The Extensive Salafization of Malaysian Islam /
Abdul Hamid, Ahmad Fauzi
The Extensive Salafization of Malaysian Islam / Ahmad Fauzi Abdul Hamid. - 1 online resource (41 p.)
Frontmatter -- FOREWORD -- The Extensive Salafization of Malaysian Islam -- The Extensive Salafization of Malaysian Islam -- AN OVERVIEW OF MALAYSIAN ISLAM -- THE KAUM MUDA: SALAFIS BUT NOT WAHHABIS -- SALAFIZATION IN POST-INDEPENDENT MALAYSIA: PAS AND ISLAMIST MOVEMENTS -- SALAFIZATION IN CONTEMPORARY MALAYSIA: UMNO, THE GOVERNMENT AND STATE INSTITUTIONS -- SALAFIZATION IN THE ERA OF NAJIB RAZAK -- MALAYSIA-SAUDI ARABIA RELATIONS AND CONCLUDING REMARKS -- REFERENCES
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
The form of Islam normatively understood and practised in Malaysia, i.e. Malaysian Islam, has undergone myriad changes since the 1970s as a result of gradual Salafization. Powered by Saudi Arabian largesse and buoyed by the advent of the Internet, this new wave of Salafization has eclipsed an earlier Salafi trend that spawned the Kaum Muda reformist movement. Recent surveys suggest that there has been a rise in the level of extremism among Muslims in Malaysia. While the majority is far from being enamoured by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), the Wahhabi-Salafi doctrine that ISIS claims to represent in unadulterated form does appeal to many of them following the decades-long Salafization of Islam in the country. This tallies with media reports on increasing numbers of Malay-Muslim youth harbouring an attraction towards radical Islamist movements such as ISIS. Salafization, referring to a process of mindset and attitudinal transformation rather than the growth of Salafi nodes per se, is not restricted to individuals or groups identified as "Salafi", but rather affects practically all levels of Malay-Muslim society, cutting across political parties, governmental institutions and non-state actors. It has resulted in Islamist, rather than Islamic, ideals increasingly defining the tenor of mainstream Islam in Malaysia, with worrying consequences for both intra-Muslim and inter-religious relations. Responses to the Wahhabi-Salafi onslaught from the Malay-Muslim ruling elite in Malaysia have been ambivalent, and have had weak counteracting effects on the Salafization process.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9789814762519 9789814762526
10.1355/9789814762526 doi
Islam and politics-Malaysia.
Islamic Studies.
Islamic fundamentalism-Malaysia.
Salafīyah-Malaysia.
Islamic Studies.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Islamic Studies.
The Extensive Salafization of Malaysian Islam / Ahmad Fauzi Abdul Hamid. - 1 online resource (41 p.)
Frontmatter -- FOREWORD -- The Extensive Salafization of Malaysian Islam -- The Extensive Salafization of Malaysian Islam -- AN OVERVIEW OF MALAYSIAN ISLAM -- THE KAUM MUDA: SALAFIS BUT NOT WAHHABIS -- SALAFIZATION IN POST-INDEPENDENT MALAYSIA: PAS AND ISLAMIST MOVEMENTS -- SALAFIZATION IN CONTEMPORARY MALAYSIA: UMNO, THE GOVERNMENT AND STATE INSTITUTIONS -- SALAFIZATION IN THE ERA OF NAJIB RAZAK -- MALAYSIA-SAUDI ARABIA RELATIONS AND CONCLUDING REMARKS -- REFERENCES
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
The form of Islam normatively understood and practised in Malaysia, i.e. Malaysian Islam, has undergone myriad changes since the 1970s as a result of gradual Salafization. Powered by Saudi Arabian largesse and buoyed by the advent of the Internet, this new wave of Salafization has eclipsed an earlier Salafi trend that spawned the Kaum Muda reformist movement. Recent surveys suggest that there has been a rise in the level of extremism among Muslims in Malaysia. While the majority is far from being enamoured by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), the Wahhabi-Salafi doctrine that ISIS claims to represent in unadulterated form does appeal to many of them following the decades-long Salafization of Islam in the country. This tallies with media reports on increasing numbers of Malay-Muslim youth harbouring an attraction towards radical Islamist movements such as ISIS. Salafization, referring to a process of mindset and attitudinal transformation rather than the growth of Salafi nodes per se, is not restricted to individuals or groups identified as "Salafi", but rather affects practically all levels of Malay-Muslim society, cutting across political parties, governmental institutions and non-state actors. It has resulted in Islamist, rather than Islamic, ideals increasingly defining the tenor of mainstream Islam in Malaysia, with worrying consequences for both intra-Muslim and inter-religious relations. Responses to the Wahhabi-Salafi onslaught from the Malay-Muslim ruling elite in Malaysia have been ambivalent, and have had weak counteracting effects on the Salafization process.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9789814762519 9789814762526
10.1355/9789814762526 doi
Islam and politics-Malaysia.
Islamic Studies.
Islamic fundamentalism-Malaysia.
Salafīyah-Malaysia.
Islamic Studies.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Islamic Studies.

