29/08/2012 / LIBYA
A little over a month after Libya held its first free elections in
decades, the government’s grip on power remains tenuous as
groups of extremists take advantage of the transitional period to carry out attacks. Groups of Salafists have taken to targeting mausoleums and tombs across the country, which, despite being Muslim institutions, they believe to be symbols of heresy.
groups of extremists take advantage of the transitional period to carry out attacks. Groups of Salafists have taken to targeting mausoleums and tombs across the country, which, despite being Muslim institutions, they believe to be symbols of heresy.
The first attack took place in Zliten, a town just 160 kilometres
east of the capital Tripoli, on Friday, August 24. Using bulldozers,
explosives and jackhammers, a group of Salafists wrecked a Sufi shrine
(Sufism is a mystical branch of Islam). They also destroyed the mosque
attached to it and its library, while yelling “Allah Akbar!” (“God is
great!”). The following day, Sufi shrines in Tripoli and the northern
city of Misrata were also destroyed. These incidents were filmed by the
Salafists themselves, who then posted the footage online.
This is not the first time that religious sites have been destroyed
in Libya. Just last December, a tomb was bulldozed in Misrata. In
videos of this incident, the attackers can be seen holding books and
signs with Muammar Gaddafi’s face on them, declaring that the former
Libyan leader had financed the mausoleums.
زليتن هدم ضريح العلامة الشيخ عبدالسلام الأسمر من قبل زمرة اعداء الدين
Mohamed al-Magariaf, head of the country’s newly elected National
Congress, has condemned the string of shrine attacks, vowing to arrest
and severely punish those responsible. Libya’s Interior Minister Fawzi
Abdel A'al, however, resigned from office after coming under fire for
not having done enough to prevent the attacks in Tripoli.
The incidents have triggered a wave of demonstrations in the capital over the past few days to protest against the vandalism.
This
is not the first time that extremists attacked the mausoleum in Zliten.
Just four months ago there was a group that tried to destroy it, but
the local community stood up against them. This time around, they took
advantage of the fact that everyone was distracted by a fight that had
erupted between two of the town’s families [which claimed two lives on
August 23] to attack the site.
“What really shocked me was how equipped the Salafists were when they came to destroy the mausoleum”
Enas
is a blogger and medical student in Tripoli. She is a member of FRANCE
24 and RFI’s Libyablog, a collective of local bloggers. She took part in
demonstrations to protest against the attacks targeting the country’s
mausoleums.
“They destroyed texts that were 700 years old”
Not only did they wreck the shrine and vandalise the saint’s tomb,
but they also destroyed a number of texts that were 700 years old. The
Salafists justified their actions by saying that the Sufi mausoleum was a
place of heresy where people go to worship men rather than God [the
tombs are those of Muslim scholars who were sainted after their deaths.
Some visitors come to seek their blessings and to pray that they will
act on their behalf before God, which is prohibited under Islam]. What
they don’t realise is that this mausoleum’s mosque is an actual place of
prayer, which is why they don’t think twice about destroying it.
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