Al-Banna endeavored to bring about reforms through institution-building, relentless activism at the grassroots level and a reliance on mass communication. He built a complex mass movement that featured sophisticated governance structures; sections in charge of furthering the society's values among peasants, workers and professionals; units entrusted with key functions, including propagation of the message, liaison with the Islamic world and press and translation; and specialized committees for finances and legal affairs. Declaring
Islam as the only comprehensive religious system that could solve the challenges of modernity and calling upon
Muslims to reject
Western ideologies, Al-Banna wrote: "If the French Revolution decreed the rights of man and declared for freedom, equality and brotherhood, and if the Russian Revolution brought closer the classes and social justice for the people, the great Islamic Revolution [had] decreed all that 1300 years before. It did not confine itself to philosophical theories but rather spread these principles through daily life, and added to them [the notions of] divinity of mankind, and the perfectibility of his virtues and [the fulfilment of] his spiritual tendencies". Al-Banna relied on pre-existing social networks―in particular those built around mosques, Islamic welfare associations and neighborhood groups―to anchor the Muslim Brotherhood into Egyptian society. This weaving of traditional ties into a distinctively modern structure was at the root of his success. Directly attached to the brotherhood, and feeding its expansion, were numerous businesses, clinics, and schools. In addition, members were affiliated with the movement through a series of cells, revealingly called
usar ("families"). The material, social and psychological support provided by the Muslim Brotherhood were instrumental to the movement's ability to generate enormous loyalty among its members and to attract new recruits. The movement was built around services and an organizational structure intended to enable individuals to integrate into a distinctly Islamic setting that was shaped by the society's own principles. Rooted in Islam, Al-Banna's message tackled issues including
colonialism,
public health,
educational policy,
natural resources management,
social inequalities,
pan-Islamism,
nationalism,
Arab nationalism, the weakness of the Islamic world on the international scene, and the growing conflict in
Palestine. By emphasizing concerns that appealed to a variety of constituencies, al-Banna was able to recruit from among a cross-section of Egyptian society—though modern-educated civil servants, office employees, and professionals remained dominant among the organization's activists and decision-makers. Al-Banna was also active in resisting British colonial rule in Egypt. Al-Banna warned his readers against the "widespread belief among many Muslims" that jihad of the heart was more important and demanding than jihad of the sword. He called on Muslims to prepare for
jihad against colonial powers:Muslims ... are compelled to humble themselves before non-Muslims, and are ruled by unbelievers. Their lands have been trampled over, and their honor besmirched. Their adversaries are in charge of their affairs, and the rites of their religion have fallen into abeyance with their own domains ... Hence it has become an individual obligation, which there is no evading, on every Muslim to prepare his equipment, to make up his mind to engage in jihad, and to get ready for it until the opportunity is ripe and God decrees. With his work
On Jihad written toward the end of the 1930s, he became "the first influential scholar since the 1857 India uprising" to call for jihad against unbelievers.
Views Al-Banna was well known for his emphasis on importance of propagating Islam and on jihad of the sword in the face of Western power. He also believed that the doctrine of early Muslims towards disbelievers in the creation of their empire had not been outdated. "Islam presents hostile [Christians and Jews] with three choices: Acceptance of Islam, war, or paying the poll tax" (
jizya). Although neither a ruler nor a scholar, in the history of the Islamic world Al-Banna notable for inspiring individual Muslims to wage "free-lance" jihad warfare "for the first time"—as prior to his influence jihad had been led a caliph or Muslim ruler. ==Muslim Brothers and the Palestine conflict==