Close Menu
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn
    • العربية (Arabic)
    • English
    • Français (French)
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn
    Middle East Transparent
    • Home
    • Categories
      1. Headlines
      2. Features
      3. Commentary
      4. Magazine
      Featured
      Headlines Samara Azzi

      It’s a Liquidity Problem, Not an Accounting Problem, Stupid

      Recent
      16 December 2025

      It’s a Liquidity Problem, Not an Accounting Problem, Stupid

      15 December 2025

      The Grand Hôtel Abysse Is Serving Meals in 2025

      14 December 2025

      Banking Without Bankers: Why Lebanon Must End the Sub-Agent Experiment

    • Contact us
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • العربية (Arabic)
    • English
    • Français (French)
    Middle East Transparent
    You are at:Home»The Muslim Brotherhood’s 213-Year Revolution

    The Muslim Brotherhood’s 213-Year Revolution

    0
    By Sarah Akel on 15 February 2013 Uncategorized

    The Atlantic

    Some believe Egypt’s uprising began on January 25, 2011, but the Brotherhood begs to differ.

    Two years ago this week, a popular uprising ended Hosni Mubarak’s thirty-year reign. Egypt’s revolution is still churning, of course, and that country is now deeply polarized between the ruling Muslim Brotherhood, which has embraced many of Mubarak’s autocratic tendencies in its attempt to consolidate power, and a non-Islamist opposition that fears theocratic rule in Egypt. Yet the Brotherhood and its opponents don’t only disagree on what Egypt’s post-Mubarak polity should look like; they also apparently disagree on when Egypt’s revolution actually started, and what Egyptians really revolted against.

    Indeed, for the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s revolution has been going on for centuries, and essentially boils down to a long-term effort to resist western political influence and secularism, which it views as a foreign cultural import.

    To understand this hostile historical view, it is worth examining Muslim Brotherhood party leader Abdel Mawgoud Al-Dardery’s recent talk at the Council on Foreign Relations. “Many think that the Egyptian revolution only started on the 25th of January [2011],” Al-Dardery told an audience of Washington policy wonks last week. “But I think the revolution was in the making for so many decades before that.” According to Al-Dardery, Egypt’s revolution took “213 years,” beginning with resistance to Napoleon’s invasion of Egypt in 1798 and intensifying with resistance to Britain’s invasion of Egypt in 1882.

    “These two colonial attempts created a state of confusion not only in the Egyptian culture and political development, but also inside the Egyptian minds,” said Al-Dardery, citing British controller-general of Egypt Lord Cromer’s establishment of an Egyptian educational system to produce, in Cromer’s words, “de-Muslimized Muslims.” Al-Dardery then traced this foreign attempt to secularize Egypt in the writings of Egyptian thinker Taha Hussein, who “wrote a whole book about…which direction should Egypt take. Should it take the European direction or the Islamic direction? And in the writings of Taha Hussein, his vision was Egypt had to go European. It had to do everything the Europeans did in order to be able to create a new renaissance for Egypt.”

    According to Al-Dardery, Hussein’s embrace of European values and development “was not…welcomed very much by the traditional thinkers and the Islamists at that particular time.” But the 1952 military coup and the successive Nasser, Sadat, and Mubarak regimes prevented Egyptians from providing “a popular answer” to the question of whether Egypt should embrace European secularism or Islamism.

    Thus, Al-Dardery said, the significance of Egypt’s 2011 uprising was that it represented the first opportunity for Egyptians to finally answer collectively, “What is the future of Egypt? Where Egypt should go?” And the Muslim Brotherhood’s successive electoral victories have legitimized its preferred formula, which reconciles “the Islamic tradition with…Euro-American developments.” Al-Dardery traced this approach back to late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Islamic thinkers such as Muhammad ‘Abduh and Rashid Rida, as well as Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna, who aimed “to take from Europe the best we could, add it to the best traditions we have, and try to create the third alternative.”

    It bears emphasizing that this “third alternative” takes “Euro-American developments” — specifically western scientific advances and administrative procedures, such as electoral politics — but uses them to advance the Brotherhood’s “Islamic tradition,” which emphasizes “instituting the sharia” and, thereafter, building a “global Islamic state.” This approach makes it different from, say, traditional Salafists, who until recently largely rejected western advancements as illicit “innovations.” But the Brotherhood’s approach ultimately views western values — such as political secularism and pluralism — as imports against which, according to Al-Dardery, Egyptians have been fighting for 213 years.

    This is, of course, not what motivated most of the revolutionaries who bravely took to Tahrir Square two years ago, demanding political freedom and touting their ecumenism. But the Islamist organization that seized the revolutionaries’ initial momentum has been fighting a very different battle for nearly a century, and Washington should note that the Brotherhood essentially views Egypt’s revolution as part of an ongoing struggle against western influence and values. One of the Brotherhood’s own spokesmen, after all, said as much in Washington.

    Eric Trager is the Next Generation fellow at [The Washington Institute->http://washin.st/XSCVg8
    ]. Katie Kiraly, his research assistant, transcribed Al-Dardery’s remarks.

    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email WhatsApp Copy Link
    Previous ArticleA Honeymoon between a Fortress and a Shelter
    Next Article Is Lebanon on the brink of civil war?

    Comments are closed.

    RSS Recent post in french
    • Le Grand Hôtel Abysse sert toujours des repas en 2025 16 December 2025 Walid Sinno
    • Au cœur de Paris, l’opaque machine à cash de l’élite libanaise 5 December 2025 Clément Fayol
    • En Turquie et au Liban, le pape Léon XIV inaugure son pontificat géopolitique 27 November 2025 Jean-Marie Guénois
    • «En Syrie, il y a des meurtres et des kidnappings d’Alaouites tous les jours», alerte Fabrice Balanche 6 November 2025 Celia Gruyere
    • Beyrouth, Bekaa, Sud-Liban : décapité par Israël il y a un an, le Hezbollah tente de se reconstituer dans une semi-clandestinité 20 October 2025 Georges Malbrunot
    RSS Recent post in arabic
    • الرأي العام اللبناني أقرب إلى فكرة “السلام” من أي وقت مضى! 16 December 2025 علي حمادة
    • صديقي الراحل الدكتور غسان سكاف 13 December 2025 كمال ريشا
    • هدية مسمومة لسيمون كرم 13 December 2025 مايكل يونغ
    • كوريا الجنوبية تقترب من عرش الذكاء الاصطناعي 13 December 2025 د. عبدالله المدني
    • من أسقط حق “صيدا” بالمعالجة المجانية لنفاياتها؟ 13 December 2025 وفيق هواري
    26 February 2011

    Metransparent Preliminary Black List of Qaddafi’s Financial Aides Outside Libya

    6 December 2008

    Interview with Prof Hafiz Mohammad Saeed

    7 July 2009

    The messy state of the Hindu temples in Pakistan

    27 July 2009

    Sayed Mahmoud El Qemany Apeal to the World Conscience

    8 March 2022

    Russian Orthodox priests call for immediate end to war in Ukraine

    Recent Comments
    • P. Akel on The Grand Hôtel Abysse Is Serving Meals in 2025
    • Rev Aso Patrick Vakporaye on Sex Talk for Muslim Women
    • Sarah Akel on The KGB’s Middle East Files: Palestinians in the service of Mother Russia
    • Andrew Campbell on The KGB’s Middle East Files: Palestinians in the service of Mother Russia
    • farouk itani on A Year Later, Lebanon Still Won’t Stand Up to Hezbollah
    Donate
    © 2025 Middle East Transparent

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.