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History of Islamic Socialism

Ibn Khaldoun

the present is dead, long live the future . . .
http://dawn.com/2013/02/21/islamic-socialism-a-history-from-left-to-right

Perhaps the title, containing 'Islamic socialism', might to some extent be considered misleading, given the various movements it encompasses. Yet it is pertinent in itself. Also, how the American CIA sabotaged a lot of this history is largely ommitted, although the author is being very objective. Nice article though!
Here is some of the beginning:
Between the 1950s and early 1970s, a powerful ideology in the Muslim world galvanised itself from the minds and fringes of modern Islamic intellectualism and made its way into the mainstream political arena.

But this ideology did not have a single originator. Its roots can be found amongst the works of Muslim thinkers and ideologues in South and East Asia, Africa and in various Middle Eastern (Arab) countries.

Also, once it began being adopted by mainstream leaders and political outfits, it was expressed through multiple names. But today, each one of these names and terms are slotted under a single definitional umbrella: Islamic Socialism.

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Roots and Trees

Though one can struggle to pinpoint the exact starting point (or points) from where the many ideas that became associated with Islamic Socialism emerged, historians and intellectuals, Sami A. Hanna and Hanif Ramay – who specialised in critiquing and compiling a dialectic history of Islamic Socialism – are of the view that one of the very first expressions of Islamic Socialism appeared in Russia in the late 19th and early 20th century.

A movement of Muslim farmers, peasants and petty-bourgeoisie in the Russian state of Tatartan opposed the Russian monarchy but was brutally crushed.

In the early 2oth century, the movement went underground and began working with communist, socialist and social democratic forces operating in Russia to overthrow the monarchy.

The leaders of the Muslim movement, that became to be known as the Waisi began explaining themselves as Islamic Socialists when a leftist revolution broke out against the Russian monarchy in 1906.

During the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution that finally toppled and eliminated the Russian monarchy and imposed communist rule in the country, the Waisi fell in with the Bolsheviks and supported Russian revolutionary leader, Vladimir Lenin’s widespread socialist program and policies.

However, after Lenin’s death in 1924, the Waisi began to assert that the Muslim community and its socialism in Tatartan were a separate entity from the Bolshevik communism.

The movement that had formed its own communes became a victim of Stalin’s radical purges of the 1930s and was wiped out.

One is not quite sure how the Waisi defined their socialism in a country where (after 1917) atheism had become the state-enforced creed. It was left to a group of influential thinkers and ideologues in South Asia and the Middle East to finally get down to giving a more coherent and doctrinal shape to Islamic Socialism.
 
http://dawn.com/2013/02/21/islamic-socialism-a-history-from-left-to-right

Perhaps the title, containing 'Islamic socialism', might to some extent be considered misleading, given the various movements it encompasses. Yet it is pertinent in itself. Also, how the American CIA sabotaged a lot of this history is largely ommitted, although the author is being very objective. Nice article though!
Here is some of the beginning:

It manages to jumble together a hell of a lot of movements together - sort of like what would happen if you tried to have a go at 'Western socialism', but doesn't mention the Gilan movement in Persia or the Green Army in Ottoman Empire that did try and merge Islam with socialist principles.
It's also very soft on Ghulam Ahmed Parvez especially the early Muslim League years in the 1930s.
 
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