State and Sufism in Iraq

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A01=David Jordan
Ahl Al Bayt
Al Rawi
Author_David Jordan
Baathist religious policy
Category=JP
Category=NHG
Category=QRA
Category=QRPB4
Category=QRVK2
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eq_history
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eq_society-politics
Higher Islamic Institute
Higher Religious Education
Ibn Taymiyya
International Relations
Iraq
Iraqi Dinars
Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies
Islamic modernity Iraq
KDP
Kurdish Tribes
MENA Country
MENA Region
Moderate Islam
Naqib Al Ashraf
Political Science
Presidential Family
Religious Anthropology
religious anthropology Middle East
Religious Scholars
Saddam Husayn
Saint Veneration
sectarian conflict studies
state-sponsored religious revival
Sufi Circles
Sufi Culture
Sufi Islam
Sufi Islam under authoritarian regimes
Sufi Life
Sufi Orders
Sufi political networks
Sufi Scholars
Sufi Shaykhs
Twelve Imams
UN

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032118208
  • Weight: 589g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Dec 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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State and Sufism in Iraq is the first comprehensive study of the Iraqi Baʿth regime’s (r. 1968–2003) entanglement with Sufis and of Sunnī Sufi Islam in Iraq from the late Ottoman period until 2003 and beyond.

For far too long, the secular and authoritarian Baʿth regime has been reduced to the dictator Saddam Husayn and portrayed as antireligious. Its growing political employment of Islam during the 1990s, in turn, has been interpreted either as an abstract Baʿthist-nationalist Islam or as an ideological U-turn from secularism to a form of Islamism that ultimately contributed to the spread of Islamist terrorism after 2003. Broadening the narrow focus on Saddam Husayn, this book analyses other leading regime figures, their close entanglement with Sufis, and Baʿth religious politics of a state-sponsored revival of Sufi Islam and Iraq’s broad and distinct Sufi culture. It is the story of a secular regime’s search for "moderate" Islam in order to overcome the challenges of radical Islamism and sectarianism in Iraq.

The book’s two-pronged interdisciplinary approach that deals equally with politics and Sufi Islam in Iraq makes it a valuable contribution to scholars and students in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, Religious Anthropology and Sociology, Political Science, and International Relations.

David Jordan (Ph. D. 2019 Hamburg) is Research Associate for Islamic Studies at Bochum University. His research focusses on Sufism and the entanglement of religion and politics in the early modern and modern history of the Middle East. His publications include: "Jaysh rijāl al-ṭarīqa al-naqshbandīya: The Sufi Resistance of the Former Baʿth Party in Iraq" (2020).

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