反卡扎菲的主力是极端MSL武装

来源:百度文库 编辑:超级军网 时间:2024/04/29 23:20:40
昨天收到STRAFOR发来的几篇文章

照这种说法,在东部发起暴乱的主力是利比亚伊斯兰战斗组织 Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) ,基地的重要合作伙伴。暴乱的起点Darnah和班加西是利国内伊斯兰势力最猖獗的地方,07年美国在伊拉克Sinjar缴获的文件显示,基地组织成员仅次于沙特的来源就是利比亚,其中60%来自Darnah,24%来自班加西

http://www.stratfor.com/theme/protests-libya-full-coverage

Jihadist Opportunities in Libya
As George Friedman noted in his geopolitical weekly “Revolution and the Muslim World,” one aspect of the recent wave of revolutions we have been carefully monitoring is the involvement of militant Islamists, and their reaction to these events.

Militant Islamists, and specifically the subset of militant Islamists we refer to as jihadists, have long sought to overthrow regimes in the Muslim world. With the sole exception of Afghanistan, they have failed, and even the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan was really more a matter of establishing a polity amid a power vacuum than the true overthrow of a coherent regime. The brief rule of the Supreme Islamic Courts Council in Somalia also occurred amid a similarly chaotic environment and a vacuum of authority.

However, even though jihadists have not been successful in overthrowing governments, they are still viewed as a threat by regimes in countries like Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. In response to this threat, these regimes have dealt quite harshly with the jihadists, and strong crackdowns combined with other programs have served to keep the jihadists largely in check.

As we watch the situation unfold in Libya, there are concerns that unlike Tunisia and Egypt, the uprising in Libya might result not only in a change of ruler but also in a change of regime and perhaps even a collapse of the state. In Egypt and Tunisia, strong military regimes were able to ensure stability after the departure of a long-reigning president. By contrast, in Libya, longtime leader Moammar Gadhafi has deliberately kept his military and security forces fractured and weak and thereby dependent on him. Consequently, there may not be an institution to step in and replace Gadhafi should he fall. This means energy-rich Libya could spiral into chaos, the ideal environment for jihadists to flourish, as demonstrated by Somalia and Afghanistan.

Because of this, it seems an appropriate time to once again examine the dynamic of jihadism in Libya.

A Long History

Libyans have long participated in militant operations in places like Afghanistan, Bosnia, Chechnya and Iraq. After leaving Afghanistan in the early 1990s, a sizable group of Libyan jihadists returned home and launched a militant campaign aimed at toppling Gadhafi, whom they considered an infidel. The group began calling itself the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) in 1995, and carried out a low-level insurgency that included assassination attempts against Gadhafi and attacks against military and police patrols.

Jihadist Opportunities in Libya
(click here to enlarge image)

Gadhafi responded with an iron fist, essentially imposing martial law in the Islamist militant strongholds of Darnah and Benghazi and the towns of Ras al-Helal and al-Qubbah in the Jabal al-Akhdar region. After a series of military crackdowns, Gadhafi gained the upper hand in dealing with his Islamist militant opponents, and the insurgency tapered off by the end of the 1990s. Many LIFG members fled the country in the face of the government crackdown and a number of them ended up finding refuge with groups like al Qaeda in places such as Afghanistan.

While the continued participation of Libyan men in fighting on far-flung battlefields was not expressly encouraged by the Libyan government, it was tacitly permitted. The Gadhafi regime, like other countries in the region, saw exporting jihadists as a way to rid itself of potential problems. Every jihadist who died overseas was one less the government had to worry about. This policy did not take into account the concept of “tactical Darwinism,” which means that while the United States and its coalition partners will kill many fighters, those who survive are apt to be strong and cunning. The weak and incompetent have been weeded out, leaving a core of hardened, competent militants. These survivors have learned tactics for survival in the face of superior firepower and have learned to manufacture and effectively employ new types of highly effective improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

In a Nov. 3, 2007, audio message, al Qaeda No. 2 Ayman al-Zawahiri reported that the LIFG had formally joined the al Qaeda network. This statement came as no real surprise, given that members of the group have long been close to al-Zawahiri and Osama bin Laden. Moreover, the core al Qaeda group has long had a large number of Libyan cadre in its senior ranks, including men such as Abu Yahya al-Libi, Anas al-Libi, Abu Faraj al-Libi (who reportedly is being held by U.S. forces at Guantanamo Bay) and Abu Laith al-Libi, who was killed in a January 2008 unmanned aerial vehicle strike in Pakistan.

The scope of Libyan participation in jihadist efforts in Iraq became readily apparent with the September 2007 seizure of a large batch of personnel files from an al Qaeda safe house in the Iraqi city of Sinjar. The Sinjar files were only a small cross-section of all the fighters traveling to Iraq to fight with the jihadists, but they did provide a very interesting snapshot. Of the 595 personnel files recovered, 112 of them were of Libyans. This number is smaller than the 244 Saudi citizens represented in the cache, but when one considers the overall size of the population of the two countries, the Libyan contingent represented a far larger percentage on a per capita basis. The Sinjar files suggested that a proportionally higher percentage of Libyans was engaged in the fighting in Iraq than their brethren from other countries in the region.

Another interesting difference was noted in the job-description section of the Sinjar files. Of those Libyan men who listed their intended occupation in Iraq, 85 percent of them listed it as suicide bomber and only 13 percent listed fighter. By way of comparison, only 50 percent of the Saudis listed their occupation as suicide bomber. This indicates that the Libyans tended to be more radical than their Saudi counterparts. Moroccans appeared to be the most radical, with more than 91 percent of them apparently desiring to become suicide bombers.

The Libyan government’s security apparatus carefully monitored those Libyans who passed through the crucible of fighting on the battlefield in places like Iraq and Afghanistan and then returned to Libya. Tripoli took a carrot-and-stick approach to the group similar to that implemented by the Saudi regime. As a result, the LIFG and other jihadists were unable to pose a serious threat to the Gadhafi regime, and have remained very quiet in recent years. In fact, they were for the most part demobilized and rehabilitated.

Gadhafi’s son, Seif al-Islam, oversaw the program to rehabilitate LIFG militants, which his personal charity managed. The regime’s continued concern over the LIFG was clearly demonstrated early on in the unrest when it announced that it would continue the scheduled release from custody of LIFG fighters.

The Sinjar reports also reflected that more than 60 percent of the Libyan fighters had listed their home city as Darnah and almost 24 percent had come from Benghazi. These two cities are in Libya’s east and happen to be places where some of the most intense anti-Gadhafi protests have occurred in recent days. Arms depots have been looted in both cities, and we have seen reports that at least some of those doing the looting appeared to have been organized Islamists.

A U.S. State Department cable drafted in Tripoli in June 2008 made available by WikiLeaks talked about this strain of radicalism in Libya’s east. The cable, titled “Die Hard in Derna,” was written several months after the release of the report on the Sinjar files. Derna is an alternative transliteration of Darnah, and “Die Hard” was a reference to the Bruce Willis character in the Die Hard movie series, who always proved hard for the villains to kill. The author of the cable, the U.S. Embassy’s political and economic officer, noted that many of the Libyan fighters who returned from fighting in transnational jihad battlefields liked to settle in places like Darnah due to the relative weakness of the security apparatus there. The author of the cable also noted his belief that the presence of these older fighters was having an influence on the younger men of the region who were becoming radicalized, and the result was that Darnah had become “a wellspring of foreign fighters in Iraq.” He also noted that some 60-70 percent of the young men in the region were unemployed or underemployed.

Finally, the author opined that many of these men were viewing the fight in Iraq as a way to attack the United States, which they saw as supporting the Libyan regime in recent years. This is a concept jihadists refer to as attacking the far enemy and seems to indicate an acceptance of the transnational version of jihadist ideology — as does the travel of men to Iraq to fight and the apparent willingness of Libyans to serve as suicide bombers.

Trouble on the Horizon?

This deep streak of radicalism in eastern Libya brings us back to the beginning. While it seems unlikely at this point that the jihadists could somehow gain control of Libya, if Gadhafi falls and there is a period of chaos in Libya, these militants may find themselves with far more operating space inside the country than they have experienced in decades. If the regime does not fall and there is civil war between the eastern and western parts of the country, they could likewise find a great deal of operational space amid the chaos. Even if Gadhafi, or an entity that replaces him, is able to restore order, due to the opportunity the jihadists have had to loot military arms depots, they have suddenly found themselves more heavily armed than they have ever been inside their home country. And these heavily armed jihadists could pose a substantial threat of the kind that Libya has avoided in recent years.

Given this window of opportunity, the LIFG could decide to become operational again, especially if the regime they have made their deal with unexpectedly disappears. However, even should the LIFG decide to remain out of the jihad business as an organization, there is a distinct possibility that it could splinter and that the more radical individuals could cluster together to create a new group or groups that would seek to take advantage of this suddenly more permissive operational environment. Of course, there are also jihadists in Libya unaffiliated with LIFG and not bound by the organization’s agreements with the regime.

The looting of the arms depots in Libya is also reminiscent of the looting witnessed in Iraq following the dissolution of the Iraqi army in the face of the U.S. invasion in 2003. That ordnance not only was used in thousands of armed assaults and indirect fire attacks with rockets and mortars, but many of the mortar and artillery rounds were used to fashion powerful IEDs. This concept of making and employing IEDs from military ordnance will not be foreign to the Libyans who have returned from Iraq (or Afghanistan, for that matter).

This bodes ill for foreign interests in Libya, where they have not had the same security concerns in recent years that they have had in Algeria or Yemen. If the Libyans truly buy into the concept of targeting the far enemy that supports the state, it would not be out of the realm of possibility for them to begin to attack multinational oil companies, foreign diplomatic facilities and even foreign companies and hotels.

While Seif al-Islam, who certainly has political motives to hype such a threat, has mentioned this possibility, so have the governments of Egypt and Italy. Should Libya become chaotic and the jihadists become able to establish an operational base amid the chaos, Egypt and Italy will have to be concerned about not only refugee problems but also the potential spillover of jihadists. Certainly, at the very least the weapons looted in Libya could easily be sold or given to jihadists in places like Egypt, Tunisia and Algeria, turning militancy in Libya into a larger regional problem. In a worst-case scenario, if Libya experiences a vacuum of power, it could become the next Iraq or Pakistan, a gathering place for jihadists from around the region and the world. The country did serve as such a base for a wide array of Marxist and rejectionist terrorists and militants in the 1970s and 1980s.

It will be very important to keep a focus on Libya in the coming days and weeks — not just to see what happens to the regime but also to look for indicators of the jihadists testing their wings.

Read more: Jihadist Opportunities in Libya | STRATFOR昨天收到STRAFOR发来的几篇文章

照这种说法,在东部发起暴乱的主力是利比亚伊斯兰战斗组织 Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) ,基地的重要合作伙伴。暴乱的起点Darnah和班加西是利国内伊斯兰势力最猖獗的地方,07年美国在伊拉克Sinjar缴获的文件显示,基地组织成员仅次于沙特的来源就是利比亚,其中60%来自Darnah,24%来自班加西

http://www.stratfor.com/theme/protests-libya-full-coverage

Jihadist Opportunities in Libya
As George Friedman noted in his geopolitical weekly “Revolution and the Muslim World,” one aspect of the recent wave of revolutions we have been carefully monitoring is the involvement of militant Islamists, and their reaction to these events.

Militant Islamists, and specifically the subset of militant Islamists we refer to as jihadists, have long sought to overthrow regimes in the Muslim world. With the sole exception of Afghanistan, they have failed, and even the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan was really more a matter of establishing a polity amid a power vacuum than the true overthrow of a coherent regime. The brief rule of the Supreme Islamic Courts Council in Somalia also occurred amid a similarly chaotic environment and a vacuum of authority.

However, even though jihadists have not been successful in overthrowing governments, they are still viewed as a threat by regimes in countries like Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. In response to this threat, these regimes have dealt quite harshly with the jihadists, and strong crackdowns combined with other programs have served to keep the jihadists largely in check.

As we watch the situation unfold in Libya, there are concerns that unlike Tunisia and Egypt, the uprising in Libya might result not only in a change of ruler but also in a change of regime and perhaps even a collapse of the state. In Egypt and Tunisia, strong military regimes were able to ensure stability after the departure of a long-reigning president. By contrast, in Libya, longtime leader Moammar Gadhafi has deliberately kept his military and security forces fractured and weak and thereby dependent on him. Consequently, there may not be an institution to step in and replace Gadhafi should he fall. This means energy-rich Libya could spiral into chaos, the ideal environment for jihadists to flourish, as demonstrated by Somalia and Afghanistan.

Because of this, it seems an appropriate time to once again examine the dynamic of jihadism in Libya.

A Long History

Libyans have long participated in militant operations in places like Afghanistan, Bosnia, Chechnya and Iraq. After leaving Afghanistan in the early 1990s, a sizable group of Libyan jihadists returned home and launched a militant campaign aimed at toppling Gadhafi, whom they considered an infidel. The group began calling itself the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) in 1995, and carried out a low-level insurgency that included assassination attempts against Gadhafi and attacks against military and police patrols.

Jihadist Opportunities in Libya
(click here to enlarge image)

Gadhafi responded with an iron fist, essentially imposing martial law in the Islamist militant strongholds of Darnah and Benghazi and the towns of Ras al-Helal and al-Qubbah in the Jabal al-Akhdar region. After a series of military crackdowns, Gadhafi gained the upper hand in dealing with his Islamist militant opponents, and the insurgency tapered off by the end of the 1990s. Many LIFG members fled the country in the face of the government crackdown and a number of them ended up finding refuge with groups like al Qaeda in places such as Afghanistan.

While the continued participation of Libyan men in fighting on far-flung battlefields was not expressly encouraged by the Libyan government, it was tacitly permitted. The Gadhafi regime, like other countries in the region, saw exporting jihadists as a way to rid itself of potential problems. Every jihadist who died overseas was one less the government had to worry about. This policy did not take into account the concept of “tactical Darwinism,” which means that while the United States and its coalition partners will kill many fighters, those who survive are apt to be strong and cunning. The weak and incompetent have been weeded out, leaving a core of hardened, competent militants. These survivors have learned tactics for survival in the face of superior firepower and have learned to manufacture and effectively employ new types of highly effective improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

In a Nov. 3, 2007, audio message, al Qaeda No. 2 Ayman al-Zawahiri reported that the LIFG had formally joined the al Qaeda network. This statement came as no real surprise, given that members of the group have long been close to al-Zawahiri and Osama bin Laden. Moreover, the core al Qaeda group has long had a large number of Libyan cadre in its senior ranks, including men such as Abu Yahya al-Libi, Anas al-Libi, Abu Faraj al-Libi (who reportedly is being held by U.S. forces at Guantanamo Bay) and Abu Laith al-Libi, who was killed in a January 2008 unmanned aerial vehicle strike in Pakistan.

The scope of Libyan participation in jihadist efforts in Iraq became readily apparent with the September 2007 seizure of a large batch of personnel files from an al Qaeda safe house in the Iraqi city of Sinjar. The Sinjar files were only a small cross-section of all the fighters traveling to Iraq to fight with the jihadists, but they did provide a very interesting snapshot. Of the 595 personnel files recovered, 112 of them were of Libyans. This number is smaller than the 244 Saudi citizens represented in the cache, but when one considers the overall size of the population of the two countries, the Libyan contingent represented a far larger percentage on a per capita basis. The Sinjar files suggested that a proportionally higher percentage of Libyans was engaged in the fighting in Iraq than their brethren from other countries in the region.

Another interesting difference was noted in the job-description section of the Sinjar files. Of those Libyan men who listed their intended occupation in Iraq, 85 percent of them listed it as suicide bomber and only 13 percent listed fighter. By way of comparison, only 50 percent of the Saudis listed their occupation as suicide bomber. This indicates that the Libyans tended to be more radical than their Saudi counterparts. Moroccans appeared to be the most radical, with more than 91 percent of them apparently desiring to become suicide bombers.

The Libyan government’s security apparatus carefully monitored those Libyans who passed through the crucible of fighting on the battlefield in places like Iraq and Afghanistan and then returned to Libya. Tripoli took a carrot-and-stick approach to the group similar to that implemented by the Saudi regime. As a result, the LIFG and other jihadists were unable to pose a serious threat to the Gadhafi regime, and have remained very quiet in recent years. In fact, they were for the most part demobilized and rehabilitated.

Gadhafi’s son, Seif al-Islam, oversaw the program to rehabilitate LIFG militants, which his personal charity managed. The regime’s continued concern over the LIFG was clearly demonstrated early on in the unrest when it announced that it would continue the scheduled release from custody of LIFG fighters.

The Sinjar reports also reflected that more than 60 percent of the Libyan fighters had listed their home city as Darnah and almost 24 percent had come from Benghazi. These two cities are in Libya’s east and happen to be places where some of the most intense anti-Gadhafi protests have occurred in recent days. Arms depots have been looted in both cities, and we have seen reports that at least some of those doing the looting appeared to have been organized Islamists.

A U.S. State Department cable drafted in Tripoli in June 2008 made available by WikiLeaks talked about this strain of radicalism in Libya’s east. The cable, titled “Die Hard in Derna,” was written several months after the release of the report on the Sinjar files. Derna is an alternative transliteration of Darnah, and “Die Hard” was a reference to the Bruce Willis character in the Die Hard movie series, who always proved hard for the villains to kill. The author of the cable, the U.S. Embassy’s political and economic officer, noted that many of the Libyan fighters who returned from fighting in transnational jihad battlefields liked to settle in places like Darnah due to the relative weakness of the security apparatus there. The author of the cable also noted his belief that the presence of these older fighters was having an influence on the younger men of the region who were becoming radicalized, and the result was that Darnah had become “a wellspring of foreign fighters in Iraq.” He also noted that some 60-70 percent of the young men in the region were unemployed or underemployed.

Finally, the author opined that many of these men were viewing the fight in Iraq as a way to attack the United States, which they saw as supporting the Libyan regime in recent years. This is a concept jihadists refer to as attacking the far enemy and seems to indicate an acceptance of the transnational version of jihadist ideology — as does the travel of men to Iraq to fight and the apparent willingness of Libyans to serve as suicide bombers.

Trouble on the Horizon?

This deep streak of radicalism in eastern Libya brings us back to the beginning. While it seems unlikely at this point that the jihadists could somehow gain control of Libya, if Gadhafi falls and there is a period of chaos in Libya, these militants may find themselves with far more operating space inside the country than they have experienced in decades. If the regime does not fall and there is civil war between the eastern and western parts of the country, they could likewise find a great deal of operational space amid the chaos. Even if Gadhafi, or an entity that replaces him, is able to restore order, due to the opportunity the jihadists have had to loot military arms depots, they have suddenly found themselves more heavily armed than they have ever been inside their home country. And these heavily armed jihadists could pose a substantial threat of the kind that Libya has avoided in recent years.

Given this window of opportunity, the LIFG could decide to become operational again, especially if the regime they have made their deal with unexpectedly disappears. However, even should the LIFG decide to remain out of the jihad business as an organization, there is a distinct possibility that it could splinter and that the more radical individuals could cluster together to create a new group or groups that would seek to take advantage of this suddenly more permissive operational environment. Of course, there are also jihadists in Libya unaffiliated with LIFG and not bound by the organization’s agreements with the regime.

The looting of the arms depots in Libya is also reminiscent of the looting witnessed in Iraq following the dissolution of the Iraqi army in the face of the U.S. invasion in 2003. That ordnance not only was used in thousands of armed assaults and indirect fire attacks with rockets and mortars, but many of the mortar and artillery rounds were used to fashion powerful IEDs. This concept of making and employing IEDs from military ordnance will not be foreign to the Libyans who have returned from Iraq (or Afghanistan, for that matter).

This bodes ill for foreign interests in Libya, where they have not had the same security concerns in recent years that they have had in Algeria or Yemen. If the Libyans truly buy into the concept of targeting the far enemy that supports the state, it would not be out of the realm of possibility for them to begin to attack multinational oil companies, foreign diplomatic facilities and even foreign companies and hotels.

While Seif al-Islam, who certainly has political motives to hype such a threat, has mentioned this possibility, so have the governments of Egypt and Italy. Should Libya become chaotic and the jihadists become able to establish an operational base amid the chaos, Egypt and Italy will have to be concerned about not only refugee problems but also the potential spillover of jihadists. Certainly, at the very least the weapons looted in Libya could easily be sold or given to jihadists in places like Egypt, Tunisia and Algeria, turning militancy in Libya into a larger regional problem. In a worst-case scenario, if Libya experiences a vacuum of power, it could become the next Iraq or Pakistan, a gathering place for jihadists from around the region and the world. The country did serve as such a base for a wide array of Marxist and rejectionist terrorists and militants in the 1970s and 1980s.

It will be very important to keep a focus on Libya in the coming days and weeks — not just to see what happens to the regime but also to look for indicators of the jihadists testing their wings.

Read more: Jihadist Opportunities in Libya | STRATFOR
别妨碍小白兔啃萝卜就行,其他无所谓,小白兔还需要几十年发展呢
极端这个词开始泛滥了
卡上校没说谎?
他之前还在说北约准备入侵呢,真是乱七八糟啊
ROCROC 发表于 2011-2-25 21:08


    敢动俺们的萝卜的国家,越来越少了
消失了很久的反汉分子、极端民族主义者伊兰回胤有了消息,06年左右他是反汉的急先锋,自任回族贴吧的吧主,在贴吧上屡屡挑起反汉事端,加剧了汉回冲突:
回族文学群欢迎您:伊兰回胤究竟指的是什么? [以下链接均须去掉空格]  
w w w.noorislam.org/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=99880&extra=page%3D1

奉安拉之命
尊敬的回族朋友们大家好,我是回族文学群群主伊兰回胤,从2006年至2011年的5年时间里,我们慢慢在完善我们群的作用,并且我们也毅然决然的探讨如何更好的让更多的人在这个群里得到知识、信仰、友爱和帮助。下面我将简单的从几个方面介绍一下回族文学群!银沙安拉,希望这样能得到真主的喜悦。也希望更多的回族朋友们能关心关注到自己的民族事业上来!
回族文学群群概况:

回族文学1群:24199975(探讨主题:民族复兴,民族发展、民族未来,❤人已满)
回族文学2群:42841146(探讨主题:文学形式  中国现代文学MSL社会现代文学)
回族文学3群:126283522(探讨主题:语言文字)
回族文学4群:123747290(探讨主题:信仰知识)
回族文学5群:124824397(探讨主题:回族民俗,包括婚姻、丧葬、现代回族社会现象探讨)
回族文学6群:15490735(探讨主题:回族历史)
穆民之声网络电台(超级群):23688111(穆民之声网络电台录播节目)

回族文学官方博客:
伊兰回胤博客:h t t p://blog.sina.com.cn/yilanhuiyin(新浪平台)
回族文学QQ空间: h t t p://1115274748.qzone.qq.com(腾讯平台)
百度回族空间:h t t p://hi.baidu.com/huizu(百度平台)
回族文学度贴吧: h t t p://tieba.baidu.com/f?kw=    ������ѧ(百度平台)
回族思想: h t t p://huizusixiang.blog.sohu.com(搜狐平台)

回族文学官方电台:
YY歪歪语音聊天频道:18298299
电台每天:21点——22点整有一档节目《回族在线》 欢迎所有的回族朵斯提能下载YY语音软件,输入频道:18298299 收听节目电台节目
备注:本电台试播中……招聘电台主播         


回族文学自办刊物简介:
  回族文学自办刊物为《希望旬刊》(回族文学——希望)由于现实的特殊情况,只出了1期。且知道的人甚少。本刊物于2009年5月15日出版。在回族文学1群共享文档里可以找到。格式为PDF。这部刊物标着回族文学群实践伊兰回胤精神走出了实质性质的第一步。也标着着回族文学群第一部文学创作集的产生。
  2011年,回族文学群也将一如既往的把杂志做下去。在这里真诚的向各族各界朋友发出邀请,我们希望收到您的原创性文章。更希望回族文学群里的朋友能够积极的参与到《希望旬刊》的创作上来。《希望旬刊》为公益性内部学术性文学刊物,属于免费的、团体成员互相共享的刊物。在这里也希望更多的能人志士加入进来。为回族人自己的事业贡献出自己的一份力量。
有关伊兰回胤精神的解读:
  伊兰回胤精神是一种实践性精神。实践作为一名回族人应该做的事情。是每个回族人都应该拥有的精神。最早伊兰回胤只是百度网络上一个id帐号,其思想也只是单纯的以一个回族人的身份来宣传回族文化、探讨回族历史。2005年伊兰回胤通过百度回族贴吧强调了伊兰回胤精神被大多数人所知晓。就这样,以伊兰回胤为帐号注册的网友越来越多,充分的表明伊兰回胤精神在回族年轻一代已经有了一定的影响,并且被越来越多的人认同。由于伊兰回胤这种精神是网络上回族网民对母族的思考,大部分文章在网络的时间推移中没有保存,被删除了,或者写文章的人在写了伊兰回胤精神的文章后长时间不登陆帐号,文章无法显示。所以伊兰回胤思想并没有进行整理。这也将是回族文学下一步要做的一项重要工作,整理出版伊兰回胤文集。
  现在,我们重新来解读伊兰回胤精神,伊兰回胤的核心精神是通过回族人自己的努力使的自己的民族能够生活的更好,有更好的福利,有更好的教育,有更好的发展。伊兰回胤精神朴实的认为只有回回民族的觉醒,才能使得回族自己,及回族所在国,以及全世界MSL民族及人类更好。本着这种朴实的原则,伊兰回胤精神为回族的发展勾勒了相对清晰的路标:
一、坚定的支持回族人创造自己的语言文字;二、坚定的支持以实事求是的精神探寻回族人的历史,民俗;三、以民族为重心,自己了解自己。以中国为导向让国人了解回族。以全世界为己任让世界了解回族!四、端正回族是MSL民族的一支的思想。提高信仰,努力在族内族外用正确的方法宣传伊斯兰;五、伊兰回胤精神厌恶政治,追求自由、平等、互相尊重。
这就是伊兰回胤精神的核心理念。5点方向各有侧重,其一是为了让回族人不被同化瓦解。让这个伟大的民族屹立在世界民族之林。其二是发展民族教育,以及使民族素质不断提高,其三宣传伊兰回胤精神,以一种正确的全新的方式诠释回族形象;其四提高信仰,发展教伊斯兰真精神。其五追求全人类最本真最一致的东西;和各族各界搞好关系!
  伊兰回胤精神不是空洞的,而是有血有肉,有目标有想法的。回族文学正在抓紧时间整理出版符合伊兰回胤精神的文集。欢迎广大回族文学群的朋友能一起行动起来帮助这项伟大的工程开展起来!

关于回族文学的文章采集:
  现在回族文学的主要文章来源于群主伊兰回胤,回族文学群里的众多人有些并不了解我们群存在的价值和意义。只是发现是一个回族群就加进来了,然后或者交流,或者缄默。当然我们不排除在群里有一些人最初的目的的确是想了解更多伊兰回胤精神的,但是,随着时间的推移很大一部分会员都没有了热情,甚至不闻不问群内的事情。造成的结果是可怕的,我们群的许多工作都开展不了。所以在这里我呼吁所有群里的朋友能积极的投稿给我们。

尾声:
  在这里真诚的邀请回族中的能人志士加入我们!安拉在古兰经中说:“凡奋斗者,都只为自己而奋斗,真主确是无求于全世界的。”(29:7)

伊兰回胤草写于2011年2月25日星期五
呵呵,不太妙


呼噜呼噜 TG自己搞砸自己啊 ysl! 中国人为划分的民族都有这么强的民族意识了,哎!!! 什么母族,你们是阿拉伯人吗??!!

呼噜呼噜 TG自己搞砸自己啊 ysl! 中国人为划分的民族都有这么强的民族意识了,哎!!! 什么母族,你们是阿拉伯人吗??!!
卡上校的美女卫队能管用吗?