UAE Recognition of Israel Dents Emirati Religious Soft Power
by James
M. Dorsey
The
United Arab Emirates’ establishment of diplomatic relations with Israel is
damaging its efforts to garner religious soft power by projecting itself as a
model of Islamic moderation and tolerance and a force for peace. The UAE move
has sparked splits within a key group, created and nurtured by the Gulf state,
to project its image as a moderate religious power.
The United
Arab Emirates’ bold recognition of Israel, earning it valuable brownie points
in the West, has come at a cost: a blow to its efforts to earn religious soft
power in the Muslim world.
The setback
raises questions about the UAE’s strategy of co-opting prominent Muslim
scholars with financial incentives to project the Gulf state as a model of
tolerance that seeks to promote a moderate interpretation of Islam in a global
competition for religious soft power with Qatar, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and
Indonesia.
The UAE
attempt to reap religious support for its opening to Israel encountered
blowback when a statement by the Abu Dhabi-based Forum
for Promoting Peace in Muslim Societies — one of several UAE-backed groups
created to counter similar Qatari institutions and give the UAE effort
religious cachet — sparked protests and resignations.
Members of the Forum’s
board complained that the statement had been issued without a
discussion in the Forum’s board of trustees. The board includes former Jordanian
Islamic chief justice and minister of endowments Ahmad Hilayel and Abdullah
Al-Maatouq, a Kuwaiti royal court advisor and former religious affairs minister
and United Nations envoy.
Hamza Yusuf, the Forum’s vice president and a popular
American Islamic scholar who heads Zaytuna College — the United States’ first
accredited Muslim undergraduate college — distanced himself from the statement,
asserting that he did “not engage in or endorse geopolitical strategies or
treaties” and that his “allegiance is and has always been with the oppressed
peoples of Palestine, whether Muslim, Christian, or otherwise.”
Similarly,
while announcing her resignation from the Forum’s board, prominent American
Muslim activist Aisha al-Adawiya, founder of the
human rights group Women in Islam, said that there had been “no agreement on
any kind of support for the UAE’s deal with Israel.”
So did Muhammad Hussein, the grand
mufti of Jerusalem. Mr. Hussein banned Muslims from the UAE from visiting and
praying at Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque, Islam’s third holiest site.
However, the
statement issued by Abdullah Bin Bayyah, a Mauritanian politician, religious
scholar, and the head of the Forum and president of the Emirati Fatwa Council,
took a different tone.
Praising
“the wisdom of His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince
of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces,” the statement
asserted that normalization of relations with the Jewish state had “stopped
Israel from extending its sovereignty over Palestinian lands” and was a means
to “promote peace and stability across the world.”
Mr. Bin Bayyah’s defense of
the statement reflected the UAE’s definition of moderate Islam as one that is
state-controlled and preaches absolute obedience to the ruler. He insisted that
“international relations and treaties are among the initiatives that fall
within the policy-making purview of the ruler.”
Despite
longstanding relations with Abu Dhabi’s ruling Al-Nahyan family, Mr. Bin Bayyah
was long aligned with their nemesis as vice president of the International
Union of Muslim Scholars (IUMS) and the European Council for Fatwa and
Research, that was established to provide guidance to European Muslims through the
dissemination of religious opinions.
The two
groups were headed and founded by Qatar-based Yusuf al-Qaradawi, one of the
world’s most prominent living Islamic scholars who is widely viewed as a
spiritual guide of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Qatari
support of the Brotherhood is a main driver of the more than three-year-old
UAE-Saudi-led diplomatic and economic boycott of the Gulf state. The Emirates
and the kingdom earlier designated the Brotherhood as a terrorist organization.
Members of
the Abu Dhabi ruling family, including Crown Prince Mohammed and his foreign
minister, Abdullah bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, began courting Mr. Bin
Bayyah in early 2013.
They invited the cleric to the
Emirates the same month that Egyptian President and Muslim Brother Mohammed
Morsi – the post-2011 revolt democratically elected head of state -- was
toppled by a UAE-backed military coup.
In a letter Mr. Bin Bayyah sent three months
later to the IUMS, he announced that he was resigning from the group. He wrote:
“the humble role I am attempting to undertake towards reform and reconciliation
(among Muslims) requires a discourse that does not sit well with my position at
the International Union of Muslim Scholars.”
Mr. Bin
Bayyah wrote his letter after the IUMS had bitterly denounced the Egyptian coup
and condemned the subsequent brutal repression of the Brotherhood and he
published it to demonstrate to Emirati leaders that he had ended his
association with Qatari-supported Islamic groups.
The courting
of Mr. Bin Bayyah emanated from Prince Mohammed’s realization that he needed
religious soft power to justify the UAE’s wielding of hard power that started
with the Egyptian coup and expanded with military interventions in Yemen and
Libya.
The
emergence in recent years of Mr. Bin Bayyah – a celebrated Islamic jurist whom
Islam scholar Usamaa Al-Azami dubbed
“counter‐revolutionary Islam’s most important scholar” – as the religious face
of the UAE coincided with the 93-year-old Mr. Qaradawi’s withdrawal from public
life.
The backlash
sparked by Mr. Bin Bayyah’s statement highlights the Achilles heel, at least in
the Muslim world, of the UAE’s religious soft power ploy.
“The
counter‐revolutionary Islamic political thought that is being developed and
promoted by Bin Bayyah and the UAE suffers from certain fundamental structural
problems that means its very existence is precariously predicated on the
persistence of autocratic patronage,” Mr. Al-Azami asserted. “Its lack of
independence means that it is not the organic product of a relatively unencumbered
engagement with political modernity that might be possible in freer societies
than counter‐revolutionary Gulf autocracies,” he added.
Mr. Al
Azami’s criticism goes to the heart of a debate, particularly in Turkey and
Indonesia, on Islam’s ability to recontextualize itself and break away from the
shackles of outdated concepts and traditions without being freed from control
by states that seek to impose a self-serving vision of the faith.
Expressed
more bluntly, Yahya Birt, a scholar of British Islam
and a convert to the faith, who has researched UAE-backed clerics, argued that
there is discrepancy between how they project their sponsors abroad and the
reality on the ground.
“The
extracted price of government patronage is high for ulema (religious
scholars) in the Middle East. Generally speaking, they have to openly support
or maintain silence about autocracy at home, while speaking of democracy,
pluralism, and minority rights to Western audiences,” Mr. Birt said.
The backlash
to the support of the UAE recognition of Israel by the Forum and Mr. Bin Bayyah
suggests a serious flaw in the Gulf state’s approach to religious soft power:
It targets first and foremost Western corridors of power rather than the Muslim
community at large.
An
initial version of this story was first published by Inside
Arabia
A podcast
version of this story is available on
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Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and a senior fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in
Singapore. He is also a senior research fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Middle East Institute and co-director of the University of Wuerzburg’s
Institute of Fan Culture in Germany.
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