Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 January 2009
The Ulema are the power that holds the Sultan and his people together—the medium of control. But they seldom meddle in politics. This premise was expressed by Ameen Rihani, an Arab traveller, in 1928, before either Sultan 'Abd al-'Aziz became king or Najd and its dependencies became the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Was Rihani correct in his conclusion? Is he right today? This article will endeavor to explore the term ulama in the Saudi context in the twentieth century. Later, an attempt will be made to discuss the participation of Saudi ulama in a number of key cases in the history of Saudi Arabia.
The house of Saud along with the house of Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Wahhab, the founder of the Unitarian movement, were parties to a unique coalition in the eighteenth century. The coalition embraced the Unitarian movement, or Wahhabiyah, founded in the mid-eighteenth century, and members of the Arab noble house of Saud of Najd.
Author's note: This article was presented as a paper at the Middle East Studies Association meeting, Washington, D.C., November 6–9, 1980.Google Scholar
1 Rihani, Ameen, Maker of Modern Arabia (Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1928), p. 200.Google Scholar
2 al-Bilād, Saudi Arabia, November 10, 1970;Google Scholaral-Anwār, Lebanon, May 16, 1975;Google Scholar'Ukāz, Saudi Arabia, December 18, 1978;Google ScholarSaudi News Agency, July 9, 1979.Google Scholar
3 Sādiq, Muhammad Tawfīq, Tatawwur al-hukm wa-āl-idārah fī al-Mamlakah al-'Arabīyah al-Su'ūdīyah (Riyadh: Ma'had al-idārah al-'āmmah, 1965), p. 213. Sādiq says that 'Abd al-Rahman Āl al-Shaykh served as Minister of Agriculture from March 15, 1962 to October 31, 1962.Google Scholar See also al-Nahār, Lebanon, January 1, 1963;Google Scholaral-Bilād, Saudi Arabia, June 16, 1967.Google Scholar
4 U.S. National Archives, RG 226, Records of the Office of Strategic Services, no. 44994; British Foreign Office—Personalities in Saudi Arabia, July 1, 1939; revised 1943, p. 9.Google Scholar
5 Ibid, p. 7.
6 Arabian American Oil Company, Directory of the Royal Family, Officials of the Government, Diplomats and Other Prominent Persons (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia). Second Edition 1957, pp. 48–53; Fourth Edition 1962, Chapter 6.Google Scholar
7 a1-Bilād, April 1, 1964.Google Scholar
8 al-Shaykh, 'Abd al-Rahmān ibn 'Abd al-Latīf Āl, Mashāhir 'ulamā' Najd wa-ghayruhum (Riyadh: Dār al-Yamāmah, 1934:1974/75), p. 179.Google Scholar
9 Ibid, p. 184.
10 Public Record Office, London, Foreign Office (PRO/FO) 905, Vol. 21: Secret-Minute sheet 150/82 of August 26, 1935.Google Scholar
11 Ibid.
12 PRO/FO 371, Vol. 24588, E482/482/25. Jedda Report, December 1939, para. 377.Google Scholar
13 PO/FO 371, Vol. 35167, E160/69/25. Jedda Report, December 1939, para. 377.Google Scholar
14 PRO/FO 905, Vol. 21. Unnumbered minute sheet, September 17, 1936.Google Scholar
15 Boyd, Douglas A., “Saudi Arabian Television,” Journal of Broadcasting, XV, 1 (Winter 1970–1971), p. 73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
16 Ibid, p. 74.
17 al-Difā', Jordan, Septemper 23, 1965;Google Scholaral-Hayār, Lebanon, October 1, 1965.Google Scholar
18 The Arizona Republic, Phoenix, March 26, 1975.Google Scholar
19 Boyd, op. cit., pp. 74–5.Google Scholar
20 Eilts, Hermann F., “Social Revolution in Saudi Arabia,” Pt.1, Parameters Vol. 1, no. 1 (1971), p.9;Google ScholarUmm al-Qura, Saudi Arabia, most of the issues, 1953–1964.Google Scholar
21 His official title: al-Mufri al-akbar li-Mamlakah al-'Arabiyah al-Su'udīyah wa-al-marfī' al-'amm li-'ulama⊃ al-Muslimīn, Mufti of Saudi Arabia, Head of the ulama. ARAMCO, Directory, 1957, p. 48.Google Scholar
22 ARAMCO, Directory, 1962, PP. 48–62.Google ScholarCf. De Gaury, Gerald, Faisal: King of Saudi Arabia (London: Barker, 1966). Appendix III. His charts pretend to describe the hierarchy as of 1966 but seem less accurate than those of ARAMCO.Google Scholar
23 Eilts, “Social Revolution.”Google Scholar
24 U.S. National Archives/Department of State, Office of Intelligence Research and Analysis. Intelligence Report, No. 7692: Background and Implications of the Conflict Within the Saudi Ruling Family (Washington, D.C., Division of Research and Analysis for Near East, South Asia, and Africa, April 4, 1958).Google Scholar
25 Harrington, Charles W., “The Saudi Arabian Council of Ministers,” Middle East Journal, XII, 1 (Winter 1958), p. 1.Google Scholar
26 Daliy Star, Lebanon, September 25, 1970.Google Scholar
27 Mideast Mirror, Lebanon, November 10, 1962.Google Scholar
28 Hindustan Times, India, January 18, 1965;Google ScholarGazette de Lausanne, Switzerland, February 22, 1965.Google Scholar
29 al-Ifrīqī, Muhammad Tāriq, al-Dawlah al-Su'ūdīyah fī al-Jazīrah al-'Arabīyah (Damascus: Matābi' al-Ahmar, 1944), p. 10;Google ScholarĀl al-Shaykh, Mashāhir, P. 134.Google Scholar
30 Āl al-Shaykh, Mashāhir, pp. 130, 131.Google Scholar
31 PRO/FO 905, Vol. 21. Minute sheet 150/83, “Extract from K.B.I.'s minute at 285/23 at August 25. 1935.”Google Scholar
32 PRO/FO 905, Vol. 21. Secret minute sheet 150/82, August 26, 1935.Google Scholar
33 Intelligence Report, No. 7692.Google Scholar
34 al-Hayāt, Lebanon, March 22, 1964.Google Scholar
35 Ibid, March 27, 28, 1964.
36 Ibid, March 27, 1964.
37 Ibid, March 29, 1964.
38 a1-Bil¯d, Saudi Arabia, April 1, 1964.Google Scholar
39 a1-Hayāt, April 1, 1964.Google Scholar
40 Ibid.
41 Cf. al-Jarīdah, Lebanon, September 9, 1964;Google Scholaral-Hayāt, October 31, 1964;Google ScholarDaily Telegraph, United Kingdom, November 17, 1964.Google Scholar
42 Scotsman, United Kingdom, November 12, 1964;Google ScholarEconomist Foreign Report, United Kingdom, October 16, 1969.Google Scholar
43 Cf. Economist, United Kingdom, September 17, 1977.Google Scholar
44 Economist Foreign Report, November 28, 1979.Google Scholar
45 Ibid.
46 Saudi Gazette, Saudi Arabia, December 27, 1979.Google Scholar