Saʽid Ḥawwa

Said Hawwa (Arabic: سعيد حوى, ''Saīd Ḥawwá'') (1935–1989) was a prominent Syrian Hanafi scholar, a symbol of resistance to Hafez al-Assad and a leading member and prominent ideologue in the Muslim Brotherhood of Syria. Hawwa authored a large number of books that dealt with the proper organizational principles and structures for Islamist organizations, the proper spiritual and practical training for Muslim activists, and issues of interpretation, jurisprudence, and creed in Islam. As a high-ranking member of the Syrian Brotherhood, he was involved in the escalating unrest directed against the Ba`thist regime throughout the 1960s and 1970s and played a key role from exile in the latter part of the failed Islamist uprising in Syria of 1976–1982.

Hawwa was also an early prominent scholar known for his vocal opposition to Iran's Khomeinist movement. In his treatise "''Khomeini, Deviation in Doctrines, Deviation in Positions''", Hawwa denounced Khomeini's beliefs as heretical and attacked Khomeinist revolution as a project to expand Iranian influence in the Arab World. Hawwa's treatise made a huge impact amongst Sunnis in the Muslim World, who were becoming increasingly opposed to Iranian policies. Provided by Wikipedia
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by Sa'id Hawwa.
Published 1999