Founder | Abdalqadir as-Sufi |
---|---|
Headquarters | Spain |
The Murabitun World Movement is an Islamic movement founded by Abdalqadir as-Sufi (born as Ian Dallas), with communities in several countries. Its heartland is Spain. [1] The number of its followers may amount, according to one estimate, to around 10,000. [2]
The name Murabitun derives from the name of the Almoravid dynasty. The founder of the Murabitun World Movement is Abdalqadir as-Sufi, a convert to Islam born Ian Dallas in Ayr, Scotland, in 1930. He met his first Shaykh, Muhammad ibn al-Habib, in Meknes around 1968, and was made a muqaddam and given the title "as-Sufi". Ibn al-Habib said to him, “You can stay here with me, and something might happen. But go to England and see what will happen”. [3]
Abdalqadir as-Sufi travelled in Europe and America, held talks, and published works such as The Way of Muhammad [4] and Islam Journal proposing that Islam could be understood, and entered, as the "completion of the Western intellectual and spiritual tradition". [4] He also initiated translations into English of classical texts on Islamic law and Sufism, including the Muwatta Imam Malik. [5]
In 1982 Abdalqadir as-Sufi held a series of talks in America which were to become the basis of his work, Root Islamic Education. [6]
The political and social work of the Murabitun centres around the restoration of the “fallen pillar” [7] of zakat, which, it is claimed, has been abandoned on several primary counts.
Principally:
As their authority for this position the Murabitun cite a wide range of sources, beginning with the Qur'anic injunction to take zakat, [10] the Prophetic practice of zakat-taking, the well-known position of the Khalif Abu Bakr as-Siddiq, [11] and the established practice among the world Muslim community which was until relatively recently the assessment and collection of zakat by the Leader and his collectors.
This they place in contradistinction to the currently prevailing practices of voluntary self-assessment, donation to the zakat charity of one’s choice, and the placement of zakat donations into interim or even long-term investment funds. This, they argue, destroys the political cohesion of the Muslim community, which is based primarily on the circulation of wealth along divinely revealed lines. [12] They also condemn zakat investment funds as un-Islamic.
They previously connected their position on zakat with promotion of the Islamic gold dinar and silver dirham, which was developed above all by the scholar Umar Ibrahim Vadillo. Paper money, since actually a promise of payment written on paper, can from the point of view of zakat only be considered in terms of its value as paper, [9] since zakat cannot be discharged by passing on a token of debt owed to a third party. Vadillo has written extensively [13] on the origins of paper money and the Islamic position on money.
The Murabitun traced the bi-metallic currency back to Muhammad and the first Muslim community; its specific weights and purities were formally recorded by ‘Umar Ibn al-Khattab. [14]
In February 2014, however, Shaykh Dr. Abdalqadir as-Sufi distanced himself from the dinar and dirham movement, saying, "So, I now dis-associate myself from all activity involving the Islamic gold dinar and silver dirham". [15]
The Murabitun advocate personal rule as the Islamic and indeed natural form of human governance, [16] [17] taking authority for this position from extensive Qur'anic references. [18]
Abdalqadir as-Sufi's advocacy of Malik’s school of Madinah is explained at length in his work Root Islamic Education. The Murabitun do not, however, in any way dispute the validity of the other legal schools, [19] nor is adherence to or advocacy of the madhhab of Malik a condition of membership of the Murabitun.
The Murabitun advocate a revival of the forms of trading and social welfare practiced during the first generations of Muslims and for most of the history of Islam, proposing that these are the natural modes of human activity and rejecting the dialectical categorisation of “ancient” or “modern”, a set of opposites whose application to Islam they consider irrelevant and misleading. [20]
These models have been formulated in detail and include awqaf [12] for the funding of social welfare institutions, mosques and other public facilities.
Abdalqadir as-Sufi has consistently identified terrorism and suicide tactics as forbidden in and alien to Islam, and indeed as a phenomenon with no precursor in Muslim history. Instead, he states that its original appearance as a tactic and a psychology was among the Isma‘ili sect of Shi‘a Islam, and that it later emerged among the Russian nihilists of the late 19th century. [21]
The Murabitun organise themselves around emirs. This is distinct from the role of the movement’s founder, Abdalqadir as-Sufi, who, while exercising an undoubted influence, is a spiritual guide rather than a political leader – an arrangement common throughout the history of Islam. [22] [23]