Early Islam Some Muslims (such as Muhammad
Ibn Abd al-Wahhab, founder of
Wahhabism) believe that one of the earliest examples of
takfir was alleged to have been practised by the first
Caliph,
Abu Bakr. In response to the refusal of certain Arab tribes to pay the alms-tax (
zakat), he is reported to have said: "By God, I will fight anyone who differentiates between the prayer and the zakat. ... Revelation has been discontinued, the Shari'ah has been completed: will the religion be curtailed while I am alive. ... I will fight these tribes even if they refuse to give a halter. Poor-due (
zakat) is a levy on wealth and, by God, I will fight him who differentiates between the prayer and poor-due." Abu Bakr did not use the word
kafir though. . The author and Zaraqawi agree that the Muslims fighting in
Bosnia,
Tajikistan,
Chechnya, and
Kashmir are
polytheists and supporters of
secular democracy, and that the
Taliban are a front for
Pakistan. Zarqawi tells Abu Mus'ab that he is accused of Takfir because of his views about the Muslims in Bosnia, Tajikistan, Chechnya, and Kashmir. The group known as
Khawarij takfired and killed the
Rashidun caliph
Ali (601–661 CE), after he agreed to arbitration with his rival,
Muawiyah I, to decide the succession to the
Caliphate. They believed that "judgement belongs to God alone", so that for human beings to arbitrate peacefully rather than wage war was making a decision rightfully belonging to God. In contrast, the victor of a battle was determined by God. In the wars between the
Umayyad Caliphate and the
Khawarijs, the latter's practice of takfir became the justification for their indiscriminate attacks on civilian Muslims; the more moderate Sunni view of takfir developed partly in response to this conflict. In the Umayyad and early Abbasid periods (roughly 661–800 CE), authorities "appear" to have defended Islam against apostasy "mostly" with "intellectual debates". During the
Mihna inquisition in the
Abbasid Caliphate which was instituted by the ruling
Mu'tazilites, enemies of the Mu'tazila were considered heretics and disbelievers and were punished. The Mihna lasted from 833 to 851 CE. The celebrated Abū Ḥāmid Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad
al-Ghazālī (d. 1111) preached against the excessive takfīr among theologians. Maliki scholar
Qadi Ayyad (d. 1149) is said to have been the first scholar to call for the death penalty for "disseminating improprieties about Muḥammad or questioning his authority in all questions of faith and profane life" (according to Tilman Nagel), setting the pace for later scholars like
Ibn Taymiyyah and
Taj al-Din al-Subki (d.1355). In a study of 60 high-profile takfir cases in Egypt and Syria "tried before the qadis of the four Sunni schools of law" during
Mamluk Sultanate (1250–1517). CE), historian
Amalia Levanoni found "more than half" led to the execution of the accused. These individuals included
Sufis,
Rafidi, Shi'a, reverts from Islam, "alleged blasphemers and sorcerers, rebels, political rivals and others, with charges often being trumped up."(Executions became more common and political during times of unrest.)
Ibn Taymiyyah 14th century scholar
Ibn Taymiyyah takfired a number of Muslims and Islamic groups—the
Mu'tazila,
Shi'a Muslims,
Sufis and the Sufi mystic,
Ibn Arabi, etc. – he believed to have strayed from true Islam, The fatwa was important because the Mongols continued to attack after their conversion and the fatwa gave legitimacy to the Mamluk Jihad against them by "rendering the Mongols apostate", not Muslims, and jihad against them obligatory. "It is obligatory to fight them until they comply to all of the Sharia, even though they may utter the
Shahaadataayn" (i.e. the two declarations of faith – "There is no god except Allah and Muhammad is his Messenger"). Living in a time when Islamic jurists tended towards docility in the face of injustice, Ibn Taymiyyah urged jihad against tyrants. Ibn Taymiyyah influenced/impressed
Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya (1292–1350 AD) and
Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab (1703–1792 AD), and all three "quoted frequently" by the media of the contemporary Takfiri group ISIS. Ibn Abd al-Wahhab's interpretation of Islam (aka
Wahhabism)
became enormously influential throughout the Muslim world starting in the late 20th century, thanks in large part to the financial power of Saudi Arabia which spent tens of billions of dollars to propagate his movement. ;19th and early 20th century Some killings or executions of apostates from the 19th century up to 1970 listed by Rudolph Peters and Gert J. J. De Vries include the strangling of a female apostate in Egypt sometime between 1825 and 1835, an Armenian youth beheaded for reverting to Christianity in 1843 in the Ottoman Empire. Moslems in Afghanistan who converted to
Ahmadiyyah condemned to be stoned in 1903 and 1925.
After 1950 According to Hussam S. Timani, both apostasy among Muslims and the number of Muslim groups "adopting the concept of takfir" have increased in recently (as of 2017). Timani states that Muslim scholars blame this on "the decline of Islamic values and the loss of solidarity among the people after centuries of colonialism and foreign domination". Takfir has become "a central ideology of militant groups" such as those in Egypt, "which reflect the ideas" of
Sayyid Qutb,
Abul A'la Maududi and others, according to the Oxford Islamic Studies Online website. It is rejected by Islamic scholars and leaders such as
Hasan al-Hudaybi (d. 1977) and
Yusuf al-Qaradawi and by mainstream Muslims and Islamist groups. While he did not specifically takfir or call for the execution of those governing non-sharia governments (he wrote
Milestones in prison), he emphasized that "the organizations and authorities" of the putatively Muslim countries were irredeemably corrupt and evil and would have to be abolished by "physical power and Jihad", movement of true Muslims.
In Pakistan Takfir has been used against the
Ahmadiyya, (a sect of self-described Muslims who believe the
mahdi of Islam has arrived in the form of
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad (died 1908)) who many Muslims and Islamic scholars believe reject the doctrine of
Khatam an-Nabiyyin, i.e. the belief that Muhammad was the last and final
Prophet and Messenger of God, after whom there can be no other Prophet or Messenger. In 1974 Pakistan amended its constitution to declare Ahmadis as non-Muslims. In 1984, General
Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, the then military ruler of Pakistan, issued Ordinance XX, forbidding Ahmadis to call themselves Muslim. As a result, they are not allowed to profess the Islamic creed publicly or to call their places of worship mosques, to worship in non-Ahmadi mosques or public prayer-rooms, to perform the Muslim call to prayer, to use the traditional Islamic greeting in public, to publicly quote from the
Quran, to preach in public, to seek converts, or to produce, publish, and disseminate their religious materials. Local
ulama (Islamic scholars) have declared takfir on another group in Pakistan, the
Zikri of Makran in
Balochistan. The Zikri believe that Syed
Muhammad Jaunpuri (born in 1443) was the
Mahdi (redeemer) of Islam. In 1978 the ulama founded a movement (
Tehrik Khatm-e-Nabuat) to have the Pakistan state declare the Zikris as non-Muslims, like the Ahmadis.
Faraj In 1981,
President Anwar El Sadat was assassinated (along with six diplomats) by Islamists who had infiltrated a military parade he was reviewing. While it was assumed by many (especially in the Western world) that the killers must have been motivated by anger over Sadat's making peace with Israel, a document found by police spelled out a different motivation. ''Al-Farida al-gha'iba'' (The Neglected Duty) by
Muhammad abd-al-Salam Faraj the theorist of the group (Tanzim al-Jihad movement), proclaimed that jihad would enable Muslims to rule the world and to reestablish the caliphate, but the document explained that the specific reason Sadat had to be killed was that his government (along with all Muslim majority country governments) did not rule according to sharia. Faraj cited as justification the fatwa of
Ibn Taymiyyah (mentioned above) takfiring Mongols for not ruling by sharia -- "combat ... those that place themselves outside the sharia"; And also verse 5:44 of the Quran: "And whoever did not judge (yahkum) by what Allah revealed, those are the unbelievers" (later copied by Osama bin Laden).
Salman Rushdie The case of
Salman Rushdie provides an example of
takfir that featured prominently in Western media. Rushdie went into hiding after
Ayatollah Khomeini issued a
fatwa in 1989, officially declaring him a
kafir who should be executed for his book
The Satanic Verses, which is
perceived by many Muslims to contain passages that draw into question the basis of Islam. Similar cases have occurred in Egypt: for example,
Nasr Abu Zayd was accused of apostasy following his work on Islamic sources, describing the Qur'an as a historical document.
GIA in Algeria During the
Algerian Civil War of 1991–2002 the
Islamist insurgent group the GIA (
Armed Islamic Group of Algeria) under amir Antar Zouabri issued a manifesto in 1996 entitled
The Sharp Sword, presenting Algerian society as resistant to jihad and lamented that the majority of Algerians had "forsaken religion and renounced the battle against its enemies". Zouabri at first took care to deny that the GIA had ever declared takfir on Algerian society itself. But during the month of Ramadan (January–February 1997) hundreds of civilians were killed in massacres, some with their throats cut. The massacres continued for months and culminated in August and September when hundreds of men women and children were killed in the villages of
Rais,
Bentalha and Beni Messous. Pregnant women were sliced open, children were hacked to pieces or dashed against walls, men's limbs were hacked off one by one, and, as the attackers retreated, they would kidnap young women to keep as sex slaves. The GIA issued a communiqué signed by Zouabri claiming responsibility for the massacres and justifying them—in contradiction to his manifesto—by declaring impious (takfir) all those Algerians who had not joined its ranks. While the GIA had been the "undisputed principal Islamist force" in Algeria two years earlier, the slaughters drained it of popular support and led to the end of "organized jihad" in Algeria. because in his view the Saudi 'don't apply the Shari'a'
Islamic State The
Islamic State has been heavily criticized for applying takfir to Muslims who oppose its rule. According to journalist
Graeme Wood in mid-2015, Following takfiri doctrine, the Islamic State is committed to purifying the world by killing vast numbers of people. The lack of objective reporting from its territory makes the true extent of the slaughter unknowable, but social-media posts from the region suggest that individual executions happen more or less continually, and mass executions every few weeks. The tendency of the group to target Shia Muslims with suicide bombings is due to the fact that the group considers them apostates.
Salafi jihadis Shiraz Maher specifies that the major
Salafi jihadist theorists like
Abu Hamza al-Masri,
Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi,
Omar Abdel-Rahman, and
Abu Basir al-Tartusi ask to exercise caution while doing takfir, as declaring a Muslim unbeliever wrongly makes the one who accuses to himself get out of the religion of Islam and become an apostate himself. ==See also==