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Muslim Brotherhood
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Muslim Brotherhood

Sunni Islamic movement founded in Egypt in 1928, active throughout the Arab world although banned in most countries. It aims at the establishment of a Muslim state governed by Islamic law.

The movement, founded by Hasan al-Banna (1906–1949), also operates under different names, such as the People of the Call (Alh al-Da'wa) in Algeria and Islamic Party (al Hizb al-Islami) in Tunisia.

The Muslim Brotherhood is headed by a ‘supreme guide’. It has grown to become the most prominent Sunni Islamic movement, and gained political acceptance in Jordan, in 1989 winning 20 out of 80 seats in the House of Representatives, and joining the government in 1991. However, in Syria, membership became a capital crime 1980.



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They have remained unchallenged in the Islamic world in spite of numerous internal conflicts and movements that sought to establish "true" Islamic brotherhood.
Revolutionary Islam is an attempt to deal with the problem [of perceived Muslim helplessness], and has been for the more than a century since Hassan Al-Banna founded the Ikhwan al-Mulimeen, or Islamic Brotherhood, in Egypt as a way of turning Islam into a political ideology.
This Islamic Confederation champions the idea of an Islamic brotherhood with employers, as opposed to conflict-oriented trade unionism.
 
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