
Islamismexperten Lorenzo Vidino ger i senaste
Muslimska Brödraskapets strategi och taktik
i Europa.
***
"In 1990 Yusuf al-Qaradawi, 
an influential Sunni scholar and 
the unofficial theological leader 
of the international Muslim Brotherhood 
(al Ikhwan al Muslimoun), 
published a book called Priorities 
of the Islamic Movement in the Coming Phase. [1] 
This 186-page treatise can be 
considered the most recent manifesto 
of the Islamist revivalist movement. 
As Qaradawi explains in the 
introduction, the “Islamic Movement” 
is meant to be the “organized, collective work, 
undertaken by the people, to restore 
Islam to the leadership of society” 
and to reinstate “the Islamic caliphate 
system to the leadership anew as required by sharia.” 
**
Qaradawi’s treatise introduces 
a new agenda and modus operandi 
for the movement, signaling a clear break 
with many salafi groups and even 
with some past ideological elements o
f the Muslim Brotherhood. 
While the book does not rule 
out the use of violence to defend Muslim lands, 
it generally advocates the use of dawa, 
dialogue, and other peaceful means 
to achieve the movement’s goals. 
This doctrine is commonly referred to 
as “wassatiyya,” a sort of “middle way” 
between violent extremism and secularism, 
and Qaradawi is one of its key proponents. [2]
**
After examining the situation 
of the “Islamic Movement” throughout 
the Muslim world, the dissertation 
devotes significant attention to the 
situation of Muslims living in the West. 
Qaradawi explains how Muslim 
expatriates living in Europe, Australia 
and North America “are no longer few in numbers,” 
and that their presence is both 
permanent and destined to grow with 
new waves of immigration. 
While Qaradawi says that their 
presence is “necessary” for several reasons
—such as spreading the word of Allah 
globally and defending the Muslim Nation “
against the antagonism and misinformation 
of anti- Islamic forces and trends”—
it is also problematic. 
Because the Muslim Nation, and therefore 
Muslim minorities “scattered throughout t
he world,” do not have a centralized leadership, 
“melting” poses a serious risk. 
Qaradawi warns, in other words, 
that a Muslim minority could lose 
its Islamic identity and be absorbed 
by the non-Muslim majority. "