Egypt, 1925: the Muslim world is in turmoil over Mustapha Kamal
Ataturk's proposed abolition of the caliphate in Turkey. The tension
surrounding Islam and politics re-ignites as traditional political
systems dissolve under pressure from European powers and most Muslim
countries lose their sovereignty. Into this debate enters Ali Abdel
Razek, a religious cleric trained at Al-Azhar University, arguing in
favour of secularism in his essay 'Islam and the Foundations of
Political Power', translated here for the first time. This edition
includes a contextualising introduction, Razek's original footnotes and
new explanatory notes, additional notes about particular people, events
and vocabulary that may be unfamiliar to modern readers, and an appendix
with a list of Razek's sources and their full publication details.