Syria Alawis
The Alawis, or Nusayris, who number about 1,350,000,
constitute Syria's largest religious minority. They live chiefly
along the coast in Al Ladhiqiyah Province, where they form over
60 percent of the rural population; the city of Latakia itself is
largely Sunni. The Alawis appear to be descendants of people who
lived in this region at the time of Alexander the Great. When
Christianity flourished in the Fertile Crescent, the Alawis,
isolated in their little communities, clung to their own preIslamic religion. After hundreds of years of Ismaili influence,
the Alawis moved closer to Islam. However, contacts with the
Byzantines and the Crusaders added Christian elements to the
Alawis' new creeds and practices. For example, Alawis celebrate
Christmas, Easter, and Epiphany, and use sacramental wine in some
ceremonies.
For several centuries, the Alawis enjoyed autonomy within the
Ottoman Empire, but, in the mid-nineteenth century, the Ottomans
imposed direct rule. Regarding the Alawis as infidels, the
Ottomans consistently persecuted them and imposed heavy taxation.
During the French Mandate, the Alawis briefly gained territorial
autonomy, but direct rule was reimposed in 1936.
For centuries, the Alawis constituted Syria's most repressed
and exploited minority. Most were indentured servants and tenant
farmers or sharecroppers working for Sunni landowners. However,
after Alawi President Assad and his retinue came to power in
1970, the well being of the Alawis improved considerably.
Split by sectional rivalries, the Alawis have no single,
powerful ruling family, but since independence many individual
Alawis have attained power and prestige as military officers.
Although they are settled cultivators, Alawis gather into kin
groups much like those of pastoral nomads. The four Alawi
confederations, each divided into tribes, are Kalbiyah,
Khaiyatin, Haddadin, and Matawirah.
Alawis claim they are Muslims, but conservative Sunnis do not
always recognize them as such. Like Ismaili Shias, Alawis believe
in a system of divine incarnation. Unlike Ismailis, Alawis regard
Ali as the incarnation of the deity in the divine triad. As such,
Ali is the "Meaning;" Muhammad, whom Ali created of his own
light, is the "Name;" and Salman the Persian is the "Gate." Alawi
catechesis is expressed in the formula: "I turn to the Gate; I
bow before the Name; I adore the Meaning." An Alawi prays in a
manner patterned after the shahada: "I testify that there
is no God but Ali."
According to Alawi belief, all persons at first were stars in
the world of light but fell from the firmament through
disobedience. Faithful Alawis believe they must be transformed
seven times before returning to take a place among the stars,
where Ali is the prince. If blameworthy, they are sometimes
reborn as Christians, among whom they remain until atonement is
complete. Infidels are reborn as animals.
Because many of the tenets of the faith are secret, Alawis
have refused to discuss their faith with outsiders. Only an elect
few learn the religion after a lengthy process of initiation;
youths are initiated into the secrets of the faith in stages.
Their prayer book, the source of religious instruction, is the
Kitab al Majmu, believed to be derived from Ismaili writings.
Alawis study the Quran and recognize the five pillars of Islam,
which they interpret in a wholly allegorical sense to fit
community tenets.
Alawis do not set aside a particular building for worship. In
the past, Sunni government officials forced them to build
mosques, but these were invariably abandoned. Only the men take
part in worship.
Data as of April 1987
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