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'Ashura - History and Popular Legend Second Sermon
Martyr Murtada Mutahhari Translated from the Persian by 'Ali Quli Qara'i Vol XIII No. 3 (Fall 1996)
In the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful
All Praise belongs to Allah, the Lord of the worlds and the Maker of
all creation, and may Peace and benedictions be upon His servant and
messenger, His beloved and elect, our master, our prophet, and our sire,
Abu al-Qasim Muhammad, may Allah bless him and his pure, immaculate, and
infallible Progeny.
I seek the refuge of Allah from the accursed Satan:
So for their breaking their compact We cursed them and
made their hearts hard; they would pervert the words from their
meanings, and they forgot a portion of what they were reminded of.
(5:13) We said that the event of 'Ashura' has been
subject to tahrif and it has occurred both in its outward form as
well as its inner content. A consequence of these distortions has been
that this great historic document and this great educative source has
become ineffectual or less potent, in our lives, leaving, at times, even
an opposite effect. All of us have the duty to purge it of the distortions
that have polluted this sacred document. Tonight we will discuss the
general factors responsible for tahrif. Thereafter our discussion
will focus on tahrif in the content and significance of this
event.
The Factors of Tahrif:
These factors are of two kinds, one of which are of a general nature.
That is, there are in general certain factors that lead to the corruption
of histories and these are not limited to the event of 'Ashura' alone. For
instance, the enemy's motives are themselves a factor that distort an
event. In order to achieve their purposes, the enemies bring about
alterations in historical texts or misinterpret them. There are many
examples of it which I do not wish to mention here. All that I would say
is that this kind of tahrif did play a role in distorting the facts
of Karbala', and the enemies did take resort in misrepresenting the
uprising of Imam Husayn. As usually happens, the enemies accuse sacred
movements of causing conflict and division and of disrupting social
harmony and peace. The Umayyad regime also made much effort to give such a
hue to the Husayni uprising.
Such propaganda began from the very first day. When Muslim arrived in
Kufah, Yazid, while sending an order appointing Ibn Ziyad to the
governership of Kufah, wrote: "Muslim, son of 'Aqil, has gone to Kufah and
his aim is to disrupt peace and to create social discord and disunity in
the Muslim community. Go and suppress him." When Muslim was captured and
brought to the dar al-imarah, the governor's residency, Ibn Ziyad
said to Muslim: "Son of 'Aqil! What was it that brought you to this city?
The people here lived in satisfaction and peace. You came and disrupted
their peace, causing disunity and conflict amongst Muslims." Muslim
answered in a manly manner and said: "Firstly, I did not come to this city
on my own account. It was the people of this city who invited us. They
wrote a great number of letters, which are in our possession. In those
letters they wrote that your father, Ziyad, who ruled this city for years,
had killed its virtuous men and imposed its scoundrels over the virtuous,
subjecting them to various forms of tyranny and injustice. They appealed
to us to help them establish justice. We have come to establish
justice!"
The Umayyad regime did wage much propaganda of this kind, but their
misrepresentations did not affect the history of Islam. You will not find
a single competent historian in the world who might have said that Husayn
ibn 'Ali, naudhubillah, made an unlawful uprising, that he rose to
cause conflict and disunity among the people. No. The enemy could not
bring about any misrepresentation in [the history of] the event of
Karbala'. Most regrettably, whatever tahrif has occurred in the
event of Karbala' has been at the hands of the friends.
The Second Factor:
The second factor is the human tendency towards myth-making and for
turning facts into legends. This tendency has been at work in all the
world's historical traditions. There is a tendency in men for hero worship
which induces the people to fabricate myths and legends about national and
religious heroes. [13] The best
evidence of it are the legends that the people have invented around the
figures of some geniuses such as Ibn Sina and Shaykh Baha'i. Ibn Sina,
undoubtedly, was a genius and was gifted with extraordinary physical and
intellectual powers. But these very gifts have led the people to weave out
legends about him. For instance, it is said that once Ibn Sina saw a man
from a distance of one parasang and remarked that the man was eating a
bread made with oil. They asked him how could he know that the man was
eating a bread and that it was made with oil. He replied that he saw flies
circling the bread, which had made him conclude that there was oil in the
bread. Obviously, this is a legend. Someone who can see flies from the
distance of one parasang will see a bread made with oil much sooner than
he would see flies!
Or it is said that once during the time that Ibn Sina was studying at
Isfahan he complained that when he gets up in the middle of the night to
study, he was disturbed by the noise of the hammering of the coppersmiths
of Kashan. They went and made a test. One night they told the coppersmiths
of Kashan not to use their hammers. That night, said Ibn Sina, he had
slept peacefully and was undisturbed in his study. Obviously this is a
legend.
Many such legends have been made about Shaykh Bahi'i as well. Such
things are not confined to the event of 'Ashura. However, let the
people say what they would about Ibn Sina. What harm does it do? None! But
in respect of individuals who are guides of mankind and whose words and
deeds and whose stands and uprisings serve as a model and authority, there
should not be any tahrif whatsoever in their statements, in their
personality, and history.
How many legends have been fabricated by us Shi'is about Amir al
Mu'minin 'Ali, many Peace be upon him! There is no doubt that 'Ali
('a) was an extraordinary man. No one has doubts about 'Ali's
courage which was superior to that of any ordinary human being. 'Ali did
not encounter any contestant in battle without felling him to the ground.
But does that satisfy the myth makers? Never! For instance, there is the
legend about 'Ali's encounter with Marhab in the battle of Khaybar with
all the curious details about the physique of Marhab. The historians have
also written that 'Ali's sword cut him into two from the middle (I don't
know whether the two halves were perfectly equal!). But here they found
the opportunity to weave out fables which are harmful for the faith. It is
said that God commanded Gabriel to go immediately to the earth lest 'Ali's
sword when it comes down on Marhab should cut the earth into two halves,
reaching right down to the Cow and the Fish. Gabriel was told to shield
the blow with his wings. Gabriel went and when 'Ali struck the blow with
his sword, it slashed Marhab into two halves which had they been put in a
balance would have turned out to be exactly equal. However, one of
Gabriel's wings suffered injury and he could not ascend to the heaven for
forty days. When at last he arrived in heaven, God asked him as to where
he had been all these days. He replied, "O Lord! I was on the earth. You
had given me an assignment to go there." He was asked why he had taken so
much time to return. Gabriel said, "O God, the blow of 'Ali's sword
wounded my wings and I was busy bandaging and healing them all these forty
days!" According to another legend 'Ali's sword flew so swiftly and
slickly through Marhab's forehead cutting all the way to the saddle that
when 'Ali pulled away his sword Marhab himself did not know what had
happened (he thought the blow had gone amiss). He jeered at 'Ali, "Was
that all of your swordsmanship?!" 'Ali' said to him, "Just move yourself a
bit and see." As soon as Marhab made a movement, one half of his body fell
on one side of the horse and the other on the other side!
Hajji Nuri, this great man, in his book Lu'lu wa marjan, while
condemning the practice of fabricating of such legends, writes about
legends that some people have put into circulation concerning the valour
of Hadrat Abu al-Fadl al-'Abbas. According to one of them, in the Battle
of Siffin (in which, basically, it is not known whether he had
participated, and even if he did he must have been a boy of fifteen years)
he threw a man into the air, then another, and so on up to eighty men, and
by the time the last one was thrown up the first one had not yet reached
the ground. Then when the first one came down, he cut him into two halves,
then the second and so on to the last man!
A part of the interpolations in the narratives of the event of Karbala
have resulted from the myth-making tendency. The Europeans assert that one
finds many exaggerations in accounts pertaining to the history of the
East, and there is some truth in what they say. Mulla Darbandi writes in
his book Asrar al-shahadah that the cavalry of the army of 'Umar
ibn Sa'd consisted of six hundred thousand horsemen and twenty million
infantrymen - in all a force of one million and six hundred thousand plus
all the people of Kufah! Now how large was Kufah? Kufah was a recently
founded city and not more than thirty-five years old, as it was built
during the time of 'Umar ibn Khattab. It was built at 'Umar's orders as a
military outpost for Muslim warriors near the borders of Iran. It is not
certain whether the entire population of Kufah during that time was even a
hundred thousand. That a force of one million and six hundred thousand
could have been assembled on that day and that Husayn ibn 'Ali' should
have killed three hundred thousand of them is not at all reasonable. Such
figures cast a shadow on the whole event.
It is said that someone once made exaggerated claims about the
largeness of the city of Herat in former days. He said, 'Herat was a very
big city at one time.' 'How big? he was asked. He said, 'At one time there
were in Herat twenty thousand one-eyed cooks named Ahmad selling head and
totters stew. Now imagine, how many men there must be in a city, and how
many named Ahmad, and how many one-eyed Ahmads, to have twenty-one
thousand one-eyed Ahmads selling head and totters stew!
This myth-making tendency has always been very active; but we must not
leave a sacred document to the mercy of myth-makers.
There is amongst us, the Ahl al-Bayt, in every
generation reformers who purge the faith of the perversions of the
extremists, of the false beliefs of the falsifiers, and of the
misinterpretations of the ignorant. [14] We
have a duty here. Now let anyone say anything he likes about Herat. But is
it right that such legends as these should find way into the history of
the event of Ashura', an event concerning which our duty is to keep
it alive and revive its memory every year?
The Third Factor
The third factor is of a particular nature. The two factors that we
have discussed above, that is, the hostile ends of the enemies and the
human tendency for conjuring legends and myths, apply to all histories of
the world, but there is also a factor which is specific to the event of
Ashura' that has led to fabrication of stories.
The leaders of the faith, from the time of the Noble Messenger and the
Pure Imams, have commanded in clear and emphatic terms that the memory of
Husayn ibn 'Ali must be kept alive and that his martyrdom and ordeals
should be commemorated every year. Why? What is the reason underlying this
Islamic ordinance? Why is there so much encouragement for and emphasis on
visiting the shrine of Husayn ibn 'Ali? We should reflect over these
questions. Some might say that it is for the sake of condoling with Hadrat
Zahra' and offering her consolation! But is it not ridiculous to imagine
that Hadrat Zahra' should still need consolation after fourteen hundred
years, whereas, in accordance with the explicit statements of Imam Husayn
and according to our creed, since his martyrdom Imam Husayn and Hadrat
Zahra have been together in heaven? What a thing to say! Is it correct to
think of Hadrat Zahra as a little child that goes on weeping, even after
fourteen centuries, and whom we have to go and console? Such kind of
beliefs are destructive for religion. Imam Husayn ('a) established
the practical ideology of Islam and he is the practical model for Islamic
movements. They (that is the Prophet and Imams) wanted Imam Husayn's
ideology to be kept alive. They wanted Husayn should reappear every year
with those sweet, sublime and heroic summons of his and declare"
Don't you see that what is right and true is not acted upon,
and what is wrong and false is not forbidden? [In such conditions] the
man of faith should long to meet his true Lord! [15] They
wanted the words:
Death is better than a life saddled with indignity, [16] to
be kept alive forever, and so also the words:
To me death is nothing but felicity, and life with
oppressors is nothing but disgrace, [17] They
wanted such other saying of Imam Husayn to be kept alive:
The children of Adam carry the mark of death like necklaces
that adorn the neck of damsels! [18]
Far from us is disgrace and indignity! [19] They
wanted to keep alive the memory of such scenes as that of Imam Husayn's
confronting a force of thirty thousand men, in a state when he and his
family are faced with a great ordeal, and declaring in a manly manner -
and the world has never seen such a manly personage!
Indeed, that baseborn son of a baseborn father has left me
only two alternatives to choose from: the sword or disgrace. And far
from us is disgrace! It is disdainful to God, His Messenger and the
faithful that we should yield to anything of that kind, and those born
of chaste mothers and high-minded fathers and possessing a lofty sense
of honour disdain that submission to vile men should be preferred to
honourable death! [20] They
wanted to keep alive the formative school of Imam Husayn so that the rays
of the Husayni spirit may breathe life into this community. Its objective
is quite clear.
Do not allow the event of 'Ashura' to be consigned to oblivion! Your
life, your humanity, and your dignity depend on this event!
You can keep Islam alive only by its means! That is why they have
encouraged us to keep alive the tradition of mourning Imam Husayn, and
very rightly! The institution of mourning Husayn ibn 'Ali has a correct
philosophy underlying it, a philosophy which is also extremely sublime. It
is fitting that we should do all that we can to endeavour for the sake of
this cause, provided we understand its purpose and goal. Unfortunately
some people have not understood it. Without making the people understand
the philosophy of Imam Husayn's uprising and without making them
understand the station of Imam Husayn, they imagine that if they just came
and sat in mourning assemblies and shed tears, without knowledge and
understanding, it would atone their sins.
Marhum Hajji Nuri mentions a point in the book, Lu'lu' wa marjan.
That point is the belief of some people that the reward
(thawab) for mourning Imam Husayn is so great that it is
justifiable to employ any means whatsoever for this end. Nowadays a group
which subscribes to the views of Machiavilli in political thought says
that ends justify the means. If the end is a good one, it does not matter
what means are used to achieve it. Now these people also say that we have
a sacred and exalted goal, which is mourning Imam Husayn and it does not
matter what means are used for this end. As the end is a sacred one, it
does not matter what the means are: Is it correct to perform ta'ziyahs
- even ta'ziyahs which are vulgar - for this purpose? They ask,
'Do they make the people cry? If they do, there is so problem with such
ta'ziyahs.' So also there is no problem if we blow trumpets, beat
drums, commit sinful acts, make men dress as women, conjure a wedding for
Qasim, or fabricate and forge episodes. Such things do not matter in the
tradition of mourning Imam Husayn, which is something exclusive. Here
lying is forgiven, forgery and fabrication are forgivable, making
pictures, and dressing men as women is pardonable. Here any kind of sinful
conduct is forgivable as the end is most sacred! As a consequence of such
thinking, some persons have resorted to such tahrif and
misrepresentation that are stunning.
About ten or fifteen years ago when I was on a visit to Isfahan, I met
a great man, marhum Hajj Shaykh Muhammad Hasan Najafabadi, may God elevate
his station. I recounted to him a rawdah that I had heard recently
somewhere. It was something which I had never heard until that time.
Incidentally, this man who had delivered that rawdah, an opium
addict, had made the people weep profusely with that rawdah of his.
In it he recounted the story of an old woman during the reign of
Mutawakkil (the 'Abbasid caliph who persecuted the Shi'ah). The woman had
set out with the purpose of making a pilgrimage to the tomb of Imam
Husayn, which was forbidden at that time and they would cut off the hands
of the pilgrims. He went on with the narrative until the point when the
old woman is taken and thrown into the river. In that state she cries out
for help, calling out, "O Abu al-Fadl al-'Abbas!" As she is about to drown
a horseman appears and tells her to catch hold of his stirrup. The woman
takes hold of the stirrups but she says, "Why don't you give me your
hand?' The horseman says, "I haven't any hands!" At this point the people
wept a lot.
Marhum Hajj Shaykh Muhammad Hasan recounted for me the history of this
legend. In a place near the bazaar, in the near abouts of Madrasah Sadr,
there used to be held a majlis which was one of the major
majalis of Isfahan and which even the marhum Hajj Mulla
Isma'il Khwaju'i used to attend. One day there had occurred there an
incident. (It had taken place earlier and he had heard its account from
reliable persons.) It involved a well-known wa'iz; who himself had
recounted it in these words: "One day mine was the last turn to speak from
the minbar. Other speakers had come and each one of them had exerted his
skills to make the people weep. Everyone that came would try to surpass
his predecessor and having delivered his rawdah would descend from
the minbar to sit among the audience and watch the art of the succeeding
rawdeh-khwan. This continued until the time of noon. I saw that
everyone had tried his prowess and together they had drawn out all the
tears that the people could shed. What should I do? I thought for a while,
and then and there I made up this story. When my turn came, I went up and
related the story, leaving all of them behind. In the afternoon, the same
day, while attending another majlis in the Char-suq locality, I saw
that the one who took to the minbar before me related this same story.
Gradually it came to be written in books and appeared in print."
The false and wrong notion that the tradition of mourning Imam Husayn
is an exception to all norms, that it is justified to use any means to
make the people weep, has been a major factor leading to fabrication of
legends and tahrif.
Marhum Hajji Nuri, that saintly man and teacher of marhum
Hajj Shaykh 'Abbas Qummi, who as confessed by Hajj Shaykh 'Abbas himself
as well as others was superior to his pupils, was an extraordinarily
learned and pious man. In his book he makes the point that if it is a
correct notion that the end justifies the means, then one may also justify
the following line of reasoning. One of the Islamic precepts is that
bringing delight to the heart of a believer and to do something to make
him happy is a greatly commendable act. Such being the case, according to
this reasoning, it is justifiable to do backbiting in his presence, as he
loves listening to backbiting. And should someone say that it is sinful to
do so, the answer will be," No! The purpose is a sacred one and the
backbiting is being done to make a believer pleased and happy!"
Marhum Hajji Nuri gives another example. A man embraces a
non-mahram woman, which is an unlawful act. We ask him why did you do
that? He replies, "I have done it for a believer's delight." The same
reasoning can be applied to such unlawful acts as adultery, drinking wine,
and sodomy. Isn't this an absurd reasoning? Wouldn't such a notion destroy
the Shari'ah? By God, to think that it is permissible to use any kind of
means for making people cry in mourning Imam Husayn is a notion that
contradicts everything that Imam Husayn stands for. Imam Husayn was
martyred to uplift Islam, as we confess while reciting his
ziyarah:
I bear witness that you established the prayer, gave
zakat commanded what is right and forbade what is wrong, and did
such jihad in the way of God as ought to be done. [21] Imam
Husayn was killed in order to revive Islamic traditions, Islamic laws and
regulations, not in order to create an excuse for the violation of Islamic
norms. Na'udhubillah, we have changed Imam Husayn into a destroyer
of Islam: the Imam Husayn that we have conjured in our imagination is a
destroyer of Islam.
In his book Hajji Nuri mentions a story that was related to him by one
of the students in Najaf, who originally came from Yazd. "One day," he
said, "in my youth I made a journey on foot to Khorasan, going by the road
that passes through the desert (kawr). In one of the villages of
Nayshabur I went to a mosque, as I did not have any place to stay. The
imam of the mosque came and led the prayers. Afterwards he went on the
minbar to make a rawdah I was amazed to see the mosque
attendant bring a pile of stones which he handed over to the imam. When
the rawdah started, he ordered the lamps to be put out. When the
lamps had been put out, he pelted the stones at the audience and there
arose cries from the people. When the lamps were lighted, I saw bleeding
heads. Their eyes were tearful as they walked out of the mosque. I
approached the imam and asked him why he had done such a thing. He said,
'I have tested these people. There is no rawdah in the world that
will make them weep. As weeping for the sake of Imam Husayn has a great
reward and thawab, I have found that the only way to make them cry
is to throw stones on their heads. This is how I make them weep.' " He
believed that the end justifies the means. The end was to mourn Imam
Husayn though it should involve emptying a pile of stones on the people's
heads.
Accordingly, this is a particular factor which is specific to this
historic event and it has led to much fabrication and tahrif.
When one studies history one finds what they have done to this event.
By God, Hajji Nuri is right when he says that if we were to weep for Imam
Husayn today, we should mourn for him on account of these falsehoods,
fabrications and tahrif!
There is a well-known book called Rawdat al-shuhada'. whose
author was Mulla Husayn Kashifi. According to Hajji Nuri, he was the first
to write in his book the stories of Za'far the Jinn and the one about
Qasim's wedding. I have read this book. I used to imagine that it
contained only one or two of such cases. But afterwards when I read it I
saw that the matter was very much different. This book, which is in
Persian, was compiled about five-hundred years ago. Mulla Husayn Kashifi
was a scholar and learned man. He has authored several books including the
Anwar suhayli. His biographical accounts do not indicate whether he
was a Shi'i or a Sunni. Basically he was a Chameleon: among the Shi'ah he
would pose as an outright Shi'i, while amongst the Sunnis he would pass as
a Hanafi. He was a native of Sabzawar, a Shi'i centre whose people were
staunch Shi'is. In Sabzawar he would act as an out and out Shi'i, and at
times when he would go to Herat ('Abd al-Rahman Jami was the husband of
his sister or sister-in-law) he would give sermons for the Sunnis in the
Sunni style. But in Sabzawar he narrated the tragedies of Karbala'. His
death occurred around 910/1504, that is, either at the end of the 9th or
the beginning of the 10th century. This was the first book, compiled about
five hundred years ago, to be written as an elegiac narrative
(marthiyah). Earlier the people used to refer to the primary
sources. Shaykh Mufid, may God be pleased with him, wrote the
Irshad and how sound is his narration! If we were to refer to the
Irshad of Shaykh Mufid we would not stand in need of any other
source. Tabari, among Sunni authors, has also written about it. Ya'qubi,
Ibn 'Asakir and Khwarazmi have also written. I don't know what this unjust
man has done! When I read this book I saw that even the names are
spurious. He mentions names among Imam Husayn's companions that never
existed. He mentions names of the enemy's men which are also spurious. He
has turned the factual accounts of the event into fables.
As this was the first book to be written in Persian, the orators in
mourning assemblies, who were mostly illiterate and could not use the
Arabic texts, would take this book and read from it in the mourning
sessions. That is why the gatherings that are held nowadays to mourn Imam
Husayn are called rawdeh-khwani. Rawdeh-khwani was not in
vogue during the time of Imam Sadiq or Imam Hasan 'Askari, nor it was
prevalent during the times of Sayyid Murtada [d 436/1044] or even Khwajah
Nasir al-Din al-Tusi [d. 672/1273]. Rawdeh-khwani came into vogue
since the last five hundred years and it came to be called as such.
Rawdeh-khwani meant reading from the book Rawdat
al-shuhada', a pack of lies. From the time that this book fell into
the hands of the people, no one has bothered to study the actual history
of Imam Husayn.
Then, about sixty or seventy years ago, there appeared another man, the
marhum Mulla Darbandi. He took all the contents of the Rawdat
al-shahuda' and compiled them together with other material, collecting
it all in a book called Asrar al-shahadah. The contents of this
book make one lament for the fate of Islam.
Hajji Nuri writes, "We used to attend the lectures of Hajj Shaykh 'Abd
al-Husayn Tehrani (who was a very saintly man) and benefited from his
teaching. A sayyid from Hillah, who was a rawdeh-khwan, came to
meet him and he showed him a book written about the events of Imam
Husayn's martyrdom (maqtal, plural: maqatil) to see whether
its contents were reliable. This book did not have any beginning or end.
Only at one place in it was mentioned the name of a certain mulla of Jabl
al-'Amil who was among the pupils of the author of the Ma'alim
al-usul. Marhum Hajj Shaykh 'Abd al-Husayn took the book to examine
it.
First he studied the biographical accounts of that scholar and found
that such a book had not been attributed to him. Then he read the book
itself and found it to be full of falsehoods. He said to that sayyid,
'This book is a pack of lies. Don't circulate this book and don't quote
anything from it, for it is unlawful to do so. Basically this book has not
been written by that scholar and its contents are spurious.' " Hajji Nuri
says that the same book fell into the hands of the author of Asrar
al-shahadah and he copied all its contents into his book, from the
beginning to the end!"
Hajji Nuri relates another episode, which is rather touching. Once a
man came to author of the Maqami' [22] and said to
him, "Last night I saw a horrible dream." "What was it?" he asked him. He
said, "I saw that I am biting away flesh from the body of Imam Husayn."
The scholar trembled on hearing these words. He lowered his head and
thought for a while. Then he said, "Perhaps you are a
marthiyeh-khwan?". "Yes, I am," he replied. He said, "Hereafter,
either abandon marthiyeh-khwani altogether or draw your material
from reliable books. You are tearing away the flesh Imam Husayn, with
these lies of yours. It was God's grace that He showed this to you in a
dream."
If one studies the history of 'Ashura' one will find that it is the
most vivid and well-documented of histories with plenty of sources. The
marhum Akhund Khurasani used to say, "Those who are ever after 'new'
rawdahs should go and read the true accounts, for no one has ever
heard them" One should study the addresses of Imam Husayn ('a)
delivered in Makkah - in the Hijaz as a whole - at Karbala', during his
journey, as well as the sermons addressed to his companions, the questions
and answers that took place between him and others, the letters that were
exchanged between him and other people, the letters that were exchanged
between the enemies themselves, in addition to the accounts of those (from
among the friends as well the enemies) who were present on the occasion of
'Ashura'. There were three or four persons from among Imam Husayn's
companions who survived, including a slave named 'Uqbah ibn Sam'an, who
had accompanied the Imam from Makkah and lived to write the accounts
pertaining to the Imam's troops. He was captured on the day of 'Ashura'
but was released when he told them that he was a slave. Humayd ibn Muslim
was another chronicler who accompanied the army of 'Umar ibn Sa'd. Of
those present on the occasion was Imam Zayn al-'Abidin ('a) himself
who has recounted all the events. There is no blind spot in the history of
Imam Husayn ('a).
Hajji Nuri refers to a spurious story that relates to Imam Zayn
al-'Abidin ('a). According to it when there remained no companion
with Hadrat Abu 'Abd Allah ('a), the Hadrat went into the tent of
Imam Zayn al- 'Abidin ('a) to bid him good-bye. Imam Zayn
al-'Abidin ('a) asked him, "Father! How did things come about
between you and these people? (that is, Imam Zayn al-'Abidin was unaware
of what was happening until that time). The Imam said to him, "Son, this
matter has ultimately led to a battle." 'What happened to Habib ibn
Mazahir?, asked Imam Zayn al-'Abidin. "He was killed," replied the Imam.
"How about Zuhayr ibn Qayn?" "He was also killed," replied the Imam. "What
happened to Burayr ibn Hudayr?" "He was killed," said Imam Husayn
('a). Imam Zayn al-'Abidin continued naming each of his father's
companions one after another and the Imam's reply was the same Then he
asked concerning the men of Banu Hashim. "What happened to Qasim ibn
Hasan?" What happened to my brother 'Ali Akbar?" "What happened to my
uncle Abu al-Fadl The answer was the same: "He has been killed." This is a
fabrication and a lie. Imam Zayn al-'Abidin, na'udhubillah, was not
so sick and unconscious as not to know what was going on. Historians have
written that even in that state of illness he rose from his bed and said
to Zaynab, "Aunt, bring me my staff and give me a sword." In any case,
Imam Zayn al-'Abidin ('a) was one of those who were present on the
scene and related the accounts of events.
Truly, we should be penitent for these crimes and treacheries that we
are guilty of in respect of Abu 'Abd Allah al-Husayn ('a), his
companions, comrades and members of his family, and for effacing all their
achievements. He should do penance and then make effort to derive benefit
from this most educative source.
Is there any inadequacy in the life of 'Abbas ibn 'Ali as recounted in
the reliable maqatil (accounts of martyrdom)? The single point that
there was no danger to his own life is enough to be a matter of pride for
him. Imam Husayn had also told him, "They are only after me, and if they
kill me, they will not have anything again anyone else." At Kufah, when
Shimr ibn Dhi al-Jawshan was departing for Karbala', one of those who were
present said to Ibn Ziyad that some of his relatives on the mother's side
were with Husayn ibn 'Ali. He requested Ibn Ziyad to write a letter
granting them amnesty, and Ibn Ziyad wrote it. Shimr belonged to a clan
that had remote ties with the tribe of Umm al-Banin (the mother of Abu
al-Fadl). Shimr personally brought this letter of amnesty on the night
following the ninth day of Muharram. This wretch approached the camp of
Husayn ibn 'Ali and shouted, "Where are my nephews!" (ayna banu
ukhtina?!).[23] Abu
al-Fadl, along with his full brothers, was sitting with Hadrat Abu 'Abd
Allah ('a). He remained silent and did not reply, until the Imam
said to him, "Answer him, though he be an evil man (ajibuhu in kana
fasiqa). At the Imam's leave, he answered Shimr, saying, "What do you
want?" (Ma taqul?). Shimr said, "I have come with some good news
for you. I have brought a letter of amnesty for you from the emir, 'Ubayd
Allah. You are now free, and you will be safe if you leave now." Abu
al-Fadl said to him, "May God damn you and your emir, as well as the
letter that you bring. Do you think we will abandon our Imam and brother
for the sake of our own safety?"
On the night of 'Ashura', the first person to declare his loyalty
towards Abu 'Abd Allah was his brother Abu al-Fadl. Aside from the foolish
exaggerations that are often made, that which is confirmed by history is
that Abu al-Fadl was a very wise person, valiant and courageous, tall and
most handsome. He had been nicknamed 'The Moon of the Hashimis.'[24] These
things are true. To be sure, he had inherited Ali's courage. The story is
also true regarding his mother, that Ali' had asked 'Aqil, his brother, to
propose a woman born of a heroic descent (waladatha
al-fuhulah) [25] who might
give birth to son who would be a warrior and man of valour (li-talidani
farisan shuja'ah).[26] 'Aqil had
suggested Umm al-Banin. So much of it is true. 'Ali's wish was fulfilled
in Abu al-Fadl.
According to one of two reports, on the day of 'Ashura' Abu al-Fadl
came to the Imam and said, "Dear brother, now give me the permission. This
breast of mine is suffocated and I can bear it no more. I want to
sacrifice my life for your sake." I don't know the reason why Imam
responded to Hadrat Abu al-Fadl's request in the manner that he did. Abu
'Abd Allah himself knows better. He said, "Brother, now that you want to
leave, try to get some water for these children." Hadrat Abu al-Fadl had
already come to receive the nickname Saqqa (water carrier), as
earlier, on one or two occasions, at nights he had been able to pass
through the enemy's ranks to fetch water for the children in Abu 'Abd
Allah's camp. It was not the case that they had not drunk any water for
three days and nights. Access to water had been closed for three days and
nights, but during this time they had been able to get some water on one
or two occasions, including the night of 'Ashura', when they had taken
bath and washed their bodies. Abu al-Fadl consented. Now note this
majestic scene! What greatness! What valour! What a spirit of
understanding and self-sacrifice! A lone warrior, alone by himself,
advances against a host. The number of men who guarded the river bank was
four thousand. He descends along the river bank and leads his horse into
the water (all historians have written this). First, he fills the
waterskin that he has brought and lays it on his shoulder. He is thirsty.
The air is hot and has been fighting. But as he sits on the back of his
horse and the horse stands in water reaching up to its belly, he lowers
his hands into water, takes water into them and raises them somewhat
towards his sacred lips.
Those who were watching from a distance report that he hesitated for a
while. Then they saw that he threw the water back and came out of the
river without drinking any. No one knew why Abu Al-Fadl did not drink
water there. But when he came out he recited rajaz verses which
were addressed to himself. Now from these verses they understood why he
had not drunk water:
O soul of Abu al-Fadl! My wish is that you live not
after Husayn! Will you have a drink of cold water, While there
stands Husayn, thirsty, near the tents, And about to drink the cup
of death!? Such is not the way of my faith, Nor that of one who
abides in conviction and truth! [27] What
would become of manliness? Of honour? Of caring love? And of sharing in
the hardship of one's dear ones? Isn't Husayn your Imam, and you his
follower?
While Husayn is about to drink the cup of death, Will
you have a drink of cold water? Never! My faith does not
permit me to do that! My loyalty does not allow me to do such a thing! Abu
al-Fadl changed his route while returning and now he came through the palm
groves. Earlier, he had come by the direct way, but he knew that he now
carried a precious trust with him. So he changed his route and all his
concern now was to get the water safely to the camp, for it was possible
that a single arrow may pierce the waterskin and fail his task of bringing
the water to its destination. In the mean while they heard that Abu
al-Fadl had changed his rajaz. It appeared that something had
happened. Now he cried out:
By God! Even if you sever my right arm, I will
persist in defending my faith, And the Imam, who is the true one,
for certain, the Prophet's grandson, pure and trustworthy! [28] That
is, by God even if you cut my right arm I will not flinch from defending
Husayn. Not much time passed when his rajaz changed again:
O my soul, fear not the faithless, And receive the good
news of Almighty's mercy, In the company of the Prophet, the Master
and the Elect, Though, insolently, they should slash my left
arm! [29] These
rajaz verses signaled that his left arm too had been severed. They
write that with characteristic dexterity he somehow turned the water-skin
and bent himself over it. I will not say what happened thereafter as it is
most heart rending.
It is a custom to recount the account of the ordeals of this great
human being on the night of Tasu'ah (9th Muharram). Let me add that
Umm al-Banin, the mother of Hadrat Abu al-Fadl was alive at the time of
the event of Karbala', though she was in Madinah at the time. She was
given the news that all her four sons were martyred at Karbala'. This
saintly woman would go to the Baqi' cemetery and mourn over her sons. They
write that her elegies were so full of pathos that they brought tears to
everyone who heard them, even Marwan ibn Hakam, who was the staunchest of
the enemies of the Prophet's family. Sometimes she would remember all her
sons and, at times, especially Abu al-Fadl, the eldest of them, who was
senior most of the brothers, both in respect of age as well as in respect
of spiritual and bodily merits. I remember one of her two elegies and I
will recite them for you. These are the elegiac verses that this grieved
mother recited in mourning for her sons (in general, the Arabs recite
elegiac verses in a very touching style):
You, who have seen 'Abbas make repeated forays against the
base hosts, And following him were the Lion's sons, each a mighty
lion! I have been told, my son's head was struck when his arms were
cut, Alas for my Lion's cub! Did a club fall on his head? O
'Abbas! None would have dared to approach it, Were your sword in
your hand! [30] That
is, 'O observant eye, tell me, you who have been in Karbala' and watched
its scenes and observed the moment when Abu al-Fadl, my son of a lion,
with my other lion's cubs following him, attacked that cowardly crowd -
tell me is it true what I have been told? They say that when they had cut
my son's arms an iron club fell on my dear one's head. Is that true?' Then
she says, "Abu al-Fadl! My dear! I know that if you had arms there wasn't
a man in the whole world to have the guts to face you! They had the
temerity to do that because your arms had been severed from your
body.
Notes to part 2:
[13] During the
nights of the 'id of Ghadir, Dr. Shari'ati delivered an excellent
lecture on this general human tendency for hero-worship and making of
myths and legends, turning historic figures into legendary heroes with
extraordinary and superhuman characteristics.
[14] Al-Kulayni,
Usul al-Kafi, "kitab fadl al-'ilm", p. 32; al-Saffar, Basa'ir
al-darajat, p.10
[15] Bihar
al-anwar, vol. 44, p. 381; Tuhaf al-'uqul, p. 176;
al-Luhuf, 33; al-Khwarazmi's Maqtal al-Husayn, ii, p.
5.
[16] Ibn Shahr
Ashub, al-Manaqib, iv, p. 110; al-Luhuf, p. 50, Bihar
al-anwar, vol. 45, p. 50; al-Irbili, Kashf al-ghummah, ii, p.
32.
[17] Bihar
al-anwar, vol. 44, p. 381; Tuhaf al-'uqul, p. 176;
al-Luhuf, 33.
[18] Bihar
al-anwar, vol. 44, p. 366; al-Luhuf, p. 25.
[19]
Al-Luhuf, p. 41; Khwarazmi's Maqtal al-Husayn, ii, p. 7; Ibn
'Asakir, Ta'rikh al-Sham, iv, p. 333; al-Muqarrim's Maqtal
al-Husayn, p. 287; al-Harrani, Tuhaf al-'uqul, p. 176; Shaykh
'Abbas al-Qummi, Nafs al-mahmum, p. 149, Mulhaqat Ihqaq
al-haqq, xi, pp. 624-625.
[20]
Ibid.
[21] Mafatih
al-janan, the ziyarah of Imam Husayn ('a) for the nights
of 'Id al-Fitr and 'Id al-Adha.
[22]
Marhum Aqa Muhammad Ali was the son of marhum Wahid
Behbahani and both of them were great men. Marhum Aqa Muhammad Ali
migrated to Kirmanshah where he wielded great influence.
[23]
al-Muqarrim's Maqtal al Husayn, p. 252, Bihar al-Anwar, vol.
44, p. 391, al-Luhuf, p. 37
[24]
al-Muqarrim's al-Abbas, p. 81; Ibn Shahr Ashub, al-Manaqib,
iv, p. 108
[25]
al-Muqarrim's al-Abbas, p. 69
[26] Ibsar
al-ayn fi ansar al-Husayn alayh al-salam, p. 26
[27] Yanabi
al-mawaddah, ii, p. 165; Bihar al-Anwar, vol. 45, p. 41
[28] Bihar
al-Anwar, vol. 45, p. 40
[29]
Ibid.
[30] Muntaha
al-amal, i, p. 386.
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