Republican Brotherhood

Republican Brotherhood
Leader Mahmoud Mohamed Taha
Founded 1945
Dissolved 1989
Headquarters Khartoum, Sudan
Ideology Secularism
Republicanism
Sudanese nationalism

Republican Brotherhood (Arabic: اخوان الجمهوريين) was a small, but influential political party in Sudan. The party was founded in the 1950s, by Mahmoud Mohamed Taha. The party came into the limelight in 1983, as Taha opposed the implementations of sharia laws by Gaafar Nimeiry. Taha was arrested and executed in 1985. The party continued to exist for a few years, being disbanded sometime after 1989.[1]

History

The Republican Brotherhood was the popular name for what Mahmud Muhammad Taha called the New Islamic Mission. Taha sought to develop a new Muslim consciousness based on a modern view of Islam and Islamic law.[2]The New Islamic Mission was founded in 1945.[3] The Brotherhood however refrained from participation in elections, having inherited the Republican Party's historically disdain for the political process.[4] In spite of this the Brotherhood's influence in Sudanese politics grew up until the execution of Taha in 1985, with the party having particularly swelled in the years leading up to 1985, largely due to an influx of students, women, and Muslim intellectuals.[4]

Taha and the Republican Brotherhood disagreed with Nimeiri's government over the role of Islamic law and freedom of speech. Taha spent brief periods in jail during the 1960s and 1970s, whilst the membership of the Republican Brotherhood grew to approximately 1,000 active men and women by 1980. In spite of Brotherhood's traditional aversion to involvement in politics the Brotherhood launched a major speaking and writing campaign in 1983 against Nimeiri's September Laws, which instituted a strict form of Sharia law in Sudan. The Brotherhood's campaign resulted in the arrest of more than 70 members of the organisation, including 4 Republican Sisters and Taha himself. No charges were brought against the group until the Brotherhood issued a final pamphlet at the end of 1984 demanding that Islamic law be dropped as the only state law in force. Taha was charged with apostasy, convicted, sentenced to death, and then executed on 18 January 1985. Along with Taha's execution, the Republican Brotherhood movement was disbanded. Many of its members still live in exile in Great Britain and the United States.[5]

Ideology

The Republican Brotherhood was based on a religious ideology advocating for a revised interpretation of the Qur'an, in line with Qu'rans Medinan texts, which the Brotherhood argued repealed the earlier Meccan texts. Taha has written in "The Second Message of Islam" that Islam was an evolving religion, which should be evolved from the earlier more fundamental Meccan texts to the later more concerete and practical Medinan texts in order to construct a society based on equality and social justice.[4]

The Republican Brotherhood particularly focused on issues relating to the lack of human rights and equality in the treatment of women and non-Muslims in modern Islamic societies. A pragmatic rendering of the program of the Republican Brotherhood would involve the specific revision of the Shari'a law regarding marriage and divorce whereby the right to contract the marriage and the right to terminate it is vested equally with the woman as well as the man, as individuals. Polygamy would be prohibited. The Republican Brotherhood advocated for a revised constitution, based on true principles of Muslim equity and justice, which would protect religious freedom and ensure equality of treatment and standing under the law between non-Muslims and Muslims.[4]

References

  1. http://www.sudan.net/government/parties.html
  2. Republican Brotherhood
  3. Fluehr-Lobban, Carolyn; Lobban, Richard; Voll, John Obert (1992). Historical Dictionary of the Sudan. Scarecrow Press. p. 178. ISBN 9780585102610.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Fluehr-Lobban, Carolyn; Lobban, Richard; Voll, John Obert (1992). Historical Dictionary of the Sudan. Scarecrow Press. p. 179. ISBN 9780585102610.
  5. Kramer, Robert S.; Fluehr-Lobban, Carolyn; Lobban Jr., Richard A. (2013). Historical Dictionary of the Sudan. Scarecrow Press. p. 369. ISBN 978-0-8108-6180-0.
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