|
What The Muslim Brothers Want: A New Beginning Rooted In Justice And Progress
16 February 2011 By Essam El-Errian
THE Egyptian people have spoken,
and we have spoken emphatically. In two weeks of
peaceful demonstrations we have persistently demanded
liberation and democracy. It was groups of brave,
sincere Egyptians who initiated this moment of
historical opportunity on Jan. 25, and the
Muslim
Brotherhood is committed to joining the
national effort toward reform and progress.
In more than eight decades of activism, the
Muslim Brotherhood has consistently
promoted an agenda of gradual reform. Our principles,
clearly stated since the inception of the movement in
1928, affirm an unequivocal position against violence.
For the past 30 years we have posed, peacefully, the
greatest challenge to the ruling
National Democratic Party
of
Hosni Mubarak,
while advocating for the disenfranchised classes in
resistance to an oppressive regime.
We have repeatedly tried to engage with the
political system, yet these efforts have been largely
rejected based on the assertion that the Muslim
Brotherhood is a banned organization, and has been
since 1954. It is seldom mentioned, however, that the
Egyptian Administrative Court in June 1992 stated that
there was no legal basis for the group’s dissolution.
In the wake of the people’s revolt, we have
accepted invitations to participate in talks on a
peaceful transition. Along with other representatives
of the opposition, we recently took part in
exploratory meetings with Vice President Omar
Suleiman. In these talks, we made clear that we will
not compromise or co-opt the public’s agenda. We come
with no special agenda of our own — our agenda is that
of the Egyptian people, which has been asserted since
the beginning of this uprising.
We aim to achieve reform and rights for all: not
just for the Muslim Brotherhood, not just for Muslims,
but for all Egyptians. We do not intend to take a
dominant role in the forthcoming political transition.
We are not putting forward a candidate for the
presidential elections scheduled for September.
While we express our openness to dialogue, we also
re-assert the public’s demands, which must be met
before any serious negotiations leading to a new
government. The Mubarak regime has yet to show serious
commitment to meeting these demands or to moving
toward substantive, guaranteed change.
As our nation heads toward liberty, however, we
disagree with the claims that the only options in
Egypt are a purely secular,
liberal democracy
or an authoritarian theocracy. Secular liberal
democracy of the American and European variety, with
its firm rejection of religion in public life, is not
the exclusive model for a legitimate democracy.
In Egypt, religion continues to be an important
part of our culture and heritage. Moving forward, we
envision the establishment of a democratic, civil
state that draws on universal measures of freedom and
justice, which are central Islamic values. We embrace
democracy not as a foreign concept that must be
reconciled with tradition, but as a set of principles
and objectives that are inherently compatible with and
reinforce Islamic tenets.
The tyranny of autocratic rule must give way to
immediate reform: the demonstration of a serious
commitment to change, the granting of freedoms to all
and the transition toward democracy. The Muslim
Brotherhood stands firmly behind the demands of the
Egyptian people as a whole.
Steady, gradual reform must begin now, and it must
begin on the terms that have been called for by
millions of Egyptians over the past weeks. Change does
not happen overnight, but the call for change did —
and it will lead us to a new beginning rooted in
justice and progress.
Essam El-Errian is a member of the guidance council of
the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt.
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add
Comments |