Abdesslam Yassine

Abdesslam Yassine (1928 December 13, 2012) was the leader of the Moroccan Islamist organisation Al Adl Wa Al Ihssane (Justice and Spirituality).[1][2]

Yassine was born in Marrakesh. He worked as a teacher and a school inspector for the Ministry of Education, and from 1965 on, was a member of one of the most famous Moroccan Sufi brotherhoods, the Boutchichiyya.[2][3] Yassine reportedly fell out with the leadership of the brotherhood over its refusal to engage more directly in political matters, and founded his own organisation. Yassine was jailed in a mental asylum for three years for publishing an open letter to King Hassan II denouncing his rule as unIslamic. Following his release he was kept under house arrest for many years, before eventually being released in the early years of the rule of King Mohammed VI.[4] Yassine's many publications include L'Islam ou le Deluge (Islam or the Flood),[5] probably the best known of his works. He died, aged 84, on 13 December 2012.[1][2] He was married to Khadija Al Malki who died in late March 2015.[6]

Books

originally written in Arabic

  1. Islam between the Appeal and the State, 1972
  2. Tomorrow Islam!, 1973
  3. Islam—or the Flood (An Open Letter to the Late King of Morocco), 1974
  4. The Royal Century Missive in the Balance of Islam, 1980
  5. The Prophetic Method [al-Minhāj an-Nabawi], 1982
  6. Islam and the Challenge of Marxism-Leninism, 1987
  7. Exemplary Men (1st in the series Al-Ihssān), 1988
  8. Introductions to the Method, 1989
  9. Islam and the Challenge of Secular Nationalism, 1989
  10. Reflections on Islamic Jurisprudence and History, 1990
  11. Spiritual Gems (A Collection of Poems), 1992
  12. The Muslim Mind on Trial: Divine Revelation versus Secular Rationalism, 1994
  13. A Dialogue with Honorable Democrats, 1994
  14. Letter of Reminder (1st in the series Rasa’il Al-Ihsān), 1995
  15. On the Economy, 1995
  16. Letter to Students and to all Muslims (2nd in the series Rassa’il Al-Ihssân), 1995
  17. Guide to Believing Women, 1996
  18. Shūra and Democracy, 1996
  19. Poetic Exhortations (3rd in the series Rasa’il Al- Ihsān), 1996
  20. Dialogue of the Past and the Future, 1997
  21. Dialogue with an Amazighit Friend, 1997
  22. Spirituality [Al-Ihssān] V1, 1998
  23. How Shall We Renew Our Iman? How Do We Advise For God’s Sake And His Messenger? (1st in the series “The Prophetic Method Discourses”), 1998
  24. Al-Fitra And The Remedial Treatment Of Prophecy For Hearts (2nd in the series “The Prophetic Method Discourses”), 1998
  25. Spirituality [Al-Ihssān] V2, 1999
  26. Hearts Sincerity (3rd in the series “The Prophetic Method Discourses”), 1999
  27. Braving the Obstacles (4th in the series “The Prophetic Method Discourses”), 1999
  28. Justice: Islamists and Governance, 2000
  29. Bunches of Grapes (A Collection of Poems), 2000
  30. The Scholarly Treatise, 2001
  31. Caliphate and Monarchy, 2001
  32. Exemplary Men of Uprising and Reform, 2001
  33. Day and Night Schedule of the Believer, 2002
  34. The Price (5th in the series “The Prophetic Method Discourses”), 2004
  35. God’s Custom, 2005
  36. Introductions to the future of Islam, 2005
  37. Day and Night Schedule of the Believer (a book in Arabic and English), 2007
  38. Leadership of the Umma, 2009
  39. Qur’ān and Prophecy, 2010
  40. The Muslim Community and its Bond, 2012

originally written in French

  1. The Islamic Method of Revolution, 1980
  2. Toward a Dialog with our Westernized Elite, 1980
  3. Winning the Modern World for Islam, 1998
  4. Memorandum: To Him Who Is Concerned (an open letter in French to the country's new king, Mohamed VI), 1999

translated into English

  • Memorandum: To Him Who Is Concerned (an open letter originally in French to the country's new king, Mohamed VI), 1999
  • Winning the Modern World for Islam, 2000
  • The Muslim Mind on Trial: Divine Revelation versus Secular Rationalism, 2003
gollark: A convincing explanation I read of the everyone-has-to-go-to-college thing is that college degrees work as a signal to employers that you have some basic competence at listening independently, doing things for delayed gain later, sort of thing, more than providing any massively work-relevant skills, and it apparently got easier/more popular to get a degree over time, so the *lack* of one works as a signal that you *lack* those basic skills.
gollark: No idea.
gollark: Throwing money at a somewhat broken system can just perpetuate the somewhat broken system and cost a lot.
gollark: Oh, 30.
gollark: Somewhat slowly, but that graph spans... 35 years.

References

  1. Associated Press (December 13, 2012). "Abdessalam Yassine, leader of Morocco's largest opposition movement, dies at 84, says group". The Washington Post. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  2. Masbah, Mohammed (January 10, 2013). "In Yassine's Footsteps". Sada. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  3. Aïssa Kadri, Parcours d'intellectuels maghrébins, Karthala Editions, 1999, p. 129-164
  4. Henry Clement M., Globalization and the Politics of Development in the Middle East , p. 225
  5. Malika Zeghal, Islamism in Morocco: religion, authoritarianism, and electoral politics, p. 99
  6. "Décès: Enterrement de Khadija Al Malki après l'engagement de ses proches à respecter les préceptes de la charia en matière d'inhumation". Le Martin (in French). 26 March 2015. Archived from the original on 31 March 2015.
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