• 08:42
  • Friday ,23 March 2018
العربية

The rise and fall of the Muslim Brotherhood

By-Ahram

Copts and Poliltical Islam

00:03

Friday ,23 March 2018

The rise and fall of the Muslim Brotherhood

Ninety years ago today, Hassan Al-Banna founded the Muslim Brotherhood group, which went on to become a major player in both Egyptian and regional politics.‎

What follows below is not by any means a complete analysis of the role played by the group over the past nine ‎decades, but rather a collection of articles published during interesting times by both ‎Ahram Weekly and Ahram Online, with the aim of marking the day. 
 
These articles attempt to explain the ‎rise and fall of the group which, after a revolution, managed to gain people s trust to win ‎both the legislative body and the presidency, and, in less than a year, became an enemy ‎of the people and the state; a group held accountable for planting the seeds of ‎radicalisation and violence, with an impact not only on Egypt but the entire region and even the world.‎
 
Hassan Al-Banna and the state
The nation state had no place in the system advanced by the founder of the Muslim ‎Brotherhood, writes Hazem Mahfouz
 
Nasser, myself and the Muslim Brotherhood
Marking 60th anniversary of Egypt s July Revolution, Ahram Online republished ‎chapter of memoirs by Revolution Command Council member Khaled Mohieldin on ‎origins of relations between Free Officers, Muslim Brotherhood
 
The Muslim Brotherhood s past and present
All radical and extremist Islamist terrorist groups find their origin in the Muslim ‎Brotherhood, a movement that continues to support and finance terror, writes Tarek ‎Heggy
 
Qotb and citizenship
In Qotbist ideology there is no citizen, only sheep bound to follow the shepherd, who ‎in turn has the authority to use force for the greater good of the flock, as he defines it, ‎writes Hazem Mahfouz
 
Freedom and Justice Party: Profile‎
 
The political party of the Muslim Brotherhood, could not have come into being ‎without the 25 January revolution. Up to that time, the Muslim Brotherhood (MB), ‎Egypt s most powerful Islamist organization, was not only denied the right to form ‎parties, but also barred – at least legally – from political life
 
Meet the Brotherhood s enforcer: Khairat El-Shater
 
Why Khairat El-Shater is the most important figure in the Muslim Brotherhood for ‎more than five decades.
 
Why did Morsi fall?‎
Arrogance, incompetence, duplicitousness, recklessness; the list is long why the ‎Muslim Brotherhood and Morsi fell so conclusively from grace, writes Ammar Ali ‎Hassan
 
What does the Brotherhood really want?‎
 
The tug-of-war continues inside Egypt s biggest Islamist group while vision remains ‎absent
 
The post-30 June Muslim Brotherhood
Amany Maged charts the collapse of a group that was once the dominant force in ‎Egyptian politics
 
Violent doctrines of the Muslim Brotherhood
 
The Muslim Brotherhood s history and fundamental doctrines point in the direction of ‎attempts to legitimate violence, writes Heba Sewilam
 
A look at Hasm and Lewaa Al-Thawra terror groups
 
This report, which was first published in February 2017, examines the roots of the two ‎Muslim Brotherhood offshoots terrorist organizations which carried out deadly ‎attacks against the Egyptian security forces in the last four years