The Arab Nationalists Movement 1951-1971: From Pressure Group to Socialist Party (ص 21)
غرض
- عنوان
- The Arab Nationalists Movement 1951-1971: From Pressure Group to Socialist Party (ص 21)
- المحتوى
- 
                        14
 superstitions to lead to an Islamic revival, secular
 nationalists, such as Ibrahim al-Yaziji and Negib Azoury,
 aimed at the removal of religion altogether from the realm
 of national action. Christian intellectuals, being the
 readiest tG respond to the new forces from the West and
 therefore the vanguard of change, naturally desired to
 establish a national state without any reference to Islam.
 Christian Arab thinkers, in their role as the best
 interpreters of Western values and political thought, were
 the first to advocate the idea of Arab nationalism devoid
 of any Islamic implications. ?® A modern state, they
 emphasized, cannot have equal and less equal second-class
 17
 citizens like the dimmis of classical Islam. The
 separation of religion from the state, they argued, was
 in the interest of both Islam and the Arab nation.*®
 However, in their endeavor to build up a modern state on
 the principle of nationality and in imitation of Western
 political organization, the secular nationalists were
 16h sham Sharabi, Arab Intellectuals and the West:
 The Formative Years, 1875-1914 (Baltimore: The Johns
 Hopkins Press, 1970), p. Li.
 isn an Islamic state the dimmis or the protected
 possessors of a revelation (ahl al-kitab) while. adequately
 safeguarded by human rights they nevertheless are subject
 to certain inequalities concerning their duties. Cf. E.I.J.
 Rosenthal, Islam in the Modern National State (Cambridge:
 The University Press), pp. 107-108.
 18
 Haim, op. cit., p. 30.
- تاريخ
- 1971-02-07
- المنشئ
- Basil R. Al-Kubaisi
- مجموعات العناصر
- Generated Pages Set
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