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[[File:Islam and the Drive to Global Justice.jpg|frameless|right]]
[[File:Mutahhari.jpg|frameless|right]]
'''''Islam and the Drive to Global Justice: Principles of Justice Beyond Dominant Ethnic and Religious Communities''''' is a 2023 edited volume edited by [[Louay M. Safi]], published by Lexington Books (an imprint of Rowman & Littlefield). The book brings together contributions from ten scholars, including Asma Afsaruddin, Mustafa Akyol, Armando Salvatore and Mohammed Abu-Nimer, to examine the relationship between [[Islam]] and the pursuit of global justice (Safi, 2023). The work situates Islamic justice discourse within contemporary debates on globalization, universality and the policies of global powers towards Muslim populations in the Global South (Safi, 2023, p. 4).[[Islam and the Drive to Global Justice (Book)|'''Continue ...''']]</span>
'''Murtada Motahhari''' (1919–1979) was a leading Iranian cleric, philosopher, and a key theorist of the [[Iranian Revolution|1979 Iranian Revolution]]<ref name="Davari2005">Davari, M. T. (2005). ''The Political Thought of Ayatullah Murtaza Mutahhari: An Iranian Theoretician of the Islamic State''. Routledge.</ref>. Central to his thought is the concept of faith (''iman'') as the primary engine for social and political transformation. Unlike passive or purely personal belief, Motahhari viewed authentic Islamic faith as an active, revolutionary force essential for creating a just society and opposing what he identified as the destructive influences of Western materialism<ref name="Chumaedi2018">Chumaedi, A. (2018). Pemikiran Murtadha Muthahhari Tentang Negara dan Masyarakat serta Pandangannya terhadap Revolusi Islam Iran. ''Journal of Government and Civil Society'', ''2''(1), 33-50.</ref>.[[Faith in Realizing Social Revolutions: Motahhari's Perspective|'''Continue ...''']]</span>

Revision as of 11:49, 30 June 2026

Murtada Motahhari (1919–1979) was a leading Iranian cleric, philosopher, and a key theorist of the 1979 Iranian Revolution[1]. Central to his thought is the concept of faith (iman) as the primary engine for social and political transformation. Unlike passive or purely personal belief, Motahhari viewed authentic Islamic faith as an active, revolutionary force essential for creating a just society and opposing what he identified as the destructive influences of Western materialism[2].Continue ...

  1. Davari, M. T. (2005). The Political Thought of Ayatullah Murtaza Mutahhari: An Iranian Theoretician of the Islamic State. Routledge.
  2. Chumaedi, A. (2018). Pemikiran Murtadha Muthahhari Tentang Negara dan Masyarakat serta Pandangannya terhadap Revolusi Islam Iran. Journal of Government and Civil Society, 2(1), 33-50.