4. Fundamentalism for Islam. The case of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt

This collage of pictures shows both Muslim demonstrators with manifestos for Sharia and against Christianity (Fundamentalist thought), former Egyptian president Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood and  then armed militants with covered faces (Fundamentalist action). It can introduce the theme of Islamic fundamentalism. When applied to non‐Christians, the term Fundamentalism most denotes individuals and movements in the Islamic revival of the final quarter of the twentieth century in Muslim and Arab countries. The phrase “Muslim fundamentalism” or “Islamic fundamentalism” is widely used in both scholarly and journalistic literature. It is possible find Islamism, integrism, neo‐normative Islam, neo‐traditional Islam, Islamic revivalism, and Islamic nativism too. The Muslim Brotherhood is one of the main Islamic Neo-Fundamentalist groups, was established by Hasan al-Banna in 1929 in Egypt.
[image1]

Muslims militants

www.cesnur.org/2003/hamas_09.htm

(06/08/2014) Cesnur

[image2]

Muslim demonstrators put in opposition Islam to Christianity


http://hurricane_53.ilcannocchiale.it/?TAG=fondamentalismo%20islamico

(06/08/2014) Copyright Tal Cohen