NOVANEWS
by Ismail Salami
President Obama bows down to Saudi king
The death of the Saudi Crown Prince Sultan bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud has dealt a strategic blow to the aging kingdom which is adamantly resistant to any form of social and political reform in the country.
Ironically, the country whose very name suggests the possessive nature of the Saud family has been converted from Hejaz to Saudi Arabia by the same family who now cling to power like mad.
Originally called Hejaz, the country has witnessed a number of different empires. The region enjoyed relative independence until the twentieth century. In 1916, Sharif Hussein bin Ali (1853-1931), the last of the Hashemite Sharifians, proclaimed himself king of an independent Hejaz and ruled over most of the land from 1201 to 1925.
As the head of the Arab nationalists, Sharif Hussein ibn Ali launched the Arab Revolt in June 1916 in alliance with Britain and France and succeeded in overthrowing the Ottoman Empire. With the conclusion of the war, Arab forces seized control of modern Jordan, most of the Arabian Peninsula and much of southern Syria.
The revolt was apparently initiated in reaction to the Ottoman pan-Turkic anti-Arab stance. Suffering political, cultural and linguistic persecution, the Arab nationalist groups in Syria, Iraq and Arabia joined in and together with the sons of Sharif Hussein bin Ali, Abdullah and Faisal, they started the Arab uprising against the Turks. Also known as the king of Mecca and the king of Arabs, Sharif Hussein bin Ali sought to create an independent Arab state which could stretch from Aleppo (Syria) to Aden (Yemen), with the aim of safeguarding cultural and traditional values and upholding Islamic ideals.
However, in 1925, Sharif Hussein ibn Ali was subjugated by Ibn Saud (1876 – 1953) of the region of Nejd. Ibn Saud who came to be known King Abdul-Aziz, renamed the country Saudi Arabia in 1932 and started supervising the discovery of petroleum in 1938. He fathered many children, including the subsequent Saudi kings. According to some sources, he had 22 wives and 37 children.
Wahhabism which has its roots in the teachings of an 18th century Muslim theologian named Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab (1703-1792) has a large number of adherents in Najd, Saudi Arabia. Wahhabism which is built upon radical teachings has spawned many ideologically crooked-minded people who spare no efforts in disseminating their twisted ideas and promoting terrorism. The Wahhabis funnel millions of dollars to the terror groups in Pakistan and Afghanistan and elsewhere to stoke up chaos and religious dissent. Erroneous is the notion that Wahhabism is a form of Islam; it is rather a form of credo rooted in ethnic supremacy.




