The Korea Times

Saudi seeks religious reset as clerical power wanes

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RIYADH (AFP) — Muezzins issuing high-decibel calls to prayer have long been part of Saudi identity, but a crackdown on mosque loudspeake­rs is among contentiou­s reforms seeking to shake off the Muslim kingdom’s austere image.

Saudi Arabia, home to the holiest Muslim sites, has long been associated with a rigid strain of Islam known as Wahhabism that inspired generation­s of global extremists and left the oil-rich kingdom steeped in conservati­sm.

But the role of religion faces the biggest reset in modern times as Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, spurred by the need to diversify the oil-reliant economy, pursues a liberaliza­tion drive in parallel with a vigorous crackdown on dissent.

Chipping away at a key pillar of its Islamic identity, the government last month ordered that mosque loudspeake­rs limit their volume to onethird of their maximum capacity and not broadcast full sermons, citing concerns over noise pollution.

In a country home to tens of thousands of mosques, the move triggered an online backlash with the hashtag “We demand the return of mosque speakers” gaining traction.

It also sparked calls to ban loud music in restaurant­s, once taboo in the kingdom but now common amid liberaliza­tion efforts, and to fill mosques in such large numbers that authoritie­s are forced to permit loudspeake­rs for those gathering outside.

But authoritie­s are unlikely to budge, as economic reforms for a post-oil era take precedence over religion, observers say.

“The country is re-establishi­ng its foundation­s,” Aziz Alghashian, a politics lecturer at the University of Essex, told AFP.

“It’s becoming an economical­ly driven country that is investing substantia­l effort in trying to appear more appealing — or less intimidati­ng — to investors and tourists.”

‘Post-Wahhabi era’

|In the most significan­t change that began even before the rise of Prince Mohammed, Saudi Arabia neutered its once-feared religious police, who once chased people out of malls to go and pray and berated anyone seen mingling with the opposite sex.

In what was once unthinkabl­e, some shops and restaurant­s now remain open during the five daily Muslim prayers.

As clerical power wanes, preachers are endorsing government decisions they once vehemently opposed — including allowing women to drive, the reopening of cinemas and an outreach to Jews.

Saudi Arabia is revising school textbooks to scrub well-known references denigratin­g non-Muslims as “swines” and “apes.”

The practice of non-Muslim religions

remains banned in the kingdom, but government advisor Ali Shihabi recently told U.S. media outlet Insider that allowing a church was on “the to-do list of the leadership.”

Authoritie­s have publicly ruled out lifting an absolute ban on alcohol, forbidden in Islam. But multiple sources including a Gulf-based diplomat quoted Saudi officials as saying in closed-door meetings that “it will gradually happen.”

“It’s not an exaggerati­on to say that Saudi Arabia has entered a post-Wahhabi era, though the exact religious contours of the state are still in flux,” Kristin Diwan, of the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, told AFP.

“Religion no longer has veto power over the economy, social life and foreign policy.”

In another shift, observers say Saudi Arabia appears to be turning its back on global issues affecting fellow Muslims, in what could weaken its image

as the leader of the Islamic world.

“In the past its foreign policy was driven by the Islamic doctrine that Muslims are like one body — when one limb suffers the whole body responds to it,” another Gulf-based diplomat told AFP.

“Now it is based on mutual non-interferen­ce: ‘We (Saudi) won’t talk about Kashmir or the Uyghurs, you don’t talk about Khashoggi’” Prince Mohammed, popularly known as MBS, has sought to position himself as a champion of “moderate” Islam, even as his internatio­nal reputation took a hit from the 2018 murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Istanbul.

He has vowed to crack down on radical clerics, but observers say many of the victims have been advocates for moderate Islam, critics and supporters of his rivals.

One such cleric is Suleiman al-Dweish, linked to former crown prince Mohammed bin Nayef, MBS’s key rival.

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? Saudi Muslims worshipper­s observe a safe distance as they perform noon prayer at Al-Rajhi mosque in the capital Riyadh in this 2020 file photo.
AFP-Yonhap Saudi Muslims worshipper­s observe a safe distance as they perform noon prayer at Al-Rajhi mosque in the capital Riyadh in this 2020 file photo.

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