Ali
ibn Abu Talib al-Murtadha
The First Imam
Amir
al-mu'minln Ali (upon whom be peace(AS)) was the son of
Abu Talib, the Shaykh of the Bani Hashim. Abu Talib was the
uncle and guardian of the Holy Prophet (sawas) and the
person who had brought the Prophet (sawas) to his house and
raised him like his own son. After the Prophet (sawas) was
chosen for his prophetic mission, Abu Talib continued to
support him and repelled from him the evil that came from
the infidels among the Arabs and especially the Quraysh.
According
to well-known traditional accounts Ali was born ten years
before the commencement of the prophetic mission of the
Prophet (sawas). When six years old, as a result of famine
in and around Mecca, he was requested by the Prophet (sawas)
to leave his father's house and come to the house of his
cousin, the Prophet (sawas). There he was placed directly
under the guardianship and custody of the Holy Prophet
(sawas).
A few years
later, when the Prophet (sawas) was endowed with the Divine
gift of prophecy and for the first time received the Divine
revelation in the cave of Hira', as he left the cave to
return to town and his own house he met Ali on the way. He
told him what had happened and Ali accepted the new faith.
Again in a gathering when the Holy Prophet (sawas) had
brought his relatives together and invited them to accept
his religion, he said the first person to accept his call
would be his vicegerent and inheritor and deputy. The only
person to rise from his place and accept the faith was Ali
and the Prophet (sawas) accepted his declaration of faith.
Therefore Ali was the first man in Islam to accept the faith
and is the first among the followers of the Prophet (sawas)
to have never worshipped other than the One God.
Ali was
always in the company of the Prophet (sawas) until the
Prophet (sawas) migrated from Mecca to Medina. On the night
of the migration to Medina (hijrah) when the infidels had
surrounded the house of the Prophet (sawas) and were
determined to invade the house at the end of the night and
cut him to pieces while he was in bed, Ali slept in place of
the Prophet (sawas) while the Prophet (sawas) left the house
and set out for Medina. After the departure of the Prophet
(sawas), according to his wish Ali gave back to the people
the trusts and charges that they had left with the Prophet
(sawas). Then he went to Medina with his mother, the
daughter of the Prophet (sawas), and two other women.
In Medina
also Ali was constantly in the company of the Prophet
(sawas) in private and in public. The Prophet (sawas) gave
Fatimah, his beloved daughter from Khadijah, to Ali as his
wife and when the Prophet (sawas) was creating bonds of
brotherhood among his companions he selected Ali as his
brother.
Ali was
present in all the wars in which the Prophet (sawas)
participated, except the battle of Tabuk when he was ordered
to stay in Medina in place of the Prophet (sawas). He did
not retreat in any battle nor did he turn his face away from
any enemy. He never disobeyed the Prophet (sawas), so that
the Prophet (sawas) said, "Ali is never separated from
the Truth nor the Truth from Ali."
On the day
of the death of the Prophet (sawas), Ali was thirty-three
years old. Although he was foremost in religious virtues and
the most outstanding among the companions of the Prophet
(sawas), he was pushed aside from the caliphate on the claim
that he was too young and that he had many enemies among the
people because of the blood of the polytheists he had
spilled in the wars fought alongside the Prophet (sawas).
Therefore Ali was almost completely cut off from public
affairs. He retreated to his house where he began to train
competent individuals in the Divine sciences and in this way
he passed the twenty-five years of the caliphate of the
first three caliphs who succeeded the Prophet (sawas). When
the third caliph was killed, people gave their allegiance to
him and he was chosen as caliph.
During his
caliphate of nearly four years and nine months, Ali followed
the way of the Prophet (sawas) and gave his caliphate the
form of a spiritual movement and renewal and began many
different types of reforms. Naturally, these reforms were
against the interests of certain parties that sought their
own benefit. As a result, a group of the companions
(foremost among whom were Talhah and Zubayr, who also gained
the support of A'ishah, and especially Mu'awiyah) made a
pretext of the death of the third caliph to raise their
heads in opposition and began to revolt and rebel against
Ali.
In order to
quell the civil strife and sedition, Ali fought a war near
Basra, known as the "Battle of the Camel," against
Talhah and Zubayr in which Ummul Mu'mineen A'ishah,
was also involved. He fought another war against Mu'awiyah
on the border of Iraq and Syria which lasted for a year and
a half and is famous as the "Battle of Siffin." He
also fought against the Khawarij at Nahrawan, in a battle
known as the "Battle of Nahrawan." Therefore, most
of the days of Ali's caliphate were spent in overcoming
internal opposition. Finally, in the morning of the 19th of
Ramadan in the year 40 A.H., while praying in the mosque of
Kufa, he was wounded by one of the Khawarij and died as a
martyr during the night of the 21st of Ramadan.
According
to the testimony of friend and foe alike, Ali had no
shortcomings from the point of view of human perfection. And
in the Islamic virtues he was a perfect example of the
upbringing and training given by the Prophet (sawas). The
discussions that have taken place concerning his personality
and the books written on this subject by Shi'ites, Sunnis
and members of other religions, as well as the simply
curious outside any distinct religious bodies, are hardly
equalled in the case of any other personality in history.
In science
and knowledge Ali was the most learned of the companions of
the Prophet (sawas), and of Muslims in general. In his
learned discourses he was the first in Islam to open the
door for logical demonstration and proof and to discuss the
"divine sciences" or metaphysics (ma'arif-i
ilahlyah). He spoke concerning the esoteric aspect of the
Quran and devised Arabic grammar in order to preserve the
Quran's form of expression. He was the most eloquent Arab in
speech (as has been mentioned in the first part of this
book).
The courage
of Ali was proverbial. In all the wars in which he
participated during the lifetime of the Prophet (sawas), and
also afterward, he never displayed fear or anxiety. Although
in many battles such as those of Uhud, Hunayn, Khaybar and
Khandaq the aides to the Prophet (sawas) and the Muslim army
trembled in fear or dispersed and fled, he never turned his
back to the enemy. Never did a warrior or soldier engage Ali
in battle and come out of it alive. Yet, with full chivalry
he would never slay a weak enemy nor pursue those who fled.
He would not engage in surprise attacks or in turning
streams of water upon the enemy. It has been definitively
established historically that in the Battle of Khaybar in
the attack against the fort he reached the ring of the door
and with sudden motion tore off the door and cast it away.
Also on the day when Mecca was conquered the Prophet (sawas)
ordered the idols to be broken. The idol "Hubal"
was the largest idol in Mecca, a giant stone statue placed
on the top of the Ka'bah. Following the command of the
Prophet (sawas), Ali placed his feet on the Prophet
(sawas)'s shoulders, climbed to the top of the Ka'bah,
pulled "Hubal" from its place and cast it down.
Ali was
also without equal in religious asceticism and the worship
of God. In answer to some who had complained of Ali's anger
toward them, the Prophet (sawas) said, "Do not reproach
Ali for he is in a state of Divine ecstasy and bewilderment.
" Abu
Darda'', one of the companions, one day saw the body of Ali
in one of the palm plantations of Medina laying on the
ground as stiff as wood. He went to Ali's house to inform
his noble wife, the daughter of the Prophet (sawas), and to
express his condolences. The daughter of the Prophet (sawas)
said, "My cousin (Ali) has not died. Rather, in fear of
God he has fainted. This condition overcomes him
often." There are many stories told of Ali's kindness
to the lowly, compassion for the needy and the poor, and
generosity and munificence toward those in misery and
poverty. Ali spent all that he earned to help the poor and
the needy, and himself lived in the strictest and simplest
manner. Ali loved agriculture and spent much of his time
digging wells, planting trees and cultivating fields. But
all the fields that he cultivated or wells that he built he
gave in endowment (waqf) to the poor. His endowments, known
as the "alms of Ali," had the noteworthy income of
twenty-four thousand gold dinars toward the end of his life.
Hasan
ibn Ali al-Mujtaba
The Second Imam
Imam Hasan
Mujtaba--upon whom be peace--was the second Imam. He and his
brother Imam Husayn were the two sons of Amir al-mu'minin
Ali and Hadrat Fatimah,
the daughter of the Prophet (sawas). Many times the Prophet
(sawas) had said, "Hasan and Husayn are my
children." Because of these same words Ali would say to
his other children, "You are my children and Hasan and
Husayn are the children of the Prophet (sawas)."
Imam Hasan
was born in the year 3 A.H. in Medina and shared in the life
of the Prophet (sawas) for somewhat over seven years,
growing up during that time under his loving care. After the
death of the Prophet (sawas) which was no more than three,
or according to some, six months earlier than the death of
Hadrat Fatimah, Hasan was placed directly under the care of
his noble father. After the death of his father, through
Divine Command and according to the will of his father, Imam
Hasan became Imam; he also occupied the outward function of
caliph for about six months, during which time he
administered the affairs of the Muslims. During that time
Mu'awiyah, who was a bitter enemy of Ali and his family and
had fought for years with the ambition of capturing the
caliphate, first on the pretext of avenging the death of the
third caliph and finally with an open claim to the
caliphate, marched his army into Iraq, the seat of Imam
Hasan's caliphate. War ensued during which Mu'awiyah
gradually subverted the generals and commanders of Imam
Hasan's army with large sums of money and deceiving promises
until the army rebelled against Imam Hasan. Finally, the
Imam was forced to make peace and to yield the caliphate to
Mu'awiyah, provided it would again return to Imam Hasan,
after Mu'awiyah's death and the Imam's household and
partisans would be protected in every way.
In this way
Mu'awiyah captured the Islamic caliphate and entered Iraq.
In a public speech he officially made null and void all the
peace conditions and in every way possible placed the
severest pressure upon the members of the Household of the
Prophet (sawas) and the Shi'ah. During all the ten years of
his Imamate, Imam Hasan lived in conditions of extreme
hardship and under persecution, with no security even in his
own house. In the year 50 A.H. he was poisoned and martyred
by one of his own household who, as has been accounted by
historians, had been motivated by Mu'awiyah.
In human
perfection Imam Hasan was reminiscent of his father and a
perfect example of his noble grandfather. In fact, as long
as the Prophet (sawas) was alive, he and his brother were
always in the company of the Prophet (sawas) who even
sometimes would carry them on his shoulders. Both Sunni and
Shi'ite sources have transmitted this saying of the Holy
Prophet (sawas) concerning Hasan and Husayn: "These two
children of mine are Imams whether they stand up or sit
down" (allusion to whether they occupy the external
function of caliphate or not). Also there are many
traditions of the Holy Prophet (sawas) and Ali concerning
the fact that Imam Hasan would gain the function of Imamate
after his noble father.
Husein
ibn Ali al-Shaheed
The Third Imam
Imam Husayn
(Sayyid al-Shuhada', "the
lord among martyrs"), the second child of Ali and Fatimah,
was born in the year 4 A.H. and after the martyrdom of his
brother, Imam Hasan Mujtaba, became Imam through Divine
Command and his brother's will.
Imam Husayn
was Imam for a period of ten years, all but the last six
months coinciding with the caliphate of Mu'awiyah. Imam
Husayn lived under the most difficult outward conditions of
suppression and persecution. This was due to the fact that,
first of all, religious laws and regulations had lost much
of their weight and credit, and the edicts of the Umayyad
government had gained complete authority and power.
Secondly, Mu'awiyah and his aides made use of every possible
means to put aside and move out of the way the Household of
the Prophet (sawas) and the Shi'ah, and thus obliterate the
name of Ali and his family. And above all, Mu'awiyah wanted
to strengthen the basis of the caliphate of his son, Yazid,
who because of his lack of principles and scruples was
opposed by a large group of Muslims. Therefore, in order to
quell all opposition, Mu'awiyah had undertaken newer and
more severe measures. By force and necessity Imam Husayn had
to endure these days and to tolerate every kind of mental
and spiritual agony and affliction from Mu'awiyah and his
aides,until in the middle of the year 60 A.H. Mu'awiyah died
and his son Yazid took his place.
Paying
allegiance (bay'ah) was an old Arab practice which was
carried out in important matters such as that of kingship
and governorship. Those who were ruled, and especially the
well known among them, would give their hand in alleging,
agreement and obedience to their king or prince and in this
way would show their support for his actions. Disagreement
after allegiance was considered as disgrace and dishonour
for a people and it was like breaking an agreement after
having signed it officially, it was considered as a definite
crime. Following the example of the Holy Prophet (sawas),
people believed that allegiance, when given by free will and
not through force, carried authority and weight.
Mu'awiyah
had asked the well-known among the people to give their
allegiance to Yazid, but had not imposed this request upon
Imam Husayn. He had especially told Yazid in his last will
that if Husayn refused to pay allegiance he should pass over
it in silence and overlook the matter, for he had understood
correctly the disastrous consequences which would follow if
the issue were to be pressed. But because of his egoism and
recklessness, Yazid neglected his father's advice and
immediately after the death of his father ordered the
governor of Medina either to force a pledge of allegiance
from Imam Husayn or send his head to Damascus.
After the
governor of Medina informed Imam Husayn of this demand, the
Imam, in order to think over the question, asked for a delay
and overnight started with his family toward Mecca. He
sought refuge in the sanctuary of God which in Islam is the
official place of refuge and security. This event occurred
toward the end of the month of Rajab and the beginning of
Sha'ban of 60 A.H. For nearly four months Imam Husayn stayed
in Mecca in refuge. This news spread throughout the Islamic
world. On the one hand many people who were tired of the
iniquities of Mu'awiyah's rule and were even more
dissatisfied when Yazid became caliph, corresponded with
Imam Husayn and expressed their sympathy for him. On the
other hand a flood of letters began to flow, especially from
Iraq and particularly the city of Kufa, inviting the Imam to
go to Iraq and accept the leadership of the populace there
with the aim of beginning an uprising to overcome injustice
and iniquity. Naturally such a situation was dangerous for
Yazid.
The stay of
Imam Husayn in Mecca continued until the season for
pilgrimage when Muslims from all over the world poured in
groups into Mecca in order to perform the rites of the hajj.
The Imam discovered that some of the followers of Yazid had
entered Mecca as pilgrims (hajjis) with the mission to kill
the Imam during the rites of hajj with the arms they carried
under their special pilgrimage dress (ihram). The Imam
shortened the pilgrimage rites and decided to leave. Amidst
the vast crowd of people he stood up and in a short speech
announced that he was setting out for Iraq. In this short
speech he also declared that he would be martyred and asked
Muslims to help him in attaining the goal he had in view and
to offer their lives in the path of God. The next day he set
out with his family and a group of his companions for Iraq.
Imam
Husayn was determined not to give his allegiance to
Yazid and knew full well that he would be killed. He was
aware that his death was inevitable in the face of the
awesome military power of the Umayyads, supported as it was
by corruption in certain sectors, spiritual decline, and
lack of will power among the people, especially in Iraq.
Some of the outstanding people of Mecca stood in the way of
Imam Husayn and warned him of the danger of the move he was
making. But he answered that he refused to pay allegiance
and give his approval to a government of injustice and
tyranny. He added that he knew that wherever he turned or
went he would be killed. He would leave Mecca in order to
preserve the respect for the house of God and not allow this
respect to be destroyed by having his blood spilled there.
While on the way to Kufa and still a few days' journey away
from the city, he received news that the followers of Yazid
in Kufa had put to death the representative of the Imam in
that city and also one of the Imam's determined supporters
who was a well-known man in Kufa. Their feet had been tied
and they had been dragged through the streets. The city and
its surroundings were placed under strict observation and
countless soldiers of the enemy were awaiting him, There was
no way open to him but to march ahead and to face death. It
was-here that the Imam expressed his definitive
determination to go ahead and be martyred; and
so he continued on his journey.
Approximately
seventy kilometres from Kufa, in a desert named Kerbala, the
Imam and his entourage were surrounded by the army of Yazid.
For eight days they stayed in this spot during which the
circle narrowed and the number of the enemy's army
increased. Finally the Imam, with his household and a small
numbers of companions were encircled by an army of thirty
thousand soldiers. During these days the Imam fortified his
position and made a final selection of his companions. At
night he called his companions and during a short speech
stated that there was nothing ahead but death and martyrdom.
He added that since the enemy was concerned only with his
person he would free them from all obligations so that
anyone who wished could escape in the darkness of the night
and save his life. Then he ordered the lights to be turned
out and most of his companions, who had joined him for their
own advantage, dispersed. Only a handful of those who loved
the truth--about forty of his close aides--and some of the
Banu Hashim remained.
Once again
the Imam assembled those who were left and put them to a
test. He addressed his companions and Hashimite relatives,
saying again that the enemy was concerned only with his
person. Each could benefit from the darkness of the night
and escape the danger. But this time the faithful companions
of the Imam answered each in his own way that they would not
deviate for a moment from the path of truth of which the
Imam was the leader and would never leave him alone. They
said they would defend his household to the last drop of
their blood and as long as they could carry a sword.
On the
ninth day of the month the last challenge to choose between
"allegiance or war" was made by the enemy to the
Imam. The Imam asked for a delay in order to worship
overnight and became determined to enter battle on the next
day.
On the
tenth day of Muharram of the year 61/680 the Imam lined up
before the enemy with his small band of followers, less than
ninety persons consisting of forty of his companions, thirty
some members of the army of the enemy that j joined him
during the night and day of war, and his Hashimite family of
children, brothers, nephews, nieces and cousins. That day
they fought from morning until their final breath, the Imam,
the young Hashimites and the companions were all martyred.
Among those killed were two children of Imam Hasan, who were
only thirteen and eleven years old; and a five-year-old
child and a suckling baby of Imam Husayn.
The army of
the enemy, after ending the war, plundered the haram of the
Imam and burned his tents. They decapitated the bodies of
the martyrs, denuded them and threw them to the ground
without burial. Then they moved the members of the haram,
all of whom were helpless women and girls, along with the
heads of the martyrs, to Kufa. Among the prisoners there
were three male members: a twenty-two year old son of Imam
Husayn who was very ill and unable to move, namely Ali ibn
Husayn, the fourth Imam; his four year old son, Muhammad ibn
Ali, who became the fifth Imam; and finally Hasan Muthanna,
the son of the second Imam who was also the son-in-law of
Imam Husayn and who, having been wounded during the war, lay
among the dead. They found him near death and through the
intercession of one of the generals did not cut off his
head. Rather, they took him with the prisoners to Kufa and
from there to Damascus before Yazid. The event of Kerbala,
the capture of the women and children of the Household of
the Prophet (sawas), their being taken as prisoners from
town to town and the speeches made by the daughter of Ali;
Zaynab, and the fourth Imam who were among the prisoners,
disgraced the Umayyads. Such abuse of the Household of the
Prophet (sawas) annulled the propaganda which Mu'awiyah had
carried out for years. The matter reached such proportions
that Yazid in public disowned and condemned the actions of
his agents.
The event
of Kerbala was a major factor in the overthrow of Umayyad
rule although its effect was delayed. It also strengthened
the roots of The Followers of Ahlu Bayt. Among its immediate
results were the revolts and rebellions combined with bloody
wars which continued for twelve years. Among those who were
instrumental in the death of the Imam not one was able to
escape revenge and punishment. Anyone who studies closely
the history of the life of Imam Husayn and Yazid and the
conditions that prevailed at that time, and analyses this
chapter of Islamic history, will have no doubt that in those
circumstances there was no choice before Imam Husayn but to
be killed. Swearing allegiance to Yazid would have meant
publicly showing contempt for Islam, something which was not
possible for the Imam, for Yazid not only showed no respect
for Islam and its injunctions but also made a public
demonstration of impudently, treading under foot its basis
and its laws. Those before him, even if they opposed
religious injunctions, always did so in the guise of
religion, and at least formally respected religion. They
took pride in being companions of the Holy Prophet (sawas)
and the other religious figures in whom people believed.
From this it can be concluded that the claim of some
interpreters of these events is false when they say that the
two brothers, Hasan and Husayn, had two different tastes and
that one chose the way of peace and the other the way of
war, so that one brother made peace with Mu'awiyah although
he had an army of forty thousand while the other went to war
against Yazid with an army of forty. For we see that this
same Imam Husayn, who refused to pay allegiance to Yazid for
one day, lived for ten years under the rule of Mu'awiyah, in
the same manner as his brother who also had endured for ten
years under Mu'awiyah, without opposing him.
It must be
said in truth that if Imam Hasan or Imam Husayn had fought
Mu'awiyah they would have been killed without there being
the least benefit for Islam. Their deaths would have had no
effect before the righteous appearing policy of Mu'awiyah, a
competent politician who emphasised his being a companion of
the Holy Prophet (sawas), the "scribe of the
revelation," and "uncle of the faithful" and
who used every stratagem possible to preserve a religious
guise for his rule. Moreover, with his ability to set the
stage to accomplish his desires he could have had them
killed by their own people and then assumed a state of
mourning and sought to revenge their blood, just as he
sought to give the impression that he was avenging the
killing of the third caliph.
Event
of Ashura
Muhammad Iqbal (from Lahore, Pakistan) said:
"Imam Husain uprooted despotism forever till the day of Judgment. He
watered the dry garden of freedom with surging wave of his blood, and
indeed he awakened the sleeping Muslim nation. If Imam Husain had
aimed at acquiring a worldly empire, he would not have traveled he
did. Husain weltered in blood and dust for the sake of truth. Verily
he, therefore, became bed-rock (foundation) of the Muslim creed; There
is no God but Allah."
Charles Dickens had said the following about Imam Husain (AS):
"If Husain fought to quench his worldly desires, then I do not
understand why his sisters, wives and children accompanied him. It
stands to reason therefore that he sacrificed purely for Islam."
Thomas Carlyle has relayed this about the Tragedy of Karbala:
"The best lesson which we get from the tragedy of Karbala is that
Husain and his companions were the rigid believers of God. They
illustrated that numerical superiority does not count when it comes to
truth and falsehood. The victory of Husain despite his minority
marvels me!"
The famous, Dr. K. Sheldrake on Imam Husain (AS) said this:
"Husain marched with his little company not to glory, not to power or
wealth, but to a supreme sacrifice and every member of that gallant
band, male and female, knew that the foes were implacable, were not
only ready to fight but to kill. Denied even water for the children,
they remained parched under a burning sun, amid scorching sands yet no
one faltered for a moment and bravely faced the greatest odds without
flinching."
World famous Arab historian al-Fakhri has said this about Imam Husain's
sacrifice:
"This is a catastrophe whereof I care not to speak at length, deeming
it alike too grievous and too horrible. For verily, it was a
catastrophe than that which naught more shameful has happened in
Islam...There happened therein such a foul slaughter as to cause man's
flesh to creep with horror. And again I have dispersed with my long
description because of it's notoriety, for it is the most lamented of
catastrophes."
The previous four quotes have been taken from "The Martyrdom of Imam Husain
(AS)" - Yousuf Lalljee
Ali
ibn Husayn al-Zayn al-'Abedin
The Fourth Imam
Imam Sajjad
(Ali ibn Husayn entitled Zayn al-'abedin and Sajjad) was the
son of the third Imam and his wife, the queen among women,
the daughter of Yazdigird the king of Persia. He was the
only son of Imam Husayn to survive, for his other three
brothers Ali Akbar, aged twenty-five, five year old Ja'far
and Ali Asghar (or 'Abdallah) who was a suckling baby were
martyred during the event of Kerbala.
The Imam
had also accompanied his father on the journey that
terminated fatally in Kerbala, but because of severe illness
and the inability to carry arms or participate in fighting
he was prevented from taking part in the holy war and being
martyred. So he was sent with the womenfolk to Damascus.
After spending a period in imprisonment he was sent with
honour to Medina because Yazid wanted to conciliate public
opinion. But for a second time, by the order of the Umayyad
caliph, 'Abd al-Malik, he was chained and sent from Medina
to Damascus and then again returned to Medina.
The fourth
Imam, upon returning to Medina, retired from public life
completely, closed the door of his house to strangers and
spent his time in worship. He was in contact only with the
elite among the Shi'ites such as Abu Hamzah Thumali, Abu
Khalid Kabuli and the like. The elite disseminated among the
Shi'ah the religious sciences they learned from the Imam. In
this way The Followers of Ahlu Bayt spread considerably and
showed its effects during the Imamate of the fifth Imam.
Among the works of the fourth Imam is a book called Sahifa
al-Sajjadiyah. It consists of fifty-seven prayers
concerning the most sublime Divine sciences and is known as
"The Psalm of the Household of the Prophet
(sawas)."
The fourth
Imam died (according to some Shi'ite traditions poisoned by
Walid ibn 'Abd al-Malik through the instigation of the
Umayyad caliph Hisham) in 95/712 after thirty-five years of
Imamate.
Muhammad
ibn Ali al-Baqir
The Fifth Imam
Imam
Muhammad ibn Ali Baqir (the word Baqir meaning he who cuts
and dissects, a title given to him by the Prophet (sawas))
was the son of the fourth Imam and was born in 67/675. He
was present at the event of Kerbala when he was four years
old. After his father, through Divine Command and the decree
of those who went before him, he became Imam.
In the year
114/732 he died, according to some Shi'ite traditions
poisoned by Ibrahim ibn Walid ibn 'Abdallah, the nephew of
Hisham, the Umayyad caliph. During the Imamate of the fifth
Imam, as a result of the injustice of the Umayyads, revolts
and wars broke out in some corner of the Islamic world every
day. Moreover, there were disputes within the Umayyad family
itself which kept the caliphate busy and to a certain extent
left the members of the Household of the Prophet (sawas)
alone. From the other side, the tragedy of Kerbala and the
oppression suffered by the Household of the Prophet (sawas)
of which the fourth Imam was the most noteworthy embodiment
had attracted many Muslims to the Imams. These factors
combined to make it possible for people and especially the
Shi'ites to go in great numbers to Medina and to come into
the presence of the fifth Imam.
Possibilities
for disseminating truths about Islam and the sciences of the
Household of the Prophet (sawas), which had never existed
for the Imams before him, were presented to the fifth Imam.
The proof of this fact is the innumerable traditions
recounted from the fifth Imam and the large number of
illustrious men of science and Shi'ite scholars who were
trained by him in different Islamic sciences. These names
are listed in books of biographies of famous man in time.
Ja'far
ibn Muhammad Al-Sadiq
The Sixth Imam
Imam Ja'far
ibn Muhammad Al-Sadiq, the son of the fifth Imam, was born
in 83/702. He died in 148/785 according to Shi'ite
tradition, poisoned and martyred through the intrigue of the
Abbasid caliph Mansur. After the death of his father he
became Imam by Divine Command and decree of those who came
before him.
During the
Imamate of the sixth Imam greater possibilities and a more
favourable climate existed for him to propagate religious
teachings. This came about as a result of revolts in Islamic
lands, especially the uprising of the Muswaddah to overthrow
the Umayyad caliphate, and the bloody wars which finally led
to the fall and extinction of the Umayyads. The greater
opportunities for Shi'ite teachings were also a result of
the favourable ground the fifth Imam had prepared during the
twenty years of his Imamate through the propagation of the
true teachings of Islam and the sciences of the Household of
the Prophet (sawas).
The Imam
took advantage of the occasion to propagate the religious
sciences until the very end of his Imamate, which was
contemporary with the end of the Umayad, and beginning of
the Abbasid caliphates. He instructed many scholars in
different fields of the intellectual and transmitted
sciences, such as Zararah, Muhammad ibn Muslim, Mu'min Taqi,
Hisham ibn Hakam, Aban ibn Taghlib, Hisham ibn Salim,
Hurayz, Hisham Kalbi Nassabah, and Jabir ibn Hayyan, the
alchemist. Even some important Sunni scholars such as Sufyan
Thawri, Abu Hanifah, the founder of the Hanafi school of
law, Qadi. l Sukuni, Qadi Abu'l-Bakhtari, and others, had
the honour of being his students. It is said that his
classes and sessions of instruction produced four thousand
scholars of hadith and other sciences. The number of
traditions preserved from the fifth and sixth Imams is more
than all the hadith that have been recorded from the Prophet
(sawas) and the other ten Imams combined.
Towards the
end of his life the Imam was subjected to severe
restrictions by the Abbasid caliph Mansur, who ordered such
torture and merciless killing of many of the descendants of
the Prophet (sawas) who were Shi'ite that his actions even
surpassed the cruelty and heedlessness of the Umayyads. On
his order they were arrested in groups, some thrown into
deep and dark prisons and tortured until they died, while
others were beheaded or buried alive or placed at the base
of or between walls of buildings, and walls were constructed
over them.
Hisham, the
Umayyad caliph, had ordered the sixth Imam to be arrested
and brought to Damascus. Later, the Imam was arrested by
Saffah., the Abbasid caliph, and brought to Iraq. Finally,
Mansur had him arrested again and brought to Samarrah where
he had the Imam kept under supervision, was in every way
harsh and discourteous to him, and several times thought of
killing him. Eventually the Imam was allowed-to return to
Medina where he spent the rest of his life in hid-ing, until
he was poisoned and martyred through the intrigue of Mansur.
Upon
hearing the news of the imam's martyrdom, Mansur wrote to
the governor of Medina instructing him to go to the house of
the Imam on the pretext of expressing his condolences to the
family, to ask for the Imam's will and testament and read
it. Whoever was chosen by the Imam as his inheritor and
successor should be beheaded on the spot. Of course the aim
of Mansur was to put an end to the whole question of the
Imamate and to Shi'ite aspirations. When the governor of
Medina following orders, read the last will and testament.
He learnt that the Imam had chosen four people rather than
one to administer his last will and testament: the caliph
himself, the governor of Medina, 'Abdallah Aftah., the
Imam's older son and Musa, his younger son. In this way the
plot of Mansur failed.
Musa
ibn Ja'far Kazim
The Seventh Imam
Imam Musa
ibn Ja'far Kazim, the son of the sixth Imam, was born in
128/744 and was poisoned and martyred in prison in 183/799.
He became Imam after the death of his father, through Divine
Command and the decree of his forefathers.
The seventh
Imam was a contemporary of the Abbasid caliphs, Mansur,
Hadi, Mahdi and Harun. He lived in very difficult times and
in hiding, until finally Harun went on the Hajj. In Medina,
he had the Imam arrested while praying in the Mosque of the
Prophet (sawas). He was chained and imprisoned, then taken
from Medina to Basra and from Basra to Baghdad where for
years he was transferred from one prison to another. Finally
he died in Baghdad in the Sindi ibn Shahak prison through
poisoning and was buried in the cemetery of the Quraysh
which is now located in the city of Kazimayn.
Ali
ibn Musa al-Ridha
The Eight Imam
Imam Rida
(Ali ibn Musa) was the son of the seventh Imam and according
to well known accounts was born in 148/765 and died in
203/817.
The eighth
Imam reached the Imamate, after the death of his father,
through Divine Command and the decree of his forefathers.
The period of his Imamate coincided with the caliphate of
Harun and then his sons Amin and Ma'mun. After the death of
his father, Ma'mun fell into conflict with his brother Amin
which led to bloody wars and finally the assassination of
Amin, after which Ma'mun became caliph. Until that day the
policy of the Abbasid caliphate toward the Shi'ites had been
increasingly harsh and cruel.
Every once
in a while one of the supporters of Ali ('alawis) would
revolt, causing bloody wars and rebellions which were of
great difficulty and consequence for the caliphate. The
Shi'ite Imams would not co-operate with those who carried
out these rebellions and would not interfere with their
affairs. The Shi'ites of that day, who comprised a
considerable population, continued to consider the Imams as
their religious leaders to whom obedience was obligatory and
believed in them as the real caliphs of the Holy Prophet
(sawas). They considered the caliphate to be far from the
sacred authority of their Imams, for the caliphate had come
to seem more like the courts of the Persian kings and Roman
emperors and was being run by a group of people more
interested in worldly rule than in the strict application of
religious principles.
. The
continuation of such a situation was dangerous for the
structure of the caliphate and was a serious threat to it.
Ma'mun thought of finding a new solution for these
difficulties which the seventy-year old policy of his
Abbasid predecessors had not been able to solve. To
accomplish this end he chose the eighth Imam as his
successor, hoping in this way to overcome two difficulties;
first of all to prevent the descendants of the Prophet
(sawas) from rebelling against the government since they
would be involved in the government themselves; and
secondly, to cause the people to lose their spiritual belief
and inner attachment to the Imams. This would be
accomplished by having the Imams become engrossed in worldly
matters and the politics of the caliphate itself, which had
always been considered by the Shi'ites to be evil and
impure. In this way their religious organisation would
crumble and they would no longer present any dangers to the
caliphate. Obviously, after accomplishing these ends, the
removal of the Imam would present no difficulties to the
Abbasids.
In order to
have this decision put into effect, Ma'mun asked the Imam to
come to Marw from Medina. Once he had arrived there, Ma'mun
offered him first the caliphate and then the succession to
the caliphate. The Imam made his apologies and turned down
the proposal, but he was finally induced to accept the
successorship, with the condition that he would not
interfere in governmental affairs or in the appointment or
dismissal of government agents. This event occurred in
200/814.
Soon Ma'mun
realised that he had committed an error, for there was a
rapid spread of The Followers of Ahlu Bayt. Increasing
growth in the peoples attachment to the Imam, even from the
army and government agents. Ma'mun sought to find a remedy
for this difficulty and eventually had the Imam poisoned and
martyred. The Imam was buried in the city of Tus in Iran,
which is now called Mashhad.
Ma'mun
displayed great interest in having works on the intelectual
sciences translated into Arabic. He organised gatherings in
which scholars of different religions and sects assembled
and carried out scientific and scholarly debates. The eighth
Imam also participated in these assemblies and joined in the
discussions with scholars of other religions. Many of these
debates are recorded in the collections of Shi'ite hadiths.
Muhammad
ibn Ali Taqi
The Ninth Imam
Imam
Muhammad (ibn Ali) Taqi (sometimes called Jawad and Ibn
al-Rida) was the son of the eighth Imam. He was born in
196/809 in Medina and according to Shi'ite traditions was
martyred in 220/835, poisoned by his wife, the daughter of
Ma'mun, at the instigation of the Abbasid caliph Mu'tasim.
He was buried next to his grandfather, the seventh Imam, in
Kazimayn. He became Imam after the death of his father
through Divine Command and by the decree of his forefathers.
At the time
of the death of his father he was in Medina. Ma'mun called
him to Baghdad which was then the capital of the caliphate
and outwardly showed him much kindness. He even gave the
Imam his daughter in marriage and kept him in Baghdad. In
reality he wanted to keep a close watch upon the Imam from
both outside and within his own household. The Imam spent
some time in Baghdad and then with the consent of Ma'mum set
out for Medina where he remained until Ma'mun's death.
When
Mu'tasim became the caliph he called the Imam back to
Baghdad and, as we have seen, through the Imam's wife had
him poisoned and killed.
Ali
ibn Muhammad Naqi
The Tenth Imam
Imam Ali
ibn Muhammad Naqi (sometimes referred to by the title of
Hadi), was the son of the ninth Imam. He was born in 212/
827 in Medina and according to Shi'ite accounts was martyred
through poisoning by Mu'tazz the Abbasid caliph, in 254/868.
The tenth
Imam was a contemporary of seven of the Abbasid caliphs:
Ma'mun, Mu'tasim, Wathiq, Mutawakkil, Muntasir, Musta'm and
Mu'tazz. It was during the rule of Mu'tasim in 220/835 that
his noble father died through poisoning in Baghdad. At that
time Ali ibn Muhammad Naqi was in Medina. There he became
the Imam through Divine Command and the decree of the Imams
before him. He stayed in Medina teaching religious sciences
until the time of Mutawakkil. In 243/857, as a result of
certain false charges, Mutawakkil ordered one of his
government officials to invite the Imam from Medina to
Samarrah which was then the capital. He himself wrote the
Imam a letter full of kindness and courtesy asking him to
come to the capital where they could meet.
Upon
arrival in Samarrah the Imam was also shown certain outward
courtesy and respect. Yet at the same time Mutawakkil tried
by all possible means to trouble and dishonour him. Many
times he called the Imam to his presence with the aim of
killing or disgracing him and had his house searched.
In his
enmity toward the Household of the Prophet (sawas)
Mutawakkil had no equal among the Abbasid caliphs. He was
especially opposed to Ali, whom he cursed openly. He even
ordered a clown to ridicule Ali at voluptuous banquets. In
the year 237/850 he ordered the mausoleum of Imam Husayn in
Kerbala and many of the houses around it to be torn down to
the ground. Then water was turned upon the tomb of the Imam.
He ordered the ground of the tomb to be ploughed and
cultivated so that any trace of the tomb would be forgotten.
During the
life of Mutawakkil the condition of life of the descendants
of Ali in the Hijaz had reached such a pitiful state that
their womenfolk had no veils with which to cover themselves.
Many of them had only one old veil which they wore at the
time of the daily prayers. Pressures of a similar kind were
put on the descendants of Ali who lived in Egypt. The tenth
Imam accepted in patience the tortures and afflictions of
the Abbasid caliph Mutawakkil until the caliph died and was
followed by Muntasir, Musta'in and finally Mu'tazz, whose
intrigue led to the Imam being poisoned and martyred.
Hasan
ibn Ali 'Askari
The Eleventh Imam
Imam Hasan
ibn Ali 'Askari, the son of the tenth Imam, was born in
232/845 and according to some Shi'ite sources was poioned
and killed in 260/872 through the instigation of the Abbasid
caliph Mu'tamid. The eleventh Imam gained the Imamate, after
the death of his noble father, through Divine Command and
through the decree of the previous Imams.
During the
seven years of his Imamate, due to untold restrictions
placed upon him by the caliphate, he lived in hiding and
dissimulation (taqiyah). He did not have any social contact
with even the common people among the Shi'ite population.
Only the elite of the Shi'ah were able to see him. Even so,
he spent most of his time in prison.
There was
extreme repression at that time because the Shi'ite
population had reached a considerable level in both numbers
and power. Everyone knew that the Shi'ah believed in the
Imamate, and the identity of the Shi'ite Imams was also
known. Therefore, the caliphate kept the Imams under its
close supervision more than ever before. It tried through
every possible means and through secret plans to remove and
destroy them. Also, the caliphate had come to know that the
elite among the Shi'ah believed that the eleventh Imam,
according to traditions cited by him as well as his
forefathers, would have a son who was the promised Mahdi.
The coming of the Mahdi had been foretold in authenticated
hadiths of the Prophet (sawas) in both Sunni and Shi'ite
sources. For this reason the eleventh Imam, more than other
Imams, was kept under close watch by the caliphate. The
caliph of the time had decided definitely to put an end to
the Imamate in The Followers of Ahlu Bayt through every
possible means and to close the door to the Imamate once and
for all.
Therefore,
as soon as the news of the illness of the eleventh Imam
reached Mu'tamid. he sent a Physician and a few of his
trusted agents and judges to the house of the Imam to be
with him and observe his condition and the situation within
his house at all times. After the death of the Imam, they
had the house investigated and all his female slaves
examined by the midwife. For two years the secret agents of
the caliph searched for the successor of the Imam until they
lost all hope.
The
eleventh Imam was buried in his house in Samarrah next to
his noble father. Here it should be remembered that during
their lifetimes the Imams trained many hundreds of scholars
of religion and hadith, and it is these scholars who have
transmitted to us information about the Imams. In order not
to prolong the matter, the list of their names and works and
their biographies have not been included here.
Muhammad
ibn Hasan al-Mahdi(Arwahuna lahu
fadah)
The Twelfth Imam
The
promised Mahdi, who is usually mentioned by his title of
Imam-i 'Asr (the Imam of the "Period") and Sahib
al-Zaman (the Lord of the Age), is the son of the eleventh
Imam. His name is the same as that of the Holy Prophet
(sawas). He was born in Samarrah in 256/868 and until
260/872 when his father was martyred, lived under his
father's care and tutelage. He was hidden from public view
and only a few of the elite among the Shi'ah were able to
meet him. After the martyrdom of his father he became Imam
and by Divine Command went into occultation (ghaybat).
Thereafter he appeared only to his deputies (na'ib) and even
then only in exceptional circumstances.
The Imam
chose as a special deputy for a time Uthman ibn Sa'id
'Umari, one of the companions of his father and grandfather
who was his confidant and trusted friend. Through his deputy
the Imam would answer the demands and questions of the
Shi'ah. After Uthman ibn Sa'id, his son Muhammad ibn Uthman
Umari was appointed the deputy of the Imam. After the death
of Muhammad ibn Uthman, Abu'l Qasim Husayn ibn Ruh Nawbakhti
was the special deputy, and after his death Ali ibn Muhammad
Simmari was chosen for this task.
A few days
before the death of Ali ibn Muhammad Simmari in 329/939 an
order was issued by the Imam stating that in six days Ali
ibn Muhammad Simmari would die. Henceforth the special
deputation of the Imam would come to an end and the major
occultation (ghaybat-i kubra) would begin and would continue
until the day God grants permission to the Imam to manifest
himself. The occultation of the twelfth Imam is, therefore,
divided into two parts: the first, the minor occultation
(ghaybat-i-sughra) which began in 260/872 and ended in
329/939, lasting about seventy years; the second, the major
occultation which commenced in 329/939 and will continue as
long as God wills it. In a hadith upon whose authenticity
everyone agrees, the Holy Prophet (sawas) has said, "If
there were to remain in the life of the world but one day,
Allah would prolong that day until He sends in it a man from
my community and my household. His name will be the same as
my name. He will fill the earth with-equity and justice as
it was filled with oppression and tyranny.''
On
the Appearance of the Mahdi
Prophet
Muhammed (s.a.w.a.s.) has said: "Even if the entire
duration of the world’s existence has already been
exhausted and only one day is left before Doomsday, Allah
will expand that day to such length of time as to
accommodate the kingdom of a person from my Ahlul-Bayt who
will be called by name. He will fill out the earth with and
justice as it will have been full of injustice and tyranny
(by then)".
In the discussion on prophecy and the Imamate it was
indicated that as a result of the law of general guidance
which governs all of creation, man is of necessity endowed
with the power of receiving revelation through prophecy,
which directs him toward the perfection of the human norm
and the well-being of the human species. Obviously, if this
perfection and happiness were not possible for man, whose
life possesses a social aspect, the very fact that he is
endowed with this power would be meaningless and futile. But
there is no futility in creation. In other words, ever since
he has inhabited the earth, man has had the wish to lead a
social life filled with happiness in its true sense and has
striven toward this end. If such a wish were not to have an
objective existence it would never have been imprinted upon
man's inner nature, in the same way that if there were no
food there would have been no hunger. Or if there were to be
no water there would be no thirst and if there were to be no
reproduction there would have been no sexual attraction
between the sexes. Therefore, by reason of inner necessity
and determination, the future will see a day when human
society will be replete with justice and when all will live
in peace and tranquillity, when human beings will be fully
possessed of virtue and perfection. The establishment of
such a condition will occur through human hands but with
Divine succour. And the leader of such a society, who will
be the saviour of man, is called in the language of the
hadith, the Mahdi.
In the
different religions that govern the world such as Hinduism,
Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Zoroastrianism and Islam
there are references to a person who will come as the
saviour of mankind. These religions have usually given happy
tidings of his coming, although there are naturally certain
differences in detail that can be discerned when these
teachings are compared carefully. The hadith of the Holy
Prophet (sawas) upon which all Muslims agree, "The
Mahdi is of my progeny," refers to this same truth.
There are numerous hadiths cited in Sunni and Shi'ite
sources from the Holy Prophet (sawas) and the Imams
concerning the appearance of the Mahdi, such as that he is
of the progeny of the Prophet (sawas) and that his
appearance will enable human society to reach true
perfection and the full realisation of spiritual life. In
addition, there are numerous other traditions concerning the
fact that the Mahdi is the son of the eleventh Imam, Hasan
al-'Askari. They agree that after being born and undergoing
a long occultation the Mahdi will appear again, filling with
justice the world that has been corrupted by injustice and
iniquity.
As an
example, Ali ibn Musa al-Rida (the eighth Imam) has said, in
the course of a hadith, "The Imam after me is my son,
Muhammad, and after him his son Ali, and after Ali his son,
Hasan, and after Hasan his son H. Hujjat al-Qa'im, who is
awaited during his occultation and obeyed during his
manifestation. If there remain from the life of the world
but a single day, Allah will extend that day until he
becomes manifest, and fill the world with justice in the
same way that it had been filled with iniquity. But when? As
for news of the 'hour,' verily my father told me, having
heard it from his father who heard it from his father who
heard it from his ancestors who heard it from Ali, that it
was asked of the Holy Prophet (sawas), 'Oh Prophet (sawas)
of God, when will the "support" (qa'im) who is
from thy family appear?' He said, 'His case is like that of
the Hour (of the Resurrection). "He alone will manifest
it at its proper time. It is heavy in the heavens and the
earth. It cometh not to you save unawares" (Quran, VII,
187).102
Saqr ibn Abi Dulaf said, "I heard from Abu Ja'far
Muhammad ibn Ali al-Rida [the ninth Imam] who said, 'The
Imam after me is my son, Ali; his command is my command; his
word is my word; to obey him is to obey me. The Imam after
him is his son, Hasan. His command is the command of his
father; his word is the word of his father; to obey him is
to obey his father.' After these words the Imam remained
silent. I said to him, 'Oh son of the Prophet (sawas), you
will be the Imam after Hasan?' The Imam cried hard, then
said, 'Verily after Hasan his son is the awaited Imam who is
"al-qa'im bi'l-haqq" (He who is supported by the
Truth).' "
Musa ibn Ja'far Baghdadi said, "I heard from the Imam
Abu Muhammad al-Hasan ibn Ali [the eleventh Imam] who said,
'I see that after me differences will appear among you
concerning the Imam after me. Whoso accepts the Imams after
the Prophet (sawas) of God but denies my son is like the
person who accepts all the prophets but denies the
prophethood of Muhammad, the Prophet (sawas) of God, upon
whom be peace and blessing. And whoso denies [Muhammad] the
Prophet (sawas) of God is like one who has denied all the
prophets of God, for to obey the last of us is like obeying
the first and to deny the last of us is like denying the
first. But beware ! Verily for my son there is an
occultation during which all people will fall into doubt
except those whom Allah protects.''
The
opponents of The Followers of Ahlu Bayt protest that
according to the beliefs of this school the Hidden Imam
should by now be nearly twelve centuries old, whereas this
is impossible for any human being. In answer it must be said
that the protest is based only on the unlikelihood of such
an occurrence, not its impossibility. Of course such a long
lifetime or a life of a longer period is unlikely. But those
who study the hadiths of the Holy Prophet (sawas) and the
Imams will see that they refer to this life as one
possessing miraculous qualities.
Miracles
are certainly not impossible nor can they be negated through
scientific arguments. It can never be proved that the causes
and agents that are functioning in the world are solely
those that we see and know and that other causes which we do
not know or whose effects and actions we have not seen nor
understood do not exist. It is in this way possible that in
one or several members of mankind there can be operating
certain causes and agents which bestow upon them a very long
life of a thousand or several thousand years. Medicine has
not even lost hope of discovering a way to achieve very long
life spans. In any case such protests from "peoples of
the Book" such as Jews, Christians and Muslims are most
strange for they accept the miracles of the prophets of God
according to their own sacred scriptures.
. The
opponents of The Followers of Ahlu Bayt also protest that,
they considers the Imam necessary in order to expound the
injunctions and verities of religion and to guide the
people, the occultation of the Imam is the negation of this
very purpose, for an Imam in occultation who cannot be
reached by mankind cannot be in any way beneficial or
effective. The opponents say that if God wills to bring
forth an Imam to reform mankind He is able to create him at
the necessary moment and does not need to create him
thousands of years earlier. In answer it must be said that
such people have not really understood the meaning of the
Imam, for in the discussion on the Imamate it became clear
that the duty of the Imam is not only the formal explanation
of the religious sciences and exoteric guidance of the
people. In the same way that he has the duty of guiding men
outwardly, the Imam also bears the function of walayat and
the esoteric guidance of men. It is he who directs man's
spiritual life and orients the inner aspect of human action
toward God: Clearly, his physical presence or absence has no
effect in this matter. The Imam watches over men inwardly
and is in communion with the soul and spirit of men even if
he be hidden from their physical eyes. His existence is
always necessary even if the time has not as yet arrived for
his outward appearance and the universal reconstruction that
he is to bring about.
Ghaibat-us-Sughra
Ghaibat-us-Sughra
means ‘the minor concealment.’ Its period was about 70
years. It began in 260 A.H. when Imam al-Mahdi (a.s) first
went into concealment, and ended in 328 A.H.
During
Ghaibut-us-Sughra, the Imam appointed some agents to
represent him and the people. The Imam had four agents.
After the death of the fourth agent, the Imam went into
major concealment (Ghaibut-ul-Kubra). This was on the 10th
Shawal 329 A.H.
Let
us all pray to Almighty Allah for the reappearance of Imam
al-Mahdi (a.s).
Amin.
Sayings
Of Holy Prophet (pbuh&hf) about Imam Mahdi(as)
AL-MAHDI
(A.S.)
Al-Imam
al-Mahdi, The Just Leader of Humanity
Imam
Mahdi(AS)
The
Concept of Messiah in Islam
More
Information about Imam Mahdi (a.s.) @
www.shia.org/mehdi.html
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