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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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July 9, 2018
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Egypt's
Islamist Televangelists Lose Clout
by Hany Ghoraba
Special to IPT News
July 9, 2018
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They once captured
the hearts and minds of millions of Egyptians, but Islamist televangelists
are losing popularity. They started to lose credibility during the June
2013 revolution that drove the Muslim Brotherhood from power and in the
subsequent terrorist attacks after Islamist President Mohamed Morsi's
ouster.
"The state of abandonment of the Salafi preachers and the Muslim
Brotherhood ... is very good and serves the interests of the Egyptian, Arab
and Islamic societies," said former Muslim Brotherhood member Sameh
Eid. "The exposure of the ideas of these preachers and their great
dependence on a heritage that is no longer suitable for the present time
and place make them a rare and ridiculous material on the pages of the
media."
Fewer people are watching the Islamist televangelists shows, Islamist
groups researcher and former Brotherhood member Tarek Abou Saad, so they
now resort to using historical tales of Islam's grandeur to try to
draw an audience.
Despite those efforts, televangelist ratings during Ramadan were the
lowest since 2011.
Egyptian media traditionally offered two main types of televangelists –
Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated and Salafist (Wahhabi). Brotherhood clerics
in modern clothes advocate a gradual Islamization of society while
infiltrating Egypt's more affluent society. Salafists successfully appealed
to working class and more impoverished sectors of society.
The televangelist movement in Egypt was initiated by Omar
Abdel Kafi who became extremely famous among the affluent. The radical
preacher issued fatwas prohibiting greeting Christians and
urging boycotting Jews. Egyptian authorities took him off the air in 1994,
forcing him to work in exile from the United Arab Emirates. He follows the
path of both the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafists. Recently, his
anti-Semitic statements, describing Jews as "aiming to control all the
world's money and lands then controlling all international politics,"
got him banned from delivering a speech in Canada in April.
The rise of Islamist televangelists was cancerous to the fiber of the
Egyptian society and fueled radicalization during the past two decades.
Views toward women, Christians, art and the West all grew more strident.
The new wave of preachers was first introduced in 2002 through the
Saudi-financed religious network "Iqra [Read] TV." By 2007, Time magazine listed Amr
Khaled as one of the 100 most influential people in the world, calling
him a "rock star" and "a needed voice for moderation from
within the Muslim world."
Forbes Arabia also identified Amr Khaled as one of the richest Islamist preachers that year, estimating his
income at $2.5 million.
He introduced a new form of preaching – which he called "Visual Da'wa" – emphasizing appearance as a way to
inspire more religious adherence. He urged girls to wear the hijab, which
he called a "walking symbol of the faith." "Wearing your
hijab at the beach, even if surrounded by semi-naked girls," he said, will lead to society becoming more religious.
This is the way to fix society."
Most of the new breed of televangelists didn't study Islamic theology at
Al Azhar University like traditional preachers. Instead, they present themselves as average people who found religion
through personal experiences. For example, televangelist Moez Massoud said that he became closer to God after losing friends in an accident and then surviving
a health scare. This approach has attracted a younger audience than traditional religious
programs.
While many view the new televangelists as sincere God-fearing preachers,
others see actors performing a role. Amr Khaled has been mocked for fake
piety repeatedly on social media for actions like praying only for his followers while in Mecca,
excluding other Muslims.
"l believe they put on an act and use a special voice tone to
convey their message to the audience," said Egyptian actress Laila Ezz Al
Arab.
Amr Khaled's chicken
endorsement drew ridicule.
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The epitome of acting and fake enthusiasm came when Khaled taped
an advertisement for a Saudi chicken brand called "Al Wataniya."
"We need to do everything right in this Ramadan," he said.
"We need to fast properly, worship God properly and watch over our
health properly ... Your soul will not be purified without your stomach and
body being healthy...." This advertisement drew a storm of condemnation and mockery.
Some Salafi preachers attempted to take over the
televangelist and religious scene following the Muslim Brotherhood's 2013
ouster from power by siding with the army. Some of their leaders still
preferred an Islamist government and rejected the June 2013 revolution and
the constitution that followed it. For instance, the most famous Salafist
televangelist, Abou Ishak Al Howeiny, issued a fatwa urging people to
boycott a 2014 referendum on the new constitution because it was written by
"coup d'état" supporters.
Other Salafi televangelists offer radical and occasionally insane fatwas. Those include permitting necrophilia and
underage marriage. Egypt's parliament responded
with new legislation requiring fatwas be vetted by established religious
institutions like Al Azhar, the world's oldest and most prestigious Islamic
institution.
However, while Muslim Brotherhood affiliated televangelists are
declining in influence, core supporters of some Salafists clerics are
holding their ground, according to Egyptian media expert Amina Tharwat Abaza.
"Followers of some famous Salafist clerics such as Ishak Al Howeiny
are simple-minded people and unfortunately they still revere him," she
said. Al Howeiny became famous for saying
jihad can be used to acquire wealth and spoils from infidels. "The
poverty we are suffering from is because we gave up jihad, if we wage jihad
once or twice a year, each one can capture some men, women and children and
sell them for a good profit."
"Unfortunately," Abaza said, "some of the masses are
satisfied treating their limited knowledge of religious teachings as a
'science' in itself."
"They follow the radicals in their witch-hunts against all
reformers and thinkers. Some of the anchors accuse them of infidelity and
atheism. Assisted by this twisted media are the clergymen who brainwashed
them into thinking that all who oppose their word are infidels."
While televangelists try to rebuild their reputations and try out less
overtly religious appearances, the June 30th revolution that
toppled the Muslim Brotherhood greatly diminished their influence. Instead,
criticism and mockery have become synonymous with their preaching.
"I'm afraid they're trying to rebuild it again by signing new
contracts with TV channels to try brainwashing youth minds," said
actress Laila Ezz al Arab.
But this time, after they've been exposed as flakes and profit-seekers,
it doesn't appear to be working very well. The public is more aware that
they garnered wealth and fame by trading in religion. Televangelists'
former "rock star" status coupled with some insane fatwas
conflicted with the religious beliefs of the masses. It may be the
beginning of the end of a phenomenon that has negatively affected Egyptian
society for decades.
Hany
Ghoraba is an Egyptian writer, political and counter-terrorism
analyst at Al Ahram Weekly, author of Egypt's
Arab Spring: The Long and Winding Road to Democracy and a
regular contributor to the BBC.
Related Topics: Media
| Hany
Ghoraba, Egypt,
televangelists,
dawa,
Tarek
Abou Saad, Amr
Khaled, Muslim
Brotherhood, Salafis,
Omar
Abdel Kafi, Moez
Massoud, Laila
Ezz Al Arab, Abou
Ishak Al Howeiny, fatwas,
Al
Azhar, Amina
Tharwat Abaza
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