Article
Author: Bader Mousa Al-Saif (Georgetown University)
Since independence, the military and the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) have exerted unmatched influence and control over Egypt. However, an “alternative current” is on the rise. In this paper, first, I survey the role played by the military and the MB. Second, I highlight one of the voices of this alternative current, Abdul Rahman Yusuf. The evolution of his thought in post-July 2013 coup era unveils the difficulties facing this alternative current in competing with the well-entrenched voices of both the military and the MB. Notwithstanding such challenges, I argue that suggesting the existence and eventual resilience and popularity of an alternative current that politically and intellectually defies both the military and the MB in Egypt is not a far-fetched aspiration should the leaders of this current articulate their ideas with clarity, embrace genuine reform, celebrate diversity and difference as prerequisites for constructive societal and political pluralism.
Keywords: Arab uprisings, Islam, Egypt, Muslim Brotherhood, military, intellectuals, alternative current
How to Cite: Al-Saif, B. (2015) “Neither Fulul nor Ikhwan: The Thought of Abdul Rahman Yusuf and the Rise of an Alternative Current in Post-Morsi Egypt”, Journal of Islamic and Middle Eastern Multidisciplinary Studies: Mathal. 4(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.17077/2168-538X.1066