Khuddamul Furqan


Khuddamul Furqan was Afghanistan's first Islamic Political Party that was primarily formed in response to the Soviet/Communist influence in Afghanistan. Khuddamul Furqan was formed by Muhammad Ismaiel Mojadidi, who was also the Dean of Afghanistan's oldest private Islamic Institution ; namely Nurul Madariss Farouqi in Ghazni, Afghanistan. Khuddamul Furqan was formed in 1966, and the party's members were mainly Afghan Scholars. Many of the party members belonged to the Naqshbandi-Mojadidi Tariqah, Afghanistans's largest religious and spiritual order. Muhammad Ismaiel Mojadidi's father, Muhammad Ibrahim Shaykh Ziaul Mashaw'ikh was the head of the Naqshbandi-Mojadidi order and was based in Qala Jawad, Kabul. Muhammad Ibrahim Mojadidi is the son, and religious & spiritual heir to his father Fazl Omar Mojadidi Nurul Mashaw'ikh - the most influential and respected spiritual figure of Afghanistan
Khuddamul Furqan had a newspaper under the name of Neda-e-Haq and its editor in Chief was Mawlavi Abdul Sattar Siddiqi. The party was very influential within Afghanistan's religious community. Khuddamul Furqan was known for its adherence to Islamic tradition and was a moderate Political party.
After the imprisonment of the Mojadidi family by Soviet forces and their allies in 1979, namely M. Ibrahim Shaykh Ziaul Mashaw'ikh and his son, leader of Khuddamul Furqan M. Ismaiel Mojadidi, the party's name was changed to Harakat-e-Inqilab Islami, in order to continue its efforts against the Soviet occupation without harming its respected leaders in captivity. Members of the party played a major role in the resistance movement against the Soviets in Afghanistan. Khuddamul Furqan was later revived in 2004 in Kabul and some of the party's members are playing an active role in the peace process in Afghanistan. One of Khuddamul Furqans top members Maulavi Arsala Rahmani was assassinated in Kabul on May 13, 2012.