To: FL_engineer
Identified by court papers only as Abdella, the man was accused in an August indictment of acting with "a covert underground support unit" and an "operational combat cell" for a
radical Islamic movement allied with Al Qaeda.Could this radical Islamic movement be al Fuqra, Jamatt al fuqra, nation of Islam, black panthers, new black panthers, Black Muslims, 5 percenters or their rat supporters in congress?
To: Grampa Dave
quick google search reveals that:
These Shayateen first called themselves Wahhabiyya, but after numerous fatawa were passed about them, they soon changed their name to: Salafiyya
So I guess it is Wahhabism or ? Still checking.
To: Grampa Dave
Somebody Else's Civil War
by Michael Scott Doran
From Foreign Affairs, January/February 2002
continued...
The al Qaeda organization grew out of an Islamic religious movement called the Salafiyya -- a name derived from al-Salaf al-Salih, "the venerable forefathers," which refers to the generation of the Prophet Muhammad and his companions. Salafis regard the Islam that most Muslims practice today as polluted by idolatry; they seek to reform the religion by emulating the first generation of Muslims, whose pristine society they consider to have best reflected God's wishes for humans. The Salafiyya is not a unified movement, and it expresses itself in many forms, most of which do not approach the extremism of Osama bin Laden or the Taliban. The Wahhabi ideology of the Saudi state, for example, and the religious doctrines of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and a host of voluntary religious organizations around the Islamic world are all Salafi. These diverse movements share the belief that Muslims have deviated from God's plan and that matters can be returned to their proper state by emulating the Prophet.
Like any other major religious figure, Muhammad left behind a legacy that his followers have channeled in different directions. An extremist current in the Salafiyya places great emphasis on jihad, or holy war. Among other things, the Prophet Muhammad fought in mortal combat against idolatry, and some of his followers today choose to accord this aspect of his career primary importance. The devoted members of al Qaeda display an unsettling willingness to martyr themselves because they feel that, like the Prophet, they are locked in a life-or-death struggle with the forces of unbelief that threaten from all sides. They consider themselves an island of true believers surrounded by a sea of iniquity and think the future of religion itself, and therefore the world, depends on them and their battle against idol worship.
In almost every Sunni Muslim country the Salafiyya has spawned Islamist political movements working to compel the state to apply the shari`a -- that is, Islamic law. Extremist Salafis believe that strict application of the shari`a is necessary to ensure that Muslims walk on the path of the Prophet. The more extremist the party, the more insistent and violent the demand that the state must apply the shari`a exclusively.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson