Following the
Arab Spring, some neo-traditionalist scholars adopted a counter-revolutionary politically quietist stance citing the prohibition of resistance against ruling authorities by a number of pre-modern Sunni
jurists and concerns that political upheaval would empower
Islamic fundamentalist groups such as the
Muslim Brotherhood. However, other neo-traditionalist scholars such as
Muhammed al-Yaqoubi advocated for the removal of dictators such as
Bashar al-Assad. According to
Mustafa Kabha and
Haggai Erlich, the Islamic political organization
al-Ahbash adheres to neo-traditionalism in their political-religious methodology, citing their opposition to traditionalist and Salafi thinkers such as
Sayyid Qutb,
ibn Abdul Wahhab, and
Abul A'la Maududi, criticism of extremism and zeal, as well as their ardent focus on
good behaviour and
Islamic morality, the latter of which is largely absent from the modernist and progressive strands within Islam, and Thomas Pierret also identified the al-Ahbash as adherents of this methodology, although he used the alternate term neo-traditionalist to describe them. == Contemporary neo-traditionalists ==