TY - JOUR
T1 - When Legal Conservatism Renders Salafi-Jihadis Lenient
T2 - The Intra-Salafi Debate about Being a Naturalized Citizen of an Infidel Country
AU - Alshech, Eli
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Salafi-jihadis have a reputation of being conservative in the application of Islamic law and stringent in their legal rulings, whereas their traditional counterparts, the Salafi-taqlidis, are known to be less conservative and more lenient. Interestingly, in discussing the permissibility of becoming a naturalized citizen in an infidel country, a matter with serious ramifications under the doctrine of al-walāʼ wal-barāʼ, Salafi-jihadis and Salafi-taqlidis swap roles. While Salafi-jihadis adopt a lenient position, and allow Muslims to become naturalized citizens of infidel countries, Salafi-taqlidis prohibit Muslims from doing so. The current study outlines the Salafi debate about the lawfulness of obtaining citizenship in a non-Islamic country and reveals the curious twist that accounts for the unusual role-reversal on this matter between Salafi-jihadis and Salafi-taqlidis. This paper demonstrates that the Salafi-jihadis’ unyielding conservatism in defining which countries qualify as “truly” Muslim regimes and which do not, results in a lenient approach to naturalization. Conversely, the Salafi-taqlidis’ more flexible approach to defining which countries are “truly” Muslim results in their surprising prohibition against naturalization.
AB - Salafi-jihadis have a reputation of being conservative in the application of Islamic law and stringent in their legal rulings, whereas their traditional counterparts, the Salafi-taqlidis, are known to be less conservative and more lenient. Interestingly, in discussing the permissibility of becoming a naturalized citizen in an infidel country, a matter with serious ramifications under the doctrine of al-walāʼ wal-barāʼ, Salafi-jihadis and Salafi-taqlidis swap roles. While Salafi-jihadis adopt a lenient position, and allow Muslims to become naturalized citizens of infidel countries, Salafi-taqlidis prohibit Muslims from doing so. The current study outlines the Salafi debate about the lawfulness of obtaining citizenship in a non-Islamic country and reveals the curious twist that accounts for the unusual role-reversal on this matter between Salafi-jihadis and Salafi-taqlidis. This paper demonstrates that the Salafi-jihadis’ unyielding conservatism in defining which countries qualify as “truly” Muslim regimes and which do not, results in a lenient approach to naturalization. Conversely, the Salafi-taqlidis’ more flexible approach to defining which countries are “truly” Muslim results in their surprising prohibition against naturalization.
KW - Citizenship
KW - Dar al-Islam
KW - Dar al-kufr
KW - Islamic law
KW - Salafi-jihadi
KW - Salafi-taqlidi
KW - naturalization
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85178205459&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/21520844.2023.2270882
DO - 10.1080/21520844.2023.2270882
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
AN - SCOPUS:85178205459
SN - 2152-0844
VL - 14
SP - 393
EP - 413
JO - Journal of the Middle East and Africa
JF - Journal of the Middle East and Africa
IS - 4
ER -