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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Samar El Hussieny

Interviewed August 3, 2012

In fact religion in Egypt is a key element before the revolution and after the revolution. And it is not only the Islamic – the Islam religion; Islam and Christians, because we have one of the most powerful churches in the world. And our church also are controlling the people.

Also the Islamist forces in Egypt, they are – they’re playing a big role now in the political arena. You will find the Muslim Brotherhood; you will find some Salafist parties; you will find some independent Islamic or Islamist candidates. And they’re all there in the parliament. If you are talking about Islamist versus civilians or civic people, you will got like 70 percent of Islamists in the parliament: Muslim Brotherhood – al-Nour Salafi party, al-Wasat party, different parties.

And I think this is a very clear reflection to the – to the past work before in the lower classes, because before the revolution, the only groups that was allowed informally to go and organize themselves was the Muslim Brotherhood. And they have been working there during their – using their charity organizations, using the mosques, using some of the associations that supposed to help widows, divorced women and some of the orphans – they were there working with these classes.

And they were just concentrating about using this kind of – kind of lack of economic resources, lack of political empowerment in these specific classes. And they kept working with them. So after the revolution when it comes to voting, a real voting, they just asked them to go and vote for what they will like.