Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Sultan Qaboos, Omani Society, and the “Blessed Renaissance”, 1979–2020
- 1 The Legacy of Sultan Qaboos: A Historiographical Note
- 2 Prehistoric Interactions between Oman and the Indus Civilization: Projecting the Past in the Present
- 3 The Land of Frankincense: Dhofari Sites as National and World Heritage
- 4 The Multiple Legacies of Sultan Qaboos: Heritage and Omani Nation–building
- 5 Stamps as Messengers of the Renaissance: The Postal Issues of Oman during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 6 From the First Renaissance to the Second: The Historical and Legal Basis for the Sultanate
- 7 The Interpretation of Islam under Sultan Qaboos
- 8 In the Middle of a Reign
- 9 Constitutional Reforms during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 10 Nation and State in Oman: The Initial Impact of 1970
- 11 Literature in Oman during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 12 Public Health and the Omani Renaissance
- 13 Beyond the Horizon and Back: The Sultan Qaboos Scholarship
- 14 Muscat and Sultan Qaboos: The Omanization of Muscat and the Muscatization of Oman
- 15 Duqm and Salalah: Oman’s Ports and Special Economic Zones
- 16 Greening Oman: Islamic Environmentalism, Sustainable Development, and Post-oil Futures
- 17 Omani Peacemaking and Middle East Crises in the 2010s: Sultan Qaboos’ Last Decade
- 18 “Friend to All, Enemy to None”: Oman’s Quiet Diplomacy since 1970
- Index
7 - The Interpretation of Islam under Sultan Qaboos
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 November 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Sultan Qaboos, Omani Society, and the “Blessed Renaissance”, 1979–2020
- 1 The Legacy of Sultan Qaboos: A Historiographical Note
- 2 Prehistoric Interactions between Oman and the Indus Civilization: Projecting the Past in the Present
- 3 The Land of Frankincense: Dhofari Sites as National and World Heritage
- 4 The Multiple Legacies of Sultan Qaboos: Heritage and Omani Nation–building
- 5 Stamps as Messengers of the Renaissance: The Postal Issues of Oman during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 6 From the First Renaissance to the Second: The Historical and Legal Basis for the Sultanate
- 7 The Interpretation of Islam under Sultan Qaboos
- 8 In the Middle of a Reign
- 9 Constitutional Reforms during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 10 Nation and State in Oman: The Initial Impact of 1970
- 11 Literature in Oman during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 12 Public Health and the Omani Renaissance
- 13 Beyond the Horizon and Back: The Sultan Qaboos Scholarship
- 14 Muscat and Sultan Qaboos: The Omanization of Muscat and the Muscatization of Oman
- 15 Duqm and Salalah: Oman’s Ports and Special Economic Zones
- 16 Greening Oman: Islamic Environmentalism, Sustainable Development, and Post-oil Futures
- 17 Omani Peacemaking and Middle East Crises in the 2010s: Sultan Qaboos’ Last Decade
- 18 “Friend to All, Enemy to None”: Oman’s Quiet Diplomacy since 1970
- Index
Summary
Oman is the only country in the world in which the majority of Muslims, at least by the Omani government’s own account, belong to the Ibadi sect of Islam. Ibadism is the only surviving branch of Kharijism, the movement that originated in discontent with the caliphates of ‘Uthman (644–656) and ‘Ali (656–661). Today Ibadis deny that they are Kharijis because of this appellation’s linkage to a long-extinct group that was known for its violence, although there were always moderate Kharijis as well. Ibadism thus represents a third branch of Islam, distinct from Sunnism and Shiism. Ibadis, who number less than 1 percent of the world’s Muslims, are found mainly in the Oman and in small pockets in Algeria, Libya, and Tunisia, and among Omani immigrant communities in East Africa. Sultan Qaboos bin Said was himself an Ibadi. His reign from 1970 to 2020 and his program of modernization and social transformation cannot be fully understood without addressing the role of Ibadism in Omani society and history and the interpretation of Islamic thought fostered under his rule.
The original distinctions between the Kharijis, the Shia, and the main body of Muslims, later called Sunnis, concerned the qualifications of the leader of the Muslims (the caliph/khalifa or imam). Until the end of the ‘Abbasid caliphate (750–1258 CE), Sunnis required that the caliph or imam belong to the Quraysh tribe, but thereafter they accepted any ruler who could unify the majority of Muslims. The Shiites, the partisans of ‘Ali, held that the imam must belong to the immediate household or descendants of Muhammad; the Twelver/Imami and Ismaʻili branches of Shiism hold that there can only be a single true imam, selected by God. Kharijis held that tribe and lineage have no bearing on the qualifications of the imam, who should be selected in consultation with the leading scholars of the community on the basis of his piety and qualifications for leadership.
Among the distinctive features of traditional Ibadism are a strong insistence on just rule, the requirement to resist injustice, and the permissibility of removing tyrannical rulers whenever possible. Unlike Sunni ‘ulama’, who came not only to accept dynastic rule but to make it a religious requirement to obey tyrannical rulers, Ibadi scholars played a role in the selection of the ruling imam and in opposition to injustice.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Sultan Qaboos and Modern Oman, 1970-2020 , pp. 185 - 208Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2022