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Al-Ustaz (revered teacher) Mahmoud Muhammad Taha was born
in 1909 in Rufa'a, a small town on the east bank of
the Al-Ustaz Mahmoud
and other intellectuals who agreed with his criticism formed the Republican
Party in October of 1945. The organization’s first publication and subsequent
pamphlets and leaflets reflected a strong modernist Islamic orientation which, at the time, was not yet fully
developed. The party’s policy of direct and open confrontation with the
colonial authorities led to the arrest and subsequent imprisonment of Al-Ustaz Mahmoud in 1946. He
was sentenced to prison for a year when he refused to abstain from political
activity against the colonial government. In response to the mounting protest
orchestrated by the Republican Party, he was “pardoned” by the British
Governor General and released after fifty days in prison. |
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He did not stay free
for long, however. In the same year he was arrested, tried,
and sentenced to two years’ imprisonment for leading a popular revolt against
the British in the town of Through his
intelligent and exact imitation of the Prophet Muhammad Al-Ustaz Mahmoud arrived to
his individual relation with God which he later described in the following
paragraph translated from his book “Questions and Answers– Part two”: “So, my prayer, my
fasting, my holy pilgrimage and my Zakat ‘Alms-giving’
are collectively, and separately, my whole life in my joy as in my sorrow, in
my wakefulness as in my sleep, in my health as in my illness. And it is a
life that should be for Allah – contenting with Him, ever correcting its
contentment, to the extent of being joyful with Him.” |
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THE
EMERGENCE OF A NEW CONCEPT By the end of his
period of seclusion in October 1951, Al-Ustaz
emerged with a comprehensive new conception of Islam. He summed up that
understanding in a book that was published in 1952 under the name “This is
my Path”, Qul Hadhihi
Sabieli. The Republican Party was then transformed from a political party, in the usual
sense of the term, into an organization for the propagation of that new
conception of Islam. Those members of the party who wanted to pursue a more
secular political role broke away and joined other political parties. For
those who remained with the party, the organization became a spiritual
environment under the guidance of Al-Ustaz Mahmoud. After a short period
of service with the Water and Electricity Company in In 1955, just before |
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Shortly after
independence, which was granted since |
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After the return to
the Multi-Party parliamentary rule Al-Ustaz Mahmoud revived his
Republican Party, not to indulge in Politics in the usual way, but to
propagate his proposals for social, political and religious reform through
public lectures, newspaper articles, and books. In 1966-67
he published three of his main books: “Tarieq Mohammed –Mohammed’s Path”, “Risalat Assalat –The Message of
Prayer” and “Arrisala Atthaniya
min Al-Islam –The Second Message of
Islam”. He was the first man to propose a direct dialog for a peaceful
co-existence between the The sectarian ruling
Parties together with the Muslim-Brotherhood movement managed to amend the
article number 5/2 in the constitution in order to expel communist members of
the parliament and dissolve their party in 1965. Despite his principal
opposition to Marxist Communism, Al-Ustaz Mahmoud objected vigorously to the dissolution of
the Sudanese Communist Party and he considered that step as falsification to
Democracy. So it was not surprising
that internal and external influences united in an effort to silence Al-Ustaz Mahmoud and his
Movement. That plotting appeared in an attempt, in November 1968, to accuse
him of Ridda, or Apostasy - the fall from
Islam- theoretically punishable by death. He refused to appear before that
court depending on his constitutional right of freedom of thought and
expression. Anyhow the Khartoum Sharia
High Court assembled in his absence to look into allegations raised by two
“Islamic University Teachers” accusing Al-Ustaz
Mahmoud of Ridda
and demanding the dismantling of his party and movement. That court was able
to forge a nominal verdict which, although remained without formal
consequences, but it caused the movement a lot of
inconveniences in correcting those false allegations. Its advantage, however,
was the subsequent wide publicity of the movement among the young
intellectuals and students who were dissatisfied with the traditional Islamic
Thought as well as with the rule of the parties along sectarian lines.
Meanwhile, the sectarian parties were engaged in games of power by trying to
win public support in the issue of including the Sharia
Rules in the permanent Constitution. They were even ready to make it the
subject of a public Referendum if the Parliament was unable to approve it by
the end of 1969. All that led to wide discontent among the Army Officers,
some of whom were organized in the so-called “Free
Officers Movement” which succeeded in seizing the power on May 1969. The new
government banned all political parties, including the Republican Party. |
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The Republicans during the May Regime 1969-1983 It was quite obvious from the start that the new Military Regime
was influenced and supported by the Communist Party and by the Arab
Nationalists. It won a quick support from A
Woman-Liberating Movement For most of the
remaining years of his life, Al-Ustaz
confined himself to guiding the activities of the organization by then known
as the “Republican Brothers” which included a growing number of women
members. Both male and female members of the organization continued to
propagate the Second Message of Islam despite harassment by some officials
and members of the security forces. Since it was crucial to Al-Ustaz Mahmoud that he
should practice what he preached, he tried to establish a community, which
applied, as far as possible, the main tenets of his vision of Islam. As a
small community within Sudanese society, the Republicans were unable to
implement the full scope of their beliefs in the Organization of the The group’s practice
in relation to contracting marriage is illustrative of the members'
determination to implement their reform in light of the prevailing social
customs. |
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A
latent Confrontation After Al-Ustaz Mahmoud’s public
lectures were banned in 1973, his disciples operated
with some difficulty throughout most of Numeiri’s
rule. Although their activities were always within the law, their views
tended to arouse opposition from traditional and fundamentalist religious and
political circles. Their opponents
succeeded at times in applying various administrative and executive mechanisms
to obstruct or limit the effectiveness of the Republicans. Denied access to
the media, all of which were state-owned at that time, the Republicans had to
prepare their own publications and seek unorthodox channels to reach the
public. They had to resort, for example, to the use of street corners and
public parks to address whoever was willing to stop and listen to what they
had to say. The police often intervened to break up those spontaneous public
meetings, charging the Republicans conducting the
meetings with “breach of the peace” and “disturbance of public
tranquility.” The Republicans’ frequent protests against those
infringements of their fundamental constitutional rights were futile. Despite
these restrictions, the Republicans supported the regime of former President Numeiri throughout the 1970s and into the early 1980s.
Their support was forthcoming as long as the regime maintained policies of
national unity and refrained from applying Sharia
to the detriment of women and non-Muslim Sudanese. The Republicans also
believed that the regime of President Numeiri was
preferable to the only available alternative, a sectarian and
“fundamentalist” civilian dictatorship. Only after Sharia
was imposed by presidential decrees beginning in
August of 1983, thereby undermining national unity between the Muslim north
and non-Muslim south and leading to harsh and repressive policies in the
country as a whole, did the Republicans declare their opposition. In other
words, their opposition was prompted by the change in
the nature and policies of the regime rather than the 1983 detention of the
group’s leadership as such. Al-Ustaz Mahmoud himself had previously been
detained together with eight leaders of the group, for one month in
1976-77 without charge for publishing a book criticizing the Wahhabi movement of |
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The immediate or
apparent cause of the detention in mid 1983 was a pamphlet issued by the
Republicans. It criticized what they perceived to be the failurof
the chief of state security, who also happened to be the first vice-president
of the republic, to check Muslim fundamentalists’ incitement of religious
hatred, and abetment of violence against the Republicans and against
non-Muslim Sudanese. In hindsight, however,
and in the light of subsequent developments, it would seem that at least the
continuation of the leaders’ detention, if not the initial sweeping detention
order, was motivated by other considerations. A few
weeks after their detention, President Numeiri
announced his intention to impose Sharia
law. If the Republicans were free, it must have been
thought, they would actively oppose that policy, because it
contravened their long-held position that there must be radical reform of Sharia prior to its modern implementation. When
that policy materialized in a series of enactments starting in August 1983,
the Republicans started an opposition campaign with their leadership still in
detention. Despite their active opposition to President Numeiri’s
policy of imposed Islamization, or perhaps because
of that opposition, the Republicans were all released
on |
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The initial police
reaction to the leaflet was ambivalent, because of the recent mass release of
the Republicans. Moreover, the mild language and content of the leaflet
itself gave no cause for serious charges under existing laws. Some police
districts arrested a few Republicans who were found
distributing the leaflet and charged them with the minor offense of breach of
the peace under section 127 of the penal code. In some cases, however, police
officers actually intervened to instruct an arresting policeman
to release a Republican because no offense was committed. It
was at this point that the state minister for criminal affairs intervened and
instructed public prosecutors in the three towns of Khartoum, Omdurman, and Khartoum North to press charges of
sedition, undermining the constitution, inciting unlawful opposition to the
government, and disturbing public tranquility under sections 96, 105 and 127A
of the Penal Code Of 1983, as well as membership in an unlawful organization
under section 20 of the State Security Act of 1973. With the charges
thereby transformed into capital offenses, ten recently arrested Republicans
were to remain in custody, as the new charges permitted no release on bail.
On Al-Ustaz Mahmoud
accompanied by all the Republicans, men as well as women marched in a
peaceful demonstration to that court. The trial was
adjourned, however, because the serious charges required the special
sanction of the president of the republic. On Saturday afternoon, January 5, Al-Ustaz Mahmoud was arrested at his house in But
because the five accused decided to boycott the trial proceedings because of
their objections to the laws under which the court was constituted and
purported to act, and also because of their objections to the calibre of the judges presiding in those courts, the
unconstitutionality of charges under section 458(3) of the penal code was
never discussed at any stage of the case. In announcing his
decision to boycott the proceedings, Al-Ustaz
Mahmoud improvised a strong statement (click to hear). |
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The trial lasted less
than two hours. On the first day, Monday, January 7, the only
witness for the prosecution, the police officer who interviewed the accused
after their arrest, was examined by the public prosecutor and the judge.
His testimony lasted about an hour, The witness
submitted the only exhibit for the prosecution, the leaflet published by the
Republicans on On Tuesday, the 8th of
January, the judge read his judgment, which was largely based
on the statements made by the accused for the investigating police officer.
The judge stated that the accused held curious and unorthodox views of Islam,
which might or might not be valid: according to his knowledge of Islam, the Quran may reveal its secrets to men of piety and
diligence. Nevertheless, according to the judgment, it was certainly wrong of
the accused to discuss those secrets and insights with the public, because
that activity could create religious turmoil (fitnah). |
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Following this
discussion of the thought of the main accused, Al-Ustaz
Mahmoud-which suggested that the judge had the
Islamic offense of apostasy in mind - the judgment suddenly concluded by
declaring all five accused guilty of sedition, undermining the constitution,
inciting unlawful opposition to the government, disturbing public
tranquility, and membership in an unlawful organization. In other words, the
reasoning of the decision was related to the offense
of apostasy, although it never mentioned that offense by name, while the
actual charges were brought on sections 96, 105 and 127A of the penal code
and section 20 of the State Security Act. There was no attempt in the
proceedings to show how the conduct of the accused rendered them culpable
under those sections. While violation of section 458(3) of the penal code was mentioned as one of the charges, the judgment made no
mention of that section. The judge then passed
the death sentence on all five accused under section 96 of the penal code,
while adding the proviso that the accused could be
reprieved if they repented and recanted their views. This clearly,
shows that the judge was in fact convicting the accused of apostasy, because
under Islamic Sharia law repentance and
disavowal of the “heretic’s” views are grounds for reprieve. There was no
basis for reprieve on such grounds in relation to section 96 of the penal
code under which the accused were being sentenced. |
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In contrast to the
trial court, the special court of appeal which reviewed the
judgment relied heavily on the apostasy charge, which it specified by
name. The special court of appeal confirmed the lower court’s finding and
sentence of death for all five accused for apostasy as well as the specified
sections of the penal code and State Security Act. Holding that Al-Ustaz Mahmoud was persistent in
his apostasy, the court of appeal decided to deny him the opportunity to have
his death sentence reprieved through repentance and recanting his views. The
Court ruled that the death sentence was to be carried out
on Al-Ustaz Mahmoud
immediately. The other four accused were to be allowed
one month to reconsider their position. They were told
that they would be pardoned if they recanted. The decision of the
special court of appeal was announced on Tuesday,
January 15, and the President of the Republic publicly announced his confirmation
on Thursday, January 17, and directed the execution of Al-Ustaz
Mahmoud on Friday, January 18. Like the trial
court, President Numeiri based his address to the
nation on the theory of apostasy in Islamic Sharia
law, without mentioning the offense by name, when he confirmed the conviction
and sentence on all five accused. As for the other four accused, the
President directed that they should have only three days to repent and recant
or be executed on Sunday, January 20. As President Numeiri was making his confirmation address through
national radio and television on the afternoon of |
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Following the
execution of Al-Ustaz Mahmoud
on Friday morning, which they were made to attend,
the four convicted Republicans declared their intention to recant and were
accordingly pardoned and allowed to go free on Saturday the 19th. That
process of intimidation was videotaped and shown on TV
nationwide in an attempt to discourage any sympathy with the Republicans that
might lead to a revolt against the regime. By agreeing to dismantle
their organization and refrain from further propagation of the views of Al-Ustaz Mahmoud, all of the
nearly four hundred Republican men and women detained in Following the
overthrow of Numeiri and enactment of a new
Transitional Constitution in October of 1985, a
constitutional suit was instituted by Al-Ustaz
Mahmoud’s elder daughter, Asma,
and one of the Republicans convicted with him in the January 1985 trial. In
this suit the applicants petition the Supreme Court of the Nevertheless, the
Supreme Court asked for a detailed written response to the petition. After
considering all the available evidence and the submissions of both sides, the
Supreme Court ruled that the trial, confirmation proceedings, and execution
of Al-Ustaz Mahmoud
were all null and void. In a long judgment handed
down on The circumstances of
the prosecution and trial and the disproportionately severe sentence imposed
for publishing a mildly worded single sheet of paper critical of government
policy suggest the existence of a conspiracy or prearranged plan to murder Al-Ustaz Mahmoud. This theory
draws support from the language of correspondence between President Numeiri and his top judicial and legal advisers prior to
the arrest of Al-Ustaz Mahmoud
on In contrast, there is
the remarkable courage and serenity with which Al-Ustaz
Mahmoud met the execution. This aspect of the
episode is very significant, because it put to the ultimate test one of the main
tenets of Al-Ustaz Mahmoud’s
religious thinking, namely the doctrine of absolute submission to the will of
God. Throughout his life he preached that submission
to the will of God was the essence of Islam and endeavored to achieve such
submission in every aspect of his private and public life. He often told his
disciples to see the hand of the original actor, God, behind that of the
apparent actor or immediate cause of the event or incident. So, Al-Ustaz Mahmoud demonstrated that belief and action could combine
in the life of a human being into a single consistent pattern, even up to the
ultimate test of death. To many Sudanese, and perhaps soon to the world at
large, when his life and work are fully appreciated, the events of that
fateful Friday morning are the most eloquent testimony to Al-ustaz’s extraordinary moral stature. This summary is adopted from a
thesis written by Mr. Eddie Thomas with historical facts extracted mainly
from the writings and documentation of Dr. Abdullahi
Annaiem, as well as from a book published by the
Republican Movement in 1976 under the name of “Landmarks on the way of
development of the Republican Ideology through 30 Years” “Maalim Ala Tarieq Tatawwur Alfikra Algumhuriyya Khilal Thalathien Aaman”. Source : http://www.alfikra.org |