By Ernesto Londono, Published: June 10
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt — For years, the rugged Mediterranean
shoreline here has been a favorite necking place for young Egyptian
couples. But now menacing new messages have been spray-painted on the
rocks.
“Would you find it all right for your sister?” one message
says, addressing the men who bring girlfriends to the rocky area where
waves break. “God sees you.” Other messages decry alcohol. One says
simply, “Enough sins.”
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The fresh scrawls are the work of Islamists who are emerging
from the fringes of Egyptian society with zeal and swagger. Their
graffiti and billboards calling for a more conservative Egypt
have become pervasive here in recent months, part of a rapidly growing
debate about what should emerge from a revolution that toppled an
autocratic leader and unleashed long-subdued social and political
forces. “There is going to be a battle between two visions for Egypt,” said Abdel Moneim El-Shahat, a leader in Egypt’s fundamentalist Salafist movement, whose members spent long years in jail under President Hosni Mubarak. With
parliamentary elections scheduled for this fall, the Salafists are
poised to emerge as a powerful political force in the contest, which
could become an unofficial referendum on how piously the Arab world’s
largest nation should be governed in the post-revolutionary era.Salafists
are loosely organized around the ideal that Islam ought to be restored
to what they consider the pure, fundamental way the prophet Muhammad and
his immediate descendants practiced it. In Egypt, Salafist men
shun alcohol and grow long beards. They insist that female relatives
refrain from working outside the household and cover their faces with
the garment known as the niqab. Unlike the Muslim Brotherhood, they have
not actively participated in Egyptian politics and have not opened
their political ranks to minorities, such as Coptic Christians. Although less politically experienced than the better-known Brotherhood,
Egypt’s Salafists could significantly alter the political landscape of a
country that was run by a secular autocrat for three decades. Salafist
leaders are forming political parties, tapping into the region’s
burgeoning blogosphere and reintroducing themselves in communities where
they had long been regarded as pariahs.Abdallah al-Ashaal, a
former Egyptian diplomat who is running for president as a liberal, said
the Salafists will be able to rally a large base of supporters at the
polls.“They vote according to orders, not to convictions,” he said.No
one — not even budding Salafist politicians — is predicting a windfall
on election day for the movement, which includes leaders who profess
admiration for slain al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. But Shahat and
other influential Salafists say they intend to play a key role in the
drafting of a new constitution to ensure it reflects a strict
interpretation of Islamic law. Salafist leaders have not spelled
out a clear political platform or said how far they think the state
should go in ensuring that Islamic law is the anchor of morality,
justice and governance in the new Egypt.