Muslim world
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The Muslim world is a term given to the world-wide community of those who adhere to the religion of Islam. This community, who are known as Muslims, number approximately 1.5 - 1.6 billion people. This community does not constitute a distinct race, but are spread across every race; the world's Muslims are connected only by the heritage of adhering to a common religion.
When believers in Islam co-operate as Muslims, they are known as the "ummah", which means "all of the believers". The faith emphasizes unity and defense of fellow Muslims, so it should be common for Muslim nations to co-operate; however, nationalist currents have tended to divide rather than unite the Islamic world, particularly in the second half of the 20th century.
Geographic spread
Many Muslims not only live in, but also have an official status in the following regions:
- Southwest Asia: Arab nations such as Saudi Arabia, Iraq and several non-Arab nations, e.g. Turkey, Azerbaijan and Iran
- Africa: North African countries such as Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt and Sub-Saharan countries like Mali, Nigeria or Somalia.
- the Balkans: countries like Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro.
- Eastern Europe: parts of Russia and Ukraine (especially in the Crimea).
- Central Asia: Afghanistan, formerly Soviet states like Uzbekistan
- South Asia: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and the Maldives
- Southeast Asia: Indonesia, Brunei and Malaysia
The countries of Southwest Asia, and many in Northern Africa are considered part of the Middle East.
Also worthy of mention are provinces of Kosovo in the former Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and Chechnya in the Russian Federation, where Muslims are in the majority.
Some definitions would also include the sizable Muslim minorities in:
- several countries of the European Union (especially France and Germany)
- several regions of the Russian Federation
- People's Republic of China
- Singapore, Thailand, and the Philippines
- The United States and Canada
Demographics
One fifth of the world population share Islam as an ethical tradition. Muslims are the majority in over 55 nations and territories. They speak about 60 languages and come from diverse ethnic backgrounds.
- 3-11 million Muslims in the Americas (estimates vary greatly)
- 5-8 million Muslims in Canada and the United States
- <1-3 million Muslims in Latin America
- 84 million Muslims in Europe (including Turkey)
- 10 million Muslims in Western Europe, mostly in the UK, France, Germany
- 7 million Muslims in the Balkans, mostly in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Albania and Republic of Macedonia
- 67 million Muslims in Turkey
- 284 million Muslims in the Arab League including Iraq (with about 15 million Shia, 60% of the population in Iraq)
- 254 million Muslims in Sub-Saharan Africa
- 103 million Muslims in Central Asia
- 49 million Muslims in the former republics of the Soviet Union: Central Asia - in Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan
- 26 million Muslims in Russia
- 28 million Muslims in Afghanistan
- 420 million Muslims in South Asia
- 156 million Muslims in Pakistan
- 127 million Muslims in Bangladesh
- 137 million Muslims in India
- 289 million Muslims in East Asia
- 30 million Muslims in China
- 209 million Muslims in Indonesia (the largest National Muslim community in the world)
- 30 million Muslims in the rest of South-East Asia, especially Malaysia and Brunei.
- Small populations in Japan, Mongolia, North Korea or the South Pacific
- Over 1.5 billion in total
Important organizations
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries includes many nations that are also in the Arab League.
A politically motivated oil embargo in 1974 (to support Egypt and Syria in their 1973 war against Israel after US secretly re-equipped Israel with armaments) had drastic economic and political consequences in the United States and Europe. Although such a move would have less impact today, it demonstrates the power of the Muslim World acting in concert, and the key role of religion and ethnicity in the politics of oil regions, with which the Muslim world intersects.
As oil sources in Indonesia, Central Asia and southern regions of Russia become more developed, oil politics may be less dependent on the Arab World but more dependent on the Muslim World as a whole.
Main denominations of Islam
The two main denominations of Islam are the Sunni and Shia sects. The difference between them is primarily in terms of how the life of the ummah ("faithful") should be governed, and the role of the imam.
The overwhelming majority of Muslims in the world are Sunni.
The Shi'a are a majority in Iraq (60%) and in Iran (90%), and Azerbaijan (75%). A more strictly traditional Shia regime maintains power in Iran, although a nominally Sunni minority held political power in Iraq up until the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
The Kharijite Muslims, who are less known, have their own stronghold in the country of Oman holding about 75% of the population. The rest of the population being 20% Sunni and the rest Shi'a or Hindu.
There are other differences in how Muslims practice their faith; notable polarities are the Islamist's, the liberal reformists and the desperate militant groups lebeled as extremists.
Islam in law and ethics
In some nations, Muslim ethnic groups enjoy considerable autonomy.
In some places, Muslims implement a form of Islamic law, called shariah in Arabic. The Islamic law exists in many variations, but the main forms are the five (four Sunni and one Shia) schools of jurisprudence (fiqh):
- the Hanafi school in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, West Africa, Egypt,
- the Maliki in North Africa and West Africa,
- the Shafi'i in Malaysia, Indonesia, and East Africa
- the Hanbali in Arabia, and
- Jaferi in Iran and Iraq - where the majority is Shia.
All five are centuries old and many Muslims feel a new fiqh must be created for modern society. Islam has a method for doing this, al-urf and ijtihad are the words to describe this method, but they have not been used in a long time, and few people are trusted enough to use them to make new laws.
So, in most of the Muslim world, people are socially conservative.
Muslim women often dress extremely modestly, perhaps by choice. Thus, in some countries an interpretation of the Islamic law requires women to cover either just legs, shoulders and head or the whole body apart from the face. In strictest forms, the face as well must be covered leaving just a mesh to see through. These rules for dressing are one of the things that cause tension between the Western World and that of Muslims, concerning particularly Muslims living in western countries.
Islamic economics bans interest or Usury but in most Muslim countries Western banking is allowed. This is another issue that many Muslims have with the Western world.
Civil and political freedoms remain to be a source of controversy.
Islam in politics
Many people in Islamic countries also see Islam manifested politically as Islamism. In democratic countries there is usually at least one Islamic party. Political Islam is powerful in all Muslim-majority countries. Islamic parties in Turkey, Pakistan and Algeria have taken power. Many in these movements call themselves Islamists, which also sometimes describes more militant Islamic groups. The relationships between these groups and their views of democracy are complex.
Some of these groups are accused of practicing terrorism. According to US President George W. Bush, they all have a single common agenda:
"The militants believe that controlling one country will rally the Muslim masses, enabling them to overthrow all moderate governments in the region, and establish a radical Islamic empire that spans from Spain to Indonesia," Bush asserted in an October 2005 speech.[citation needed]
Conflicts with Israel
This article contains weasel words: vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information. |
Israel is very unpopular in the Muslim world, due to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the way that the state of Israel came into being in 1948 which many muslims consider unfair.
Some, but not all Muslims see this as a fight against Judaism or Jews. Most Muslims, in fact, make a clear distinction between Judaism and Zionism. In Morocco for instance, the Islamists recently invited Jews to join the party. Other countries, such as Iran, grant Jews exceptional political rights, though social and political discrimination very much exists (see Persian Jews). Prior to the Iranian Revolution, Iran and Israel maintained a strong political frienship (see Iran-Israel relations). Today, Turkey is Israel's closest Muslim friend; and some other Muslim countries, such as Egypt and Jordan, have developed diplomatic relations and signed peace treaties with Israel, an act opposed by the Palestinian Authority. Jewish groups also cooperate with Arabs in the West Bank, where Neturei Karta (anti-Zionist orthodox Jewish) leader Rabbi Mosche Hirsch served as the Minister for Jewish Affairs in the Fatah before there was a Palestinian Authority. Like many Arabs, this small group of Jews oppose Israel's existence.
Nuclear capabilities
The other conflict Muslims have with the West is regarding nuclear capabilities and weapons. Pakistan's testing of nuclear weapons in 1998 earned it American-imposed sanctions. Following the Gulf War, the United Nations put in place sanctions against Iraq, to keep it from developing weapons of mass destruction. The 2003 Invasion of Iraq was justified as an attempt to rid Iraq of Weapons of Mass Destruction. These weapons have yet to be found. The current United Nations/Iranian tension is also related to Iran's nuclear programme.
Recent history
1979 was a critical year in the Muslim world's relationship with the rest of the world. In that year, Egypt made peace with Israel, Iran became an Islamic state after the Iranian Revolution, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan began.
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War Muslim/Non-Muslim relations have been characterized by a struggle against Islamist extremism. Some of the events pivotal in this relationship are:
- The 1991 Gulf War
- The 9/11 terrorist attacks on the United States
- The 2001 invasion of Afghanistan
- The 2003 invasion of Iraq
- The Cartoon controversy
The United States approach to dealing with the threat of terrorism (the "War on Terrorism") has been seen as a War on Islam by many Muslims.
Growing polarization
In Pakistan, nominally a US ally, Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal - a virulently Anti-American Islamist political party - won local elections in two out of four of the country's provinces and became in mid-2003 the third largest party in the national parliament, their best showing ever. For the first time, their support comes not just from the areas bordering Afghanistan, but even from urban areas. (See Politics of Pakistan)
In Kuwait, elections in July 2003 returned Islamic traditionalists and supporters of the royal family, while liberals suffered a severe defeat. (See Elections in Kuwait)
In Indonesia, the growth of various groups allied to those considered responsible for the Bali Bombing most of which have previously been invisible, has been marked. It is expected that executions of the party accused for that attack, which hit mostly citizens of Australia, will polarize that nation further.
Future
The neutrality of this section is disputed. |
Some believe that the Muslim World is destined to democratize and replace constitutional monarchy and military dictatorship with representative democracy. G. E. Jansen in 1979, in his book Militant Islam, postulated that Islamist movements were themselves the most likely path to democratization.
Currently, Turkey and Malaysia are prominent examples of countries in the Islamic World with a strong tradition of secularism and democracy as state policy. Iran, Pakistan, Indonesia, Algeria and other populist movements may represent examples of a trend towards democracy. They enjoy substantial local democracy and have active political life.
However some opine that the Muslim World is fated to come into deeper conflict with the western world. [citation needed] At least one Islamic nation, Pakistan, has developed nuclear weapons. Weapons of mass destruction are likely to become easier to construct given the modernizing and fast-developing economies of the Muslim World.
See also
- Islam by country
- List of Islamic terms in Arabic
- History of Islam
- Hajj
- Majority Muslim countries
- Organization of the Islamic Conference
- Dar al-Islam
- Arab world
External links
- Dinar Standard - Covers Muslim World Economics
- The Islamic World to 1600 an online tutorial at the University of Calgary, Canada.
- MSNBC report citing Wesley Clark that the US planned to invade Iraq, then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Iran, Somalia, and Sudan - also his own views on Egypt, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia
- Al-Jazeera report saying the same thing