Mayhem,Myths, and Martyrdom: The Shi'a Conception of Jihad |
| |
Authors: | Assaf Moghadam |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. John M. Olin Institute for Strategic Studies , Harvard University , Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA assafm@hotmail.com |
| |
Abstract: | The article examines the perception of jihad in Shi'a Islam. It first provides an overview of the understanding of jihad in Islam at large, and then examines the reflections of four central Shi'a thinkers on jihad. More so than the traditional Sunni approach to this concept, the Shi'a understanding of jihad is heavily influenced by perceptions of historical suffering, placing an emphasis on injustice, tyrannical rule, indignity, humiliation, and resistance. In recent decades, Shi'a and Sunni notions of jihad have become more closely aligned, as Salafi-Jihadists, who increasingly monopolize the Sunni discourse on jihad, persistently frame jihad as a response to the oppression by Western “infidel” regimes and tyrannical “apostate” regimes in the Arab and Muslim world. |
| |
Keywords: | jihad martyrdom shiah-doctrines |
|
|