伊拉克的国家与宗教:历史背景下前巴政权的苏菲叛乱

IF 1.3 3区 社会学 Q1 AREA STUDIES International Journal of Middle East Studies Pub Date : 2023-05-01 DOI:10.1017/S0020743823000818
David Jordan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自2003年萨达姆·侯赛因政权倒台以来,伊拉克社会从一个世俗的巴党威权主义下的强大中央集权国家过渡到一个由什叶派伊斯兰政党主导、派系斗争、公开宗派竞争和冲突困扰的新的软弱但仍然威权的联邦国家,经历了深刻的危机。全面审视该国最近的历史断裂和持续,尤其是与国家和宗教之间的关系有关,仍然是当代伊拉克研究的当务之急。35年的巴独裁统治在多大程度上改变和持久塑造了伊拉克多样化的宗教景观,目前还没有完全了解。在美国领导的入侵之后,前政权因其对社会几乎所有阶层的镇压和暴行而被人们铭记,但其形象以及长期以来对其“无神论者”和“反宗教”的观念和记忆正日益受到挑战。此外,2005年以来的宗派冲突和暴力事件表明,伊拉克各派之间在圣地和清真寺等著名宗教纪念场所的解释主权和所有权问题上持续存在冲突。从1980年两伊战争开始,巴政权慷慨赞助逊尼派和什叶派圣地,并在全国各地的宗教战争宣传中宣传它们是纪念伊拉克和阿拉伯国家的场所。这些宗教场所中的许多都被某种忏悔的模糊性所包围,构成了逊尼派和什叶派的纪念馆和聚会场所。政权倒台后,这种模糊性引发了对这些遗址的宗派竞争,因为两个社区经常与同一个圣地联系在一起,对同一个圣人的记忆截然不同,或者他们对埋葬在那里的人意见不一。反过来,激进的圣战分子萨拉菲人普遍认为他们是非伊斯兰的,甚至从2014年起将他们与旧政权联系在一起。
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State and Religion in Iraq: The Sufi Insurgency of the Former Baʿth Regime in Historical Context
Since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime in 2003, Iraqi society has experienced profound crises in its transition from a strong centralized state under secular Baʿth Party authoritarianism to a new weak but still authoritarian federal state that is dominated by Shiʿi Islamist parties and plagued by factionalism, open sectarian competition, and conflict. A comprehensive scrutiny of the country's recent historical ruptures and continuities that pertain to the relations between the state and religion in particular is still a desideratum in contemporary Iraq studies. The extent to which thirty-five years of Baʿthi dictatorship transformed and lastingly shaped Iraq's diverse religious landscape is still not yet fully understood. Following the US-led invasion, the former regime was well-remembered for its repression and atrocities against almost all segments of society, but its image and the long-held notion and memory of it as “atheist” and “antireligious” are increasingly being challenged. Moreover, sectarian conflicts and violence since 2005 reveal an ongoing conflict over the interpretive sovereignty and ownership of famous religious sites of memory, such as shrines and mosques, between the various factions in Iraq. Beginning with the Iran–Iraq War in 1980, the Baʿth regime lavishly sponsored Sunni and Shiʿi shrines and advertised them in its religious war propaganda all over the country as sites of memory for the Iraqi and Arab nation. Many of these religious sites were surrounded by a certain confessional ambiguity and constitute memorials and meeting places for Sunnis and Shiʿis equally. After the fall of the regime, this ambiguity sparked sectarian competition over these sites since both communities often associated with one and the same shrine quite different memories of the same saintly figure, or they disagreed about who was buried there. Radical jihadist Salafis, in turn, generally rejected them as un-Islamic and even associated them with the old regime from 2014 onward.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
10.00%
发文量
81
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Middle East Studies publishes original research on politics, society and culture in the Middle East from the seventh century to the present day. The journal also covers Spain, south-east Europe, and parts of Africa, South Asia, and the former Soviet Union for subjects of relevance to Middle Eastern civilization. Particular attention is paid to the history, politics, economics, anthropology, sociology, literature, and cultural studies of the area and to comparative religion, theology, law, and philosophy. Each issue contains approximately 50 pages of detailed book reviews. Subscribers to the print version also receive the Review of Middle East Studies free. Published under the auspices of the Middle East Studies Association of North America
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