Contrasting the
Salafi quietists with the doctrines of Salafi-Jihadist organizations that wage
armed insurgencies, (such as
al-Qaeda,
Islamic State,
Boko Haram, etc.) the Western journalist
Graeme Wood notes that while both believe that God’s law is the only law and are "committed" to expanding the
Dar al-Islam (the land of Islam), Salafi quietists share other quietist Muslims' concern about disunity in the
Muslim community (
Ummah). Wood quotes a Salafi preacher as saying: "The Prophet said: as long as the ruler does not enter into clear
kufr [disbelief], give him general obedience," even if he is a sinner. Classic "books of creed" all warn against causing social upheaval. Western scholar Joas Wagemakers describes Salafist quietists as focusing "on the propagation of their message (''
da'wah) through lessons, sermons, and other missionary activities and stay[ing] away from politics and violence, which they leave to the ruler." Another Western scholar—Quintan Wiktorowicz—uses the term purist
to describe Salafists who sound similar (according to Jacob Olidort) to what Wagemakers describes as quietist'': "they emphasize a focus on nonviolent methods of propagation, purification and education. They view politics as a diversion that encourages deviancy." Western scholar Jacob Olidort describes the Salafi scholar
Muhammad Nasiruddin al-Albani (d. 1999) as "the most prominent quietist Salafist of the last century". His slogan "later in life" was: "the best policy is to stay out of politics." Today, his students range from
Madkhalis—which Olidort describes as the "absolute quietists"—to the violent
Ikhwan insurgents that planned and perpetrated the
siege of Mecca in 1979.
Divisions among Salafists Modern Salafi movements such as the
Muslim Brotherhood, which was founded in Egypt in the 1920s, co-opted the Sufi tradition of ‘uzla' or retreat from worldly affairs and political quietism as a form of "soft jihad" against fellow Muslims.
Sayyid Qutb could be said to have founded the actual movement of
Salafi-Jihadism. He was a prominent leader of the Muslim Brotherhood and a highly influential Islamist ideologue, Other Salafi movements in the
Middle East and North Africa and across the
Muslim world adopted many of his Islamist principles. According to Qutb, the Muslim community has been extinct for several centuries and reverted to
jahiliyah (the pre-Islamic age of ignorance) because those who call themselves Muslims have failed to follow the
sharia law. In order to
restore Islam, bring back its days of glory, and free the Muslims from the clasps of ignorance, Qutb proposed the shunning of modern society, establishing a vanguard modeled after the early Muslims, preaching, and bracing oneself for poverty or even death as preparation for
jihad against what he perceived as
jahili government/society, and overthrow them.
Qutbism, the radical Islamist ideology derived from the ideas of Qutb, was denounced by many prominent Muslim scholars as well as other members of the Muslim Brotherhood, like
Yusuf al-Qaradawi. ==Quietism within Sufism==