Published with license by Koninklijke Brill nv | doi: 10.1163/15700607-20230001
© Cole M. Bunzel, 2023 | ISSN: 0043-2539 (pri nt) 1570-0607 (online)
Toward the Seizure of the Grand Mosque in Mecca:
The Writings and Ideology of Juhaymān al-ʿUtaybī
and the Ikhwān
Cole M. Bunzel
Stanford University, Hoover Institution, Stanford, United States
cbunzel@stanford.edu
Abstract
This article seeks to explain how the pietist movement led by Juhaymān al-ʿUtaybī
culminated in the seizure of the Grand Mosque in Mecca in November 1979, a pivotal
event in the history of modern Saudi Arabia that contributed to the increasingly
conservative orientation of Saudi policy in subsequent decades. It assesses the distinct
ideology espoused by Juhaymān and his followers by examining the series of writings
issued by the group in the year and a half leading up to the mosque takeover. The article
provides the first comprehensive survey of these rasāʾil, focusing on the three most
salient themes therein: (1) the appeal to the Wahhābī heritage, (2) the rejection of Saudi
royal family rule, and (3) apocalypticism. While all three were critical components of
Juhaymān’s ideology, it was his apocalyptic convictions—spelled out here in detail
for the first time—that led him and his followers to stage the takeover of the Grand
Mosque. The event was therefore not a “rebellion” or “uprising” in any mundane sense.
The list of political demands allegedly issued by one of the militants on the first day of
the mosque takeover is shown to have been almost certainly a fabrication.
Keywords
Juhaymān al-ʿUtaybī – Wahhābism – Salafism – Saudi Arabia – apocalypticism
– mahdism
On the morning of November 20, 1979, the first day of the fourteenth Islamic
century, some 200 armed men led by Juhaymān al-ʿUtaybī seized control
of Islam’s holiest sanctuary, the Grand Mosque in Mecca. Wielding guns
Die Welt des Islams (2023) 1–35