālikī, Shāfiʿī, Ḥanbalī).[1] Groups in Islam may be numerous (the largest branches are Shīʿas and Sunnīs), or relatively small in size (Ibadis, Zaydīs, Ismāʿīlīs). Differences between the groups may not be well known to Muslims outside of scholarly circles, or may have induced enough passion to have resulted in political and religious violence (Barelvi, Deobandi, Salafism, Wahhabism).[2][3][4][5] There are informal movements driven by ideas (such as Islamic modernism and Islamism) as well as organized groups with a governing body (Ahmadiyya, Ismāʿīlism, Nation of Islam). Some of the Islamic sects and groups regard certain others as deviant or accuse them of being not truly Muslim (for example, Sunnīs frequently discriminate Ahmadiyya, Alawites, Quranists, and Shīʿas).[2][3][4][5] Some Islamic sects and groups date back to the early history of Islam between the 7th and 9th centuries CE (Kharijites, Sunnīs, Shīʿas), whereas others have arisen much more recently (Islamic neo-traditionalism, liberalism and progressivism, Islamic modernism, Salafism and Wahhabism) or even in the 20th century (Nation of Islam). Still others were influential in their time but are not longer in existence (non-Ibadi Kharijites, Muʿtazila, Murji'ah). Muslims who do not belong to, do not self-identify with, or cannot be readily classified under one of the identifiable Islamic schools and branches are known as non-denominational Muslims.

Overview

 
Diagram showing the various branches of Islam: Sunnīsm, Shīʿīsm, Ibadism, Quranism, Non-denominational Muslims, Mahdavia, Ahmadiyya, Nation of Islam, and Sufism.

The original schism between Kharijites, Sunnīs, and Shīʿas among Muslims was disputed over the political and religious succession to the guidance of the Muslim community (Ummah) after the death of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[6] From their essentially political position, the Kharijites developed extreme doctrines that set them apart from both mainstream Sunnī and Shīʿa Muslims.[6] Shīʿas believe ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib is the true successor to Muhammad, while Sunnīs consider Abu Bakr to hold that position. The Kharijites broke away from both the Shīʿas and the Sunnīs during the First Fitna (the first Islamic Civil War);[6] they were particularly noted for adopting a radical approach to takfīr (excommunication), whereby they declared both Sunnī and Shīʿa Muslims to be either infidels (kuffār) or false Muslims (munāfiḳūn), and therefore deemed them worthy of death for their perceived apostasy (ridda).[6]

In addition, there are several differences within Sunnī and Shīʿa Islam: Sunnī Islam is separated into four main schools of jurisprudence, namely Mālikī, Ḥanafī, Shāfiʿī, and Ḥanbalī; these schools are named after their founders Mālik ibn Anas, Abū Ḥanīfa al-Nuʿmān, Muḥammad ibn Idrīs al-Shāfiʿī
, and Aḥmad ibn Ḥanbal, respectively.[1] Shīʿa Islam, on the other hand, is separated into three major sects: Twelvers, Ismāʿīlīs, and Zaydīs. The vast majority of Shīʿa Muslims are Twelvers (a 2012 estimate puts the figure as 85%),[7] to the extent that the term "Shīʿa" frequently refers to Twelvers by default. All mainstream Twelver and Ismāʿīlī Shīʿa Muslims follow the same school of thought, the Jaʽfari jurisprudence, named after Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq, the sixth Shīʿīte Imam.

Zaydīs, also known as Fivers, follow the Zaydī school of thought (named after Zayd ibn ʿAlī). Ismāʿīlīsm is another offshoot of Shīʿa Islam that later split into Nizārī and Musta‘lī, and the Musta‘lī further divided into Ḥāfiẓi and Ṭayyibi.[8] Ṭayyibi Ismāʿīlīs, also known as "Bohras", are split between Dawudi Bohras, Sulaymani Bohras, and Alavi Bohras.[9]

Similarly, Kharijites were initially divided into five major branches: Sufris, Azariqa, Najdat, Adjarites, and Ibadis. Of these, Ibadi Muslims are the only surviving branch of Kharijites. In addition to the aforementioned groups, new schools of thought and movements like Ahmadi Muslims, Quranist Muslims, and African-American Muslims later emerged independently.

Muslims who do not belong to, do not self-identify with, or cannot be readily classified under one of the identifiable Islamic schools and branches are known as non-denominational Muslims.

Main branches or denominations

 
Geographical distribution of the main three Islamic branches and their schools of jurisprudence:

Demographic distribution of the main three Islamic branches:

  Sunnīsm (85%)
  Shīʿīsm[10] (15%)
  Ibadism and others (0.5%)

Sunnī Islam

Sunnī Islam, also known as Ahl as-Sunnah waʾl Jamāʾah or simply Ahl as-Sunnah, is by far the largest denomination of Islam, comprising around 85% of the Muslim population in the world. The term Sunnī comes from the word sunnah, which means the teachings, actions, and examples of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and his companions (ṣaḥāba).

Sunnīs believe that Muhammad did not specifically appoint a successor to lead the Muslim community (Ummah) before his death in 632 CE, however they approve of the private election of the first companion, Abū Bakr.[11][12] Sunnī Muslims regard the first four caliphs—Abū Bakr (632–634), ʿUmar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb (Umar І, 634–644), ʿUthmān ibn ʿAffān (644–656), and ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib (656–661)—as al-Khulafā'ur-Rāshidūn ("the Rightly-Guided Caliphs"). Sunnīs also believe that the position of caliph may be attained democratically, on gaining a majority of the votes, but after the Rashidun, the position turned into a hereditary dynastic rule because of the divisions started by the Umayyads and others. After the fall of the Ottoman Empire in 1923, there has never been another caliph as widely recognized in the Muslim world.

Followers of the classical Sunnī schools of jurisprudence and kalām (rationalistic theology) on one hand, and Islamists and Salafists such as Wahhabis and Ahle Hadith, who follow a literalist reading of early Islamic sources, on the other, have laid competing claims to represent the "orthodox" Sunnī Islam.[13] Anglophone Islamic currents of the former type are sometimes referred to as "traditional Islam".[14] Islamic modernism is an offshoot of the Salafi movement that tried to integrate modernism into Islam by being partially influenced by modern-day attempts to revive the ideas of the Muʿtazila school by Islamic scholars such as Muhammad Abduh.

Shīʿa Islam

Shīʿa Islam is the second-largest denomination of Islam, comprising around 10–15%[15] of the total Muslim population.[16] Although a minority in the Muslim world, Shīʿa Muslims constitute the majority of the Muslim populations in Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Bahrain, and Azerbaijan, as well as significant minorities in Syria, Turkey, South Asia, Yemen, and Saudi Arabia, as well as in other parts of the Persian Gulf.[17]

In addition to believing in the supreme authority of the Quran and teachings of Muhammad, Shīʿa Muslims believe that Muhammad's family, the Ahl al-Bayt ("People of the Household"), including his descendants known as Imams, have distinguished spiritual and political authority over the community,[18] and believe that ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib, Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law, was the first of these Imams and the rightful successor to Muhammad, and thus reject the legitimacy of the first three Rāshidūn caliphs.[19]

Major sub-denominations

Ghulat movements

Shīʿīte groups and movements who either ascribe divine characteristics to some important figures in the history of Islam (usually members of Muhammad's family, the Ahl al-Bayt) or hold beliefs deemed deviant by mainstream Shīʿa Muslims were designated as Ghulat.[38]

Non-denominational Muslims

Non-denominational Muslims (Arabic: مسلمون بلا طائفة, romanizedMuslimūn bi-la ṭā’ifa) are Muslims who do not belong to, do not self-identify with, or cannot be readily classified under one of the identifiable Islamic schools and branches.[39][40][41][42]

Non-denominational Muslims make up a majority of the Muslims in eight countries (and a plurality in three others): Albania (65%), Kyrgyzstan (64%), Kosovo (58%), Indonesia (56%), Mali (55%), Bosnia and Herzegovina (54%), Uzbekistan (54%), Azerbaijan (45%), Russia (45%), and Nigeria (42%).[43] They are found primarily in Central Asia.[43] Kazakhstan has the largest number of non-denominational Muslims, who constitute about 74% of the population.[43] Southeastern Europe also has a large number of non-denominational Muslims.[43]

Kharijite Islam

Kharijite (literally, "those who seceded") are an extinct sect who originated during the First Fitna, the struggle for political leadership over the Muslim community, following the assassination in 656 of the third caliph Uthman.[44][6] Kharijites originally supported the caliphate of Ali, but then later on fought against him and eventually succeeded in his martyrdom while he was praying in the mosque of Kufa. While there are few remaining Kharijite or Kharijite-related groups, the term is sometimes used to denote Muslims who refuse to compromise with those with whom they disagree.

Sufris were a major sub-sect of Kharijite in the 7th and 8th centuries, and a part of the Kharijites. Nukkari was a sub-sect of Sufris. Harūrīs were an early Muslim sect from the period of the Four Rightly-Guided Caliphs (632–661 CE), named for their first leader, Habīb ibn-Yazīd al-Harūrī. Azariqa, Najdat, and Adjarites were minor sub-sects.

Ibadi Islam

The only Kharijite sub-sect extant today is Ibadism, which developed out of the 7th century CE. There are currently two geographically separated Ibadi groups—in Oman, where they constitute the majority of the Muslim population in the country, and in North Africa where they constitute significant minorities in Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya. Similarly to another Muslim minority, the Zaydīs, "in modern times" they have "shown a strong tendency" to move towards the Sunnī branch of Islam.[20]

Schools of Islamic jurisprudence

 
Geographical distribution of the schools of Islamic jurisprudence in the Muslim world[45]

Islamic schools of jurisprudence, known as madhhab, differ in the methodology they use to derive their rulings from the Quran, ḥadīth literature, the sunnah (accounts of the sayings and living habits attributed to the Islamic prophet Muhammad during his lifetime), and the tafsīr literature (exegetical commentaries on the Quran).

Sunnī

Sunnī Islam contains numerous schools of Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) and schools of Islamic theology (ʿaqīdah).[1] In terms of religious jurisprudence (fiqh), Sunnism contains several schools of thought (madhhab):[1]

In terms of religious creed (ʿaqīdah), Sunnism contains several schools of theology:[1]

The Salafi movement is a conservative reform branch and/or revivalist movement within Sunnī Islam whose followers don't believe in strictly following one particular madhhab. They include the Wahhabi movement, an Islamic doctrine and religious movement founded by Muhammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhab, and the modern Ahle Hadith movement, whose followers call themselves Ahl al-Ḥadīth.

Shīʿa

In Shīʿa Islam, the major Shīʿīte school of jurisprudence is the Jaʿfari or Imāmī school,[47] named after Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq, the sixth Shīʿīte Imam. The Jaʿfari jurisprudence is further divided into two branches: the Usuli school, which favors the exercise of ijtihad,[48] and the Akhbari school, which holds the traditions (aḵbār) of the Shīʿīte Imams to be the main source of religious knowledge.[49] Minor Shīʿa schools of jurisprudence include the Ismāʿīlī school (Mustaʿlī-Fāṭimid Ṭayyibi Ismāʿīlīs) and the Zaydī school, both of which have closer affinity to Sunnī jurisprudence.[47][50][51] Shīʿīte clergymen and jurists usually carry the title of mujtahid (i.e., someone authorized to issue legal opinions in Shīʿa Islam).

Ibadi

The fiqh or jurisprudence of Ibadis is relatively simple. Absolute authority is given to the Quran and ḥadīth literature; new innovations accepted on the basis of qiyas (analogical reasoning) were rejected as bid'ah (heresy) by the Ibadis. That differs from the majority of Sunnīs,[52] but agrees with most Shīʿa schools[53] and with the Ẓāhirī and early Ḥanbalī schools of Sunnism.[54][55][56]

Schools of Islamic theology

Aqidah is an Islamic term meaning "creed", doctrine, or article of faith.[57][58] There have existed many schools of Islamic theology, not all of which survive to the present day. Major themes of theological controversies in Islam have included predestination and free will, the nature of the Quran, the nature of the divine attributes, apparent and esoteric meaning of scripture, and the role of dialectical reasoning in the Islamic doctrine.

Sunni

Classical

Kalām is the Islamic philosophy of seeking theological principles through dialectic. In Arabic, the word literally means "speech/words". A scholar of kalām is referred to as a mutakallim (Muslim theologian; plural mutakallimūn). There are many schools of Kalam, the main ones being the Ashʿarī and Māturīdī schools in Sunni Islam.[59]

Ashʿarī

Ashʿarīsm is a school of theology founded by Abū al-Ḥasan al-Ashʿarī in the 10th century. The Ashʿarīte view was that comprehension of the unique nature and characteristics of God were beyond human capability. Ashʿarī theology is considered one of the orthodox creeds of Sunni Islam alongside the Māturīdī theology.[59] Historically, the Ashʿarī theology prevails in Sufism and was originally associated with the Ḥanbalī school of Islamic jurisprudence.[59]

Māturīdī

Māturīdism is a school of theology founded by Abū Manṣūr al-Māturīdī in the 10th century, which is a close variant of the Ashʿarī school. Māturīdī theology is considered one of the orthodox creeds of Sunni Islam alongside the Ashʿarī theology,[59] and prevails in the Ḥanafī school of Islamic jurisprudence.[59] Points which differ are the nature of belief and the place of human reason. The Māturīdites state that imān (faith) does not increase nor decrease but remains static; rather it's taqwā (piety) which increases and decreases. The Ashʿarītes affirm that belief does in fact increase and decrease. The Māturīdites affirm that the unaided human mind is able to find out that some of the more major sins such as alcohol or murder are evil without the help of revelation. The Ashʿarītes affirm that the unaided human mind is unable to know if something is good or evil, lawful or unlawful, without divine revelation.

Traditionalist theology

Traditionalist theology, sometimes referred to as the Atharī school, derives its name from the word "tradition" as a translation of the Arabic word hadith or from the Arabic word athar, meaning "narrations". The traditionalist creed is to avoid delving into extensive theological speculation. They rely on the Qur'an, the Sunnah, and sayings of the Sahaba, seeing this as the middle path where the attributes of Allah are accepted without questioning their nature (bi-la kayf). Ahmad ibn Hanbal is regarded as the leader of the traditionalist school of creed. The modern Salafi movement associates itself with the Atharī creed.[60][61][62][63]

Muʿtazila

Muʿtazilite theology originated in the 8th century in Basra when Wasil ibn Ata left the teaching lessons of Hasan al-Basri after a theological dispute. He and his followers expanded on the logic and rationalism of Greek philosophy, seeking to combine them with Islamic doctrines and show that the two were inherently compatible. The Muʿtazilites debated philosophical questions such as whether the Qur'an was created or co-eternal with God, whether evil was created by God, the issue of predestination versus free will, whether God's attributes in the Qur'an were to be interpreted allegorically or literally, and whether sinning believers would have eternal punishment in hell.[citation needed]

Murji'ah

Murji'ah was a name for an early politico-religious movement which came to refer to all those who identified faith (iman) with belief to the exclusion of acts.[64] Originating during the caliphates of Uthman and Ali, Murijites opposed the Kharijites, holding that only God has the authority to judge who is a true Muslim and who is not, and that Muslims should consider all other Muslims as part of the community.[65] Two major Murijite sub-sects were the were Karamiya and Sawbaniyya.[66]

Qadariyyah

Qadariyyah is an originally derogatory term designating early Islamic theologians who asserted that humans possess free will, whose exercise makes them responsible for their actions, justifying divine punishment and absolving God of responsibility for evil in the world.[67][68] Some of their doctrines were later adopted by the Mu'tazilis and rejected by the Ash'aris.[67]

Jabriyah

In direct contrast to the Qadariyyah, Jabriyah was an early islamic philosophical school based on the belief that humans are controlled by predestination, without having choice or free will. The Jabriya school originated during the Umayyad dynasty in Basra. The first representative of this school was Al-Ja'd ibn Dirham who was executed in 724.[69] The term is derived from the Arabic root j-b-r, in the sense which gives the meaning of someone who is forced or coerced by destiny.[69] The term Jabriyah was also a derogatory term used by different Islamic groups that they considered wrong,[70] The Ash'ariyah used the term Jabriyah in the first place to describe the followers of, Jahm ibn Safwan who died in 746, in that they regarded their faith as a middle position between Qadariyah and Jabriya. On the other hand, the Mu'tazilah considered the Ash'ariyah as Jabriyah because, in their opinion, they rejected the orthodox doctrine of free will.[71] The Shiites used the term Jabriyah to describe the Ash'ariyah and Hanbalis.[72]

Jahmiyyah

Jahmis were the alleged followers of the early Islamic theologian Jahm bin Safwan who associated himself with Al-Harith ibn Surayj. He was an exponent of extreme determinism according to which a man acts only metaphorically in the same way in which the sun acts or does something when it sets.[73]

Batiniyyah

The Bāṭiniyyah is a name given to an allegoristic type of scriptural interpretation developed among some Shia groups, stressing the bāṭin (inward, esoteric) meaning of texts. It has been retained by all branches of Isma'ilism and its Druze offshoot. Alevism, Bektashism and folk religion, Hurufis and Alawites practice a similar system of interpretation.[74]

Sufism

Sufism is Islam's mystical-ascetic dimension and is represented by schools or orders known as Tasawwufī-Ṭarīqah. It is seen as that aspect of Islamic teaching that deals with the purification of inner self. By focusing on the more spiritual aspects of religion, Sufis strive to obtain direct experience of God by making use of "intuitive and emotional faculties" that one must be trained to use.[75]

The following list contains some notable Sufi orders:

Later movements

African-American movements

Many slaves brought from Africa to the Western Hemisphere were Muslims,[85] and the early 20th century saw the rise of distinct Islamic religious and political movements within the African-American community in the United States,[86] such as Darul Islam,[85] the Islamic Party of North America,[85] the Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood (MIB),[85] the Muslim Alliance in North America,[85] the Moorish Science Temple of America,[86] the Nation of Islam (NOI),[86][87][88][89] and the Ansaaru Allah Community.[90] They sought to ascribe Islamic heritage to African-Americans, thereby giving much emphasis on racial and ethnic aspects[87][86][88][89][91] (see black nationalism and black separatism).[85][90][92] These black Muslim movements often differ greatly in matters of doctrine from mainstream Islam.[86][88][90][92] They include:

Ahmadiyya Movement In Islam

The Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam was founded in British India in 1889 by Mirza Ghulam Ahmad of Qadian, who claimed to be the promised Messiah ("Second Coming of Christ"), the Mahdi awaited by the Muslims as well as a "subordinate" prophet to the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[98][99][100][101] Ahmadis claim to practice the pristine form of Islam as followed by Muhammad and his earliest followers.[102][103] They believe that it was Mirza Ghulam Ahmad's task to restore the original sharia given to Muhammad by guiding the Ummah back to the "true" Islam and defeat the attacks on Islam by other religions.[98][99][100][101][104]

There are a wide variety of distinct beliefs and teachings of Ahmadis compared to those of most other Muslims,[98][99][100][101] which include the interpretation of the Quranic title Khatam an-Nabiyyin,[105] interpretation of the Messiah's Second Coming,[99][106] complete rejection of the abrogation/cancellation of Quranic verses,[107] belief that Jesus survived the crucifixion and died of old age in India,[99][100][108] conditions of the "Jihad of the Sword" are no longer met,[99][109] belief that divine revelation (as long as no new sharia is given) will never end,[110] belief in cyclical nature of history until Muhammad,[110] and belief in the implausibility of a contradiction between Islam and science.[104] These perceived deviations from normative Islamic thought have resulted in severe persecution of Ahmadis in various Muslim-majority countries,[99] particularly Pakistan,[99][111] where they have been branded as Non-Muslims and their Islamic religious practices are punishable by the Ahmadi-Specific laws in the penal code.[112]

The followers of the Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam are divided into two groups: the first being the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, currently the dominant group, and the Lahore Ahmadiyya Movement for the Propagation of Islam.[99] The larger group takes a literalist view believing that Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was the promised Mahdi and a Ummati Nabi subservient to Muhammad, while the latter believing that he was only a religious reformer and a prophet only in an allegorical sense.[99] Both Ahmadi groups are active in dawah or Islamic missionary work, and have produced vasts amounts of Islamic literature, including numerous translations of the Quran, translations of the Hadith, Quranic tafsirs, a multitude of sirahs of Muhammad, and works on the subject of comparative religion among others.[99][101] As such, their international influence far exceeds their number of adherents.[99][101][113] Muslims from more Orthodox sects of Islam have adopted many Ahmadi polemics and understandings of other religions,[114] along with the Ahmadi approach to reconcile Islamic and Western education as well as to establish Islamic school systems, particularly in Africa.[115]

Barelvi / Deobandi split

Sunni Muslims of the Indian subcontinent comprising present day India, Pakistan and Bangladesh who are overwhelmingly Hanafi by fiqh have split into two schools or movements, the Barelvi and the Deobandi. While the Deobandi is revivalist in nature, the Barelvi are more traditional and inclined towards Sufism.

Gülen / Hizmet movement

The Gülen movement, usually referred to as the Hizmet movement,[116] established in the 1970s as an offshoot of the Nur Movement[117] and led by the Turkish Islamic scholar and preacher Fethullah Gülen in Turkey, Central Asia, and in other parts of the world, is active in education, with private schools and universities in over 180 countries as well as with many American charter schools operated by followers. It has initiated forums for interfaith dialogue.[118][119] The Cemaat movement's structure has been described as a flexible organizational network.[120] Movement schools and businesses organize locally and link themselves into informal networks.[121] Estimates of the number of schools and educational institutions vary widely; it appears there are about 300 Gülen movement schools in Turkey and over 1,000 schools worldwide.[122][123]

Islamic modernism

Islamic modernism, also sometimes referred to as "modernist Salafism",[124][125][126][127][128] is a movement that has been described as "the first Muslim ideological response"[129] attempting to reconcile Islamic faith with modern Western values such as nationalism, democracy, and science.[130]

Islamism

Islamism is a set of political ideologies, derived from various fundamentalist views, which hold that Islam is not only a religion but a political system that should govern the legal, economic and social imperatives of the state. Many Islamists do not refer to themselves as such and it is not a single particular movement. Religious views and ideologies of its adherents vary, and they may be Sunni Islamists or Shia Islamists depending upon their beliefs. Islamist groups include groups such as Al-Qaeda, the organizer of the September 11, 2001 attacks and perhaps the most prominent; and the Muslim Brotherhood, the largest and perhaps the oldest. Although violence is often employed by some organizations, most Islamist movements are nonviolent.

Muslim Brotherhood

The Al-Ikhwan Al-Muslimun (with Ikhwan الإخوان brethren) or Muslim Brotherhood, is an organisation that was founded by Egyptian scholar Hassan al-Banna, a graduate of Dar al-Ulum. With its various branches, it is the largest Sunni movement in the Arab world, and an affiliate is often the largest opposition party in many Arab nations. The Muslim Brotherhood is not concerned with theological differences, accepting both, Muslims of any of the four Sunni schools of thought, and Shi'a Muslims. It is the world's oldest and largest Islamist group. Its aims are to re-establish the Caliphate and in the meantime, push for more Islamisation of society. The Brotherhood's stated goal is to instill the Qur'an and sunnah as the "sole reference point for... ordering the life of the Muslim family, individual, community... and state".[citation needed]

Jamaat-e-Islami

The Jamaat-e-Islami (or JI) is an Islamist political party in the Indian subcontinent. It was founded in Lahore, British India, by Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi (with alternative spellings of last name Maudoodi) in 1941 and is the oldest religious party in Pakistan. Today, sister organizations with similar objectives and ideological approaches exist in India (Jamaat-e-Islami Hind), Bangladesh (Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh), Kashmir (Jamaat-e-Islami Kashmir), and Sri Lanka, and there are "close brotherly relations" with the Islamist movements and missions "working in different continents and countries", particularly those affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood (Akhwan-al-Muslimeen). The JI envisions an Islamic government in Pakistan and Bangladesh governing by Islamic law. It opposes Westernization—including secularization, capitalism, socialism, or such practices as interest based banking, and favours an Islamic economic order and Caliphate.[citation needed]

Hizb ut-Tahrir

Hizb ut-Tahrir (Arabic: حزب التحرير) (Translation: Party of Liberation) is an international, pan-Islamist political organization which describes its ideology as Islam, and its aim the re-establishment of the Islamic Khilafah (Caliphate) to resume Islamic ways of life in the Muslim world. The caliphate would unite the Muslim community (Ummah)[131] upon their Islamic creed and implement the Shariah, so as to then carry the proselytizing of Islam to the rest of the world.[132]

Quranism

Quranism[133] or Quraniyya (Arabic: القرآنية; al-Qur'āniyya) is a protestant[134] branch of Islam. It holds the belief that Islamic guidance and law should only be based on the Quran, thus opposing the religious authority and authenticity of the hadith literature.[135][136] Quranists believe that God's message is already clear and complete in the Quran and it can therefore be fully understood without referencing outside texts.[137] Quranists claim that the vast majority of hadith literature are forged lies and believe that the Quran itself criticizes the hadith both in the technical sense and the general sense.[138][135][139][140][141][142][excessive citations]

Liberal and progressive Islam

Liberal Islam originally emerged out of the Islamic revivalist movement of the 18th-19th centuries.[143] Liberal and progressive Islamic organizations and movements are primarily based in the Western world, and have in common a religious outlook which depends mainly on ijtihad or re-interpretation of the sacred scriptures of Islam.[143] Liberal and progressive Muslims are characterized by a rationalistic, critical examination and re-interpretation of the sacred scriptures of Islam;[143] affirmation and promotion of democracy, gender equality, human rights, LGBT rights, women's rights, religious pluralism, interfaith marriage,[144][145] freedom of expression, freedom of thought, and freedom of religion;[143] opposition to theocracy and total rejection of Islamism and Islamic fundamentalism;[143] and a modern view of Islamic theology, ethics, sharia, culture, tradition, and other ritualistic practices in Islam.[143]

Mahdavia

Mahdavia, or Mahdavism, is a Mahdiist sect founded in late 15th century India by Syed Muhammad Jaunpuri, who declared himself to be the Hidden Twelfth Imam of the Twelver Shia tradition.[146] They follow many aspects of the Sunni doctrine. Zikri Mahdavis, or Zikris, are an offshoot of the Mahdavi movement.[147]

Non-denominational Islam

Non-denominational Muslims is an umbrella term that has been used for and by Muslims who do not belong to or do not self-identify with a specific Islamic denomination.[148][40][41][42] A quarter of the world's Muslims are non-denominational Muslims.[149]

Tolu-e-Islam

Tolu-e-Islam ("Resurgence of Islam") is a non-denominational Muslim organization based in Pakistan, with members throughout the world.[150] The movement was initiated by Ghulam Ahmed Pervez.

Salafism and Wahhabism

Ahle Hadith

Ahl-i Hadith (Persian: اهل حدیث, Urdu: اہل حدیث: transl.People of the traditions of the Prophet) is a movement which emerged in the Indian subcontinent in the mid-19th century. Its followers call themselves Ahl al-Hadith and are considered to be a branch of the Salafiyya school. Ahl-i Hadith is antithetical to various beliefs and mystical practices associated with folk Sufism. Ahl-i Hadith shares many doctrinal similarities with the Wahhabi movement and hence often classified as being synonymous with the "Wahhabis" by its adversaries. However, its followers reject this designation, preferring to identify themselves as "Salafis".[151][152][153][154]

Salafiyya movement

The Salafiyya movement is a conservative,[155] Islahi (reform)[156] movement within Sunni Islam that emerged in the second half of the 19th century and advocate a return to the traditions of the "devout ancestors" (Salaf al-Salih). It has been described as the "fastest-growing Islamic movement"; with each scholar expressing diverse views across social, theological, and political spectrum. Salafis follow a doctrine that can be summed up as taking "a fundamentalist approach to Islam, emulating the Prophet Muhammad and his earliest followers—al-salaf al-salih, the 'pious forefathers'....They reject religious innovation, or bidʻah, and support the implementation of Sharia (Islamic law)."[157] The Salafi movement is often divided into three categories: the largest group are the purists (or quietists), who avoid politics; the second largest group are the militant activists, who get involved in politics; the third and last group are the jihadists, who constitute a minority.[157] Most of the violent Islamist groups come from the Salafi-Jihadist movement and their subgroups.[158] In recent years, Jihadi-Salafist doctrines have often been associated with the armed insurgencies of Islamic extremist movements and terrorist organizations targeting innocent civilians, both Muslims and Non-Muslims, such as al-Qaeda, ISIL/ISIS/IS/Daesh, Boko Haram, etc.[159][160][157][158] The second largest group are the Salafi activists who have a long tradition of political activism, such as those that operate in organizations like the Muslim Brotherhood, the Arab world's major Islamist movement. In the aftermath of widescale repressions after the Arab spring, accompanied by their political failures, the activist-Salafi movements have undergone a decline. The most numerous are the quietists, who believe in disengagement from politics and accept allegiance to Muslim governments, no matter how tyrannical, to avoid fitna (chaos).[157]

Wahhabism

The Wahhabi movement was founded and spearheaded by the Ḥanbalī scholar and theologian Muhammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhab,[161][162][163] a religious preacher from the Najd region in central Arabia,[164][165][166][167][168] and was instrumental in the rise of the House of Saud to power in the Arabian peninsula.[161] Ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhab sought to revive and purify Islam from what he perceived as non-Islamic popular religious beliefs and practices by returning to what, he believed, were the fundamental principles of the Islamic religion.[165][166][167][168] His works were generally short, full of quotations from the Quran and Hadith literature, such as his main and foremost theological treatise, Kitāb at-Tawḥīd (Arabic: كتاب التوحيد; "The Book of Oneness").[165][166][167][168] He taught that the primary doctrine of Islam was the uniqueness and oneness of God (tawḥīd), and denounced what he held to be popular religious beliefs and practices among Muslims that he considered to be akin to heretical innovation (bidʿah) and polytheism (shirk).[165][166][167][168]

Wahhabism has been described as a conservative, strict, and fundamentalist branch of Sunnī Islam,[169] with puritan views,[169] believing in a literal interpretation of the Quran.[161] The terms "Wahhabism" and "Salafism" are sometimes evoked interchangeably, although the designation "Wahhabi" is specifically applied to the followers of Muhammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhab and his reformist doctrines.[161] The label "Wahhabi" was not claimed by his followers, who usually refer themselves as al-Muwaḥḥidūn ("affirmers of the singularity of God"), but is rather employed by Western scholars as well as his critics.[161][162][166] Starting in the mid-1970s and 1980s, the international propagation of Salafism and Wahhabism within Sunnī Islam[169] favored by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia[164][170][171] and other Arab states of the Persian Gulf has achieved what the French political scientist Gilles Kepel defined as a "preeminent position of strength in the global expression of Islam."[172]

22 months after the September 11 attacks, when the FBI considered al-Qaeda as "the number one terrorist threat to the United States", journalist Stephen Schwartz and U.S. Senator Jon Kyl have explicitly stated during a hearing that occurred in June 2003 before the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology, and Homeland Security of the U.S. Senate that "Wahhabism is the source of the overwhelming majority of terrorist atrocities in today's world".[173] As part of the global "War on Terror", Wahhabism has been accused by the European Parliament, various Western security analysts, and think tanks like the RAND Corporation, as being "a source of global terrorism".[173][174] Furthermore, Wahhabism has been accused of causing disunity in the Muslim community (Ummah) and criticized for its followers' destruction of many Islamic, cultural, and historical sites associated with the early history of Islam and the first generation of Muslims (Muhammad's family and his companions) in Saudi Arabia.[175][176][177][178]

Population of the branches

Denomination Population
Sunni Varies: 75% - 90%[179][180]
Non-denominational Muslim 25%[149]
Shia Varies: 10% - 13%[181]
Ibadi 2.7 million[182]
Quranism n/a

See also

References

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External links

  • The Four Sunni Schools of Thought

islamic, schools, branches, have, different, understandings, islam, there, many, different, sects, denominations, schools, islamic, jurisprudence, schools, islamic, theology, ʿaqīdah, creed, within, islamic, groups, themselves, there, differences, such, differ. Islamic schools and branches have different understandings of Islam There are many different sects or denominations schools of Islamic jurisprudence and schools of Islamic theology or ʿaqidah creed Within Islamic groups themselves there may be differences such as different orders tariqa within Sufism and within Sunni Islam different schools of theology Athari Ashʿari Maturidi and jurisprudence Ḥanafi Maliki Shafiʿi Ḥanbali 1 Groups in Islam may be numerous the largest branches are Shiʿas and Sunnis or relatively small in size Ibadis Zaydis Ismaʿilis Differences between the groups may not be well known to Muslims outside of scholarly circles or may have induced enough passion to have resulted in political and religious violence Barelvi Deobandi Salafism Wahhabism 2 3 4 5 There are informal movements driven by ideas such as Islamic modernism and Islamism as well as organized groups with a governing body Ahmadiyya Ismaʿilism Nation of Islam Some of the Islamic sects and groups regard certain others as deviant or accuse them of being not truly Muslim for example Sunnis frequently discriminate Ahmadiyya Alawites Quranists and Shiʿas 2 3 4 5 Some Islamic sects and groups date back to the early history of Islam between the 7th and 9th centuries CE Kharijites Sunnis Shiʿas whereas others have arisen much more recently Islamic neo traditionalism liberalism and progressivism Islamic modernism Salafism and Wahhabism or even in the 20th century Nation of Islam Still others were influential in their time but are not longer in existence non Ibadi Kharijites Muʿtazila Murji ah Muslims who do not belong to do not self identify with or cannot be readily classified under one of the identifiable Islamic schools and branches are known as non denominational Muslims Contents 1 Overview 2 Main branches or denominations 2 1 Sunni Islam 2 2 Shiʿa Islam 2 2 1 Major sub denominations 2 2 2 Ghulat movements 2 3 Non denominational Muslims 2 4 Kharijite Islam 2 4 1 Ibadi Islam 3 Schools of Islamic jurisprudence 3 1 Sunni 3 2 Shiʿa 3 3 Ibadi 4 Schools of Islamic theology 4 1 Sunni 4 1 1 Classical 4 1 1 1 Ashʿari 4 1 1 2 Maturidi 4 1 2 Traditionalist theology 4 2 Muʿtazila 4 3 Murji ah 4 4 Qadariyyah 4 5 Jabriyah 4 6 Jahmiyyah 4 7 Batiniyyah 5 Sufism 6 Later movements 6 1 African American movements 6 2 Ahmadiyya Movement In Islam 6 3 Barelvi Deobandi split 6 4 Gulen Hizmet movement 6 5 Islamic modernism 6 6 Islamism 6 6 1 Muslim Brotherhood 6 6 2 Jamaat e Islami 6 6 3 Hizb ut Tahrir 6 7 Quranism 6 8 Liberal and progressive Islam 6 9 Mahdavia 6 10 Non denominational Islam 6 10 1 Tolu e Islam 6 11 Salafism and Wahhabism 6 11 1 Ahle Hadith 6 11 2 Salafiyya movement 6 11 3 Wahhabism 7 Population of the branches 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksOverview EditMain article History of Islam Further information Political aspects of Islam Shia Sunni relations and Succession to Muhammad Diagram showing the various branches of Islam Sunnism Shiʿism Ibadism Quranism Non denominational Muslims Mahdavia Ahmadiyya Nation of Islam and Sufism The original schism between Kharijites Sunnis and Shiʿas among Muslims was disputed over the political and religious succession to the guidance of the Muslim community Ummah after the death of the Islamic prophet Muhammad 6 From their essentially political position the Kharijites developed extreme doctrines that set them apart from both mainstream Sunni and Shiʿa Muslims 6 Shiʿas believe ʿAli ibn Abi Ṭalib is the true successor to Muhammad while Sunnis consider Abu Bakr to hold that position The Kharijites broke away from both the Shiʿas and the Sunnis during the First Fitna the first Islamic Civil War 6 they were particularly noted for adopting a radical approach to takfir excommunication whereby they declared both Sunni and Shiʿa Muslims to be either infidels kuffar or false Muslims munafiḳun and therefore deemed them worthy of death for their perceived apostasy ridda 6 In addition there are several differences within Sunni and Shiʿa Islam Sunni Islam is separated into four main schools of jurisprudence namely Maliki Ḥanafi Shafiʿi and Ḥanbali these schools are named after their founders Malik ibn Anas Abu Ḥanifa al Nuʿman Muḥammad ibn Idris al Shafiʿi and Aḥmad ibn Ḥanbal respectively 1 Shiʿa Islam on the other hand is separated into three major sects Twelvers Ismaʿilis and Zaydis The vast majority of Shiʿa Muslims are Twelvers a 2012 estimate puts the figure as 85 7 to the extent that the term Shiʿa frequently refers to Twelvers by default All mainstream Twelver and Ismaʿili Shiʿa Muslims follow the same school of thought the Jaʽfari jurisprudence named after Jaʿfar al Ṣadiq the sixth Shiʿite Imam Zaydis also known as Fivers follow the Zaydi school of thought named after Zayd ibn ʿAli Ismaʿilism is another offshoot of Shiʿa Islam that later split into Nizari and Musta li and the Musta li further divided into Ḥafiẓi and Ṭayyibi 8 Ṭayyibi Ismaʿilis also known as Bohras are split between Dawudi Bohras Sulaymani Bohras and Alavi Bohras 9 Similarly Kharijites were initially divided into five major branches Sufris Azariqa Najdat Adjarites and Ibadis Of these Ibadi Muslims are the only surviving branch of Kharijites In addition to the aforementioned groups new schools of thought and movements like Ahmadi Muslims Quranist Muslims and African American Muslims later emerged independently Muslims who do not belong to do not self identify with or cannot be readily classified under one of the identifiable Islamic schools and branches are known as non denominational Muslims Main branches or denominations Edit Geographical distribution of the main three Islamic branches and their schools of jurisprudence Shiʿism Jaʿfari Ismaʿili Zaydi Sunnism Ḥanafi Maliki Shafiʿi Ḥanbali Ibadism Demographic distribution of the main three Islamic branches Sunnism 85 Shiʿism 10 15 Ibadism and others 0 5 Sunni Islam Edit Main article Sunni Islam Sunni Islam also known as Ahl as Sunnah waʾl Jamaʾah or simply Ahl as Sunnah is by far the largest denomination of Islam comprising around 85 of the Muslim population in the world The term Sunni comes from the word sunnah which means the teachings actions and examples of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and his companions ṣaḥaba Sunnis believe that Muhammad did not specifically appoint a successor to lead the Muslim community Ummah before his death in 632 CE however they approve of the private election of the first companion Abu Bakr 11 12 Sunni Muslims regard the first four caliphs Abu Bakr 632 634 ʿUmar ibn al Khaṭṭab Umar I 634 644 ʿUthman ibn ʿAffan 644 656 and ʿAli ibn Abi Ṭalib 656 661 as al Khulafa ur Rashidun the Rightly Guided Caliphs Sunnis also believe that the position of caliph may be attained democratically on gaining a majority of the votes but after the Rashidun the position turned into a hereditary dynastic rule because of the divisions started by the Umayyads and others After the fall of the Ottoman Empire in 1923 there has never been another caliph as widely recognized in the Muslim world Followers of the classical Sunni schools of jurisprudence and kalam rationalistic theology on one hand and Islamists and Salafists such as Wahhabis and Ahle Hadith who follow a literalist reading of early Islamic sources on the other have laid competing claims to represent the orthodox Sunni Islam 13 Anglophone Islamic currents of the former type are sometimes referred to as traditional Islam 14 Islamic modernism is an offshoot of the Salafi movement that tried to integrate modernism into Islam by being partially influenced by modern day attempts to revive the ideas of the Muʿtazila school by Islamic scholars such as Muhammad Abduh Shiʿa Islam Edit Main articles Shia Islam and Imamah Shia doctrine Shiʿa Islam is the second largest denomination of Islam comprising around 10 15 15 of the total Muslim population 16 Although a minority in the Muslim world Shiʿa Muslims constitute the majority of the Muslim populations in Iran Iraq Lebanon Bahrain and Azerbaijan as well as significant minorities in Syria Turkey South Asia Yemen and Saudi Arabia as well as in other parts of the Persian Gulf 17 In addition to believing in the supreme authority of the Quran and teachings of Muhammad Shiʿa Muslims believe that Muhammad s family the Ahl al Bayt People of the Household including his descendants known as Imams have distinguished spiritual and political authority over the community 18 and believe that ʿAli ibn Abi Ṭalib Muhammad s cousin and son in law was the first of these Imams and the rightful successor to Muhammad and thus reject the legitimacy of the first three Rashidun caliphs 19 Major sub denominations Edit Further information List of extinct Shia sects The Twelvers believe in the twelve Shiʿite Imams and are the only school to comply with the Hadith of the Twelve Successors where Muhammad stated that he would have twelve successors This sometimes includes the Alevi and Bektashi schools Ismaʿilism including the Nizari Sevener Musta li Dawudi Bohra Hebtiahs Bohra Sulaymani Bohra and Alavi Bohra sub denominations The Zaydis historically derive from the followers of Zayd ibn ʿAli In the modern era they survive only in northern Yemen 20 Although they are a Shiʿa sect in modern times they have shown a strong tendency to move towards the Sunni mainstream 20 The Alawites are a distinct monotheistic Abrahamic religion and ethno religious group that developed between the 9th and 10th centuries CE Historically Twelver Shiʿite scholars such as Shaykh Tusi didn t consider Alawites as Shiʿa Muslims while condemning their beliefs perceived as heretical 21 The medieval Sunni Muslim scholar Ibn Taymiyyah also pointed out that the Alawites were not Shiʿites 22 The Druze are a distinct monotheistic Abrahamic religion and ethno religious group that developed in the 11th century CE originally as an offshoot of Ismaʿilism 23 The Druze faith further split from Ismaʿilism as it developed its own unique doctrines and finally separated from both Ismaʿilism and Islam altogether 23 these include the belief that the Imam Al Ḥakim bi Amr Allah was God incarnate 24 Thus the Druze don t identify themselves as Muslims 23 25 26 27 28 and aren t considered as such by Muslims either See Islam and Druze 23 29 30 31 According to the medieval Sunni Muslim scholar Ibn Taymiyyah the Druze were not Muslims neither Ahl al Kitab People of the Book nor mushrikin polytheists rather he labeled them as kuffar infidels 32 33 34 35 The Bahaʼi Faith is a distinct monotheistic universal Abrahamic religion that developed in 19th century Persia originally derived as a splinter group from Babism another distinct monotheistic Abrahamic religion itself derived from Twelver Shiʿism 36 37 Bahaʼis believe in an utterly transcendent and inaccessible Supreme Creator of the universe 36 nevertheless seen as conscious of the creation 36 with a will and purpose that is expressed through messengers recognized in the Bahaʼi Faith as the Manifestations of God all the Jewish prophets Zoroaster Krishna Gautama Buddha Jesus Muhammad the Bab and ultimately Bahaʼu llah 36 Bahaʼis believe that God communicates his will and purpose to humanity through his intermediaries the prophets and messengers who have founded various world religions from the beginning of humankind up to the present day and will continue to do so in the future 36 Bahaʼis and Babis don t consider themselves as Muslims since both of their religions have superseded Islam and aren t considered as such by Muslims either rather they are seen as apostates from Islam 36 37 Since both Bahaʼis and Babis reject the Islamic dogma that Muhammad is the last prophet they have suffered religious discrimination and persecution both in Iran and elsewhere in the Muslim world due to their beliefs 37 See Persecution of Bahaʼis Ghulat movements Edit Main article Ghulat Shiʿite groups and movements who either ascribe divine characteristics to some important figures in the history of Islam usually members of Muhammad s family the Ahl al Bayt or hold beliefs deemed deviant by mainstream Shiʿa Muslims were designated as Ghulat 38 Non denominational Muslims Edit Main article Non denominational Muslims Non denominational Muslims Arabic مسلمون بلا طائفة romanized Muslimun bi la ṭa ifa are Muslims who do not belong to do not self identify with or cannot be readily classified under one of the identifiable Islamic schools and branches 39 40 41 42 Non denominational Muslims make up a majority of the Muslims in eight countries and a plurality in three others Albania 65 Kyrgyzstan 64 Kosovo 58 Indonesia 56 Mali 55 Bosnia and Herzegovina 54 Uzbekistan 54 Azerbaijan 45 Russia 45 and Nigeria 42 43 They are found primarily in Central Asia 43 Kazakhstan has the largest number of non denominational Muslims who constitute about 74 of the population 43 Southeastern Europe also has a large number of non denominational Muslims 43 Kharijite Islam Edit Main article Kharijite Kharijite literally those who seceded are an extinct sect who originated during the First Fitna the struggle for political leadership over the Muslim community following the assassination in 656 of the third caliph Uthman 44 6 Kharijites originally supported the caliphate of Ali but then later on fought against him and eventually succeeded in his martyrdom while he was praying in the mosque of Kufa While there are few remaining Kharijite or Kharijite related groups the term is sometimes used to denote Muslims who refuse to compromise with those with whom they disagree Sufris were a major sub sect of Kharijite in the 7th and 8th centuries and a part of the Kharijites Nukkari was a sub sect of Sufris Haruris were an early Muslim sect from the period of the Four Rightly Guided Caliphs 632 661 CE named for their first leader Habib ibn Yazid al Haruri Azariqa Najdat and Adjarites were minor sub sects Ibadi Islam Edit Main article Ibadi Islam The only Kharijite sub sect extant today is Ibadism which developed out of the 7th century CE There are currently two geographically separated Ibadi groups in Oman where they constitute the majority of the Muslim population in the country and in North Africa where they constitute significant minorities in Algeria Tunisia and Libya Similarly to another Muslim minority the Zaydis in modern times they have shown a strong tendency to move towards the Sunni branch of Islam 20 Schools of Islamic jurisprudence EditMain articles Fiqh and Madhhab Geographical distribution of the schools of Islamic jurisprudence in the Muslim world 45 Islamic schools of jurisprudence known as madhhab differ in the methodology they use to derive their rulings from the Quran ḥadith literature the sunnah accounts of the sayings and living habits attributed to the Islamic prophet Muhammad during his lifetime and the tafsir literature exegetical commentaries on the Quran Sunni Edit Sunni schools of thought 1 Sunni Islam contains numerous schools of Islamic jurisprudence fiqh and schools of Islamic theology ʿaqidah 1 In terms of religious jurisprudence fiqh Sunnism contains several schools of thought madhhab 1 the Ḥanafi school founded by Abu Ḥanifa al Nuʿman 8th century CE the Maliki school founded by Malik ibn Anas 8th century CE the Shafiʿi school founded by Muḥammad ibn Idris al Shafiʿi 8th century CE the Ḥanbali school founded by Aḥmad ibn Ḥanbal 8th century CE the Ẓahiri school founded by Dawud al Ẓahiri 9th century CE 46 In terms of religious creed ʿaqidah Sunnism contains several schools of theology 1 the Athari school a scholarly movement that emerged in the late 8th century CE the Ashʿari school founded by Abu al Ḥasan al Ashʿari 10th century CE the Maturidi school founded by Abu Manṣur al Maturidi 10th century CE The Salafi movement is a conservative reform branch and or revivalist movement within Sunni Islam whose followers don t believe in strictly following one particular madhhab They include the Wahhabi movement an Islamic doctrine and religious movement founded by Muhammad ibn ʿAbd al Wahhab and the modern Ahle Hadith movement whose followers call themselves Ahl al Ḥadith Shiʿa Edit Further information Imamate in Shia doctrine and Schools of Islamic theology Shiʿa schools of theology In Shiʿa Islam the major Shiʿite school of jurisprudence is the Jaʿfari or Imami school 47 named after Jaʿfar al Ṣadiq the sixth Shiʿite Imam The Jaʿfari jurisprudence is further divided into two branches the Usuli school which favors the exercise of ijtihad 48 and the Akhbari school which holds the traditions aḵbar of the Shiʿite Imams to be the main source of religious knowledge 49 Minor Shiʿa schools of jurisprudence include the Ismaʿili school Mustaʿli Faṭimid Ṭayyibi Ismaʿilis and the Zaydi school both of which have closer affinity to Sunni jurisprudence 47 50 51 Shiʿite clergymen and jurists usually carry the title of mujtahid i e someone authorized to issue legal opinions in Shiʿa Islam Ibadi Edit The fiqh or jurisprudence of Ibadis is relatively simple Absolute authority is given to the Quran and ḥadith literature new innovations accepted on the basis of qiyas analogical reasoning were rejected as bid ah heresy by the Ibadis That differs from the majority of Sunnis 52 but agrees with most Shiʿa schools 53 and with the Ẓahiri and early Ḥanbali schools of Sunnism 54 55 56 Schools of Islamic theology EditMain articles Aqidah and Schools of Islamic theology Aqidah is an Islamic term meaning creed doctrine or article of faith 57 58 There have existed many schools of Islamic theology not all of which survive to the present day Major themes of theological controversies in Islam have included predestination and free will the nature of the Quran the nature of the divine attributes apparent and esoteric meaning of scripture and the role of dialectical reasoning in the Islamic doctrine Sunni Edit Classical Edit Kalam is the Islamic philosophy of seeking theological principles through dialectic In Arabic the word literally means speech words A scholar of kalam is referred to as a mutakallim Muslim theologian plural mutakallimun There are many schools of Kalam the main ones being the Ashʿari and Maturidi schools in Sunni Islam 59 Ashʿari Edit Ashʿarism is a school of theology founded by Abu al Ḥasan al Ashʿari in the 10th century The Ashʿarite view was that comprehension of the unique nature and characteristics of God were beyond human capability Ashʿari theology is considered one of the orthodox creeds of Sunni Islam alongside the Maturidi theology 59 Historically the Ashʿari theology prevails in Sufism and was originally associated with the Ḥanbali school of Islamic jurisprudence 59 Maturidi Edit Maturidism is a school of theology founded by Abu Manṣur al Maturidi in the 10th century which is a close variant of the Ashʿari school Maturidi theology is considered one of the orthodox creeds of Sunni Islam alongside the Ashʿari theology 59 and prevails in the Ḥanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence 59 Points which differ are the nature of belief and the place of human reason The Maturidites state that iman faith does not increase nor decrease but remains static rather it s taqwa piety which increases and decreases The Ashʿarites affirm that belief does in fact increase and decrease The Maturidites affirm that the unaided human mind is able to find out that some of the more major sins such as alcohol or murder are evil without the help of revelation The Ashʿarites affirm that the unaided human mind is unable to know if something is good or evil lawful or unlawful without divine revelation Traditionalist theology Edit Traditionalist theology sometimes referred to as the Athari school derives its name from the word tradition as a translation of the Arabic word hadith or from the Arabic word athar meaning narrations The traditionalist creed is to avoid delving into extensive theological speculation They rely on the Qur an the Sunnah and sayings of the Sahaba seeing this as the middle path where the attributes of Allah are accepted without questioning their nature bi la kayf Ahmad ibn Hanbal is regarded as the leader of the traditionalist school of creed The modern Salafi movement associates itself with the Athari creed 60 61 62 63 Muʿtazila Edit Muʿtazilite theology originated in the 8th century in Basra when Wasil ibn Ata left the teaching lessons of Hasan al Basri after a theological dispute He and his followers expanded on the logic and rationalism of Greek philosophy seeking to combine them with Islamic doctrines and show that the two were inherently compatible The Muʿtazilites debated philosophical questions such as whether the Qur an was created or co eternal with God whether evil was created by God the issue of predestination versus free will whether God s attributes in the Qur an were to be interpreted allegorically or literally and whether sinning believers would have eternal punishment in hell citation needed Murji ah Edit Murji ah was a name for an early politico religious movement which came to refer to all those who identified faith iman with belief to the exclusion of acts 64 Originating during the caliphates of Uthman and Ali Murijites opposed the Kharijites holding that only God has the authority to judge who is a true Muslim and who is not and that Muslims should consider all other Muslims as part of the community 65 Two major Murijite sub sects were the were Karamiya and Sawbaniyya 66 Qadariyyah Edit Qadariyyah is an originally derogatory term designating early Islamic theologians who asserted that humans possess free will whose exercise makes them responsible for their actions justifying divine punishment and absolving God of responsibility for evil in the world 67 68 Some of their doctrines were later adopted by the Mu tazilis and rejected by the Ash aris 67 Jabriyah Edit In direct contrast to the Qadariyyah Jabriyah was an early islamic philosophical school based on the belief that humans are controlled by predestination without having choice or free will The Jabriya school originated during the Umayyad dynasty in Basra The first representative of this school was Al Ja d ibn Dirham who was executed in 724 69 The term is derived from the Arabic root j b r in the sense which gives the meaning of someone who is forced or coerced by destiny 69 The term Jabriyah was also a derogatory term used by different Islamic groups that they considered wrong 70 The Ash ariyah used the term Jabriyah in the first place to describe the followers of Jahm ibn Safwan who died in 746 in that they regarded their faith as a middle position between Qadariyah and Jabriya On the other hand the Mu tazilah considered the Ash ariyah as Jabriyah because in their opinion they rejected the orthodox doctrine of free will 71 The Shiites used the term Jabriyah to describe the Ash ariyah and Hanbalis 72 Jahmiyyah Edit Jahmis were the alleged followers of the early Islamic theologian Jahm bin Safwan who associated himself with Al Harith ibn Surayj He was an exponent of extreme determinism according to which a man acts only metaphorically in the same way in which the sun acts or does something when it sets 73 Batiniyyah Edit The Baṭiniyyah is a name given to an allegoristic type of scriptural interpretation developed among some Shia groups stressing the baṭin inward esoteric meaning of texts It has been retained by all branches of Isma ilism and its Druze offshoot Alevism Bektashism and folk religion Hurufis and Alawites practice a similar system of interpretation 74 Sufism EditMain article Sufism Further information List of Sufi orders and List of Sufi saints Sufism is Islam s mystical ascetic dimension and is represented by schools or orders known as Tasawwufi Ṭariqah It is seen as that aspect of Islamic teaching that deals with the purification of inner self By focusing on the more spiritual aspects of religion Sufis strive to obtain direct experience of God by making use of intuitive and emotional faculties that one must be trained to use 75 The following list contains some notable Sufi orders The Azeemiyya order was founded in 1960 by Qalandar Baba Auliya also known as Syed Muhammad Azeem Barkhia The Bektashi order was founded in the 13th century by the Islamic saint Haji Bektash Veli and greatly influenced during its formulative period by the Hurufi Ali al Ala in the 15th century and reorganized by Balim Sultan in the 16th century Because of its adherence to the Twelve Imams it is classified under Twelver Shia Islam citation needed The Chishti order Persian چشتیہ was founded by Khawaja Abu Ishaq Shami the Syrian died 941 who brought Sufism to the town of Chisht some 95 miles east of Herat in present day Afghanistan Before returning to the Levant Shami initiated trained and deputized the son of the local Emir Khwaja Abu Ahmad Abdal died 966 Under the leadership of Abu Ahmad s descendants the Chishtiyya as they are also known flourished as a regional mystical order The founder of the Chishti Order in South Asia was Moinuddin Chishti The Kubrawiya order was founded in the 13th century by Najmuddin Kubra in Bukhara in modern day Uzbekistan 76 The Mevlevi order is better known in the West as the whirling dervishes Mouride is most prominent in Senegal and The Gambia with headquarters in the holy city of Touba Senegal 77 The Naqshbandi order was founded in 1380 by Baha ud Din Naqshband Bukhari It is considered by some to be a sober order known for its silent dhikr remembrance of God rather than the vocalized forms of dhikr common in other orders The Suleymani and Khalidiyya orders are offshoots of the Naqshbandi order The Ni matullahi order is the most widespread Sufi order of Persia today It was founded by Shah Ni matullah Wali d 1367 established and transformed from his inheritance of the Ma rufiyyah circle 78 There are several suborders in existence today the most known and influential in the West following the lineage of Javad Nurbakhsh who brought the order to the West following the 1979 Iranian Revolution The Noorbakshia order 79 also called Nurbakshia 80 81 claims to trace its direct spiritual lineage and chain silsilah to the Islamic prophet Muhammad through Ali by way of Ali Al Ridha This order became known as Nurbakshi after Shah Syed Muhammad Nurbakhsh Qahistani who was aligned to the Kubrawiya order The Oveysi or Uwaiysi order claims to have been founded 1 400 years ago by Uwais al Qarni from Yemen The Qadiri order is one of the oldest Sufi Orders It derives its name from Abdul Qadir Gilani 1077 1166 a native of the Iranian province of Gilan The order is one of the most widespread of the Sufi orders in the Islamic world and can be found in Central Asia Turkey Balkans and much of East and West Africa The Qadiriyyah have not developed any distinctive doctrines or teachings outside of mainstream Islam They believe in the fundamental principles of Islam but interpreted through mystical experience The Ba Alawi order is an offshoot of Qadiriyyah Senussi is a religious political Sufi order established by Muhammad ibn Ali as Senussi As Senussi founded this movement due to his criticism of the Egyptian ulema 82 The Shadhili order was founded by Abu l Hassan ash Shadhili Followers murids Arabic seekers of the Shadhiliyya are often known as Shadhilis 83 84 The Suhrawardiyya order Arabic سهروردية is a Sufi order founded by Abu al Najib al Suhrawardi 1097 1168 The Tijaniyyah order attach a large importance to culture and education and emphasize the individual adhesion of the disciple murid Later movements EditAfrican American movements Edit Many slaves brought from Africa to the Western Hemisphere were Muslims 85 and the early 20th century saw the rise of distinct Islamic religious and political movements within the African American community in the United States 86 such as Darul Islam 85 the Islamic Party of North America 85 the Mosque of Islamic Brotherhood MIB 85 the Muslim Alliance in North America 85 the Moorish Science Temple of America 86 the Nation of Islam NOI 86 87 88 89 and the Ansaaru Allah Community 90 They sought to ascribe Islamic heritage to African Americans thereby giving much emphasis on racial and ethnic aspects 87 86 88 89 91 see black nationalism and black separatism 85 90 92 These black Muslim movements often differ greatly in matters of doctrine from mainstream Islam 86 88 90 92 They include Moorish Science Temple of America founded in 1913 by Noble Drew Ali born Timothy Drew 89 The Moorish Science Temple of America is characterized by a strong African American ethnic and religious identity 86 89 93 Moorish Orthodox Church of America Nation of Islam founded by Wallace Fard Muhammad in Detroit in 1930 94 with a declared aim of resurrecting the spiritual mental social and economic condition of the black man and woman of America and the world 86 87 88 The Nation of Islam believes that Wallace Fard Muhammad was God on earth 92 94 95 The Nation of Islam doesn t consider the Arabian Muhammad as the final prophet and instead regards Elijah Muhammad successor of Wallace Fard Muhammad as the true Messenger of Allah 86 87 88 American Society of Muslims Warith Deen Mohammed established the American Society of Muslims in 1975 85 This offshoot wanted to bring its teachings more in line with mainstream Sunni Islam establishing mosques instead of temples and promoting the Five pillars of Islam 96 97 Five Percent Nation 85 United Nation of IslamAhmadiyya Movement In Islam Edit Main article Ahmadiyya The Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam was founded in British India in 1889 by Mirza Ghulam Ahmad of Qadian who claimed to be the promised Messiah Second Coming of Christ the Mahdi awaited by the Muslims as well as a subordinate prophet to the Islamic prophet Muhammad 98 99 100 101 Ahmadis claim to practice the pristine form of Islam as followed by Muhammad and his earliest followers 102 103 They believe that it was Mirza Ghulam Ahmad s task to restore the original sharia given to Muhammad by guiding the Ummah back to the true Islam and defeat the attacks on Islam by other religions 98 99 100 101 104 There are a wide variety of distinct beliefs and teachings of Ahmadis compared to those of most other Muslims 98 99 100 101 which include the interpretation of the Quranic title Khatam an Nabiyyin 105 interpretation of the Messiah s Second Coming 99 106 complete rejection of the abrogation cancellation of Quranic verses 107 belief that Jesus survived the crucifixion and died of old age in India 99 100 108 conditions of the Jihad of the Sword are no longer met 99 109 belief that divine revelation as long as no new sharia is given will never end 110 belief in cyclical nature of history until Muhammad 110 and belief in the implausibility of a contradiction between Islam and science 104 These perceived deviations from normative Islamic thought have resulted in severe persecution of Ahmadis in various Muslim majority countries 99 particularly Pakistan 99 111 where they have been branded as Non Muslims and their Islamic religious practices are punishable by the Ahmadi Specific laws in the penal code 112 The followers of the Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam are divided into two groups the first being the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community currently the dominant group and the Lahore Ahmadiyya Movement for the Propagation of Islam 99 The larger group takes a literalist view believing that Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was the promised Mahdi and a Ummati Nabi subservient to Muhammad while the latter believing that he was only a religious reformer and a prophet only in an allegorical sense 99 Both Ahmadi groups are active in dawah or Islamic missionary work and have produced vasts amounts of Islamic literature including numerous translations of the Quran translations of the Hadith Quranic tafsirs a multitude of sirahs of Muhammad and works on the subject of comparative religion among others 99 101 As such their international influence far exceeds their number of adherents 99 101 113 Muslims from more Orthodox sects of Islam have adopted many Ahmadi polemics and understandings of other religions 114 along with the Ahmadi approach to reconcile Islamic and Western education as well as to establish Islamic school systems particularly in Africa 115 Barelvi Deobandi split Edit Sunni Muslims of the Indian subcontinent comprising present day India Pakistan and Bangladesh who are overwhelmingly Hanafi by fiqh have split into two schools or movements the Barelvi and the Deobandi While the Deobandi is revivalist in nature the Barelvi are more traditional and inclined towards Sufism Gulen Hizmet movement Edit The Gulen movement usually referred to as the Hizmet movement 116 established in the 1970s as an offshoot of the Nur Movement 117 and led by the Turkish Islamic scholar and preacher Fethullah Gulen in Turkey Central Asia and in other parts of the world is active in education with private schools and universities in over 180 countries as well as with many American charter schools operated by followers It has initiated forums for interfaith dialogue 118 119 The Cemaat movement s structure has been described as a flexible organizational network 120 Movement schools and businesses organize locally and link themselves into informal networks 121 Estimates of the number of schools and educational institutions vary widely it appears there are about 300 Gulen movement schools in Turkey and over 1 000 schools worldwide 122 123 Islamic modernism Edit Islamic modernism also sometimes referred to as modernist Salafism 124 125 126 127 128 is a movement that has been described as the first Muslim ideological response 129 attempting to reconcile Islamic faith with modern Western values such as nationalism democracy and science 130 Islamism Edit Islamism is a set of political ideologies derived from various fundamentalist views which hold that Islam is not only a religion but a political system that should govern the legal economic and social imperatives of the state Many Islamists do not refer to themselves as such and it is not a single particular movement Religious views and ideologies of its adherents vary and they may be Sunni Islamists or Shia Islamists depending upon their beliefs Islamist groups include groups such as Al Qaeda the organizer of the September 11 2001 attacks and perhaps the most prominent and the Muslim Brotherhood the largest and perhaps the oldest Although violence is often employed by some organizations most Islamist movements are nonviolent Muslim Brotherhood Edit The Al Ikhwan Al Muslimun with Ikhwan الإخوان brethren or Muslim Brotherhood is an organisation that was founded by Egyptian scholar Hassan al Banna a graduate of Dar al Ulum With its various branches it is the largest Sunni movement in the Arab world and an affiliate is often the largest opposition party in many Arab nations The Muslim Brotherhood is not concerned with theological differences accepting both Muslims of any of the four Sunni schools of thought and Shi a Muslims It is the world s oldest and largest Islamist group Its aims are to re establish the Caliphate and in the meantime push for more Islamisation of society The Brotherhood s stated goal is to instill the Qur an and sunnah as the sole reference point for ordering the life of the Muslim family individual community and state citation needed Jamaat e Islami Edit The Jamaat e Islami or JI is an Islamist political party in the Indian subcontinent It was founded in Lahore British India by Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi with alternative spellings of last name Maudoodi in 1941 and is the oldest religious party in Pakistan Today sister organizations with similar objectives and ideological approaches exist in India Jamaat e Islami Hind Bangladesh Jamaat e Islami Bangladesh Kashmir Jamaat e Islami Kashmir and Sri Lanka and there are close brotherly relations with the Islamist movements and missions working in different continents and countries particularly those affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood Akhwan al Muslimeen The JI envisions an Islamic government in Pakistan and Bangladesh governing by Islamic law It opposes Westernization including secularization capitalism socialism or such practices as interest based banking and favours an Islamic economic order and Caliphate citation needed Hizb ut Tahrir Edit Hizb ut Tahrir Arabic حزب التحرير Translation Party of Liberation is an international pan Islamist political organization which describes its ideology as Islam and its aim the re establishment of the Islamic Khilafah Caliphate to resume Islamic ways of life in the Muslim world The caliphate would unite the Muslim community Ummah 131 upon their Islamic creed and implement the Shariah so as to then carry the proselytizing of Islam to the rest of the world 132 Quranism Edit Main article Quranism Quranism 133 or Quraniyya Arabic القرآنية al Qur aniyya is a protestant 134 branch of Islam It holds the belief that Islamic guidance and law should only be based on the Quran thus opposing the religious authority and authenticity of the hadith literature 135 136 Quranists believe that God s message is already clear and complete in the Quran and it can therefore be fully understood without referencing outside texts 137 Quranists claim that the vast majority of hadith literature are forged lies and believe that the Quran itself criticizes the hadith both in the technical sense and the general sense 138 135 139 140 141 142 excessive citations Liberal and progressive Islam Edit Main article Liberalism and progressivism within Islam Further information Liberal and progressive Islam in Europe and Liberal and progressive Islam in North America Liberal Islam originally emerged out of the Islamic revivalist movement of the 18th 19th centuries 143 Liberal and progressive Islamic organizations and movements are primarily based in the Western world and have in common a religious outlook which depends mainly on ijtihad or re interpretation of the sacred scriptures of Islam 143 Liberal and progressive Muslims are characterized by a rationalistic critical examination and re interpretation of the sacred scriptures of Islam 143 affirmation and promotion of democracy gender equality human rights LGBT rights women s rights religious pluralism interfaith marriage 144 145 freedom of expression freedom of thought and freedom of religion 143 opposition to theocracy and total rejection of Islamism and Islamic fundamentalism 143 and a modern view of Islamic theology ethics sharia culture tradition and other ritualistic practices in Islam 143 Mahdavia Edit Mahdavia or Mahdavism is a Mahdiist sect founded in late 15th century India by Syed Muhammad Jaunpuri who declared himself to be the Hidden Twelfth Imam of the Twelver Shia tradition 146 They follow many aspects of the Sunni doctrine Zikri Mahdavis or Zikris are an offshoot of the Mahdavi movement 147 Non denominational Islam Edit Non denominational Muslims is an umbrella term that has been used for and by Muslims who do not belong to or do not self identify with a specific Islamic denomination 148 40 41 42 A quarter of the world s Muslims are non denominational Muslims 149 Tolu e Islam Edit Tolu e Islam Resurgence of Islam is a non denominational Muslim organization based in Pakistan with members throughout the world 150 The movement was initiated by Ghulam Ahmed Pervez Salafism and Wahhabism Edit Ahle Hadith Edit Main article Ahl i Hadith Ahl i Hadith Persian اهل حدیث Urdu اہل حدیث transl People of the traditions of the Prophet is a movement which emerged in the Indian subcontinent in the mid 19th century Its followers call themselves Ahl al Hadith and are considered to be a branch of the Salafiyya school Ahl i Hadith is antithetical to various beliefs and mystical practices associated with folk Sufism Ahl i Hadith shares many doctrinal similarities with the Wahhabi movement and hence often classified as being synonymous with the Wahhabis by its adversaries However its followers reject this designation preferring to identify themselves as Salafis 151 152 153 154 Salafiyya movement Edit Main article Salafi movement Further information International propagation of Salafism and Wahhabism International propagation of Salafism and Wahhabism by region Petro Islam and Salafi jihadism The Salafiyya movement is a conservative 155 Islahi reform 156 movement within Sunni Islam that emerged in the second half of the 19th century and advocate a return to the traditions of the devout ancestors Salaf al Salih It has been described as the fastest growing Islamic movement with each scholar expressing diverse views across social theological and political spectrum Salafis follow a doctrine that can be summed up as taking a fundamentalist approach to Islam emulating the Prophet Muhammad and his earliest followers al salaf al salih the pious forefathers They reject religious innovation or bidʻah and support the implementation of Sharia Islamic law 157 The Salafi movement is often divided into three categories the largest group are the purists or quietists who avoid politics the second largest group are the militant activists who get involved in politics the third and last group are the jihadists who constitute a minority 157 Most of the violent Islamist groups come from the Salafi Jihadist movement and their subgroups 158 In recent years Jihadi Salafist doctrines have often been associated with the armed insurgencies of Islamic extremist movements and terrorist organizations targeting innocent civilians both Muslims and Non Muslims such as al Qaeda ISIL ISIS IS Daesh Boko Haram etc 159 160 157 158 The second largest group are the Salafi activists who have a long tradition of political activism such as those that operate in organizations like the Muslim Brotherhood the Arab world s major Islamist movement In the aftermath of widescale repressions after the Arab spring accompanied by their political failures the activist Salafi movements have undergone a decline The most numerous are the quietists who believe in disengagement from politics and accept allegiance to Muslim governments no matter how tyrannical to avoid fitna chaos 157 Wahhabism Edit Main article Wahhabism Further information International propagation of Salafism and Wahhabism International propagation of Salafism and Wahhabism by region and Petro Islam The Wahhabi movement was founded and spearheaded by the Ḥanbali scholar and theologian Muhammad ibn ʿAbd al Wahhab 161 162 163 a religious preacher from the Najd region in central Arabia 164 165 166 167 168 and was instrumental in the rise of the House of Saud to power in the Arabian peninsula 161 Ibn ʿAbd al Wahhab sought to revive and purify Islam from what he perceived as non Islamic popular religious beliefs and practices by returning to what he believed were the fundamental principles of the Islamic religion 165 166 167 168 His works were generally short full of quotations from the Quran and Hadith literature such as his main and foremost theological treatise Kitab at Tawḥid Arabic كتاب التوحيد The Book of Oneness 165 166 167 168 He taught that the primary doctrine of Islam was the uniqueness and oneness of God tawḥid and denounced what he held to be popular religious beliefs and practices among Muslims that he considered to be akin to heretical innovation bidʿah and polytheism shirk 165 166 167 168 Wahhabism has been described as a conservative strict and fundamentalist branch of Sunni Islam 169 with puritan views 169 believing in a literal interpretation of the Quran 161 The terms Wahhabism and Salafism are sometimes evoked interchangeably although the designation Wahhabi is specifically applied to the followers of Muhammad ibn ʿAbd al Wahhab and his reformist doctrines 161 The label Wahhabi was not claimed by his followers who usually refer themselves as al Muwaḥḥidun affirmers of the singularity of God but is rather employed by Western scholars as well as his critics 161 162 166 Starting in the mid 1970s and 1980s the international propagation of Salafism and Wahhabism within Sunni Islam 169 favored by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 164 170 171 and other Arab states of the Persian Gulf has achieved what the French political scientist Gilles Kepel defined as a preeminent position of strength in the global expression of Islam 172 22 months after the September 11 attacks when the FBI considered al Qaeda as the number one terrorist threat to the United States journalist Stephen Schwartz and U S Senator Jon Kyl have explicitly stated during a hearing that occurred in June 2003 before the Subcommittee on Terrorism Technology and Homeland Security of the U S Senate that Wahhabism is the source of the overwhelming majority of terrorist atrocities in today s world 173 As part of the global War on Terror Wahhabism has been accused by the European Parliament various Western security analysts and think tanks like the RAND Corporation as being a source of global terrorism 173 174 Furthermore Wahhabism has been accused of causing disunity in the Muslim community Ummah and criticized for its followers destruction of many Islamic cultural and historical sites associated with the early history of Islam and the first generation of Muslims Muhammad s family and his companions in Saudi Arabia 175 176 177 178 Population of the branches EditDenomination PopulationSunni Varies 75 90 179 180 Non denominational Muslim 25 149 Shia Varies 10 13 181 Ibadi 2 7 million 182 Quranism n aSee also EditAmman Message Aqidah Glossary of Islam Index of Islam related articles International Islamic Unity Conference Iran Islamic eschatology Islamic studies Madhhab Outline of Islam Schools of Islamic theology Shia crescent Shia Sunni relations Succession to MuhammadReferences Edit a b c d e f Geaves Ronald 2021 Part 1 Sunni Traditions Sectarianism in Sunni Islam In Cusack Carole M Upal M Afzal eds Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 21 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 25 48 doi 10 1163 9789004435544 004 ISBN 978 90 04 43554 4 ISSN 1874 6691 a b Poljarevic Emin 2021 Theology of Violence oriented Takfirism as a Political Theory The Case of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria ISIS In Cusack Carole M Upal M Afzal eds Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 21 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 485 512 doi 10 1163 9789004435544 026 ISBN 978 90 04 43554 4 ISSN 1874 6691 a b Baele Stephane J October 2019 Giles Howard ed Conspiratorial Narratives in Violent Political Actors Language PDF Journal of Language and Social Psychology Sage Publications 38 5 6 706 734 doi 10 1177 0261927X19868494 hdl 10871 37355 ISSN 1552 6526 S2CID 195448888 Retrieved 3 January 2022 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint url status link a b Rickenbacher Daniel August 2019 Jikeli Gunther ed The Centrality of Anti Semitism in the Islamic State s Ideology and Its Connection to Anti Shiism Religions Basel MDPI 10 8 The Return of Religious Antisemitism 483 doi 10 3390 rel10080483 ISSN 2077 1444 a b Badara Mohamed Nagata Masaki Tueni Tiphanie June 2017 The Radical Application of the Islamist Concept of Takfir PDF Arab Law Quarterly Leiden Brill Publishers 31 2 134 162 doi 10 1163 15730255 31020044 ISSN 1573 0255 Archived PDF from the original on 11 July 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2021 a b c d e Izutsu Toshihiko 2006 1965 The Infidel Kafir The Kharijites and the origin of the problem The Concept of Belief in Islamic Theology A Semantic Analysis of Iman and Islam Tokyo Keio Institute of Cultural and Linguistic Studies at Keio University pp 1 20 ISBN 983 9154 70 2 Guidere Mathieu 2012 Historical Dictionary of Islamic Fundamentalism Scarecrow Press p 319 ISBN 978 0 8108 7965 2 Oz Mustafa Mezhepler Tarihi ve Terimleri Sozlugu The History of madh habs and its terminology dictionary Ensar Publications Istanbul 2011 Branches of Shia Islam Ismailis Twelvers and Bohras Ismailimail 23 August 2017 Retrieved 28 November 2018 Mapping the Global Muslim Population 7 October 2009 Archived from the original on 14 December 2015 Retrieved 10 December 2014 The Pew Forum s estimate of the Shia population 10 13 is in keeping with previous estimates which generally have been in the range of 10 15 Razwy Sayed Ali Asgher A Restatement of the History of Islam amp Muslims pp 331 335 History of the Islamic Caliphate in Urdu Lahore In pre Islamic times the custom of the Arabs was to elect their chiefs by a majority vote the same principle was adopted in the election of Abu Bakr Brown Jonathan A C 2009 Hadith Muhammad s Legacy in the Medieval and Modern World Oneworld Publications Kindle edition p 180 Kasper Mathiesen 2013 Anglo American Traditional Islam and Its Discourse of Orthodoxy PDF Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies 13 191 219 See Mapping the Global Muslim Population A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World s Muslim Population Pew Research Center 2009 10 07 Retrieved 2013 09 24 The Pew Forum s estimate of the Shia population 10 13 is in keeping with previous estimates which generally have been in the range of 10 15 Some previous estimates however have placed the number of Shias at nearly 20 of the world s Muslim population Shia Berkley Center for Religion Peace and World Affairs Archived from the original on December 15 2012 Retrieved December 5 2011 Shi a Islam is the second largest branch of the tradition with up to 200 million followers who comprise around 15 of all Muslims worldwide Religions The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on 2018 12 20 Retrieved 2010 08 25 Shia Islam represents 10 20 of Muslims worldwide Miller Tracy ed October 2009 Mapping the Global Muslim Population A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World s Muslim Population PDF Pew Research Center Archived from the original PDF on 2009 10 10 Retrieved 2009 10 08 Shi i History amp Beliefs Britannica www britannica com Corbin 1993 pp 45 51 Tabatabaei 1979 pp 41 44 a b c Cook Michael 2003 Forbidding Wrong in Islam an Introduction Cambridge University Press Barfi Barak 24 January 2016 The Real Reason Why Iran Backs Syria The Nusayris are more infidel than Jews or Christians even more infidel than many polytheists They have done greater harm to the community of Muhammad than have the warring infidels such as the Franks the Turks and others To ignorant Muslims they pretend to be Shi is though in reality they do not believe in God or His prophet or His book Whenever possible they spill the blood of Muslims They are always the worst enemies of the Muslims war and punishment in accordance with Islamic law against them are among the greatest of pious deeds and the most important obligations Ibn Taymiyyah as quoted by Daniel Pipes 1992 Greater Syria Oxford University Press p 163 ISBN 9780195363043 a b c d Timani Hussam S 2021 Part 5 In Between and on the Fringes of Islam The Druze In Cusack Carole M Upal M Afzal eds Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 21 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 724 742 doi 10 1163 9789004435544 038 ISBN 978 90 04 43554 4 ISSN 1874 6691 Poonawala Ismail K July September 1999 Review The Fatimids and Their Traditions of Learning by Heinz Halm Journal of the American Oriental Society American Oriental Society 119 3 542 doi 10 2307 605981 ISSN 0003 0279 JSTOR 605981 LCCN 12032032 OCLC 47785421 Are the Druze People Arabs or Muslims Deciphering Who They Are Arab America Arab America 8 August 2018 Retrieved 13 April 2020 J Stewart Dona 2008 The Middle East Today Political Geographical and Cultural Perspectives Routledge p 33 ISBN 9781135980795 Most Druze do not consider themselves Muslim Historically they faced much persecution and keep their religious beliefs secrets James Lewis 2002 The Encyclopedia of Cults Sects and New Religions Prometheus Books Retrieved 13 May 2015 De McLaurin Ronald 1979 The Political Role of Minority Groups in the Middle East Michigan University Press p 114 ISBN 9780030525964 Theologically one would have to conclude that the Druze are not Muslims They do not accept the five pillars of Islam In place of these principles the Druze have instituted the seven precepts noted above Hunter Shireen 2010 The Politics of Islamic Revivalism Diversity and Unity Center for Strategic and International Studies Washington D C Georgetown University Center for Strategic and International Studies University of Michigan Press p 33 ISBN 9780253345493 Druze An offshoot of Shi ism its members are not considered Muslims by orthodox Muslims D Grafton David 2009 Piety Politics and Power Lutherans Encountering Islam in the Middle East Wipf and Stock Publishers p 14 ISBN 9781630877187 In addition there are several quasi Muslim sects in that although they follow many of the beliefs and practices of orthodox Islam the majority of Sunnis consider them heretical These would be the Ahmadiyya Druze Ibadi and the Yazidis R Williams Victoria 2020 Indigenous Peoples An Encyclopedia of Culture History and Threats to Survival 4 volumes ABC CLIO p 318 ISBN 9781440861185 As Druze is a nonritualistic religion without requirements to pray fast make pilgrimages or observe days of rest the Druze are not considered an Islamic people by Sunni Muslims Roald Anne Sofie 2011 Religious Minorities in the Middle East Domination Self Empowerment Accommodation BRILL p 255 ISBN 9789004207424 Therefore many of these scholars follow Ibn Taymiyya sfatwa from the beginning of the fourteenth century that declared the Druzes and the Alawis as heretics outside Islam Zabad Ibrahim 2017 Middle Eastern Minorities The Impact of the Arab Spring Taylor amp Francis p 126 ISBN 9781317096733 Knight Michael 2009 Journey to the End of Islam Soft Skull Press p 129 ISBN 9781593765521 S Swayd Samy 2009 The A to Z of the Druzes Rowman amp Littlefield p 37 ISBN 9780810868366 Subsequently Muslim opponents of the Druzes have often relied on Ibn Taymiyya s religious ruling to justify their attitudes and actions against Druzes a b c d e f Cole Juan 30 December 2012 15 December 1988 BAHAISM i The Faith Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol III 4 New York Columbia University pp 438 446 doi 10 1163 2330 4804 EIRO COM 6391 ISSN 2330 4804 Archived from the original on 23 January 2013 Retrieved 11 December 2020 a b c Osborn Lil 2021 Part 5 In Between and on the Fringes of Islam The Bahaʾi Faith In Cusack Carole M Upal M Afzal eds Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 21 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 761 773 doi 10 1163 9789004435544 040 ISBN 978 90 04 43554 4 ISSN 1874 6691 Hodgson M G S 1965 GHULAT Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol 2 2nd ed Brill Academic Publishers pp 1093 1095 Benakis Theodoros 13 January 2014 Islamophoobia in Europe New Europe Brussels Archived from the original on 31 January 2016 Retrieved 20 October 2015 Anyone who has travelled to Central Asia knows of the non denominational Muslims those who are neither Shiites nor Sounites but who accept Islam as a religion generally a b Longton Gary Gurr 2014 Isis Jihadist group made me wonder about non denominational Muslims The Sentinel Archived from the original on 26 March 2017 Retrieved 21 October 2015 THE appalling and catastrophic pictures of the so called new extremist Isis Jihadist group made me think about someone who can say I am a Muslim of a non denominational standpoint and to my surprise ignorance such people exist Online I found something called the people s mosque which makes itself clear that it s 100 per cent non denominational and most importantly 100 per cent non judgmental a b Kirkham Bri 2015 Indiana Blood Center cancels Muslims for Life blood drive Archived from the original on 25 November 2015 Retrieved 21 October 2015 Ball State Student Sadie Sial identifies as a non denominational Muslim and her parents belong to the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community She has participated in multiple blood drives through the Indiana Blood Center a b Pollack Kenneth 2014 Unthinkable Iran the Bomb and American Strategy p 29 ISBN 9781476733937 Although many Iranian hardliners are Shi a chauvinists Khomeini s ideology saw the revolution as pan Islamist and therefore embracing Sunni Shi a Sufi and other more nondenominational Muslims a b c d Chapter 1 Religious Affiliation The World s Muslims Unity and Diversity Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project August 9 2012 Retrieved 4 September 2013 Sunan Ibn Majah 176 The Book of the Sunnah كتاب المقدمة Sunnah com Sayings and Teachings of Prophet Muhammad صلى الله عليه و سلم sunnah com Retrieved 2022 03 30 Jurisprudence and Law Islam Reorienting the Veil University of North Carolina 2009 Osman Amr 2014 Dawud al Ẓahiri and the Beginnings of the Ẓahiri Madhhab The Ẓahiri Madhhab 3rd 9th 10th 16th Century A Textualist Theory of Islamic Law Studies in Islamic 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fromSpeaking for Islam Religious Authorities in Muslim Societies Ed Gudrun Kramer and Sabine Schmidtke Leiden Brill Publishers 2006 ISBN 9789004149496 Christopher Melchert The Formation of the Sunni Schools of Law 9th 10th Centuries C E p 185 Leiden Brill Publishers 1997 Chiragh Ali The Proposed Political Legal and Social Reforms Taken from Modernist Islam 1840 1940 A Sourcebook p 281 Edited by Charles Kurzman New York City Oxford University Press 2002 J Hell Encyclopedia of Islam 2nd ed Brill Aḳida vol 1 p 332 John L Esposito ed 2014 Aqidah The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512558 0 a b c d e Henderson John B 1998 The Making of Orthodoxies The Construction of Orthodoxy and Heresy Neo Confucian Islamic Jewish and Early Christian Patterns Albany New York SUNY Press pp 55 58 ISBN 978 0 7914 3760 5 Ibn Qayyim al Jawziyah Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr Ibn Qayyim al Jawziyah 1991 Tariq al hijratayn wa bab al sa adatayn Dar al Hadith 1991 p 30 al Hanafi Imam 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Nation of Islam Astrophysical Disaster Genetic Engineering UFOs White Apocalypse and Black Resurrection Nova Religio The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions Berkeley University of California Press 20 1 5 31 doi 10 1525 novo 2016 20 1 5 hdl 1805 14819 ISSN 1541 8480 S2CID 151927666 a b c d e Berg Herbert 2011 Elijah Muhammad s Redeployment of Muḥammad Racialist and Prophetic Interpretations of the Qurʾan In Boekhoff van der Voort Nicolet Versteegh Kees Wagemakers Joas eds The Transmission and Dynamics of the Textual Sources of Islam Essays in Honour of Harald Motzki Islamic History and Civilization Vol 89 Leiden Brill Publishers pp 329 353 doi 10 1163 9789004206786 017 ISBN 978 90 04 20678 6 ISSN 0929 2403 a b c d Melton J Gordon Murphy Larry G Ward Gary L eds 2011 1993 Encyclopedia of African American Religions Religious Information Systems New York and London Routledge pp 506 507 ISBN 9780815305002 OCLC 897454070 a b c Palmer Susan J 2021 The Ansaaru Allah Community In Cusack Carole M Upal M Afzal eds Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 21 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 694 723 doi 10 1163 9789004435544 037 ISBN 978 90 04 43554 4 ISSN 1874 6691 Berg Herbert 2005 Mythmaking in the African American Muslim Context The Moorish Science Temple the Nation of Islam and the American Society of Muslims PDF Journal of the American Academy of Religion 73 3 685 703 doi 10 1093 jaarel lfi075 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 10 22 Retrieved 2016 07 16 a b c Corbman Marjorie June 2020 Fletcher Jeannine H ed The Creation of the Devil and the End of the White Man s Rule The Theological Influence of the Nation of Islam on Early Black Theology Religions Basel MDPI 11 6 Racism and Religious Diversity in the United States 305 doi 10 3390 rel11060305 eISSN 2077 1444 The Aging of the Moors Chicago Reader 15 November 2007 Retrieved 15 February 2015 a b Milton C Sernett 1999 African American religious history a documentary witness Duke University Press pp 499 501 Elijah Muhammad History of the Nation of Islam BooksGuide 2008 pp 10 Evolution of a Community WDM Publications 1995 Lincoln C Eric 1994 The Black Muslims in America Third Edition Grand Rapids Michigan William B Eerdmans Publishing Company page 265 a b c Upal M Afzal 2021 The Cultural Genetics of the Aḥmadiyya Muslim Jamaʿat In Cusack Carole M Upal M Afzal eds Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 21 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 637 657 doi 10 1163 9789004435544 034 ISBN 978 90 04 43554 4 ISSN 1874 6691 a b c d e f g h i j k l Drover Lauren 2020 The Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat A New Religious Movement Derived from Islam In Kim David W ed New Religious Movements in Modern Asian History Socio Cultural Alternatives Ethnographies of Religion Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield pp 21 36 ISBN 978 1 7936 3403 0 OCLC 1220880253 a b c d Korbel Jonathan Preckel Claudia 2016 Ghulam Aḥmad al Qadiyani The Messiah of the Christians Peace upon Him in India India 1908 In Bentlage Bjorn Eggert Marion Kramer Hans Martin Reichmuth Stefan eds Religious Dynamics under the Impact of Imperialism and Colonialism Numen Book Series Vol 154 Leiden Brill Publishers pp 426 442 doi 10 1163 9789004329003 034 ISBN 978 90 04 32511 1 a b c d e Turner Richard Brent 2003 1997 The Ahmadiyya Mission to America A Multi Racial Model for American Islam Islam in the African American Experience 2nd ed Bloomington Indiana and Indianapolis Indiana University Press pp 109 146 ISBN 9780253216304 LCCN 2003009791 Khan Adil Hussain 2015 From Sufism to Ahmadiyya a Muslim minority movement in South Asia Bloomington Indiana and Indianapolis Indiana University Press pp 68 69 ISBN 978 0 253 01529 7 OCLC 907336796 Murphy Eamon Islam and Sectarian Violence in Pakistan The Terror Within London pp 4 Sectarian Conflict in Pakistan ISBN 978 1 315 17719 9 OCLC 1053981563 a b Duffey John M 2013 Science and Religion A Contemporary Perspective Eugene Oregon Resource Publications p 51 ISBN 978 1 61097 728 9 OCLC 853497666 Balzani Marzia Ahmadiyya Islam and the Muslim Diaspora Living at the End of Days Abingdon Oxon pp 6 8 ISBN 978 1 315 19728 9 OCLC 1137739779 What are the Signs of the Second Coming of the Messiah Review of Religions 2016 03 23 Retrieved 2020 06 23 Leaman Oliver 2006 The Qurʼan An Encyclopedia London Routledge p 6 ISBN 0 203 17644 8 OCLC 68963889 The Death of Jesus AS Review of Religions 2019 07 18 Retrieved 2020 06 23 Khan Adil Hussain 2015 From Sufism to Ahmadiyya a Muslim minority movement in South Asia Bloomington Indiana University Press p 119 ISBN 978 0 253 01529 7 OCLC 907336796 Jama at i Ahmadiyya also asserts that the conditions of the world will not revert back to a situation that warrants violent jihad a b Ya Ocov Yehoiakin Ben 2012 Concepts of messiah a study of the messianic concepts of Islam Judaism Messianic Judaism and Christianity Bloomington IN West Bow Press pp 20 21 ISBN 978 1 4497 5745 8 OCLC 825564208 Uddin Asma T 2014 A Legal Analysis of Ahmadi Persecution in Pakistan In Kirkham David M ed State Responses to Minority Religions Ashgate Inform Series on Minority Religions and Spiritual Movements Farnham U K and Burlington Vermont Ashgate Publishing Routledge pp 81 98 ISBN 978 1 4724 1647 6 LCCN 2013019344 Who are the Ahmadi 2010 05 28 Retrieved 2020 05 28 Ahmadi Muslims Have a Storied American History And a Legacy That Is Often Overlooked Religion amp Politics 2018 11 20 Retrieved 2020 05 28 Burhani Ahmad Najib 2014 04 03 The Ahmadiyya and the Study of Comparative Religion in Indonesia Controversies and Influences Islam and Christian Muslim Relations 25 2 141 158 doi 10 1080 09596410 2013 864191 ISSN 0959 6410 S2CID 145427321 The Cambridge history of Islam Holt P M Peter Malcolm Lambton Ann K S 1912 2008 Lewis Bernard 1916 2018 Cambridge England 1970 pp 400 404 ISBN 0 521 07567 X OCLC 107078 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Profile Fethullah Gulen s Hizmet movement BBC 18 December 2013 Christopher L Miller 3 January 2013 The Gulen Hizmet Movement Circumspect Activism in Faith Based Reform Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 2 ISBN 978 1 4438 4507 6 The Turkish exception Gallipoli Gulen and capitalism Australia s ABC Radio National 31 August 2013 Retrieved 3 September 2013 White Jenny Barbara 13 August 2017 Islamist Mobilization in Turkey A Study in Vernacular Politics University of Washington Press ISBN 9780295982236 via Google Books Portrait ofFethullah Gulen A Modern Turkish Islamic Reformist Islam in Kazakhstan Archived from the original on 2015 02 13 Reuters Breaking International News amp Views Reuters Turkish Schools Archived from the original on 2014 10 06 Retrieved 2015 09 29 SE Asian Muslims caught between iPad and Salafism The Nation Salafism Modernist Salafism from the 20th Century to the Present Kjeilen Tore 30 December 2020 Salafism LookLex Encyclopaedia i cias com Salafism Archived 2015 03 11 at the Wayback Machine Tony Blair Faith Foundation The split between Qatar and the GCC won t be permanent Archived from the original on 2016 11 17 Retrieved 2016 07 08 Mansoor Moaddel 2005 05 16 Islamic Modernism Nationalism and Fundamentalism Episode and Discourse University of Chicago Press p 2 ISBN 9780226533339 Islamic modernism was the first Muslim ideological response to the Western cultural challenge Started in India and Egypt in the second part of the 19th century reflected in the work of a group of like minded Muslim scholars featuring a critical reexamination of the classical conceptions and methods of jurisprudence and a formulation of a new approach to Islamic theology and Quranic exegesis This new approach which was nothing short of an outright rebellion against Islamic orthodoxy displayed astonishing compatibility with the ideas of the Enlightenment Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World Thompson Gale 2004 Can the Muslim world really unite hizb org uk 4 March 2010 Retrieved 15 January 2016 Commins David 1991 Taqi al Din al Nabhani and the Islamic Liberation Party PDF The Muslim World 81 3 4 194 211 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 1991 tb03525 x Retrieved 6 March 2016 Brown Rethinking tradition in modern Islamic thought 1996 p 38 42 Yuksel Edip 2008 Islami Reform Icin Manifesto Ozan Yayincilik ISBN 9789944143202 a b Musa Aisha Y 2010 The Qur anists Religion Compass John Wiley amp Sons 4 1 12 21 doi 10 1111 j 1749 8171 2009 00189 x Mansour Ahmed Subhy 2018 03 02 Refaat Amin ed How to Understand the Holy Quran Translated by Fathy Ahmed Yuksel Edip 2012 02 20 Running Like Zebras ISBN 978 0982586730 al Manar 12 1911 693 99 cited in Juynboll Authenticity 30 cited in D W Brown Rethinking tradition in modern Islamic thought 1996 p 120 Voss Richard Stephen April 1996 Identifying Assumptions in the Hadith Sunnah Debate Monthly Bulletin of the International Community of Submitters 12 4 Archived from the original on 29 July 2016 Retrieved 5 December 2013 admin 19 org 19 org Retrieved 2021 02 06 KUR ANI BILIMSEL TEOLOJI BILIMSEL KUR ANI TEOLOJI VE KUR ANI AHENKSEL TEOLOJI Caner Taslaman in Turkish Retrieved 2021 02 06 Hadis amp Sunnet Seytani Bidatler Teslimolanlar Archived from the original on 2021 11 05 Retrieved 2021 05 25 a b c d e f Kurzman Charles 1998 Liberal Islam and Its Islamic Context In Kurzman Charles ed Liberal Islam A Sourcebook Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 1 26 ISBN 9780195116229 OCLC 37368975 Leeman A B Spring 2009 Interfaith Marriage in Islam An Examination of the Legal Theory Behind the Traditional and Reformist Positions PDF Indiana Law Journal Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Maurer School of Law 84 2 743 772 ISSN 0019 6665 S2CID 52224503 Archived PDF from the original on 23 November 2018 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Jahangir Junaid 21 March 2017 Muslim Women Can Marry Outside The Faith The Huffington Post Archived from the original on 25 March 2017 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Balyuzi 1973 pp 71 72harvnb error no target CITEREFBalyuzi1973 help Zikris pronounced Zigris in Baluchi are estimated to number over 750 000 people They live mostly in Makran and Las Bela in southern Pakistan and are followers of a 15th century mahdi an Islamic messiah called Nur Pak Pure Light Zikri practices and rituals differ from those of orthodox Islam Gall Timothy L ed Worldmark Encyclopedia of Culture amp Daily Life Vol 3 Asia amp Oceania Cleveland OH Eastword Publications Development 1998 p 85 cited after adherents com Benakis Theodoros 13 January 2014 Islamophoobia in Europe New Europe Brussels Archived from the original on 31 January 2016 Retrieved 20 October 2015 Anyone who has travelled to Central Asia knows of the non denominational Muslims those who are neither Shiites nor Sounites but who accept Islam as a religion generally a b Preface Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project 2012 08 09 Retrieved 2020 06 12 Bazm e Tolu e Islam Archived from the original on 22 November 2011 Retrieved 15 February 2015 Alex Strick Van Linschoten and Felix Kuehn An Enemy We Created The Myth of the Taliban Al Qaeda Merger in Afghanistan p 427 New York Oxford University Press 2012 ISBN 9780199927319 Ahl e Hadith Literally translates as People of the traditions of the Prophet and refers to a branch of Salafi Muslims who seek to emulate the traditions practiced by the Prophet rather than the various actions referred to as accretions that had been added since The Ahl e Hadith tradition is antithetical for instance to the ideas and practice of Sufism Lieven Anatol 2011 Pakistan A Hard Country New York PublicAffairs p 128 ISBN 978 1 61039 023 1 Ahl e Hadith a branch of the international Salafi tradition heavily influenced by Wahabism Rabasa Angel M The Muslim World After 9 11 By Angel M Rabasa p 275 256 Ahl e Hadith is heavily influenced by Wahhabism Ahl i Hadith a movement founded in the nineteenth century and classi fied as Wahhabi by the British wrongly so at the time For example the Ahl i Hadith which have been active since the nineteenth century on the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan though designated as Wahhabis by their adversaries they prefer to call themselves Salafis from The Failure of Political Islam by Olivier Roy translated by Carol Volk Harvard University Press 1994 pp 118 9 ISBN 0 674 29140 9 Naylor Phillip 15 January 2015 North Africa Revised University of Texas Press ISBN 9780292761926 Retrieved 5 December 2015 Esposito John 2004 The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford University Press p 275 ISBN 9780195125597 Retrieved 5 December 2015 a b c d Salafism Politics and the puritanical The Economist 27 June 2015 Retrieved 29 June 2015 a b Meleagrou Hitchens Alexander Hughes Seamus Clifford Bennett 2021 The Ideologues Homegrown ISIS in America 1st ed London and New York I B Tauris pp 111 148 ISBN 978 1 7883 1485 5 Marc Sageman 21 September 2011 Understanding Terror Networks University of Pennsylvania Press pp 61 ISBN 978 0 8122 0679 1 Vincenzo Oliveti January 2002 Terror s Source The Ideology of Wahhabi Salafism and Its Consequences Amadeus Books ISBN 978 0 9543729 0 3 a b c d e Peskes Esther 2012 1993 Wahhabis In Bearman P J Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E J Heinrichs W P eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1877 5888 rpp SIM 224015 ISBN 978 9004161214 a b Bokhari Kamran Senzai Farid eds 2013 Conditionalist Islamists The Case of the Salafis Political Islam in the Age of Democratization New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 81 100 doi 10 1057 9781137313492 5 ISBN 978 1 137 31349 2 Agoston Gabor Masters Bruce eds 2009 Ibn Abd al Wahhab Muhammad Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire New York Facts On File pp 260 261 ISBN 978 0816062591 LCCN 2008020716 a b Wagemakers Joas 2021 Part 3 Fundamentalisms and Extremists The Citadel of Salafism In Cusack Carole M Upal M Afzal eds Handbook of Islamic Sects and Movements Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 21 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 333 347 doi 10 1163 9789004435544 019 ISBN 978 90 04 43554 4 ISSN 1874 6691 a b c d Laoust H 2012 1993 Ibn ʿAbd al Wahhab In Bearman P J Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E J Heinrichs W P eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 2nd ed Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam SIM 3033 ISBN 978 90 04 16121 4 a b c d e Haykel Bernard 2013 Ibn Abd al Wahhab Muhammad 1703 92 In Bowering Gerhard Crone Patricia Kadi Wadad Mirza Mahan Stewart Devin J Zaman Muhammad Qasim eds The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 231 232 ISBN 978 0 691 13484 0 Retrieved 15 July 2020 a b c d Esposito John L ed 2004 Ibn Abd al Wahhab Muhammad d 1791 The Oxford Dictionary of Islam New York Oxford University Press p 123 ISBN 0 19 512559 2 Retrieved 1 October 2020 a b c d Ibn Abd al Wahhab Muhammad Oxford Islamic Studies Online www oxfordislamicstudies com Oxford University Press 2020 Retrieved 15 July 2020 a b c Musa Mohd Faizal 2018 The Riyal and Ringgit of Petro Islam Investing Salafism in Education In Saat Norshahril ed Islam in Southeast Asia Negotiating Modernity Singapore ISEAS Publishing pp 63 88 doi 10 1355 9789814818001 006 ISBN 9789814818001 S2CID 159438333 Hasan Noorhaidi 2010 The Failure of the Wahhabi Campaign Transnational Islam and the Salafi madrasa in post 9 11 Indonesia South East Asia Research Taylor amp Francis on behalf of the SOAS University of London 18 4 675 705 doi 10 5367 sear 2010 0015 ISSN 2043 6874 JSTOR 23750964 S2CID 147114018 6 common misconceptions about Salafi Muslims in the West OUPblog 2016 10 05 Retrieved 2021 08 20 Kepel Gilles 2003 Jihad The Trail of Political Islam New York I B Tauris pp 61 62 ISBN 9781845112578 a b Terrorism Growing Wahhabi Influence in the United States www govinfo gov Washington D C United States Government Publishing Office 26 June 2003 Archived from the original on 15 December 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2021 Nearly 22 months have passed since the atrocity of September 11th Since then many questions have been asked about the role in that day s terrible events and in other challenges we face in the war against terror of Saudi Arabia and its official sect a separatist exclusionary and violent form of Islam known as Wahhabism It is widely recognized that all of the 19 suicide pilots were Wahhabi followers In addition 15 of the 19 were Saudi subjects Journalists and experts as well as spokespeople of the world have said that Wahhabism is the source of the overwhelming majority of terrorist atrocities in today s world from Morocco to Indonesia via Israel Saudi Arabia Chechnya In addition Saudi media sources have identified Wahhabi agents from Saudi Arabia as being responsible for terrorist attacks on U S troops in Iraq The Washington Post has confirmed Wahhabi involvement in attacks against U S forces in Fallujah To examine the role of Wahhabism and terrorism is not to label all Muslims as extremists Indeed I want to make this point very very clear It is the exact opposite Analyzing Wahhabism means identifying the extreme element that although enjoying immense political and financial resources thanks to support by a sector of the Saudi state seeks to globally hijack Islam The problem we are looking at today is the State sponsored doctrine and funding of an extremist ideology that provides the recruiting grounds support infrastructure and monetary life blood of today s international terrorists The extremist ideology is Wahhabism a major force behind terrorist groups like al Qaeda a group that according to the FBI and I am quoting is the number one terrorist threat to the U S today Haider Murtaza Jul 22 2013 European Parliament identifies Wahabi and Salafi roots of global terrorism Dawn Pakistan Retrieved 3 August 2014 Wahhabi Islamic movement Encyclopaedia Britannica Edinburgh Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 9 June 2020 Archived from the original on 26 June 2020 Retrieved 1 July 2020 Because Wahhabism prohibits the veneration of shrines tombs and sacred objects many sites associated with the early history of Islam such as the homes and graves of companions of Muhammad were demolished under Saudi rule Preservationists have estimated that as many as 95 percent of the historic sites around Mecca and Medina have been razed Rabasa Angel Benard Cheryl 2004 The Middle East Cradle of the Muslim World The Muslim World After 9 11 Rand Corporation p 103 note 60 ISBN 0 8330 3712 9 Howden Daniel August 6 2005 The destruction of Mecca Saudi hardliners are wiping out their own heritage The Independent Archived from the original on 2011 10 20 Retrieved 2009 12 21 Finn Helena Kane October 8 2002 Cultural Terrorism and Wahhabi Islam Council on Foreign Relations Archived from the original on September 4 2014 Retrieved 5 August 2014 It is the undisputed case that the Taliban justification for this travesty the destruction of the Buddha statues at Bamiyan can be traced to the Wahhabi indoctrination program prevalent in the Afghan refugee camps and Saudi funded Islamic schools madrasas in Pakistan that produced the Taliban In Saudi Arabia itself the destruction has focused on the architectural heritage of Islam s two holiest cities Mecca and Medina where Wahhabi religious foundations with state support have systematically demolished centuries old mosques and mausolea as well as hundreds of traditional Hijazi mansions and palaces Field Listing Religions The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency www cia gov Archived from the original on 2020 03 07 Retrieved 2020 06 12 Mapping the Global Muslim Population Pew Research Center 7 October 2009 Mapping the Global Muslim Population Pew Research Center 7 October 2009 Robert Brenton Betts 2013 07 31 The Sunni Shi a Divide Islam s Internal Divisions and Their Global Consequences pp 14 15 ISBN 9781612345222 Retrieved 7 August 2015 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of a 1905 New International Encyclopedia article about Islamic schools and branches Wikimedia Commons has media related to Islamic sects The Four Sunni Schools of Thought Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Islamic schools and branches amp oldid 1135649423, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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