Abdallah al-Alayli

[5] He held a number of different advanced professional positions during his career within various religious organizations and international scholarly bodies.

Sadiq Jalal al-Azm addressed "the big stir that the book generated among the ranks of the Lebanese ulama of all colors and hues," for example, observing: "The Muslim religious establishment in Lebanon generated enough pressure at the time to have the book quickly recalled from the bookshops.... [I]n spite of its very conventional Arabic and traditional style Alayli’s book is an oblique expose of the ulama’s [religious establishment's] utter mental laziness and a sarcastic commentary on their abysmal ignorance of both their din [religion] and dunya [world]; i.e., of their religious heritage as well as of the encircling modern world that is squeezing them ever more tightly.

For those Muslims troubled by the problems and dilemmas inescapably imposed by the requirements of modern life and its quickening pace, Alayli makes many revolutionary suggestions, all ironically argued and defended in the impeccable style of a traditional Muslim faqih and with all the appropriate Koranic quotations, hadith citations and so on.

"[6] Generally speaking, al-Alayli's “socialist economic views and his secular writings…have alienated him from religious establishments and Arab regimes.

"[1] He has been described as a “foremost Arab linguist and Lebanese Sunni cleric”[1] and as “Lebanon’s revolutionary interpreter of Muslim Shari’a Law.