religions
Article
Post-Salafism: Religious Revisionism in Contemporary
Saudi Arabia
Besnik Sinani
Center for Islamic Theology, Tübingen University, 72074 Tübingen, Germany;
[email protected]
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Abstract: This article seeks to identify the driving factors, features, and significance of the transformation of Salafism in contemporary Muslim societies, a development labeled ‘post-Salafism’.
Throughout the 20th century, Salafism grew into a global religious movement, with distinctive local
characteristics. Its post-Salafi transformations have likewise been diverse and reflect local conditions.
‘Post-Salafism’ is a term employed congruently to point at the fragmentation of Salafi religious authority; the emergence of Salafi alliances with other Muslim groups, which challenge Salafi conceptions
of doctrinal superiority; in Salafi softening of sectarian rhetoric as a way of distancing from militant
groups; in Salafi “indigenization”; and in social and political transformations that overlap with
post-Islamism. Post-Salafism refers additionally to debates within Salafi circles, reflective of emerging
internal doctrinal contradictions. Since the founding of Saudi Arabia in 1932, the kingdom has played
a unique role in promoting, financing, and building the institutional network of global Salafism. The
transformation of Saudi Salafism, therefore, resulting from changes in government policy, public
pressure, and internal revisionism, will effect Salafism globally, pointing at a transformative moment
in Muslim religious thought and authority structures.
Keywords: post-Salafism; post-Islamism; Saudi Arabia; Hatim al- Awni
Citation: Sinani, Besnik. 2022.
1. Introduction
Post-Salafism: Religious Revisionism
The label ‘post-Salafism’ is related to what preceded its emergence, namely Salafism.
What explains the transformation of Salafism, what factors led to it, and what are its
features? What is the potential impact and what are the limitations of post-Salafism,
particularly in a country such as Saudi Arabia, where Salafism has shaped the kingdom’s
political and national identity? Post-Salafism, it will be argued, is indicative of changes
in state religious policy, reflective of a recent history of political volatility, constituting a
reaction to the Islamic Awakening Movement (Sahwa) and to the emergence of religious
militancy. The Sahwa emerged out of the amalgamation of Salafi theology and Islamist
ideas on politics and society. Saudi post-Salafism refers additionally to reactions from
within Saudi society to the Sahwa attempts to dominate the public sphere. Saudi postSalafism, therefore, is intrinsically reflective of post-Islamism. As Asef Bayat has argued,
post-Islamism represents a condition in which, following the first stage of experimentation,
Islamism “becomes compelled, both by its internal contradictions and by societal pressures
to re-invent itself, but it does so at the coast of a tremendous qualitative shift.” (Bayat 2005,
2013). Islamism is linked primarily to the political worldview of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Global Islamism has been an umbrella for movements that hold a variety of theological
views. In the case of Saudi Arabia, however, the emergence of Islamism was firmly
grounded in Salafi theology (Lacroix 2011; Bu Hilal 2014). Indeed, Saudi Islamism became
a vehicle for the spread of Salafism. In the 1980s and 1990s, the Sahwa grew into an
opposition force to the Royal Family, resulting in the imprisonment of its leading activists.
The government pressure on the Sahwa forced the movement to later rethink its strategy,
avoid the collusion course, and even accept forms of cooptation. As the Sahwa had come to
dominate the religious field, its transformation affected likewise its theological foundations,
namely Salafism (Lacroix 2004).
in Contemporary Saudi Arabia.
Religions 13: 340. https://doi.org/
10.3390/rel13040340
Academic Editors: Meena
Sharify-Funk and Rory Dickson
Received: 29 January 2022
Accepted: 27 March 2022
Published: 10 April 2022
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Religions 2022, 13, 340
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Additionally, post-Salafism is indicative of internal Salafi revisionism and challenges
to Salafi authority structures (Salem and Bassyuni 2015; Qadhi 2018; Razavian 2018). The
emergence of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), in particular, with its claim of
representing true Salafism, mounted a major doctrinal challenge to the religious authorities
of Saudi Salafism (Bunzel 2016). This challenge took place as the leading Salafi scholars had
already passed away. This climate of theological and political volatility and an authoritative
void coincided with a public fatigue, at least in some areas of the Middle East, including
in Saudi Arabia, with the Awakening Movement. The movement was increasingly perceived as a conflict-inducing, socially-suffocating, regressive religious worldview. At the
same time, the opposition from historical theological foes of Salafism, such as the neotraditionalists, began to take advantage of Salafism’s political predicament (Farouq 2021).
Neo-traditionalists, also referred to in contemporary scholarship as ‘late Sunni traditionalists’ (Brown 2014), are scholars committed to the pre-modern Sunni scholarly traditions and
institutions and oppose modern reformist Islamic movements such as Salafism. Prominent
scholars from Syria, Egypt, Yemen, and elsewhere have called for a return to traditional
Islam, an orientation articulated in opposition to Salafism. These ideas have also reached
Saudis searching for alternative religious interpretations.
In Saudi Arabia, these developments created the conditions for dissenting voices from
within the Saudi religious institutions to openly criticize key tenets of Salafi thought and
action. This article seeks to locate post-Salafism in Saudi Arabia at the intersection of the
transformation of Saudi state religious policy, relevant shifts in public perceptions towards
Islamism, and the emergence of internal Salafi revisionism. In so doing, it seeks to contribute
to an understanding of potential future directions in contemporary Muslim thought.
2. Salafism: An Overview
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Salafism claims to represent an understanding of Islam that is based on the foundational texts of the Quran and the Prophetic Teachings (sunna), as these sources were
understood by the generations of the early Muslims, known as the ‘pious ancestors’, or
al-salaf al-salih. This definition is only partly helpful, given that Salafis are hardly the only
Muslims that claim to anchor their understanding of religion in the foundational sources
and early predecessors. It is helpful to think of Salafism as a counterreligion (Mouline
2014; Bunzel 2018), given that it points to Salafism’s opposition to the Sunni pre-modern
dominant schools of theology (kalam) of Ash arism and Maturidism, to the authority of the
four canonical schools of Sunni Jurisprudence, and to Sufism (Haykel 2009; Griffel 2015;
Lauziere 2016). Thinking of Salafism as a counterreligion draws attention, additionally, to
some of the movement’s identifying features that arguably drive the need for the current
revisionism: its salvific exclusivism and its refusal to compromise in its dealings with other
Muslim groups.
Both Mouline and Bunzel have used the concept of counterreligion in their works on
the Saudi brand of Salafism, known as Wahhabism. The term ‘Wahhabism’ is used by
scholars in order to distinguish the Saudi brand of Salafism from others. However, with
few exceptions, Saudi scholars consider ‘Wahhabism’ a term used by their ideological
opponents, and identify themselves as ‘Salafis’ (Commins 2015). Bunzel has also argued
that the term counterreligion applies more accurately to the early stage of Wahhabism in the
18th century, all the way to early 20th century. Afterwards, the movement was required
to moderate its positions, following the demands that came with its role as the kingdom’s
‘state religion’. As Bunzel (2016) has shown elsewhere, the emergence of groups such
as ISIS has seen a renewed application of some of the most exclusivist notions of early
Wahhabism. The emergence of ISIS has forced Saudi scholars to address controversial
aspects of their theology. It should be noted that in late 19th–early 20th century, Salafi
scholars emerged in Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and Morocco (Lauziere 2015). The emergence of
Wahhabism in the central lands of Arabia in the 18th century, however, has undoubtedly
been the most consequential development in the history of Salafism.
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The message of the movement’s founder, Muhammad Ibn Abd al-Wahhab (d. 1792),
faced opposition and hostility from the vast majority of Muslim scholars at the time, as
well as from local rulers in the surrounding localities (Commins 2006; Crawford 2014;
Bunzel 2018). Ibn Abd al-Wahhab managed to secure the support of a local chieftain
of the Al-Saud clan, resulting in a historical partnership between the Al Saud and the
Wahhabi movement, which has endured until today. This development turned Salafism
into the state religion of a modern nation state, with the power to enforce its dogma and
punish what it considers heretics (Mouline 2014). As Saudi Arabia later became one of the
world’s major oil producers, that provided Saudi Salafism with financial resources that
built the institutional network to spread its teachings globally. Saudi Arabia became the
patron of most Salafi movements around the world, and its universities, particularly the
University of Medina, became the movement’s leading learning institutions, which also led
to a Saudization of global Salafism (Farquhar 2016). By the second half of the 20th century,
Salafism—particularly its Saudi brand—had been transformed from a movement that was
previously considered almost unanimously as deviant by the majority of Sunni scholars
(Bunzel 2018) into part of the Sunni mainstream. The history of Salafism is testimony to the
remarkable transformation of modern Muslim thought. By the end of the 20th century, the
former Mufti of Saudi Arabia, Abd al- Aziz Bin Baz (d. 1999), had arguably achieved a
quasi-papal role (Lacroix 2011).
The defining marker of Salafism is its understanding of theology, formulated in a
doctrine known as “the tripartite division of monotheism” (Haykel 2009). To Salafis,
monotheism is divided into monotheism of Lordship, or the belief that God is Lord, Creator,
and Sustainer of the universe (tawhid al-rububiyya); monotheism of Godship, which implies
that God alone is worthy of worship (tawhid al-uluhiyya); and the belief in the unique Names
and Attributes of God (tawhid al-asma wa sifat). The implication of this creedal formulation
is that it negates the faith of large segments of the Muslim community. According to
Salafis, someone who professes to be a Muslim, believes that God is the Creator and
Sustainer of the universe, and fulfills the obligations of religion, such as the five daily
prayers, fasting, alms-giving, and pilgrimage, might still be considered a disbeliever if that
Muslim seeks, perhaps, the intercession of the prophets and saints. To Salafis, this person
might have fulfilled the conditions of tawhid al-rububiyya, but they are not a monotheist
according to tawhid al-uluhiyya. At the core of this Salafi creedal formulation is a particular
understanding of what constitutes worship ( ibada). The act of visiting the resting places of
prophets and saints represents in Salafi understanding an act of worshiping someone other
than God, and therefore as idolatry. Wahhabis have argued that a person who visits and
seeks the intercession of the prophets and saints resembles the pagans of Mecca at the time
of revelation, meaning that they are to be considered disbelievers (Qadhi 2018). No other
aspect of Wahhabi teaching has drawn as much criticism as this key precept of its creed. It
results in the excommunication (takfir) of large segments of the global Muslim community,
as well as in feeding sectarianism and potential violence (Adang et al. 2015).
This creedal formulation played an important role in mobilizing tribal communities
of the Arabian Peninsula, which supported the emergence of the Saudi kingdom in the
first decades of the 20th century. It motivated the massacres of Shi i communities in the
Eastern part of the Peninsula, and of Sunnis in cities such as Taif, near Mecca (Vasiliev 1998;
Al-Rasheed 2002). This creedal formulation is not necessarily new. It is primarily attributed
to a controversial medieval theologian, Ibn Taymiyya (d. 1328). Since the emergence of the
Wahhabi movement, Muslim scholars have debated to what extent Ibn Abd al-Wahhab
represented accurately the teachings of Ibn Taymiyya (Bunzel 2018). Be that as it may,
later Wahhabi theology, especially in the second half of the 20th century, was largely based
upon the edited publications of the works of Ibn Taymiyya. Critics have pointed at several
occasions when contemporary Wahhabi publications of Ibn Taymiyya’s works omit parts
that contradict Wahhabi teachings. Those omissions notwithstanding, the foundational role
of the works of Ibn Taymiyya in the modern formation of Salafism cannot be overstated
(Ahmed and Yosef 2010).
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A key aspect of the legacy of Ibn Taymiyya is his opposition to the two dominant
schools of Sunni theology (kalam), Asha rism and Maturidism. These schools of theology
have emphasized the importance of affirming God’s ultimate transcendence. They have
refrained from a literalist reading of texts that would suggest an anthropomorphic vision
of God, or have interpreted those texts metaphorically. As a result, based on Taymiyyan
theology, Wahhabis accuse the majority of the world’s Muslims, adherents of Ash arism
and Maturidism, of negating some of the attributes of God (ta til), resulting in failure to
understand God’s true nature and worship him accordingly (Nahouza 2018). Even in
cases when Salafis do not employ excommunication of other Muslims, they restrict their
definition of Sunnism, claiming that Salafis alone represent Sunni Islam. This results in
branding non-Salafi Muslims as deviants (mubtadi a)
The second defining aspect of Salafism is its opposition to the four traditional schools
of Sunni Jurisprudence (madhhabs). Establishment Wahhabi scholars in Saudi Arabia do
not share, at least formally, this opposition to the madhhabs. Officially, they subscribe to
one of them, the Hanbali school (Mouline 2014). Nevertheless, the influence of other Salafi
trends on the Saudi religious field popularized anti-madhhabism in the kingdom. Salafis
have worked throughout the 20th century to dismantle the centuries-old structure of legal
reasoning and precedent that has informed Sunni legal thought, religious practice, and
norms of social interaction (Hamdeh 2021). The implications of anti-madhhabism have
been wide-ranging. It challenged the role of traditional scholars as sources of religious
authority, encouraging Muslims to read the primary sources for themselves, and ignore
the compendiums of commentaries written through the centuries (Al-Buti 2017). On the
one hand, Salafis propagated the abandonment of the obligation of lay Muslims to follow
qualified scholars (taqlid). On the other hand, however, they presented themselves as
the reliable scholars Muslims should turn to. The difference, Salafis claimed, is that they
would not cite the opinions of the schools, but the words of the Prophet. Their opinions,
they claimed, were based on undisputed textual evidence (dalil). One of the distinctive
characteristics of Salafi criticism has been anchored on the claim that the madhhabs are
not based on sound reports of the statements of the Prophet (hadiths), but on unreliable,
weak traditions. To Salafis such as Nasir al-Din al-Albani (d. 1999), this explains the
existence of multiple religious opinions on a single matter (Al-Albani 2006). Consequently,
Salafism challenged the pluralism of the pre-modern Sunni legal tradition. The claim
that the religious practices of the Muslims have been for centuries based on weak hadiths
encouraged a search for religious authenticity. This search was taking place at the time of
the emergence in the Middle East of parallel ideological projects. The political failure of
Arab nationalism, and by extension of leftist forms of mobilization, led to a search for an
intellectual paradigm, and a political imagination that was free of ideological borrowings
from the East or the West. Islam was not only meant to serve as a teaching for living a life
pleasing to God, but also as a marker of an authentic cultural identity (Hamidaddin 2019).
In religious practice, this tendency was manifested in opposition to bid a, or innovation,
which referred to practices and concepts that are not based on texts that Salafis consider
authentic. Opposition to heretical innovations, as the former Mufti of the Kingdom, Shaykh
Bin Baz (d. 1999) wrote, is an inseparable part of the commitment to following the prophetic
sunna. Salafis are instructed to show animosity towards the people of innovation, and
prevent the employment of innovators to fulfill religious duties (Bin Baz n.d.). The purge
of innovations was directed at particular practices and entire traditions of Islam, including
at times prayer motions as taught by the madhhabs, celebrations of the birthday of Prophet
Muhammad, or the entire tradition of Sufism, which was condemned as a bundle of
innovations borrowed from Hinduism, Christianity, Buddhism and other religions (Ernst
2002). It encouraged, likewise, the emergence of distinctive forms of sociability, noted in
practices such as growing long beards for men, which aimed at distinguishing Salafis from
other Muslims, and “as a noble announcement to introduce society to what it means to be a
sunni” (Rock-Singer 2019). Salafism, therefore, is both a negative theological articulation of
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what it is not—expressed in opposition to classical Islam—and a project of rediscovery of
true Islam.
The third and final category used by Haykel to define Salafis is what they often refer
to as manhaj, or methodology. Manhaj speaks to overall conceptions of how to apply
Salafi theological teachings. As such, manhaj refers also to political thought and action.
Most Salafis are self-declared political quietists and believe in the obligation to obey a
Muslim ruler, regardless of the ruler’s level of piety. Certainly, this does not exclude
political activism; it only defines it. For example, one of the most notorious apolitical
Salafi movements in the contemporary world is comprised of the follower of a Saudi
scholar, Rabi Madkhali, who are hence known as madkhalis. The apolitical stance of the
madkhalis does not prevent them from being one of the armed groups operating currently
in Libya or being staunch monarchists in Morocco (Wehrey and Boukhars 2019). In Saudi
Arabia they are opposed to Islamist groups that have propagated political reform (Lacroix
2011). There have been significant exceptions to Salafi political quietism. The group
behind the Siege of Mecca in 1979, led by Juhayman al- Utaybi (d. 1980), belonged to
a Salafi organization, arguably inspired in its early stages by the teachings of al-Albani
(Lacroix 2011). Additionally, since the 1970s, several generations of Saudi Salafis have been
influenced by various trends of Islamism. In the context of the Cold War, King Faysal (d.
1975) of Saudi Arabia initiated a number of policies that sought to oppose the spread of
Soviet-backed, left-leaning ideologies such as Nasserism, Bathism and Marxism (Bsheer
2018). The founding of the Islamic University of Medina, an institution that played a key
role in the promotion of Salafism around the world, was founded in this political context
(Farquhar 2016). King Faysal welcomed religious activists that had faced persecution
in Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and elsewhere, and many of them took teaching positions in the
kingdom’s universities (Lacroix 2011). These activists became ideological warriors in King
Faysal’s war against the spread of socialism.
The amalgamation of Salafism and Islamism in Saudi educational institutions resulted
in the emergence of the Sahwa. The role of the Sahwa in the Wahhabization of the Saudi
population cannot be overstated. Its control over educational institutions, as well as its
use of Brotherhood activity methods that involved the organization of youth camps, afterschool programs, week-end retreats, and so on, gave the movement the kind of access
that establishment Wahhabism had never enjoyed before (Menoret 2020). The Sahwa
inculcated in large segments of Saudi youth the teachings of Wahhabism and a distinctive
form of socialization. In time, this new generation became increasingly critical of several
aspects of Saudi social and political life, which were not in accordance with their vision
of a true Muslim society. Initially, Islamists challenged the legitimacy of the post-colonial
nation-states everywhere in the Muslim world, except for Saudi Arabia. That would later
change, especially after the kingdom hosted American troops following the Iraqi invasion
of Kuwait in 1990. The Sahwa became the main opposition force to the Royal Family. The
Sahwa, it should be noted, was not only seeking political reform. It aimed primarily at
transforming society according to a Salafi pietistic vision. If Saudi Arabia identified itself as
a Muslim country, it argued, than it should be so comprehensively, including in areas the
government had kept away from religious control, such as foreign policy and the economy.
A key conceptual term of the movement became shumuliyya, or comprehensiveness. Were
Saudi Arabia to fail in its proper implementation of Islam, a leading Sahwa scholar, Salman
al-Ouda, argued, it would lose its reason for existing (Alshamsi 2011).
While the Sahwa called for political reform, other groups emerged from this amalgamation of Salafism and Islamism, which participated in the fight against the Soviet Union in
Afghanistan. Their camps would soon become centers for the promotion of armed struggle
against what they saw as corrupt governments in Muslim countries, including in Saudi
Arabia. That was the context in which al-Qaeda was born. In 2003, al-Qaeda initiated violent attacks inside the kingdom, targeting compounds housing foreigners and the security
forces (Hegghammer 2010). The exclusivist theology of Salafism, which had legitimized
the Saudi expansion raids against the people of the Peninsula in early 20th century, had
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turned into a powerful oppositional force that threatened the political order of Saudi Arabia
and its neighboring countries. The Salafi proclivity towards excommunication of Muslims
following other theological schools was turned against the political systems of the Muslim
world (Nedza 2015). According to a key tenet of Salafi exclusivist theology, known as
al-wala’ wa-l-bara’, believers are commanded to show allegiance to fellow believers and
show enmity towards disbelievers (Bunzel 2018). The Saudi alliance with the United States,
at the time when the latter was engaged in a war against a Muslim country—such as in
Iraq—or supporting Israel against the Palestinians implied that the Saudi state had given
its allegiance to the disbelievers, and shown enmity towards fellow Muslims. Whereas
the Sahwa sought political reform and never challenged the legitimacy of the Saudi Royal
Family, al-Qaeda militants believed in armed struggle. The imprisonment in the mid-1990s
of the leading Sahwa activists led some of their followers to believe that the mobilizing
methods of the Sahwa had failed, and that violent insurrection was the only way to bring
political change.
The later emergence of ISIS, following the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the Civil
War in Syria following the Arab Spring, only accentuated the mobilizing potential of Salafiinspired militant groups (Bunzel 2016). The majority of modern-day Salafis have employed
theological reasoning that limits the application of excommunication embedded in their
understanding of monotheism, usually by presuming justifying ignorance (al- udhr bi-l-jahl).
Additionally, the religious establishment of Saudi Arabia has maintained its support for the
government. However, the emergence of ISIS returned the spotlight to Wahhabi inclination
towards takfir of Muslims they disagree with and the use of takfir to legitimize violence.
The divisions within the Salafis have only exasperated the internal contradictions and have
resulted in the further fragmentation of the movement. These tensions started taking place
after the death of the three leading Salafi scholars of the late 20th century, the Saudis Bin
Baz and Ibn Uthaymin (d. 2001) and the Albanian al-Albani (d. 1999). Salafism has failed
to produce scholars of equal charisma and authority. Bin Baz was replaced as Mufti of
Saudi Arabia by Shaykh Abd al- Aziz Al al-Shaykh (b. 1943), a descendant of the founder
of Wahhabism, Ibn Abd al-Wahhab, who lacks the scholarly reputation of his predecessor.
Post-Salafism refers partly to this later development when the Salafi movement lacks
unifying authority figures, resulting in its fragmentation. During the Syrian civil war, the
shared Salafi theology did not prevent militant organizations such as ISIS, al-Qaeda, or
Ahrar al-Sham from fighting against each other, all while they claimed to represent true
Salafism (Salem and Bassyuni 2015). The proliferation of internal Salafi disputes only serves
to highlight in the eyes of their followers the movement’s contradictions. After all, one of
the leading claims of Salafism has been that commitment to a singular interpretation of
theology, to hadith, and to the methodology of the ancestors would bring an end to Muslim
disunity. The actual Salafi fragmentation and fierce internal infights have belied one of
their leading rhetorical claims.
3. Saudi Post-Wahhabism as Post-Islamism
As stated earlier, post-Salafism in Saudi Arabia refers to changes in state policy, in
society, and within the Islamist movement. The Saudi government responded to the Islamist
protests in the 1990s by imprisoning several of its leaders (Lacroix 2011). Congruently, the
government initiated a process of institution-building and narrative-construction which
sought to “de-center religion” from its historical role as the cornerstone of the Kingdom’s
national identity. A key component of this policy was the promotion of nationalism, and
the emergence of a historical narrative that increasingly placed the focus on the secular
history of the Al-Saud clan while downplaying the role of the Wahhabi reformist movement
(Bsheer 2020; Al-Rasheed 2021). Not only has the once-banned celebration of the National
Day become more grandiose, and increasingly devoid of religious symbolism, but in 2022
the kingdom announced a new holiday: the Founding Day. The rationale behind the
Founding Day has been presented as a historical correction, pin pointing the beginnings
of the kingdom not in 1932, the year of the founding of the Kingdom, or in 1744, the
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year marking the founding of the First Saudi State as a result of the Saudi—Wahhabi
alliance, but in 1727. According to Saudi newspapers, the Founding Day corrects “the
myth” perpetuated by some historians and religious extremists who have established the
year 1744 as the beginning of the First Saudi State. The importance of this new “reappraisal”
lies in the fact that it ceases to portray the founding of the Saudi state as the outcome of
the alliance between the two leaders. Instead, it portrays the founding of the state as a
project that preceded the Wahhabi movement (Alamer 2022). Whereas this manifestation of
post-Salafism is commonly attributed to the rise of Crown Prince Muhammad Bin Salman
(MBS), following his father’s coronation in 2015 (Blin 2021), in reality the shift has been
taking place for over three decades.
Congruently with the shift towards nationalism, the Saudi government has over the
years established stronger control over the religious field, closing a number of websites
dedicated to issuing religious opinions (fatwas), while targeting religious discourse that
was considered extremist. In 2010, former King Abdullah issued a Royal Decree making
the state-sponsored Council of Senior Scholars the only body authorized to issue fatwas
(Aloudh 2018). Starting from the mid 1990s, the government extended support for Salafi
groups that are loyal to the government and oppose the Islamist movement, such as the
madkhalis, and granted limited toleration to historically marginalized religious minorities,
such as Sufis and Shi is considered loyal to the state (Lacroix 2011). Furthermore, a policy
of infitah or opening was initiated. It offered the promise of easing certain social restrictions
and more space for what are considered in the Saudi context liberal voices (or secularists—
according to their Islamist opponents). In addition, it introduced educational and artistic
projects that challenged Wahhabi norms (Meijer 2010).
In the context of the aftermath of the September 11 attacks and the emergence of
sectarian violence that followed the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, the Saudi government
committed both domestically and internationally to combating extremism and promoting
religious moderation. King Abdullah was one of the signatories of the Amman Declaration
in 2004), which identified excommunication and salvific exclusivism as the root cause
of political violence in the region. He would later host the Mecca Declaration in 2006,
conveying a similar message. Critics have noted that these initiatives seek to put the blame
for the spread of political violence on religion in order to shift blame from authoritarianism
(Sheline 2019). Relevant to the emergence of post-Salafism, this critical focus on religious
doctrine, that directly targeted Salafi tenets of theology, forced Salafi scholars to moderate
their discourse. By way of example, a religious scholar like Shaykh Salih Al al-Shaykh, the
longest serving Saudi Minister of Religious Affairs (till 2018), and a direct descendant of
the founder of Wahhabism, is known for authoring religious texts in the 1980s where he
passionately advocated for excommunicating Muslims he considered to be heretics (Al
al-Shaykh 1987). Throughout the first decade of the 21st century, however, as one can see
in his personal website, he has been equally passionate in condemning the use of takfir.
The most significant domestic event in the string of these government-sponsored
initiatives is the National Dialogue in Mecca in 2003. It was organized by the Crown
Prince (later King) Abdullah. For the first time, Sufi and Shi a scholars were publicly
recognized and invited to contribute to the national conversation about extremism. The
National Dialogue has been criticized for raising minority expectations and failing to
deliver (Matthiesen 2015). It should be noted, however, that a high-profile event, organized
by the government, became a forum where the teachings of Wahhabism and their social
and political manifestations were publicly criticized. A number of attendees identified key
tenets of the Wahhabi creed as the root causes of extremism. Among them was a Meccan
Sufi scholar, Muhammad Alawi al-Maliki (d. 2004), who throughout the 1980s had faced
persecution, forced exile, and even threats to his life. He presented a paper in which he
identified the doctrine of the tripartite division of monotheism as the ideological pillar
of extremism (ghuluww) (Al-Maliki 2004). The event was significant not only because it
targeted Salafi theology, but also because it portrayed the government as standing above
affiliation with one particular brand of Islam (Lacroix 2005).
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In 2017, MBS identified the “return to moderation” as a hallmark of the kingdom’s
political orientation (Sheline 2017). This was projected as a reversal of the religious and
political culture that emerged in the kingdom after the Siege of Mecca and the Iranian
Revolution in 1979. The return to moderation implied a “war against extremism”, which targeted primarily former Sahwa affiliated, reformist preachers. Saudi television channels and
newspapers have reminded the public of the Siege of Mecca, of young activists breaking
musical instruments through the 1980s, and of Sahwa scholars giving incendiary speeches
during the First Gulf War. Islamist reformist preachers were collectively targeted, imprisoned, and blamed for preaching extremism, regardless of the distinctive characteristics of
their views, activism, or later transformations. A defining characteristic of this promotion
of moderation is its equating of political activism seeking political reform and participation
with violence and extremism. As part of the “return to moderation”, the government has
created social spaces outside the control of religious norms, limiting religious control over
public morality, education, and the legal system, which signals a shrinking of the religious
field and of Salafi authority in society. (Mouline 2018; Sinani 2019).
It should be noted that the government pressure on Salafi scholars to shift their
discourse towards state-sponsored moderation has diminished their status in the eyes of
their supporters. The reforms of MBS have openly opposed Wahhabi norms. Establishment
scholars have been obliged to either issue statements and religious opinions in support of
the government that contradict their previous views or simply remain silent. The promotion
of entertainment projects, the opening of movie theaters, the lifting of social restrictions,
and gender segregation rules are the most obvious cases. Critics have argued that these are
not real reforms, and that the kingdom has failed to address the problematic teachings of
Salafism (Hellyer 2018). These reforms, however, constitute a major shrinking of the role of
religion and the power of Saudi Salafi scholars, and in so doing MBS is “touching nothing,
but changing everything” (Farouk and Brown 2021). These reforms have paralyzed and
disabled a key institution of Wahhabi social presence, the Council for the Promotion of
Virtue and Prevention of Evil (Mouline 2014). Like the “de-centering” of Wahhabism from
the founding narrative of the nation, this step constitutes a significant indication of the
diminishing power of Saudi Salafism.
Recently, in a televised interview, MBS was asked about the meaning and application
of ‘moderation’. He reiterated that he is committed to following the Quran and the Sunna.
However, he added that he is not required to follow the interpretative school of Ibn Abd
al-Wahhab and that he intends to follow only the most reliable statements of the Prophet,
which have been transmitted from several chains of transmission, such that Muslim scholars
consider their fabrication impossible (mutawatir). Such hadiths, however, are very few in
number, indicating a substantial reduction in the number of hadiths the Prince considers
worthy of referring to. Additionally, in these statements he challenges once again the
historical Saudi-Wahhabi labor division, where religious expertise was entrusted to the
scholars. The Prince appeared to symbolically occupy both roles (Al-Saud 2021).
The post-Islamist and post-Wahhabi shift in Saudi Arabia goes beyond government
policy, referring additionally to shifts in public perceptions regarding the role of Salafism
in the Saudi public sphere. A few signposts should serve to illustrate this change. In 2002,
15 school-girls died in a fire in Mecca. Allegedly, firefighters were prevented from entering
the building, and the girls were trapped inside by the religious police, since they had
not been properly covered. Media articles targeted the religious culture of the kingdom,
and criticism did not spare even Ibn Taymiyya (Ahmed and Yosef 2010). The notion that
there was something wrong with the religious culture of the kingdom was being openly
debated. In 2003, al-Qaeda affiliated groups launched a number of terrorist attacks in the
kingdom. Former Saudi fighters of the Afghan war, who were once hailed as heroes, lost
their credibility and support once they brought their jihad back home (Hegghammer 2010).
Meanwhile, the religious norms imposed on society had turned ‘boredom’ into a marker of
youth culture (Menoret 2014). It was certainly more so for women in the kingdom (Alsanea
2008). Throughout the rule of King Abdullah, over one hundred thousand Saudis were
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granted scholarships to study in the U.S., Europe, Australia, and elsewhere around the
world. Increasingly, the social vision of Wahhabism stood in opposition to the values,
lifestyles, and aspirations of growing numbers of Saudis. The search for moderation,
therefore, was not simply a government policy; it spoke to the concerns and aspirations of
various segments of society.
4. Internal Revisionism of Salafism
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Government critique of religious zealotry, especially in the form of armed militancy,
created the conditions for a critique of various tenets of the creed and practices of Salafism
from within the Sahwa movement, and even from within Salafi centers of learning. The
concern over extremism was not limited to government officials alone. Leading Islamist
thinkers and intellectuals of the Awakening Movement, such as the Qatar-based Shaykh
Yusuf al-Qaradawi (b. 1926)—among others—recognized the presence of excessive zealotry
in the Movement (Al-Qaradawi 1986). After the imprisonments of Sahwa activists in the
mid-1990s, most Sahwa scholars abandoned the earlier collision course with the state, and
became active in condemning militant groups such as al-Qaeda. Indeed, several thinkers,
preachers, and activists in this period emerged as critics of certain aspects of the kingdom’s
religious culture (Alshamsi 2011; Lacroix 2019). A leading Sahwa scholar, Shaykh Salman
al-Ouda, having come out of prison in 1999, famously rode to the National Dialogue in 2003
with a Shi a scholar. He became one of the first high-profile Salafi scholars to attend a Sufi
gathering in 2005, calling for a recognition of Muslim theological diversity (Ambah 2006).
Al-Ouda promoted a vision of the renewal of Islamic legal and political thought, reflective
of the influence on his writings of non-Salafi scholars such as al-Qaradawi and Abdullah
Bin Bayyah (b. 1935). A scholar with global following, al-Ouda emerged as a leading voice
of internal Salafi revisionism (Al-Ouda 2012; Razavian 2018). He could have been a natural
proponent of a government turn towards moderation had it not been for his support for
the Arab Spring. His support for political reform led to his second imprisonment in 2017.
He is kept in solitary confinement and it is feared that he might face the death penalty. The
irony perhaps is in the fact that the Saudi government has presented the imprisonment of
scholars such as al-Ouda as part of its promotion of moderation. To the Saudi government,
moderation has meant first and foremost obedience to the state. In the context of the Arab
Spring, Islamists represented a threat to the political order of the Middle East, which the
Saudi government has been determined to preserve (Lacroix 2017).
Following the imprisonment of the leading Sahwa activists in mid 1990s, offshoots of
the movement appeared that self-identified as ‘Islamo-liberals’. These activists extended
invitations of cooperation to representatives of religious minorities, such as the Shi is,
challenging Wahhabi uncompromising animosity towards them. These Islamo-liberals
also argued that social and political reform requires addressing critically core aspects of
Wahhabi theology. Even exiled political activists, some of whom come from prominent
Wahhabi families, such as Muhammad b. Abdullah al-Mas ari, wrote texts that criticized
the Wahhabi understanding of monotheism (Al-Mas ari 2019). Despite the fact that the
Islamo-liberals failed to gain mass support, they contributed to the public critique of
Wahhabism, constituting one of the manifestations of post-Salafism among Islamist activists
(Lacroix 2004). The emergence of ISIS created the conditions for increased internal critique
from within Salafi circles. A well-known Saudi preacher and former Imam of the Grand
Mosque of Mecca, Adil al-Kalbani (b. 1959), declared in a televised interview that groups
such as ISIS share the teachings of Saudi Salafism (Al-Kalbani 2016). In later years he has
retracted his previous excommunication of Shi is and has criticized Salafi rigidity regarding
gender segregation. Visiting a Sufi gathering attended by this author in the city of Jeddah,
Saudi Arabia in 2013, al-Kalbani stated that Sufis and Salafis are brothers, a far cry from the
established Salafi excommunication of Sufis.
No other Saudi scholar, however, has critiqued Salafism from within Salafi institutions
of learning to the extent and depth of Dr. Sharif Hatim al- Awni. Born in Taif in 1966, a
city in the western part of Saudi Arabia, al- Awni hails from a family of descendants of the
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Prophet Muhammad, which ruled Mecca prior to the founding of the Kingdom. In the early
stage of his religious studies, he was inspired by the teachings of al-Albani. By his own
admission, he listened to hundreds of Albani’s recorded tapes. He studied at Um al-Qurra
University in Mecca, where he received his doctoral degree, and where he is currently a
professor at the Department of Quranic and Prophetic Sunna Studies. A former member of
the Saudi Consultative Council, a prolific author of several works in hadith, jurisprudence,
and other fields of Islamic learning, he has been active in media platforms, social media,
and conferences. He has been recognized as one of the most influential Muslim scholars
in the world by the 500 Most Influential Muslims report published by the Royal Institute
of Jordan.
The work of al- Awni has attracted the attention of several observers, who have
portrayed his work at times as a form of Salafi reclamation of its teachings from groups such
as ISIS, while others have emphasized his departure from Salafism (Razavian 2018; Ismail
2019). Salafism, and particularly its Wahhabi branch, is often depicted as espousing a strict
and rigid articulation of Islamic dogma, giving the impression of Salafi uncompromising
commitment to orthodoxy. Al- Awni, however, has made the case that the problem he
identifies with Salafi dogma is its erroneous understanding of creedal concepts and its
departure from established Sunni doctrines. Many of the arguments al- Awni presents in
his constant and developing critique of Salafism are not particularly new, and indeed many
of them have been repeated by many Muslim scholars since the emergence of Wahhabism.
The real novelty in al- Awni’s critique is that it is coming from a high-profile Saudi scholar
and a professor in an elite Salafi religious institution of learning. Al- Awni’s critique of
Salafism has given rise to angry reactions from several Salafi scholars, including senior
figures of the Saudi religious establishment such as Salih al-Fawzan (b. 1935). Al- Awni,
it can be argued, has brought a series of critical Sunni concerns regarding Salafism to the
center of Salafi circles and to the forefront of Saudi public debate. This stand seems to
contradict the claim that al- Awni represents a Salafi reclamation of its teachings from
groups such as ISIS. Indeed, al- Awni has argued that the emergence of ISIS has brought a
sense of urgency in addressing problematic features of Salafism. The second and equally
important aspect of al- Awni’s critique, as it will be briefly illustrated in this article, is that it
has been articulated through the works of scholars, texts, and methodologies of the classical
period that are largely accepted and respected by Salafis. In this regard, despite the Salafi
denunciations of al- Awni, his critique is reflective of Salafi epistemology. One might even
argue that al- Awni’s critique of Salafi-honored scholars such as Ibn Taymiyya (d. 1328)
is in itself an expression of the Salafi-inspired iconoclastic inclination. If Salafism teaches
that Muslims should not blindly follow any single scholar, and should follow instead the
textual evidence, al- Awni has extended this same principle to scholars revered by Salafis,
such as Ibn Taymiyya. Therefore, al- Awni cannot be fully described as having departed
from Salafism. Al- Awni has criticized the sacralization of the legacy of Ibn Taymiyya in
contemporary Salafi thought, and has called for a revival (tajdid) of Salafi discourse. He has
relativized Salafi claims to truth, writing that “Salafism and Wahhabism are not infallible”,
and yet at the same time he has stated that his critique comes from love, and not hatred for
Salafism, calling for a renewal of Salafi discourse, not for banning it (Al- Awni 2014a, 2017).
Key to his rise to prominence is the fact that al- Awni has been allowed to articulate
his views. No Saudi scholar can appear on TV, hold public gatherings at his home, or
participate in international conferences—especially one who holds controversial views that
oppose establishment dogma—without the tacit or explicit permission of Saudi authorities.
Al- Awni (2014b) first drew public attention in 2009 with an article titled “We will call upon
the Truth” (Sanasda u bi-l-haqq). In it, he challenged some of the legal opinions (fatwas) of
the Council of Senior Scholars, and made critical remarks regarding the legacy of Ibn Abd
al-Wahhab. Over the years, he has addressed a number of important tenets of Wahhabi
thought. He has refuted the notion that Muslims who seek the intercession of prophets
and saints are guilty of idolatry in the same manner of the pagans of Mecca at the time of
revelation. As mentioned earlier, this claim represents a core aspect of Wahhabi theology.
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His refutation was supported by quoting the works of scholars of the classical period that
are respected by Salafis, such as Ibn Kathir (d. 1373). He continues to oppose the practice
of asking for the assistance and intercession of the dead, but argues that it should not be
the basis for excommunication, and it should be treated rather as a matter of acceptable
differences. Al- Awni has argued that practices that are considered by contemporary Salafis
as manifestations of idolatry, such as seeking blessing and kissing the tomb of the Prophet
Muhammad, were considered acceptable by scholars that Salafis honor as eponyms of their
school, such as Ahmad Ibn Hanbal (d. 855) (Al- Awni 2020a). He has gone further and
critiqued Ibn Taymiyya’s unrestrained division of the categories of creed in the doctrine of
the tripartite division of monotheism, and argued that those scholars who later followed his
ideas went even further in their erroneous understanding of monotheism—a clear reference
to Ibn Abd al-Wahhab. On the basis of this faulty categorization, al- Awni has argued,
Ibn Taymiyya and his modern-day followers have drawn incorrect conclusions about the
Ash ari and Maturidi theologians (Al- Awni 2020c).
Al- Awni has further expanded his critique of Wahhabi theology by addressing its
understanding of the concept of worship. As mentioned earlier, Wahhabi understanding of
worship and the conviction that most Muslims do not worship God appropriately have
served as the reason that motivated the birth of the movement and inform Wahhabi salvific
exclusivism. To Wahhabis, non-Salafi Muslims fail to recognize God’s sovereignty. In
a treatise titled “Worship: Gate to Monotheism and Gate to Excommunication” ( Ibada:
bawaba al-tawhid . . . wa bawaba al-takfir), al- Awni essentially argued that according to primary Islamic sources, Wahhabis have simply failed to grasp the Muslim understanding of
monotheism, implying, therefore, that Wahhabi theological rigidity is not a sign of their
principled commitment, but of their faulty reading of the sources (Al- Awni n.d.). Additionally, al- Awni has called for moderating Salafi understanding of Allegiance and Rupture, or
al-wala’ wa-l-bara (Wagemakers 2008; Qadhi 2018). This doctrine is often ascribed to militant
groups alone. In reality, it constitutes a central teaching of mainstream Saudi Salafism
(al-Fawzan 1998). Drawing from the example of the Prophet Muhammad, al- Awni has
argued that enmity is justified only towards non-Muslims who are antagonistic to Muslims
and their faith. Otherwise, enmity towards amicable non-Muslims is not justified by the
Islamic sources. Perhaps his most important work in this context has been Excommunication
of the People of Two Testimonies [the Muslims] (Takfir Ahl al-Shahadatayn), for which Yasir
Qadhi (2018) has argued that it constitutes an indirect critical response to one of the main
works of Ibn Abd al-Wahhab, The Four Principles (al-Qawa id al-arba a). In it, al- Awni
has challenged the Salafi bases for excommunication and has argued that unwarranted
declarations of takfir lead to violence and corruption in society (Al- Awni 2016).
As noted earlier, a key characteristic of Salafi doctrine is the accusation of other Muslims of introducing into Islam concepts, practices, and norms which are foreign to the
religion, known as bid a, or innovation. In a number of texts, as in his How to Deal with Innovators (al-ta amul ma a-l-mubtadi a), al- Awni has argued for a revision of the understanding
of what constitutes innovation, and has appealed for a moderate methodology for treating
those that are considered heretics. He has recently expanded upon this argument in a
number of Zoom lectures that took place during the COVID-19 pandemic, where he cited
in support of his arguments the works of medieval scholars such as al-Dhahabi (d. 1348),
who are respected in Salafi circles.
In addition to doctrinal topics, al- Awni has issued a number of fatwas, challenging
well-established Salafi normative positions. Among them, he has declared permissible the
celebration of birthdays, congratulating Christians on Christmas, celebrating the National
Holiday, the permissibility of listening to music, and the permissibility of celebrating the
birthday of Prophet Muhammad (mawlid). Beyond addressing particular Salafi rulings,
al- Awni, especially through his social media accounts, has addressed the Salafi inclination
to promote the most stringent positions found among a variety of available legal rulings.
On his social media accounts, he has critiqued the Salafi promotion of a sense of alienation,
which seeks to encourage among the faithful the feeling of being strangers (ghuraba) in
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contemporary societies. In conferences and in his writings he has appealed for a broader
understanding of what constitutes a Sunni Muslim, arguing both against those who seek
to exclude Salafis from Sunnism and against Salafis who exclude Ash aris and Sufis from
Sunnism or Islam. He was one of the few Saudis to participate in the Grozny Conference in
Chechnya, titled “Who are the Sunnis”, where he debated against the views of the Ash ari
theologian Sa id al-Fawda, who argued that Salafis are not Sunnis. He has additionally
promoted this inclusive approach in his writings, for example in his “The Understanding of
“Sunna” and “Community” in the Term “The People of Sunna and Community” (mafhum
‘al-sunna’ wa ‘al-jama a’ fi laqab ‘ahl al-sunna wa-l-jama a’) (Al- Awni n.d.).
In his critique of Salafism, al- Awni has provided the building blocks for a theological
outlook, that could enable a restructuring of Salafism in the contemporary world. It is based
on foundations selected from classical sources that are accepted in contemporary Salafi
thought, while it abandons some of its most problematic features. Al- Awni’s post-Salafism
is primarily post-sectarian. It offers a rapprochement of Salafism to the legacy of classical
Sunni Islam, while it seeks to challenge the neo-traditionalist rejection of Salafism. To
what extent, however, do the views of scholars such as al- Awni represent a larger trend of
Saudi Salafism?
5. The limits of Post-Salafism in Saudi Arabia
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The trajectory of Saudi policy on religion has led observers to conclude that especially
under MBS Saudi Arabia is undergoing a process of de-Wahhabisation (Blin 2021), or that
perhaps as a state religion, Wahhabism “is dead” (Alamer 2022).
To a certain extent, MBS has continued the policies of the former King Abdullah.
There is, however, a significant shift. King Abdullah encouraged a climate of limited
opening, which included the recognition of religious diversity and the presence of religious
minorities. The current ruler, however, has retracted the limited freedom extended to some
of those minorities. The various Sufi gatherings, for example, that flourished during the
rule of King Abdullah, have been—with very few exceptions—shut down. Such spaces
offered alternative religious expressions, which are not available anymore. As a result,
the only religious spaces available to the majority of Saudis are state-mosques, which are
controlled by Salafis. In other words, while the religious field in Saudi Arabia has been
shrinking, Salafi control over the existing field has been consolidated. In the words of
Andrew Hammond (2021), Saudi Arabia “is defanging Wahhabism, not dethroning it.”
The Saudi government has allowed critical voices like that of al- Awni to emerge,
but such voices have remained solitary and isolated. By al- Awni’s own admission in
conversation with this author, there are individual Saudi scholars who support a reform
of Salafism according to the terms he has presented, but this has not turned into a trend
or a movement. The religious institutions of learning remain under solid Salafi control,
and by several accounts, al- Awni is treated as a pariah in his own university department.
While most outside observers are still impressed by the opening of movie theaters, the
organizations of rock-concerts and film festivals, and of women driving, less attention
has been paid to the continuous appearances of MBS side by side with religious scholars,
kissing their heads as a sign of deference. This relationship is crucial to the legitimacy
of the ruling family, especially in the eyes of millions of Saudis who attend the country’s
vast network of mosques. Several accounts on social media show MBS in audience with
prominent Wahhabi scholars. This fulfills two important symbolic functions. It assures
Salafi audiences that the scholars are privately advising the Crown Prince, fulfilling their
obligation of advising the ruler, and that the Prince is seeking the advice of the scholars,
fulfilling the ethical obligation of seeking their advice. When advice is offered publicly,
those rare transgressors are imprisoned. The establishment scholars have remained the
wall of legitimacy against political critique, which in Saudi Arabia is often articulated in
religious language. The observation of some scholars about the alleged Sufi tendencies of
some members of the Royal Family are for all practical purposes irrelevant (Bano 2018).
Members of the Saudi Royal Family might be privately Sufi or non-religious, but they are
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politically Wahhabi. Certainly, there is a long history of Saudi taming of Wahhabism, but it
still remains a cornerstone of the country’s legitimacy (Mouline 2018).
When, in 2018, the Saudi government opened the first movie theaters and allowed
women to drive, at the very same time it closed pilgrimage sites that are considered as
heretical by Salafis, such in Mount Hira, or it cut off a tree in Taif that was often visited
by South Asian pilgrims. Only recently, the Saudi Minister of Religious Affairs reminded
global audiences once again of Salafi sectarianism by condemning and labeling as “terrorist”
the Tablighi Jama‘at, a major Muslim movement. In Friday sermons, the current ruler is
portrayed as a defender of Sunnism from the Shi i threat headed by Iran. Despite the
changes in government policy, Saudi Salafi scholars enjoy more social prestige, political
access, and financial resources than Muslim scholars anywhere else in the region. By all
accounts, they will continue to honor the Saudi-Wahhabi pact, even as the terms of the pact
are being changed to their disadvantage.
Judging by these developments, state pressure on Salafism in Saudi Arabia will
primarily focus on social aspects of Salafi teaching, while doctrinal aspects will probably
receive less attention. It is certainly too early to tell, and yet, Salafi scholars might—as some
indications from social media activities suggest—concentrate on waging their battles on
purely theological grounds, where they can continue to advance their claims of doctrinal
superiority. On the other hand, Saudi Salafi silence regarding state reforms that go against
the teachings of Salafism will continue to diminish the global and local reputation of their
scholars. Saudi Salafism, therefore, will likely have a lesser role in shaping global Salafism.
Even within Saudi Arabia, the truth claims of Salafism will continue to be challenged by
scholars such as al- Awni. If anything, his loud presence is indicative that Saudi Salafism
has lost the power to silence religious dissent at will. His theological project offers the
potential of a religious discourse that distances itself from aspects of Salafism that have
become increasingly embarrassing in the post-ISIS scene. His presence in the Saudi religious
field is a clear indication of ongoing Salafi transformation. The distinctive features of that
transformation, however, remain to be seen.
6. Conclusions
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Post-Salafism in Saudi Arabia refers to a combination of political, social, and religious
processes. It reflects government responses to Islamist activism, to societal reactions to
Islamism’s totalizing pietistic vision, and to the internal critique of key tenets of the Salafi
creed, particularly to its salvific exclusivism. The government reforms have resulted in
a shrinking of the religious field and a reformulation of the kingdom’s political identity
in ways that have diminished the role of religion. The government has not denounced
Salafism itself or attacked the kingdom’s religious establishment. However, the attacks
against “extremism” have often included attacks against Salafi-championed social norms,
and conceptions of religious practice have created the conditions for a wider public critique
of Salafism. The establishment religious scholars have remained silent and have called
for continuous support for the government, further diminishing their authority among
followers in the kingdom and abroad. On the theological level, internal critics such as
al- Awni have addressed key aspects of Salafi theology, such as the understanding of
worship, of monotheism, of innovation, and of ‘Allegiance and Rupture’. Additionally,
targets of this critique have been legal opinions that in modern times marked the Salafi
tendency to disassociate from wider society. This kind of critique has been made possible
in the context of government policies described above. However, Salafism remains an
important component of Saudi political identity. The aim of the government has been to
shape the kind of domesticated Salafism that will support its reform agenda and continue
to offer legitimacy. Despite the enormous transformations outlined in this article, Salafism
dominates the religious life of the kingdom, even if in a shrinking religious sphere.
Funding: This research was funded by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation.
Institutional Review Board Statement: Not applicable.
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Informed Consent Statement: Not applicable.
Data Availability Statement: Not applicable.
“
Acknowledgments: The research for this paper was conducted during a one-year fellowship at the
Leibniz-Zentrum Moderner Orient in Berlin. I would like to thank the Fritz Thyssen Foundation for
awarding me a one-year post-doctoral fellowship, and the Contested Religion Unit for welcoming
me. I owe my gratitude to Salman Nasir and Yasir Qadhi for sharing their views on the topic. I am
particularly indebted to Salman Nasir for making possible the meeting with Shaykh Hatim al- Awni.
I am immensely grateful to the shaykh for his hospitality and generosity. Rezart Beka has offered
immense support in providing texts, insights, and contacts. I cherish his friendship.
Conflicts of Interest: The author declares no conflict of interest.
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