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Principles of the Wahhabi sect

San Jose Mercury News/December 29, 2001

"Wahhabi" is the name most Western scholars apply to a Muslim puritan movement founded by Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab in 18th-century Arabia. Wahhab formed an alliance with the al-Saud family, one that eventually led to Saudi dominance in the area, and the establishment of Saudi Arabia.

The Wahhabi prefer to call themselves "Salafi,'' meaning "forefathers'' or "pioneers,'' a reference to their belief that they are promulgating the Islam of Muhammad.

They point out that the tensions between fundamentalists and modernizers in Islam long predate Wahhab, dating to the decades after Muhammad's death in 632.

Some Wahhabi tenets:

These three principles are the basis of the zealous Wahhabi rejection of saints or icons, Muslim or otherwise. The Taliban's decision this year to destroy gigantic ancient statues of Buddha was influenced by Wahhabi backers.


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