Abstract

This article uses the increasing visibility of Arab non-believers in the virtual public sphere as an opportunity to re-examine the key issues and dividing lines between believers, sceptics, and non-believers in Arab societies. It analyzes the currently four most popular Arabic-language YouTube channels created by freethinkers, nonbelievers, and atheists and points out commonalities and differences in style, content, and message. The article argues that the sense of a lively and growing virtual community has raised the confidence of non-believers (lā-dīnīyūn) and atheists in the Arab world and made them more daring in their self-portrayal and in their demands on society. As the examples show, YouTube allows them to circumvent the hostility they face in society and in the mainstream media and to connect with an audience that numbers in the tens of thousands of people from all over the Arab world and the diaspora. The article argues that freethinking and non-belief imply an attempt to re-negotiate social and religious boundaries within Arab societies and could—in the long run—have an impact on legal and constitutional questions as well, such as family law and the prerogatives of religious authorities.

Highlights

  • Atheism and agnosticism have become more visible in the Arab world, and a new socioreligious group of self-declared non-believers seems to be emerging

  • Schielke pointed out that “atheism”, the most common umbrella term to denote nonbelievers in a Western context, might be a misnomer in the contemporary Arab world, as the common Arabic word used in the sense of atheism, ilh.ād, does not necessarily imply an ontological stance on the existence or non-existence of God

  • Neither does the neologism lā-dını, which negates belonging to a religion

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Summary

Introduction

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Freethinking and Atheism in Arab Muslim Thought
Arab Non-Belief and Social Media
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Full Text
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