Center for Interdisciplinary Study of Monotheistic Religions(CISMOR)Doshisha University

> CISMOR Seminar > “Modern Extremist Groups and the Division of the World: A Critique from an Islamic Perspective”

CISMOR Seminar

CISMOR Seminar Series

“Modern Extremist Groups and the Division of the World: A Critique from an Islamic Perspective”

Date: 2017/11/16 15:00-16:30
Place: S33, Shiseikan bld., Imadegawa Campus, Doshisha University
Speaker:
  • Dr. Masaki NAGATA
Summary:
Modern extremist groups have revived the use of certain concepts of Islamic dogma and wilfully misinterpreted them as a means of achieving their own ends. Dae‘sh (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) is the most striking example. They have made declarations of takfir (excommunication) regarding Muslim rulers, maintaining that only Dae‘sh land is a dar al-Islam (abode of Islam) and that other lands are dar al-kufr or harb (abodes of unbelief or war), just as the Khawarij sect believed in the 7th century CE. They do not employ the concept of hijra (migration) in its traditional, defensive sense, but rather as a means of strengthening their own power by recruiting from around the world and launching military jihads, all in order to ‘reclaim’ the dar al-kufr and establish an Islamic state. This lecture examines the evolution of these terms throughout Islamic history, their misinterpretation by extremist groups, and their modern legal status.