A Brief History of the Right Path [ An Extract
from a work by ALLAMAH SAYYID MUHAMMAD HUSAYN
TABATABAI
The course of the first manifestation and
the later growth of Islam during the twenty-three
years of prophecy brought about many conditions
which necessitated the appearance of a group
such as the Shi'ites among the companions
of the Prophet.
The Holy Prophet during the first days of
his prophecy, when according to the text
of the Quran he was commanded to invite his
closer relatives to come to his religion,
told them clearly that whoever would be the
first to accept his invitation would become
his successor and inheritor. Ali was the
first to step forth and embrace Islam. The
Prophet accepted Ali's submission to the
faith and thus fulfilled his promise.
From the Shi'ite point of view it appears
as unlikely that the leader of a movement,
during the first days of his activity, should
introduce to strangers one of his associates
as his successor and deputy but not introduce
him to his completely loyal and devout aides
and friends. Nor does it appear likely that
such a leader should accept someone as his
deputy and successor and introduce him to
others as such, but then throughout his life
and religious call deprive his deputy of
his duties as deputy, disregard the respect
due to his position as successor, and refuse
to make any distinctions between him and
others.
The Prophet, according to many unquestioned
and completely authenticated hadiths, both
Sunni and Shi'ite, clearly asserted that
Ali was preserved from error and sin in his
actions and sayings. Whatever he said and
did was in perfect conformity with the teachings
of religion and he was the most knowledgeable
of men in matters pertaining to the Islamic
sciences and injunctions. During the period
of prophecy Ali performed valuable services
and made remarkable sacrifices. When the
infidels of Mecca decided to kill the Prophet
and surrounded his house, the Holy Prophet
decided to emigrate to Medina. He said to
Ali, "Will you sleep in my bed at night
so that they will think that I am asleep
and I will be secure from being pursued by
them?" Ali accepted this dangerous assignment
with open arms. This has been recounted in
different histories and collections of hadith.
(The emigration from Mecca to Medina marks
the date of origin of the Islamic calendar,
known as the hijrah.) Ali also served by
fighting in the battles of Badr, Uhud, Khaybar,
Khandaq, and Hunayn in which the victories
achieved with his aid were such that if Ali
had not been present the enemy would most
likely have uprooted Islam and the Muslims,
as is recounted in the usual histories, lives
of the Prophet, and collections of hadith.
For Shi'ites, the central evidence of Ali's
legitimacy as successor to the Prophet is
the event of Ghadir Khumm when the Prophet
chose Ali to the "general guardianship"
(walayat-i 'ammah) of the people and made
Ali, like himself, their "guardian"
(wali).
It is obvious that because of such distinctive
services and recognition, because of Ali's
special virtues which were acclaimed by all,
and because of the great love the Prophet
showed for him, some of the companions of
the Prophet who knew Ali well, and who were
champions of virtue and truth, came to love
him. They assembled around Ali and followed
him to such an extent that many others began
to consider their love for him excessive
and a few perhaps also became jealous of
him. Besides all these elements, we see in
many sayings of the Prophet reference to
the "shi'ah of Ali" and the "shi'ah
of the Household of the Prophet."
The Cause of the Separation of the Shi'ite
Minority from the Sunni Majority.
The friends and followers of Ali believed
that after death of the Prophet the caliphate
and religious authority (marja'iyat-i 'ilmi)
belonged to Ali. This belief came from their
consideration of Ali's position and station
in relation to the Prophet, his relation
to the chosen among the companions, as well
as his relation to Muslims in general. It
was only the events that occurred during
the few days of the Prophet's final illness
that indicated that there was opposition
to their view. Contrary to their expectation,
at the very moment when the Prophet died
and his body lay still unburied, while his
household and a few companions were occupied
with providing for his burial and funeral
service, the friends and followers of Ali
received news of the activity of another
group who had gone to the mosque where the
community was gathered faced with this sudden
loss of their leader. This group, which was
later to form the majority, set forth in
great haste to select a caliph for the Muslims
with the aim of ensuring the welfare of the
community and solving its immediate problems.
They did this without consulting the Household
of the Prophet, his relatives or many of
his friends, who were busy with the funeral,
and without providing them with the least
information. Thus Ali and his companions
were presented with a fait accompli.
Ali and his friends - such as 'Abbas, Zubayr,
Salman, Abu Dharr, Miqdad and 'Ammar - after
finishing with the burial of the body of
the Prophet became aware of the proceedings
by which the caliph had been selected. They
protested against the act of choosing the
caliph by consultation or election, and also
against those who were responsible for carrying
it out. They even presented their own proofs
and arguments, but the answer they received
was that the welfare of the Muslims was at
stake and the solution lay in what had been
done.
It was this protest and criticism which separated
from the majority the minority that were
following Ali and made his followers known
to society as the "partisans" or
"shi'ah" of Ali. The caliphate
of the time was anxious to guard against
this appellation being given to the Shi'ite
minority and thus to have Muslim society
divided into sections comprised of a majority
and a minority. The supporters of the caliph
considered the caliphate to be a matter of
the consensus of the community (ijma') and
called those who objected the "opponents
of allegiance." They claimed that the
Shi'ah stood, therefore, opposed to Muslim
society. Sometimes the Shi'ah were given
other pejorative and degrading names.
Shi'ism was condemned from the first moment
because of the political situation of the
time and thus it could not accomplish anything
through mere political protest. Ali, in order
to safeguard the well-being of Islam and
of the Muslims, and also because of lack
of sufficient political and military power,
did not endeavor to begin an uprising against
the existing political order, which would
have been of a bloody nature. Yet those who
protested against the established caliphate
refused to surrender to the majority in certain
questions of faith and continued to hold
that the succession to the Prophet and religious
authority belonged by right to Ali. They
believed that all spiritual and religious
matters should be referred to him and invited
people to become his followers.
The Two Problems of Succession and Authority
in Religious Sciences.
In accordance with the Islamic teachings
which form its basis, Shi'ism believed that
the most important question facing Islamic
society was the elucidation and clarification
of Islamic teachings and the tenets of the
religious sciences. Only after such clarifications
were made could the application of these
teachings to the social order be considered.
In other words, Shi'ism believed that, before
all else, members of society should be able
to gain a true vision of the world and of
men based on the real nature of things. Only
then could they know and perform their duties
as human beings - in which lay their real
welfare - even if the performance of these
religious duties were to be against their
desires. After carrying out this first step
a religious government should preserve and
execute real Islamic order in society in
such a way that man would worship none other
than God, would possess personal and social
freedom to the extent possible, and would
benefit from true personal and social justice.
These two ends could be accomplished only
by a person who was inerrant and protected
by God from having faults. Otherwise people
could become rulers or religious authorities
who would not be free from the possibility
of distortion of thought or the committing
of treachery in the duties placed upon their
shoulders. Were this to happen, the just
and freedom-giving rule of Islam could gradually
be converted to dictatorial rule and a completely
autocratic government. Moreover, the pure
religious teachings could become, as can
be seen in the case of certain other religions,
the victims of change and distortion in the
hands of selfish scholars given to the satisfaction
of their carnal desires. As confirmed by
the Holy Prophet, Ali followed perfectly
and completely the Book of God and the tradition
of the Prophet in both words and deeds. As
Shi'ism sees it, if, as the majority say,
only the Quraysh opposed the rightful caliphate
of Ali, then that majority should have answered
the Quraysh by asserting what was right.
They should have quelled all opposition to
the right cause in the same way that they
fought against the group who refused to pay
the religious tax (zakat). The majority should
not have remained indifferent to what was
right for fear of the opposition of the Quraysh.
What prevented the Shi'ah from accepting
the elective method of choosing the caliphate
by the people was the fear of the unwholesome
consequences that might result from it: fear
of possible corruption in Islamic government
and of the destruction of the solid basis
for the sublime religious sciences. As it
happened, later events in Islamic history
confirmed this fear (or prediction), with
the result that the Shi'ites became ever
firmer in their belief. During the earliest
years, however, because of the small number
of its followers, Shi'ism appeared outwardly
to have been absorbed into the majority,
although privately it continued to insist
on acquiring the Islamic sciences from the
Household of the Prophet and to invite people
to its cause. At the same time, in order
to preserve the power of Islam and safeguard
its progress, Shi'ism did not display any
open opposition to the rest of Islamic society.
Members of the Shi'ite community even fought
hand in hand with the Sunni majority in holy
wars (jihad) and participated in public affairs.
Ali himself guided the Sunni majority in
the interest of the whole Islam whenever
such action was necessary.
The Political Method of the Selection of
the Caliph by Vote and Its Disagreement with
the Shi'ite View.
Shi'ism believes that the Divine Law of Islam
(Shari'ah), whose substance is found in the
Book of God and in the tradition (Sunnah)
of the Holy Prophet, will remain valid to
the Day of Judgment and can never, nor will
ever, be altered. A government which is really
Islamic cannot under any pretext refuse completely
to carry out the Shari'ah's injunctions.
The only duty of an Islamic government is
to make decisions by consultation within
the limits set by the Shari'ah and in accordance
with the demands of the moment.
The vow of allegiance to Abu Bakr at Saqifah,
which was motivated at least in part by political
considerations, and the incident described
in the hadith of "ink and paper,"
which occurred during the last days of the
illness of the Holy Prophet, reveal the fact
that those who directed and backed the movement
to choose the caliph through the process
of election believed that the Book of God
should be preserved in the form of a constitution.
They emphasized the Holy Book and paid much
less attention to the words of the Holy Prophet
as an immutable source of the teachings of
Islam. They seem to have accepted the modification
of certain aspects of Islamic teachings concerning
government to suit the conditions of the
moment and for the sake of the general welfare.
This tendency to emphasize only certain principles
of the Divine Law is confirmed by many sayings
that were later transmitted concerning the
companions of the Holy Prophet. For example,
the companions were considered to be independent
authorities in matters of the Divine Law
(mujtahid), being able to exercise independent
judgment
(ijtihad) in public affairs. It was also
believed that if they succeeded in their
task they would be rewarded by God and if
they failed they would be forgiven by Him
since they were among the companions. This
view was widely held during the early years
following the death of the Holy Prophet.
Shi'ism takes a stricter stand and believes
that the actions of the companions, as of
all other Muslims, should be judged strictly
according to the teachings of the Shari'ah.
For example, there was the complicated incident
involving the famous general Khalid ibn Walid
in the house of one of the prominent Muslims
of the day, Malik ibn Nuwajrah, which led
to the death of the latter. The fact that
Khalid was not at all taken to task for this
incident because of his being an outstanding
military leader shows in the eyes of Shi'ism
an undue lenience toward some of the actions
of the companions which were below the norm
of perfect piety and righteousness set by
the actions of the spiritual elite among
the companions.
Another practice of the early years which
is criticized by Shi'ism is the cutting off
of the khums from the members of the Household
of the Prophet and from the Holy Prophet's
relatives. Likewise, because of the emphasis
laid by Shi'ism on the sayings and the Sunnah
of the Holy Prophet it is difficult for it
to understand why the writing down of the
text of hadith was completely banned and
why, if a written hadith were found, it would
be burned. We know that this ban continued
through the caliphate of the khulafa' rashidun
into the Umayyad period and did not cease
until the period of Umar ibn 'Abd al- 'Aziz,
who ruled from A. H. 99/A. D. 717 TO A. H.
101/A. D. 719.
During the period of the second caliph (13/634-25/644)
there was a continuation of the policy of
emphasizing certain aspects of the Shari'ah
and of putting aside some of the practices
which the Shi'ites believe the Holy Prophet
taught and practiced. Some practices were
forbidden, some were omitted, and some were
added. For instance, the pilgrimage of tamattu
' (a kind of pilgrimage in which the 'umrah
ceremony is utilized in place of the hajj
ceremony) was banned by Umar during his caliphate,
with the decree that transgressors would
be stoned; this in spite of the fact that
during his final pilgrimage the Holy Prophet
- peace be upon him - instituted, as in Quran,
Surah II, 196, a special form for the pilgrimage
ceremonies that might be performed by pilgrims
coming from far away. Also, during the lifetime
of the Prophet of God temporary marriage
(mut'ah) was practiced, but Umar forbade
it. And even though during the life of the
Holy Prophet it was the practice to recite
in the call to prayers, "Hurry to the
best act"
(hayya 'ala khayr el-'amal), Umar ordered
that it be omitted because he said it would
prevent people from participating in holy
war, jihad. (It is still recited in the Shi'ite
call to prayers, but not in the Sunni call.)
There were also additions to the Shari'ah:
during the time of the Prophet a divorce
was valid only if the three declarations
of divorce ("I divorce thee") were
made on three different occasions, but Umar
allowed the triple divorce declaration to
be made at one time. Heavy penalties were
imposed on those who broke certain of these
new regulations, such as stoning in the case
of mut'ah marriage.
It was also during the period of the rule
of the second caliph that new social and
economic forces led to the uneven distribution
of the public treasury (bayt al-mal) among
the people, an act which was alter the cause
of bewildering class differences and rightful
and bloody struggles among Muslims. At this
time Mu'awiyah was ruling in Damascus in
the style of the Persian and Byzantine kings
and was even given the title of the "Khusraw
of the Arabs" (a Persian title of the
highest imperial power), but no serious protest
was made against him for his worldly type
of rule.
The second caliph was killed by a Persian
slave in 25/644. In accordance with the majority
vote of a six-man council which assembled
by order of the second caliph before his
death, the third caliph was chosen. The third
caliph did not prevent his Umayyad relatives
from becoming dominant over the people during
his caliphate and appointed some of them
as rulers in the Hijaz, Iraq, Egypt, and
other Muslim lands. These relatives began
to be lax in applying moral principles in
government. Some of them openly, committed
injustice and tyranny, sin and iniquity,
and broke certain of the tenets of firmly
established Islamic laws.
Before long, streams of protest began to
flow toward the capital. But the caliph,
who was under the influence of his relatives
- particularly Marwan ibn Hakam - did not
act promptly or decisively to remove the
causes against which the people were protesting.
Sometimes it even happened that those who
protested were punished and driven away.
An incident that happened in Egypt illustrates
the nature of the rule of the third caliph.
A group of Muslims in Egypt rebelled against
Uthman. Uthman sensed the dander and asked
Ali for help, expressing his feeling of contrition.
Ali told the Egyptians, "You have revolted
in order to bring justice and truth to life.
Uthman has repented saying, 'I shall change
my ways and in three days will fulfill your
wishes. I shall expel the oppressive rulers
from their posts.'" Ali then wrote an
agreement with them on behalf of Uthman and
they started home. On the way they saw the
slave of Uthman riding on his camel in the
direction of Egypt. They became suspicious
of him and searched him. On him they found
a letter for the governor of Egypt containing
the following words: "In the name of
God. When 'Abd al-Rahman ibn 'Addis comes
to you beat him with a hundred lashes, shave
his head and beard and condemn him to long
imprisonment. Do the same in the case of
'Amr ibn al'Hamq, Suda ibn Hamran, and 'Urwah
ibn Niba '." The Egyptians took the
letter and returned with anger to Uthman,
saying, "You have betrayed us!"
Uthman denied the letter. They said, "Your
slave was the carrier of the letter."
He answered, "He has committed this
act without my permission and knowledge."
They said, "The letter is in the handwriting
of your secretary." He replied, "This
has been done without my permission and knowledge."
They said, "In any case you are not
competent to be caliph and must resign, for
if this has been done with your permission
you are a traitor and if such important matters
take place without your permission and knowledge
then your incapability and incompetence is
proven. In any case, either resign or dismiss
the oppressive agents from office immediately."
Uthman answered, "If I wish to act according
to your will, then it is you who are the
rulers. Then, what is my function?"
They stood up and left the gathering in anger.
During his caliphate Uthman allowed the government
of Damascus, at the head of which stood Mu'awiyah,
to be strengthened more than ever before.
In reality, the center of gravity of the
caliphate as far as political power was concerned
was shifting to Damascus and the organization
in Medina, the capital of the Islamic world,
was politically no more than a form without
the necessary power and substance to support
it. Finally, in the year 35/656, the people
rebelled and after a few days of siege and
fighting the third caliph was killed.
The first caliph was selected through the
vote of the majority of the companions, the
second caliph by the will and testament of
the first, and the third by a six-man council
whose members and rules of procedure were
organized and determined by the second caliph.
Altogether, the policy of these three caliphs,
who were in power for twenty-five years,
was to execute and apply Islamic laws and
principles in society in accordance with
ijtihad and what appeared most wise at the
time to the caliphs themselves. As for the
Islamic sciences, the policy of these caliphs
was to have the Holy Quran read and understood
without being concerned with commentaries
upon it or allowing it to become the subject
of discussion. The hadith of the Prophet
was recited and was transmitted orally without
being written down. Writing was limited to
the text of the Holy Quran and was forbidden
in the case of hadith.
After the battle of Yamamah which ended in
12/633, many of those who had been reciters
of the Holy Quran and who knew it by heart
were killed. As a result Umar ibn al-Khattab
proposed to the first caliph to have the
verses of the Holy Quran collected in written
form, saying that if another war were to
occur and the rest of those who knew the
Quran by heart were to be killed, the knowledge
of the text of the Holy Book would disappear
among men. Therefore, it was necessary to
assemble the Quranic verses in written form.
From the Shi'ite point of view it appears
strange that this decision was made concerning
the Quran and yet despite the fact that the
prophetic hadith, which is the complement
of the Quran, was faced with the same danger
and was not free from corruption in transmission,
addition, diminution, forgery and forgetfulness,
the same attention was not paid to it. On
the contrary, as already mentioned, writing
it down was forbidden and all of the written
versions of it that were found were burned,
as if to emphasize that only the text of
the Holy Book should exist in written form.
As for the other Islamic sciences, during
this period little effort was made to propagate
them, the energies of the community being
spent mostly in establishing the new sociopolitical
order. Despite all the praise and consecration
which are found in the Quran concerning knowledge
('ilm), and the emphasis placed upon its
cultivation, the avid cultivation of the
religious sciences was postponed to a later
period of Islamic history.
Most men were occupied with the remarkable
and continuous victories of the Islamic armies,
and were carried away by the flood of immeasurable
booty which came from all directions toward
the Arabian peninsula. With this new wealth
and the worldliness which came along with
it, few were willing to devote themselves
to the cultivation of the sciences of the
Household of the Prophet, at whose head stood
Ali, whom the Holy Prophet had introduced
to the people as the one most versed in the
Islamic sciences. At the same time, the inner
meaning and purpose of the teachings of the
Holy Quran were neglected by most of those
who were affected by this change. It is strange
that, even in the matter of collecting the
verses of the Holy Quran, Ali was not consulted
and his mane was not mentioned among those
who participated in this task, although it
was known by everyone that he had collected
the text of the Holy Quran after the death
of the Prophet.
It has been recounted in many traditions
that after receiving allegiance from the
community, Abu Bakr sent someone to Ali and
asked for his allegiance. Ali said, "I
have promised not to leave my house except
for the daily prayers until I compile the
Quran." And it has been mentioned that
Ali gave his allegiance to Abu Bakr after
six months. This itself is proof that Ali
had finished compiling the Quran. Likewise,
it has been recounted that after compiling
the Quran he placed the pages of the Holy
Book on a camel and showed it to the people.
It is also recounted that the battle of Yamamah
after which the Quran was compiled, occurred
during the second year of the caliphate of
Abu Bakr. These facts have been mentioned
in most works on history and hadith which
deal with the account of the compilation
of the Holy Quran.
These and similar events made the followers
of Ali more firm in their belief and more
conscious of the course that lay before them.
They increased their activity from day to
day and Ali himself, who was cut off from
the possibility of educating and training
the people in general, concentrated on privately
training an elite.
During this twenty-five year period Ali lost
through death three of his four dearest friends
and associates, who were also among the companions
of the Prophet: Salman al-Farsi, Abu Dharr
al-Ghifari, and Miqdad. They had been constant
in their friendship with him in all circumstances.
It was also during this same period that
some of the other companions of the Holy
Prophet and a large number of their followers
in the Hijaz, the Yemen, Iraq, and other
lands, joined the followers of Ali. As a
result, after the death of the third caliph
the people turned to Ali from all sides,
swore allegiance to him and chose him as
caliph.
The Termination of the Caliphate of 'Ali
Amir al-mu'minin and His Method of Rule.
The caliphate of Ali began toward the end
of the year 35/656 and lasted about four
years and nine months. During his period
as caliph Ali followed the ways of the Holy
Prophet and brought conditions back to their
original state. He forced the resignation
of all the incompetent political elements
who had a hand in directing affairs and began
in reality a major transformation of a "revolutionary"
nature which caused him innumerable difficulties.
On his first day as caliph, in an address
to the people, Ali said, "O People,
be aware that the difficulties which you
faced during the apostolic period of the
Prophet of God have come upon you once again
and seized you. Your ranks must be turned
completely around so that the people of virtue
who have fallen behind should come forward
and those who had come to the fore without
being worthy should fall behind. There is
both truth (haqq) and falsehood (batil).
Each has its followers; but a person should
follow the truth. If falsehood be prevalent
it is not something new, and if the truth
is rare and hard to come by, sometimes even
that which is rare wins the day so that there
is hope of advance. Of course it does not
occur often that something which has turned
away from man should return to him."
Ali continued his radically different type
of government based more on righteousness
than political efficacy but, as is necessary
in the case of every movement of this kind,
elements of the opposition whose interests
were endangered began to display their displeasure
and resisted his rule. Basing their actions
on the claim that they wanted to revenge
the death of Uthman, they instigated bloody
wars which continued throughout almost all
the time that Ali was caliph. From the Shi'ite
point of view those who caused these civil
wars had no end in mind other than their
own personal interest. The wish to revenge
the blood of the third caliph was no more
than an excuse to fool the crowd. There was
no question of a misunderstanding.
After the death of the Holy Prophet, a small
minority, following Ali, refused to pay allegiance.
At the head of the minority there were Salman,
Abu Dharr, Miqdad, and Ammar. At the beginning
of the caliphate of Ali also a sizable minority
in disagreement refused to pay allegiance.
Among the most persistent opponents were
Sa'id ibn 'Ass, Walid ibn 'Uqbah, Marwan
ibn Hakam, 'Amr ibn 'Ass, Busr ibn Artat,
Samurah ibn Jundab, and Mughirah ibn Shu'bah.
The study of the biography of these two groups,
and meditation upon the acts they have performed
and stories recounted of them in history
books, reveal fully their religious personality
and aim. The first group were among the elite
of the companions of the Holy Prophet and
among the ascetics, devout worshipers and
selfless devotees of Islam who struggled
on the path of Islamic freedom. They were
especially loved by the Prophet. The Prophet
said, "God has informed me that He loves
four men and that I should love them also."
They asked about their names. He mentioned
Ali and then the names of Abu Dharr, Salman
and Miqdad. (Sunan of Ibn Majah, Cairo, 1372,
vol. I, p. 66.) 'A'ishah has recounted that
the Prophet of God said, "If two alternatives
are placed before Ammar, he will definitely
choose that which is more true and right."
(Ibn Majah, vol. I, p. 66.) The Prophet said,
"There is no one between heaven and
earth more truthful than Abu Dharr."
(Ibn Majah, vol. I, p. 68.) There is no record
of a single forbidden act committed by these
men during their lifetime. They never spilled
any blood unjustly, did not commit aggression
against anyone, did not steal anyone's property,
never sought to corrupt and misguide people.
History is, however, full of accounts of
unworthy acts committed by some of the second
group. The various acts committed by some
of these men in opposition to explicit Islamic
teachings are beyond reckoning. These acts
cannot be excused in any manner except the
way that is followed by certain groups among
the Sunnis who say that God was satisfied
with them and therefore they were free to
perform whatever act they wished, and that
they would not be punished for violating
the injunctions and regulations existing
in the Holy Book and the Sunnah.
The first war in the caliphate of Ali, which
is called the "Battle of the Camel,"
was caused by the unfortunate class differences
created during the period of rule of the
second caliph as a result of the new socioeconomic
forces which caused an uneven distribution
of the public treasury among members of the
community. When chosen to the caliphate,
Ali divided the treasury evenly as had been
the method of the Holy Prophet, but this
manner of dividing the wealth upset Talhah
and Zubayr greatly. They began to show signs
of disobedience and left Medina for Mecca
with the alleged aim of making the pilgrimage.
They persuaded "the mother of the Faithful"
(umm al-mu'minin), A'ishah, who was not friendly
with Ali, to join them and in the name of
wanting to revenge the death of the third
caliph they began the bloody Battle of the
Camel. This was done despite the fact that
this same Talhah and Zubayr were in Medina
when the third caliph was besieged and killed
but did nothing to defend him. Furthermore,
after his death they were the first to pay
allegiance to Ali on behalf of the immigrants
(muhajirun) as well as on their own. Also,
the "mother of the Faithful," A'ishah,
did not show any opposition to those who
had killed the third caliph at the moment
when she received the news of his death.
It must be remembered that the main investigators
of the disturbances that led to the death
of the third caliph were those companions
who wrote letters from Medina to people near
and far inviting them to rebel against the
caliph, a fact which is repeated in many
early Muslim histories.
As for the second war, called the Battle
of Siffin, which lasted for a year and a
half, its cause was the covetousness of Mu'awiyah
for the caliphate which for him was a worldly
political instrument rather than a religious
institution. But as an excuse he made the
revenge of the blood of the third caliph
the main issue and began a war in which more
than a hundred thousand people perished without
reason. Naturally, in these wars Mu'awiyah
was the aggressor rather than the defender,
for the protest to revenge someone's blood
can never occur in the form of defense. The
pretext of this war was blood revenge. During
the last days of his life, the third caliph,
in order to quell the uprising against him,
asked Mu'awiyah for help, but the army of
Mu'awiyah which set out from Damascus to
Medina purposely waited on the road until
the caliph was killed. Then he returned to
Damascus to begin an uprising to revenge
the caliph's death. After the death of Ali
and his gaining the caliphate himself, Mu'awiyah
forgot the question of revenging the blood
of the third caliph and did not pursue the
matter further.
After Siffin there occurred the battle of
Nahrawan in which a number people, among
whom there could be found some of the companions,
rebelled against Ali, possibly at the instigation
of Mu'awiyah. These people were causing rebellion
throughout the lands of Islam, killing the
Muslims and especially the followers of Ali.
They even attacked pregnant women and killed
their babies. Ali put down this uprising
as well, but a short while later was himself
killed in the mosque of Kufa by one of the
members of this group who came to be known
as the Khawarij.
The opponents of Ali claim that he was a
courageous man but did not possess political
acumen. They claim that at the beginning
of his caliphate he could have temporarily
made peace with his opponents. He could have
approached them through peace and friendship,
thus courting their satisfaction and approval.
In this way he could have strengthened his
caliphate and only then turned to their extirpation
and destruction. What people who hold this
view forgot is that the movement of Ali was
not based on political opportunism. It was
a radical and revolutionary religious movement
(in the true sense of revolution as a spiritual
movement to reestablish the real order of
things and not in its current political and
social sense); therefore it could not have
been accomplished through compromise or flattery
and forgery. A similar situation can be seen
during the apostleship of the Holy Prophet.
The infidels and polytheists proposed peace
to him many times and swore that if he were
to abstain from protesting against their
gods they would not interfere with his religious
mission. But the Prophet did not accept such
a proposal, although he could in those days
of difficulty have made peace and used flattery
to fortify his own position, and then have
risen against his enemies. In fact, the Islamic
message never allows a right and just cause,
nor a falsehood to be rejected and disproven
through another falsehood. There are many
Quranic verses concerning this matter.
The Benefit which the Shi'ah Derived from
the Caliphate of Ali.
During the four years and nine months of
his caliphate, Ali was not able to eliminate
the disturbed conditions which were prevailing
throughout the Islamic world, but he was
successful in three fundamental ways:
1. As a result of his just and upright manner
of living he revealed once again the beauty
and attractiveness of the way of life of
the Holy Prophet, especially to the younger
generation. In contrast to the imperial grandeur
of Mu'awiyah, he lived in simplicity and
poverty like the poorest of people. He never
favored his friends or relatives and family
above others, nor did he ever prefer wealth
to poverty or brute force to weakness.
2. Despite the cumbersome and strenuous difficulties
which absorbed his time, he left behind among
the Islamic community a valuable treasury
of the truly divine sciences and Islamic
intellectual disciplines. Nearly eleven thousand
of his proverbs and short sayings on different
intellectual, religious and social subjects
have been recorded. In his talks and speeches
he expounded the most sublime Islamic sciences
in a most elegant and flowing manner. He
established Arabic grammar and laid the basis
for Arabic literature.
He was the first in Islam to delve directly
into the questions of metaphysics (falsafah-i
ilahi) in a manner combining intellectual
rigor and logical demonstration. He discussed
problems which had never appeared before
in the same way among the metaphysicians
of the world. Moreover, he was so devoted
to metaphysics and gnosis that even in the
heat of battle he would carry out intellectual
discourse and discuss metaphysical questions.
3. He trained a large number of religious
scholars and Islamic savants, among whom
are found a number of ascetics and gnostics
who were the forefathers of the Sufis, such
men as Uways al-Qarani, Kumayl al-Nakha'i,
Maytham al-Tammar and Roshaid al-Hajari.
These men have been recognized by the later
Sufis as the founders of gnosis in Islam.
Others among his disciples became the first
teachers of jurisprudence, theology, Quranic
commentary and recitation.
The Transfer of the Caliphate to Mu'awiyah
and its Transformation into a Hereditary
Monarchy.
After the death of Ali, his son, Hasan ibn
Ali, who is recognized by the Shi'ah as their
second Imam, became caliph. This designation
occurred in accordance with Ali's last will
and testament and also by the allegiance
of the community to Hasan. But Mu'awiyah
did not remain quiet before this event. He
marched with his army toward Iraq, which
was then the capital of the caliphate , and
began to wage war against Hasan.
Through different intrigues and the payment
of great sums of money, Mu'awiyah was able
gradually to corrupt the aides and generals
of Hasan. Finally he was able to force Hasan
to hand the caliphate over to him so as to
avoid bloodshed and to make peace. Hasan
handed the caliphate to Mu'awiyah on the
condition that the caliphate would be returned
to him after the death of Mu'awiyah and that
no harm would come to his partisans.
In the year 40/661 Mu'awiyah finally gained
control of the caliphate. He then set out
immediately for Iraq and in a speech to the
people of that land said: "I did not
fight against you for the sake of the prayers
or of fasting. These acts you can perform
yourself. What I wanted to accomplish was
to rule over you and this end I have achieved."
He also said, "The agreement I made
with Hasan is null and void. It lies trampled
under my feet." With this declaration
Mu'awiyah made known to the people the real
character of his government and revealed
the nature of the program he had in mind.
He indicated in his declaration that he would
separate religion from politics and would
not give any guarantees concerning religious
duties and regulations. He would spend all
his force to preserve and to keep alive his
own power, whatever might be the cost. Obviously
a government of such a nature is more of
a sultanate and a monarchy than a caliphate
and vicegerency of the Prophet of God in
its traditional Islamic sense. That is why
some who were admitted to his court addressed
him as "king." He himself in some
private gatherings interpreted his government
as a monarchy, while in public he always
introduced himself as the caliph.
Naturally any monarchy that is based on force
carries with it inherently the principle
of inheritance. Mu'awiyah, too, finally realized
this fact, and chose his son, Yazid, who
was a heedless young man without the least
religious personality, as the "crown
prince" and his successor. This act
was to be the cause of many regrettable events
in the future. Mu'awiyah had previously indicated
that he would refuse to permit Hasan ibn
Ali to succeed him as caliph and that he
had other thoughts in mind. Therefore he
had caused Hasan to be killed by poisoning,
thus preparing the way for his son, Yazid.
In breaking his agreement with Hasan, Mu'awiyah
made it clear that he would never permit
the Shi'ah of the Household of the Prophet
to live in a peaceful and secure environment
and continue their activity as before, and
he carried into action this very intention.
It has been said that he went so far as to
declare that whoever would transmit a hadith
in praise of the virtues of the Household
of the Prophet would have no immunity or
protection concerning his life, merchandise
and property. At the same time he ordered
that whoever could recite a hadith in praise
of the other companions or caliphs would
be given sufficient reward. As a result a
noticeable number of hadiths were recorded
at this time praising the companions, some
of which are of doubtful authenticity. He
ordered pejorative comments to be made about
Ali from the pulpits of mosques throughout
the lands of Islam, while he himself sought
to revile Ali. This command continued to
be more or less in effect until the caliphate
of Umar ibn 'Abd al-'Aziz, when it was discontinued.
With the help of his agents and lieutenants,
Mu'awiyah caused elite and the most outstanding
among the partisans of Ali to be put to death
and the heads of some of them to be carried
on lances throughout different cities. The
majority of Shi'ites were forced to disown
and even curse Ali and to express their disdain
for him. If they refused, they were put to
death.
The Bleakest Days of Shi'ism.
The most difficult period for Shi'ism was
the twenty-year rule of Mu'awiyah, during
which the Shi'ites had no protection and
most of them were considered as marked characters,
under suspicion and hunted down by the state.
Two of the leaders of Shi'ism who lived at
this time, Imams Hasan and Husayn, did not
possess any means whatsoever to change the
negative and oppressive circumstances in
which they lived. Husayn, the third Imam
of Shi'ism, had no possibility of freeing
the Shi'ites from persecution in the ten
years he was Imam during Mu'awiyah's caliphate,
and when he rebelled during the caliphate
of Yazid he was massacred along with all
his aides and children.
Certain people in the Sunni world explain
as pardonable the arbitrary, unjust and irresponsible
actions carried out at this time by Mu'awiyah
and his aides and lieutenants, some of whom
were like Mu'awiyah himself, among the companions.
This group reasons that according to certain
hadiths of the Holy Prophet all the companions
could practice ijtihad, that they were excused
by God for the sins they committed, and that
God was satisfied with them and forgave them
whatever wrong they might have performed.
The Shi'ites, however, do not accept this
argument for two reasons:
1. It is not conceivable that a leader of
human society like the Prophet should rise
in order to revivify truth, justice and freedom
and to persuade a group of people to accept
his beliefs - a group all of whose members
had sacrificed their very existence in order
to accomplish this sacred end - and then
as soon as this end is accomplished give
his aides and companions complete freedom
to do with these sacred laws as they will.
It is not possible to believe that the Holy
Prophet would have forgiven the companions
for whatever wrong action they might have
performed. Such indifference to the type
of action performed by them would have only
destroyed the structure which the Holy Prophet
had built with the same means that he had
used to construct it.
2. Those sayings which depict the companions
as inviolable and pardoned in advance for
every act they might perform, even one unlawful
or inadmissible, are most likely apocryphal
; the authenticity of many of them has not
been fully established by traditional methods.
Moreover, it is known historically that the
companions did not deal with one another
as if they were inviolable and pardoned for
all their sins and wrongdoings. Therefore,
even judging by the way the companions acted
and dealt with each other, it can be concluded
that such sayings cannot be literally true
in the way some have understood them. If
they do contain an aspect of the truth it
is in indicating the legal inviolability
of the companions and the sanctification
which they enjoyed generally as a group because
of their proximity to the Holy Prophet. The
expression of God's satisfaction with the
companions in the Holy Quran, because of
the services they had rendered in obeying
His Command, refers to their past actions,
and to God's satisfaction with them in the
past, not to whatever action each one of
them might perform in the future.
The Establishment of Umayyad Rule.
In the year 60/680 Mu'awiyah died and his
son Yazid became caliph, as the result of
the allegiance which his father had obtained
for him from the powerful political and military
leaders of the community. From the testimony
of historical documents it can be seen clearly
that Yazid had no religious character at
all and that even during the lifetime of
his father he was oblivious to the principles
and regulations of Islam. At that time his
only interest was debauchery and frivolity.
During his three years of caliphate he was
the cause of calamities that had no precedent
in the history of Islam, despite all the
strife that had occurred before him.
During the first year of Yazid's rule Imam
Husayn, the grandson of the Holy Prophet,
was massacred in the most atrocious manner
along with his children, relatives, and friends.
Yazid even had some of the women and children
of the Household of the Prophet killed and
their heads displayed in different cities.
During the second year of his rule, he ordered
a general massacre of Medina and for three
days gave his soldiers freedom to kill, loot,
and take the women of the city. During the
third year he had the sacred Ka'bah destroyed
and burned.
Following Yazid, the family of Marwan gained
possession of the caliphate, according to
details that are recorded in the history
books. The rule of this eleven-member group,
which lasted for nearly seventy years, was
successful politically but from the point
of view of purely religious values it fell
short of Islamic ideals and practices. Islamic
society was dominated by the Arab element
alone and non-Arabs were subordinated to
the Arabs. In fact a strong Arab empire was
created which gave itself the name of an
Islamic caliphate. During this period some
of the caliphs were indifferent to religious
sentiments to the extent that one of them
- who was the "vicegerent of the Holy
Prophet" and was regarded as the protector
of religion - decided without showing any
respect for Islamic practices and the feelings
of Muslims to construct a room above the
Ka'bah so that he could have a place to enjoy
and amuse himself during the annual pilgrimage.
It is even recounted of one of these caliphs
that he made the Holy Quran a target for
his arrow and in a poem composed to the Quran
said: "On the Day of Judgment when you
appear before God tell Him 'the caliph tore
me.'"
Naturally the Shi'ites, whose basic differences
with the Sunnis were in the two questions
of the Islamic caliphate and religious authority,
were passing through bitter and difficult
days in this dark period. Yet in spite of
the unjust and irresponsible ways of the
governments of the time the asceticism and
purity of the leaders of the Household of
the Prophet made the Shi'ites each day ever
more determined to hold on to their beliefs.
Of particular importance was the tragic death
of Husayn, the third Imam, which played a
major role in the spread of Shi'ism, especially
in regions away from the center of the caliphate,
such as Iraq, the Yemen, and Persia. This
can be seen through the fact that during
the period of the fifth Imam, before the
end of the first Islamic century, and less
than forty years after the death of Husayn,
the Shi'ites took advantage of the internal
differences and weaknesses in the Umayyad
government and began to organize themselves,
flocking to the side of the fifth Imam. People
came from all Islamic countries like a flood
to his door to collect hadith and to learn
the Islamic sciences. The first century had
not yet ended when a few of the leaders who
were influential in the government established
the city of Qum in Persia and made it a Shi'ite
settlement. But even then the Shi'ah continued
to live for the most part in hiding and followed
their religious life secretly without external
manifestations.
Several times the descendants of the Prophet
(who are called in Persian sadat-i 'alawi)
rebelled against the injustice of the government,
but each time they were defeated and usually
lost their lives. The severe and unscrupulous
government of the time did not overlook any
means of crushing them. The body of Zayd,
the leader of Zayd Shi'ism, was dug out of
the grave and hanged; then after remaining
on the gallows for three years it was brought
down and burned, its ashes being thrown to
the wind. The Shi'ites believe that the fourth
and fifth Imams were poisoned by the Umayyads
as the second and third Imams had been killed
by them before.
The calamities brought about by the Umayyads
were so open and unveiled that the majority
of the Sunnis, although they believed generally
that it was their duty to obey the caliphs,
felt the pangs of their religious conscience
and were forced to divide the caliphs into
two groups. They came to distinguish between
the "rightly guided caliphs"
(khulafa rashidun) who are the first four
caliphs after the death of the Holy Prophet
(Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman, Ali), and the others
who began with Mu'awiyah and who did not
possess by any means the religious virtues
of the rightly guided caliphs.
The Umayyads caused so much public hatred
as a result of their injustice and heedlessness
during their rule that after the definitive
defeat and death of the last Umayyad caliph
his two sons and a number of their family
encountered great difficulties in escaping
from the capital. No matter where they turned
no one would give them shelter. Finally after
much wandering the deserts of Nubia, Abyssinia,
and Bajawah (between Nubia and Abyssinia)
during which many of them died from hunger
and thirst, they came to Bab al-Mandab of
the Yemen. There they acquired travel expenses
from the people through begging and set out
for Mecca dressed as porters. In Mecca they
finally succeeded in disappearing among the
mass of the people.
Shi'ism During the 2nd/8th Century.
During the latter part of the first third
of the 2nd/8th century, following a series
of revolutions and bloody wars throughout
the Islamic world which were due to the injustice,
repressions, and wrongdoings of the Umayyads,
there began an anti-Umayyad movement in the
name of the Household of the Prophet in Khurasan
in Persia. The leader of this movement was
the Persian general, Abu Muslim Marwazi,
who rebelled against Umayyad rule and advance
his cause step by step until he was able
to overthrow the Umayyad government.
Although this movement originated from a
profound Shi'ite background and came into
being more or less with the claim of wanting
to avenge the blood of the Household of the
Prophet, and although people were even asked
secretly to give allegiance to a qualified
member of the family of the Prophet, it did
not rise directly as a result of the instructions
of the Imams. This is witnessed by the fact
that when Abu Muslim offered the caliphate
to the sixth Imam in Medina he rejected it
completely saying "You are not one of
my men and the time is not my time."
Finally the Abbasids gained the caliphate
in the name of the family of the Prophet
and at the beginning showed some kindness
to people in general and to descendants of
the Prophet in particular. In the name of
avenging the martyrdom of the family of the
Prophet, they massacred the Umayyads, going
to the extent of opening their graves and
burning whatever they found in them. But
soon they began to follow unjust ways of
the Umayyads and did not abstain in any way
from injustice and irresponsible action.
Abu Hanifah, the founder of one of the four
Sunni schools of law, was imprisoned by al-Mansur
and whipped. The sixth Imam died from poisoning
after much torture and pain. The descendants
of the Holy Prophet were sometimes beheaded
in groups, buried alive, or even placed within
walls of government buildings under construction.
Harun al-Rashid, the Abbasid caliph, during
whose reign the Islamic empire reached the
apogee of its expansion and power, occasionally
would look at the sun and address it in these
words: "Shine wherever thou wilt, thou
shalt never be able to leave my kingdom."
On the other hand his armies were advancing
in the East and West, on the other hand a
few steps from the palace of the caliph,
and without his knowledge, officials had
decided on their own to collect tolls from
people who wanted to cross the Baghdad bridge.
Even one day when the caliph himself wanted
to cross the bridge he was stopped and asked
to pay the toll.
A singer, by chanting two lascivious verses,
incited the passions of the Abbasid caliph,
Amin, who awarded him three million dirhams.
The chanter in joy threw himself at the feet
of the caliph saying, "Oh, leader of
the faithful! You give me all this money?"
The caliph answered, "It does not matter.
We receive money from an unknown part of
the country."
The bewildering amount of wealth that was
pouring every year from all corners of the
Islamic world into the public treasury in
the capital helped creating luxury and a
mundane atmosphere. Much of it in fact was
often spent for the pleasures and iniquities
of the caliph of the time. The number of
beautiful slave girls in the court of some
of the caliphs exceeded thousands. By the
dissolution of Umayyad rule and the establishment
of the Abbasids, Shi'ism did not benefit
in any way. Its repressive and unjust opponents
merely changed their name.
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