“Like the Ark of Nuh”: Sayyids in the Leadership of the Huthi Movement

Authors

  • Timofey A. Bokov Embassy of the Russian Federation to the Syrian Arab Republic

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu13.2023.108

Abstract

The article examines the phenomenon of overrepresentation of sayyids (descendants of the Prophet Muhammad) in the Huthi movement in the 2000s. It is shown that though sayyids’
total share among the population of the northwestern Yemen was about 5 % they occupied most of the top positions in the movement and constituted about half of its military command. The trajectories of sayyid Abd al-Malik al-Huthi’s ascent to power and shaykh Abdullah al-Razzami’s descent from it are tracked down. It is demonstrated that such a prominent role of sayyids is consistent with a traditional local model of leadership, which can be traced back to the 1st millennium AD, and in which (quasi)state entities are managed either by tribesmen who have renounced their tribal identity, or by non-tribal sayyids. Other reasons of the overrepresentation of sayyids in the Movement’s leadership are considered: 1) family ties of some leaders with Hussayn al-Huthi; 2) authority and experience acquired by many of sayyids in the 1980s–1990s through active work undertaken in order to protect Zaydism from Salafi threat and state pressure; 3) reluctance of shaykhs who were affiliated with the government and/or received Saudi subsidies to support the anti-government and anti-Salafi sentiment of their fellow tribesmen, which prompted the latter to seek support from the sayyids. It is suggested that the presence of a large number of potential leaders of sayyid origin in the Huthi movement was one of the key factors that facilitated its transformation from a small group into a significant national actor in the 2000s.

Keywords:

Yemen, Huthis, Huthi Movement, sayyids, People of the House, Ahl al-Bayt

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
 

References

Brandt M. Tribes and Politics in Yemen. A History of the Houthi Conflict. New York, Oxford University Press, 2017. 466 p.

Weir S. A Tribal Order. Politics and Law in the Mountains of Yemen. Austin, University of Texas Press, 2007. 390 p.

Salmoni B. A., Loidolt B., Wells M. Regime and Periphery in Northern Yemen. The Huthi Phenomenon. Santa Monica; Arlington; Pittsburgh, RAND Corporation, 2010. 382 p.

Serebrov S. N. Yemen on the Brink of a Humanitarian Catastrophe (to the Events in the Mountains of Sa’ada). Vostok (Oriens), 2008, no. 5, pp. 66–79. (In Russian)

Kuzmin V. A., Sokolov N. V. The Causes of the Yemeni Conflict and its Development in 2011–2015. Musul’manskii mir, 2017, no. 1, pp. 46–56. (In Russian)

Vom Bruck G. Islam, Memory and Morality in Yemen. Ruling Families in Transition. New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. 348 p.

Dresch P. A History of Modern Yemen. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2000. 285 p.

Weir S. A Clash of Fundamentalisms: Wahhabism in Yemen. Middle East Report, 1997, no. 204, The Arabian Peninsula (Jul. — Sep.), pp. 22–23 + 26.

Haykel B. A Zaydi Revival? Yemen Update, 1995, no. 36, pp. 20–21.

Rodionov M. A. Demons of Words on the Edge of Arabia (Society and Versification of Hadramawt). St. Petersburg, Nauka Publ., 2009. 224 p. (In Russian)

Haykel B. Revival and Reform in Islam. The Legacy of Muhammad al-Shawkani. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2003. 265 p.

The Full Moon of the Right Way, part 1. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssrC47sEWAk (accessed: 04.09.2021). (In Arabic)

A Long Talk with sayyid Badr ad-Din al-Huthi. Available at: https://www.yemeress.com/hshd/6162 (accessed: 25.01.2022). (In Arabic)

Al-Qadhi M. Crisis reignites: Deaths mount as fighting escalates in Sa’ada. Yemen Times, 2005, April 4.

Krajeski T. Media Reaction — Al-Houthi Clashes, Draft Press Law, JMP Reform Initiative, etc. Telegram of the US Embassy in Sanaa. 2005, December 10. Available at: https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/05SANAA3438_a.html (accessed: 04.09.2021).

Al-Hamra Mountain attacked. Yemen Times, 2006, July 17.

“Nishwan News” Publishes Again Text of the Doha Agreement between Yemeni Government and Huthi Rebels of Sa’da. Available at: http://sahafaa.net/show186413.html (accessed: 04.09.2021). (In Arabic)

Bokov T. A. The Political Ideology of Huthi Movement (According to the Lectures of Husayn al-Huthi). Islam in the Modern World, 2017, no. 13 (4), pp. 95–112. (In Russian)

“Al-Ishtiraki” Publishes Their Names. Available at: http://www.aleshteraky.com/archive/news_details.php?lng=arabic&sid=6629 (accessed: 04.09.2021). (In Arabic)

al-Maqhafi I. The Handbook of Yemeni Lands and Tribes. Sana’a, Al-Jil Al-Jadid Nashirun Publ., 2011. In 3 vols. 2407 p. (In Arabic)

al-Huthi H. Responsibility of People of the House. No place, no date. (In Arabic)

Suvorov M. N. Social backwardness, religious radicalism and war in Yemeni Marwan Al-Ghafuri’s Novel Saada’s Braids (2014). Eurasian Arabic Studies, 2020, no. 10, pp. 16–34.

Hizb al-Haqq. A History of the National Work, part 1. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8vi-X60ylfg (accessed: 04.09.2021). (In Arabic)

Krajeski T. ROYG Insiders increasingly frustrated with Saleh Clan. Telegram of the US Embassy in Sanaa. 2005, May 23. Available at: https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/05SANAA1352_a.html (accessed: 04.09.2021).

Korotayev A. V. Social History of Yemen. Chiefdoms and Tribes in the Land of Hashid and Bakil. Moscow, URSS Publ., 2006. 191 p. (In Russian)

Daftari F. A History of Shi’i Islam. Moscow, Natalis Publ., 2017. 352 p. (In Russian)

Brandt M. The Irregulars of the Sa’ada War: ‘Colonel Sheikhs’ and ‘Tribal Militias’ in Yemen’s Huthi conflict (2004–2010). In: H. Lackner (ed.). Why Yemen Matters: A Society in Transition. London, Saqi, 2014, pp. 105–122.

Published

2023-07-25

How to Cite

Bokov, T. A. (2023). “Like the Ark of Nuh”: Sayyids in the Leadership of the Huthi Movement. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Asian and African Studies, 15(1), 118–132. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu13.2023.108

Issue

Section

Foreign policy and international relations of Asia and Africa