The Clarion Call for Islamic Theocracy: Understanding the Ummah and Sharia Governance
The clarion call to establish a theocracy or a Sharia-influenced nation is fundamentally rooted in the Islamic concept of al-dawlah al-Islamiyyah (the Islamic State) and the revival of the Caliphate (al-Khilafah). This call is presented as a religious duty to restore God's sovereignty on earth and to unify the global Muslim community, known as the Ummah.
Comparative Framework: Classical vs. Modern Jihadist Interpretations
| Ideological Component | Classical/Theoretical Foundation | Modern Jihadist Interpretation (e.g., ISIS) |
|---|---|---|
| Core Objective | Establish a state to "maintain religion and manage worldly affairs" | Create an immediate, territorial caliphate as a religious and political imperative for all Muslims |
| Source of Sovereignty | Allah (God) is the ultimate sovereign. The community (Ummah) exercises delegated authority through consultation (Shura) and obedience to a ruler who implements Sharia | Allah is the sole legislator. All man-made laws, constitutions, and democracies are rejected as idolatry. The Caliph is the absolute political and religious leader |
| The "Call" to Action | A collective religious duty (fard kifayah) to establish a just Islamic order | An individual duty (fard 'ayn) for every Muslim to perform hijrah (migration) to the caliphate and wage jihad to defend and expand it |
| Defining the Enemy | Focused on external threats and internal corruption | Engages in takfir, declaring other Muslims (especially Shia, Sufis) as apostates for not adhering to their rigid doctrine, thereby justifying their killing. Also wars against "unbelievers" and their governments |
The Theological and Historical Foundation
The desire for an Islamic state is based on a specific interpretation of Islamic history and political theology.
Succession to the Prophet
The Caliphate is conceived as succeeding the political authority of the Prophet Muhammad. Classical scholars like al-Mawardi defined the Caliphate's purpose as the "succession of the oracular mission in support of the faith and control of mundane affairs".
A Religious Duty
Traditional Sunni political theory holds that establishing a Caliphate is a religious obligation (fard) upon the Muslim community. The reasoning is that without a central authority to enforce Sharia, religion cannot be properly upheld, and societal chaos (fitnah) would ensue.
A Unified Ummah
The caliphate is seen as the political embodiment of the transnational Muslim Ummah, transcending modern ethnic and national identities (nation-states). The abolition of the Ottoman Caliphate in 1924 is viewed by many Islamists as a catastrophic event that fractured the Muslim world.
The Modern Jihadist Clarion Call
Modern jihadist groups like ISIS have taken these classical concepts and radicalized them into a violent and immediate political program.
Rejecting the Modern Nation-State
They argue that existing Muslim-majority countries are not truly Islamic because they rule by man-made constitutions instead of Sharia, making them regimes of jahiliyyah (pre-Islamic ignorance). Their goal is to dismantle these borders and restore a unified caliphate.
The Duty of Hijrah and Jihad
Once a caliphate is declared, as ISIS did in 2014, they issue a global call for Muslims to migrate to its territories. They frame military jihad as a defensive and offensive obligation to protect the nascent state and expand its territory, using acts of extreme violence to enforce compliance and attract recruits through a sense of power and religious fulfillment.
Sectarian Purification
A key part of their appeal to a segment of Sunnis is a virulently anti-Shia ideology. By declaring Shia Muslims apostates, they justify their violence and frame their struggle as a necessary purification of Islam, tapping into historical sectarian grievances.
It is crucial to understand that the jihadist interpretation of the caliphate is highly contested and rejected by the vast majority of Muslims and Islamic scholars worldwide. Many mainstream Islamic movements pursue political participation within existing state systems, while quietist Salafis focus on personal piety and reject modern political violence.