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Complete text of
NAHJUL-BALAGHA
[PATH TO THE PEAK OF ELOQUENCE]
By
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib ()ﻉ
Compiled by al-Sharif al-Radhi
Edited by Yasin T. al-Jibouri
[Note:]
(Here, we formatted the Sermons Section
only, the sections of Letters and Sayings will
be set as soon as possible)
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Tabel of Contents
Mutahhari’s book Sayri dar Nahjul-Balagha............................................ 8
VIEWS OF ANCIENT AND MODERN SCHOLARS........................... 15
THE AUTHOR: Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) ................................... 115
PREFACE ................................................................................................. 179
By the compiler of Nahjul-Balagha, 'Allama ash-Sharif ar-Radhi ..... 179
NAHJUL BALAGHA (Selected Sermons, Letters and Sayings) of Amir al-Mu’minin Ali
ibn Abu Talib ............................................................................................ 185
SERMONS ................................................................................................ 186
SERMON 1 ............................................................................................... 187
SERMON 2 ............................................................................................... 196
SERMON 3 ............................................................................................... 198
SERMON 4 ............................................................................................... 209
SERMON 5 ............................................................................................... 210
SERMON 6 ............................................................................................... 211
SERMON 7 ............................................................................................... 212
SERMON 8 ............................................................................................... 213
SERMON 9 ............................................................................................... 213
SERMON 10 ............................................................................................. 213
SERMON 11 ............................................................................................. 214
SERMON 12 ............................................................................................. 216
SERMON 13 ............................................................................................. 216
SERMON 14 ............................................................................................. 222
SERMON 15 ............................................................................................. 222
SERMON 16 ............................................................................................. 222
SERMON 17 ............................................................................................. 224
SERMON 18 ............................................................................................. 224
SERMON 19 ............................................................................................. 227
SERMON 20 ............................................................................................. 230
SERMON 21 ............................................................................................. 230
SERMON 22 ............................................................................................. 231
SERMON 23 ............................................................................................. 232
SERMON 25 ............................................................................................. 233
SERMON 26 ............................................................................................. 234
SERMON 27 ............................................................................................. 234
SERMON 28 ............................................................................................. 236
SERMON 29 ............................................................................................. 237
SERMON 30 ............................................................................................. 238
SERMON 31 ............................................................................................. 243
SERMON 32 ............................................................................................. 243
SERMON 33 ............................................................................................. 244
SERMON 34 ............................................................................................. 245
SERMON 35 ............................................................................................. 246
SERMON 36 ............................................................................................. 249
SERMON 37 ............................................................................................. 250
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SERMON 38 ............................................................................................. 251
SERMON 39 ............................................................................................. 251
SERMON 40 ............................................................................................. 252
SERMON 41 ............................................................................................. 252
SERMON 42 ............................................................................................. 253
SERMON 43 ............................................................................................. 253
SERMON 45 ............................................................................................. 254
SERMON 46 ............................................................................................. 255
SERMON 47 ............................................................................................. 255
SERMON 48 ............................................................................................. 255
SERMON 49 ............................................................................................. 256
SERMON 50 ............................................................................................. 256
SERMON 51 ............................................................................................. 256
SERMON 52 ............................................................................................. 257
SERMON 53 ............................................................................................. 258
SERMON 54 ............................................................................................. 258
SERMON 55 ............................................................................................. 258
SERMON 56 ............................................................................................. 259
SERMON 57 ............................................................................................. 260
SERMON 58 ............................................................................................. 260
SERMON 59 ............................................................................................. 261
SERMON 60 ............................................................................................. 262
SERMON 61 ............................................................................................. 262
SERMON 62 ............................................................................................. 263
SERMON 63 ............................................................................................. 263
SERMON 64 ............................................................................................. 263
SERMON 65 ............................................................................................. 264
SERMON 66 ............................................................................................. 264
SERMON 67 ............................................................................................. 266
SERMON 68 ............................................................................................. 267
SERMON 69 ............................................................................................. 267
SERMON 70 ............................................................................................. 268
SERMON 71 ............................................................................................. 268
SERMON 72 ............................................................................................. 269
SERMON 73 ............................................................................................. 270
SERMON 74 ............................................................................................. 270
SERMON 75 ............................................................................................. 270
SERMON 76 ............................................................................................. 270
SERMON 77 ............................................................................................. 270
SERMON 78 ............................................................................................. 271
SERMON 79 ............................................................................................. 271
SERMON 80 ............................................................................................. 273
SERMON 81 ............................................................................................. 273
SERMON 82 ............................................................................................. 274
SERMON 83 ............................................................................................. 278
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SERMON 84 ............................................................................................. 279
SERMON 85 ............................................................................................. 279
SERMON 86 ............................................................................................. 280
SERMON 87 ............................................................................................. 283
SERMON 88 ............................................................................................. 283
SERMON 89 ............................................................................................. 283
SERMON 90 ............................................................................................. 284
SERMON 91 ............................................................................................. 293
SERMON 92 ............................................................................................. 294
SERMON 93 ............................................................................................. 296
SERMON 94 ............................................................................................. 297
SERMON 95 ............................................................................................. 297
SERMON 96 ............................................................................................. 297
SERMON 97 ............................................................................................. 299
SERMON 98 ............................................................................................. 299
SERMON 99 ............................................................................................. 300
SERMON 100 ........................................................................................... 301
SERMON 101 ........................................................................................... 301
SERMON 102 ........................................................................................... 302
SERMON 103 ........................................................................................... 302
SERMON 104 ........................................................................................... 303
SERMON 105 ........................................................................................... 304
SERMON 106 ........................................................................................... 304
SERMON 107 ........................................................................................... 305
SERMON 108 ........................................................................................... 306
SERMON 109 ........................................................................................... 308
SERMON 110 ........................................................................................... 309
SERMON 111 ........................................................................................... 310
SERMON 112 ........................................................................................... 310
SERMON 113 ........................................................................................... 311
SERMON 114 ........................................................................................... 312
SERMON 115 ........................................................................................... 313
SERMON 116 ........................................................................................... 314
SERMON 117 ........................................................................................... 314
SERMON 118 ........................................................................................... 314
SERMON 119 ........................................................................................... 315
SERMON 120 ........................................................................................... 315
SERMON 121 ........................................................................................... 316
SERMON 122 ........................................................................................... 317
SERMON 123 ........................................................................................... 318
SERMON 124 ........................................................................................... 323
SERMON 125 ........................................................................................... 324
SERMON 126 ........................................................................................... 324
SERMON 127 ........................................................................................... 325
SERMON 128 ........................................................................................... 328
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SERMON 129 ........................................................................................... 329
SERMON 130 ........................................................................................... 331
SERMON 131 ........................................................................................... 331
SERMON 132 ........................................................................................... 332
SERMON 133 ........................................................................................... 333
SERMON 134 ........................................................................................... 334
SERMON 135 ........................................................................................... 335
SERMON 136 ........................................................................................... 335
SERMON 137 ........................................................................................... 335
SERMON 138 ........................................................................................... 336
SERMON 139 ........................................................................................... 336
SERMON 140 ........................................................................................... 338
SERMON 141 ........................................................................................... 339
SERMON 142 ........................................................................................... 339
SERMON 143 ........................................................................................... 340
SERMON 144 ........................................................................................... 340
SERMON 145 ........................................................................................... 341
SERMON 146 ........................................................................................... 342
SERMON 147 ........................................................................................... 343
SERMON 148 ........................................................................................... 344
SERMON 149 ........................................................................................... 344
SERMON 150 ........................................................................................... 345
SERMON 151 ........................................................................................... 346
SERMON 152 ........................................................................................... 348
SERMON 153 ........................................................................................... 349
SERMON 154 ........................................................................................... 350
SERMON 155 ........................................................................................... 351
SERMON 156 ........................................................................................... 354
SERMON 157 ........................................................................................... 355
SERMON 158 ........................................................................................... 355
SERMON 159 ........................................................................................... 355
SERMON 160 ........................................................................................... 358
SERMON 161 ........................................................................................... 358
SERMON 162 ........................................................................................... 359
SERMON 163 ........................................................................................... 360
SERMON 164 ........................................................................................... 363
SERMON 165 ........................................................................................... 365
SERMON 166 ........................................................................................... 366
SERMON 167 ........................................................................................... 366
SERMON 168 ........................................................................................... 367
SERMON 169 ........................................................................................... 367
SERMON 170 ........................................................................................... 368
SERMON 171 ........................................................................................... 368
SERMON 172 ........................................................................................... 369
SERMON 173 ........................................................................................... 371
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SERMON 174 ........................................................................................... 371
SERMON 175 ........................................................................................... 374
SERMON 176 ........................................................................................... 376
SERMON 177 ........................................................................................... 377
SERMON 178 ........................................................................................... 377
SERMON 179 ........................................................................................... 378
SERMON 180 ........................................................................................... 378
SERMON 181 ........................................................................................... 379
SERMON 182 ........................................................................................... 387
SERMON 183 ........................................................................................... 389
SERMON 184 ........................................................................................... 389
SERMON 185 ........................................................................................... 391
SERMON 186 ........................................................................................... 394
SERMON 187 ........................................................................................... 394
SERMON 188 ........................................................................................... 395
SERMON 189 ........................................................................................... 397
SERMON 190 ........................................................................................... 398
SERMON 191 ........................................................................................... 399
SERMON 192 ........................................................................................... 411
SERMON 193 ........................................................................................... 413
SERMON 194 ........................................................................................... 413
SERMON 195 ........................................................................................... 414
SERMON 196 ........................................................................................... 414
SERMON 197 ........................................................................................... 416
SERMON 198 ........................................................................................... 418
SERMON 199 ........................................................................................... 419
SERMON 200 ........................................................................................... 421
SERMON 201 ........................................................................................... 422
SERMON 202 ........................................................................................... 423
SERMON 203 ........................................................................................... 423
SERMON 204 ........................................................................................... 423
SERMON 205 ........................................................................................... 424
SERMON 206 ........................................................................................... 424
SERMON 207 ........................................................................................... 424
SERMON 208 ........................................................................................... 425
SERMON 209 ........................................................................................... 428
SERMON 210 ........................................................................................... 433
SERMON 211 ........................................................................................... 434
SERMON 212 ........................................................................................... 434
SERMON 213 ........................................................................................... 434
SERMON 214 ........................................................................................... 435
SERMON 215 ........................................................................................... 435
SERMON 216 ........................................................................................... 438
SERMON 217 ........................................................................................... 438
SERMON 218 ........................................................................................... 438
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SERMON 219 ........................................................................................... 439
SERMON 220 ........................................................................................... 441
SERMON 221 ........................................................................................... 442
SERMON 222 ........................................................................................... 443
SERMON 223 ........................................................................................... 444
SERMON 224 ........................................................................................... 444
SERMON 225 ........................................................................................... 444
SERMON 226 ........................................................................................... 445
SERMON 227 ........................................................................................... 448
SERMON 228 ........................................................................................... 448
SERMON 229 ........................................................................................... 449
SERMON 230 ........................................................................................... 449
SERMON 231 ........................................................................................... 449
SERMON 232 ........................................................................................... 450
SERMON 233 ........................................................................................... 451
SERMON 234 ........................................................................................... 451
SERMON 235 ........................................................................................... 453
SERMON 236 ........................................................................................... 453
SERMON 237 ........................................................................................... 454
SERMON 238 ........................................................................................... 454
SERMON 239 ........................................................................................... 454
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Mutahhari’s book Sayri dar Nahjul-Balagha
This is the first part of Martyr Mutahhari’s book Sayri dar Nahjul-Balagha. It consists of the
Introduction and the first section of the book. The Introduction, which the author presumably
wrote before giving the book to the publisher, is dated January 15, 1975.
SECTION ONE
The book consists of seven sections. In the first section, he discusses the two main
characteristics of Nahjul-Balagha, its literary excellence and multi-dimensionality, quoting
various viewpoints expressed about Imam Ali’s eloquence in general and Nahjul-Balagha in
particular. In the second section, the author discusses the theological and metaphysical ideas
embedded in Nahjul-Balagha, comparing them with parallel viewpoints with which Muslim
orators and philosophers are familiar. The third section deals with ibada (adoration) and its
various levels. The fourth section deals with the Islamic Government and Social Justice. The
fifth, which deals with the controversial issue of caliphate (khilafa) and the superior status of Ahl
al-Bayt (), is deleted from this translation. The sixth and the seventh sections discuss NahjulBalagha's ethical teachings, in particular the Islamic Concept of zuhd (asceticism), the meaning
of the life in this world (dunya), so often condemned in Nahjul-Balagha, and the meaning of the
contrast between life in this world and that in the Hereafter, which is also a recurring theme.
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INTRODUCTION
Perhaps it may have happened to you, and if not, you may still visualize it: Someone lives on
your street or in your neighborhood for years. You see him at least once a day and habitually nod
to him as you pass by. Years pass by in this manner till, one day, you accidentally get an
opportunity to sit down with him and become familiar with his ideas, views and feelings, his
likes and dislikes. You are amazed at what you have come to know about him. You never
imagined or guessed that he might be as you found him and never thought that he was what you
later discovered him to be.
After that, every time you see him, his face, somehow, appears to you to be different. Not
only this, your entire attitude towards him is altered. His personality assumes a new meaning and
a new depth, and you develop respect for him in your heart, as if he were a person other than the
one you thought you knew for years. You feel as if you have discovered a new world.
My experience was similar to such an analogy with regard to Nahjul-Balagha. Since the years
of my childhood, I was familiar with the title of this book, and I could distinguish it from other
books on the shelves in my father's library. Years later, during my studies, first at the theological
school of Mashhad, and later at Qum, when I was finishing the last stages of the preliminary
education in theology called sutuh, during all those days, I kept hearing the title Nahjul-Balagha
more often than that of any other book after the Qur’an. Some of its sermons on piety I had heard
so many times that I almost remembered them by heart. Nevertheless, I must admit, like all my
colleagues at the theological seminary (hawza `ilmiyya), I was quite ignorant of the world of
Nahjul-Balagha. We had met as strangers and passed by each other in the manner of strangers.
This went on till the summer of 1325 (1946) when, in order to escape the heat of Qum, I went to
Isfahan. A trivial incident brought me into contact with a person who took my hand and led me
somehow into the world of Nahjul-Balagha.
When this happened, I realized that till then, I knew little about this book. Later, I wished that
I would also find someone who would introduce me to the world of the Qur’an. Since then, the
image of Nahjul-Balagha was transformed in my eyes. I became fond of it, and gradually my
fondness grew into love. It was now a different book from the one which I had known till that
moment. I felt as if I had discovered an entirely new world. Sheikh Muhammed 'Abdo, the
former mufti of Egypt who edited and published Nahjul-Balagha with a brief commentary,
introducing this book to the Egyptians for the first time, says that he had no knowledge of this
book till he undertook its study far from home in a distant land.
He was struck with amazement and felt as if he had discovered a precious treasure trove. He,
thereupon, immediately decided to publish and introduce it to the Arab public. The unfamiliarity
of a Sunni scholar with Nahjul-Balagha is not surprising; what is surprising is that NahjulBalagha should be a stranger and alien in its own homeland, among the Shi`a (followers) of Ali
(A.S) , and that in the Shi`i theological schools as well, in the same way as Ali (A.S) himself has
remained isolated, a stranger in his own land. Evidently, if the content and ideas of a book, or if
the feelings and emotions of a person, do not harmonize with the mentality of a people, that
book/person practically remains isolated like a stranger in an alien world, even though the name
of such a person/book may be mentioned with great respect and admiration.
We, theology students, must admit our estrangement from Nahjul-Balagha. We have built a
mental world of our own which is alien to the world of Nahjul-Balagha. As I write this Preface, I
cannot abstain from recalling with sorrow the memory of that great man who introduced me for
the first time to the world of Nahjul-Balagha and whose acquaintance I treasure as one of the
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most precious experiences of my life, something which I would not exchange for anything else.
Neither day nor night passes without my remembering him or mentioning him with gratitude. I
daresay that he was a divine scholar ('alim rabbani) in the true sense of the word, although I dare
not claim that I was Aa learner of the path of deliverance (muta'allim 'ala sabil al-najat). [1] I
remember that whenever I met him, I was always reminded of the following poetry of [the
renown Persian poet] Sa`di:
The devout, the ascetic, and the Subi,
Are all toddlers on the path;
If there is any mature man,
It is none other than the 'alim rabbani.
He was a faqih [2] , a philosopher, a man of letters and a physician, all at the same time. He
was well versed in fiqh (jurisprudence), philosophy, Arabic and Persian literature as well as in
the traditional medicine. And he was considered a specialist of the first order in some of these
fields. He was a masterly teacher of al-Qanun, the treatise of ibn Sina in medicine, which does
not find a teacher these days. Many scholars of the theology school attended his lessons. Yet it
was not possible for him to confine himself to one single field, and his spirit revolted against any
kind of restrictions. Of his lectures, the most that interested him were those on Nahjul-Balagha
which threw him into ecstasy. It seemed as if Nahjul-Balagha had opened its wings and he,
having mounted them, was taken on a journey through strange worlds beyond our reach.
It was evident that he lived on Nahjul-Balagha; he lived it and breathed with it. His spirit was
united with this book; his pulse throbbed and his heart beat in harmony with Nahjul-Balagha. Its
sentences were always on his lips and their meanings engraved upon his heart. When he quoted
its passages, tears would flow from his eyes, soaking his gray beard. During the lessons, his
encounter with and involvement in Nahjul-Balagha would make him totally oblivious of his
surroundings. It was a very educative as well as an attractive spectacle. Listening to the language
of the heart from someone whose great heart is full of love and wisdom has altogether a different
effect and attraction. He was a living example of the saints of the bygone days. These words of
Ali (A.S) fully apply to him:
AHad it not been for the fact that Providence had decreed the years of their life, the passionate
yearning for Divine rewards and fear of chastisement would not have permitted their souls to
remain in their bodies even for a moment. Their realization of the greatness of the Creator has
made everything besides Him insignificant in their eyes. [3]
This refined man of letters, the speculative philosopher, the great faqih, the adept man of
medicine and the excellent master of theology was the late Hajj Mirza Ali Aqa al-Shirazi alIsfahani, sanctified by Allah, a man of truth and wisdom who had attained deliverance from the
finite self and selfhood and had merged with the Infinite Truth.
In spite of his sublime scholarly status and eminent social status, his sense of commitment to
the society and burning love for Imam al-Husain () compelled him to deliver sermons from the
minbar. His sermons, since they came from the heart, had a deep effect on the hearts of his
listeners. Whenever he visited Qum, the scholars of the first rank would persuade him to deliver
his sermons from the minbar. [4] His sermons were charged with a passionate purity and
sincerity that rendered them profoundly effective. They were not just words to be heard but a
spiritual state to be experienced.
He, however, refrained from leading congregational prayers. One year, during the holy month
of Ramadan, after a great deal of persuasion, he accepted to lead the prayers at Madrasat al-Sadr
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for that month. In spite of the fact that he did not come regularly and refused to stick to any
regular schedule, unprecedented crowds of people came to attend the prayers led by him. I heard
that such strength declined in the jama`at in the neighborhood mosques and he, too,
discontinued.
As far as I know, the people of Isfahan generally knew him in person and liked him. He was
also loved at the theology school of Qum. The `ulma' of Qum would eagerly set out to see him at
the news of his arrival in the city. Like all other restrictions, he also refused to be bound by the
conditions set for having admirers and followers. May Allah shower His infinite mercy upon him
and lodge him in the company of His awliya' on the Day of Resurrection.
Despite all his merits, I do not claim that he was familiar with all the worlds which NahjulBalagha embraces or that he had set his foot in all the domains encompassed by it. He had
explored only a portion of its realms, and that a portion of Nahjul-Balagha had been incarnated
in his personality. The universe of Nahjul-Balagha includes numerous worlds: the world of zuhd
(renunciation of worldly pleasures) and taqwa (piety), the world of `ibada (worship, devotion)
and 'irfan (mystic knowledge), the world of hikma (wisdom) and philosophy, the world of moral
preaching and guidance, the world of eschatology (malahim) and mysteries (mughayyabat), the
world of politics and social responsibilities, the world of heroism and bravery, etc., too many
worlds to be conquered by any single individual. Hajj Mirza Ali Aqa al-Shirazi had explored
only a portion of this great ocean and knew it well.
NAHJUL-BALAGHA AND PRESENT-DAYS ISLAMIC SOCIETY
The alienation from Nahjul-Balagha was not confined to me or to others like me. It pervaded
through the Islamic society. Those who understood this book, their knowledge did not go beyond
the translation of its words and the explanatory notes for its sentences. The spirit and the content
of the book were hidden from the eyes of everyone. Only lately, it may be said, has the Islamic
world begun to explore Nahjul-Balagha. In other words, Nahjul-Balagha has just started its
conquest of the Muslim world.
What is surprising is that one part of Nahjul-Balagha, in Shi`ite Iran as well as in Arab
countries, was first discovered either by atheists or non-Muslim theists who revealed the
greatness of the book to the Muslims. Of course, the purpose of most or all of them was to utilize
Nahjul-Balagha of Ali (A.S) for justifying and confirming their own social views. But the
outcome was exactly the opposite of what they had desired. This is so because, for the first time,
the Muslims have realized that the views expressed grandiloquently by others have nothing new
to offer, and that they cannot surpass what is said in Nahjul-Balagha of Ali (A.S) or translated
into action through the conduct (sira) of Ali (A.S) and his disciples such as Salman al-Farisi,
Abu Tharr and `Ammar. The outcome was that instead of supporting the pretentious views of
those who wished to exploit Nahjul-Balagha, Ali (A.S) and his book defeated their purpose.
Nevertheless, it must be accepted that before this had taken place, most of us had little
knowledge of Nahjul-Balagha, and it hardly went beyond appreciation of few sermons about the
virtues of piety and abstinence. Nobody had yet recognized the significance of the valuable
epistle of Master Ali (A.S) to Malik al-Ashtar al-Nakh`i; nobody had paid any attention to it.
As stated in the first and second chapters of this book, Nahjul-Balagha is a collection of
sermons, precepts, epistles and aphorisms of Ali (A.S) compiled by Sayyid al-Sharif al-Radhi
almost a thousand years ago. However, neither the recorded words of Master Ali (A.S) are
confined to those collected by Sayyid al-Radhi, nor was he the only man to compile the sayings
of Amir al-Mu’minin. Al-Mas`udi, who lived a hundred years before Sayyid al-Radhi, in the
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second volume of his work Muruj al-Thahab, writes the following: AAt present, there are over
480 sermons of Ali (A.S) in the hands of the people, whereas the total number of sermons
included by Sayyid al-Radhi in his collection is only 239.
There are, at present, two kinds of work that must be accomplished with respect to NahjulBalagha, so that Ali’s thought and views on various important issues expressed in NahjulBalagha, which are still relevant and are direly needed by the present-day Islamic society, may
be brought to light. The second kind of work required in relation to Nahjul-Balagha is
researching the sources (isnad) and the documents relevant to its contents. Fortunately, we hear
that Muslim scholars in various parts of the Islamic world are devoting themselves to
undertaking both of these important tasks.
This book is a collection of a series of articles which originally appeared in the journal
Maktab-e-Islam during from 1351 - 52 (1972-73), now presented to the learned readers in the
form of the present book. Formerly, I had delivered five lectures on this topic at the Husainiyyah
Irshad. [5] Later, I took up with the idea of writing a series of articles to deal with the subject in
greater detail.
From the outset, when I chose to call it "Sayri dar Nahjul-Balagha" (AA Journey into NahjulBalagha), I was aware that my attempt would not deserve to be called more than a journey, or a
short trip. This work, by no means, deserves to be called a research. I neither had the time nor the
opportunity to conduct a research, nor did I consider myself fit for undertaking such a task.
Moreover, a profound and comprehensive research study of the contents of Nahjul-Balagha, an
exploration of the ideology of Ali (A.S) , and, besides, a research about documenting its
contents, is the job of a group, not of a single individual. But, as it is said, that which cannot be
attained in its entirety is not to be abandoned entirely [6]. And since humble attempts open the
way for great tasks, I embarked upon my journey. Unfortunately, even this journey was not
completed. The project that I had prepared for, and which the reader shall find mentioned in the
third chapter, remained incomplete because of many preoccupations. I do not know if I will ever
get the opportunity to continue my journey through Nahjul-Balagha. But it is my great desire to
be able to do so.
LITERARY MARVEL
Nahjul-Balagha is a magnificent collection of the inimitable sermons, invocations (du'as),
wills or pieces of advice, epistles and aphorisms of Amir al-Mu’minin, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S), compiled by Sayyid al-Sharif al-Radhi (may Allah be pleased with him) about one
thousand years ago. Time and years have not only failed to diminish the impressive freshness of
this work but have, instead, added constantly to its value as new concepts and ideas have
emerged therefrom.
Ali (A.S) was undoubtedly a man of eloquence. He delivered a large number of speeches that
became famous. Likewise, numerous sayings containing philosophical wisdom were heard from
him. He wrote many letters, especially during the days of his caliphate, which his admirers
recorded and preserved with remarkable interest and zeal. Al-Mas`udi (d. 346/955-6 A.H.), who
lived almost a hundred years before Sayyid al-Radhi (d. 406/1115 A.H.), in the second volume
of his book titled Muruj al-Thahab, under the heading "Fi thikr luma' min kalamih, wa akhbarih,
wa zuhdih, says the following:
That which has been preserved by people of Ali’s sermons, delivered on various occasions,
exceeds 480 in number. Ali (A.S) used to deliver his extempore sermons without any prior
preparation. The people recorded [7] his words and practically derived benefit from them. [8]
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The testimony of an informed researcher and scholar like al-Mas`udi bears out the large
number of Ali’s speeches that were extant during his time. Only 239 of these have been handed
down to us in Nahjul-Balagha, whereas their number, as mentioned by al-Mas`udi, was more
than 480.
Moreover, al-Mas`udi informs us about the extraordinary dedication and ardor of various
groups of people in recording and preserving Ali’s words.
SAYYID AL-RADHI AND NAHJUL-BALAGHA
Sayyid al-Sharif al-Radhi, or Sayyid al-Radhi, as he is commonly called, was an ardent
admirer of Ali’s speeches. He was a scholar, a poet and a man of cultivated taste. Al-Tha`alibi,
his contemporary, says the following about him:
He is the most remarkable man among his contemporary and the noblest amongst the Sayyids
of Iraq. Family and descent aside, he is fully adorned and endowed with literary excellence. He
is the most remarkable poet among the descendants of Abu Talib, though there are many
distinguished poets among them. To say that of all the Quraish no poet could ever surpass him
would not be an exaggeration. [9]
It was on account of Sayyid al-Radhi’s earnest love for literature in general, and his
admiration of Ali’s discourses in particular, that his interest was mainly literary in compiling
Ali’s words. Consequently, he paid a greater attention to those passages which were more
prominent from the literary point of view. This was the reason why he named his anthology
"Nahjul-Balagha" [10] which means the Apath of eloquence, giving little importance to
mentioning his sources, a point rarely ignored by compilers of hadith (traditions). Only at times
does he casually mention the name of a certain book from which a particular sermon or epistle
has been cited. In a book of history or hadith, it is of primary importance that the sources be
precisely identified; otherwise, little credence can be given to it. The value of a literary
masterpiece, however, lies in its intrinsic beauty, subtlety, elegance and depth. Meanwhile, it is
not possible to assert that Sayyid al-Radhi was entirely oblivious of the historical value and other
dimensions of this sacred work, or that his attention was exclusively absorbed by its literary
qualities.
Fortunately, after Sayyid al-Radhi, others took up the task of collecting the isnad of NahjulBalagha. Perhaps the most comprehensive book in this regard is Nahj al-Sa`ada fi Mustadrak
Nahjul-Balagha by Muhammed Baqir al-Mahmudi, a distinguished Shi`a scholar of Iraq. In this
valuable book, all of Ali's extant speeches, sermons, decrees, epistles, supplications and sayings
have been collected. It includes Nahjul-Balagha and other discourses which were not
incorporated by Sayyid al-Radhi or were unavailable to him. Apparently, except for some
aphorisms, the original sources of all the contents of Nahjul-Balagha have been accounted for.
[11]
It should be mentioned that Sayyid al-Radhi was not the only man to compile a collection of
Ali's utterances; others, too, have compiled various books with different titles in this field. The
most famous of them is Ghurar al-Hikam wa Durar al-Kalim by al-Amudi on which Muhaqqiq
[verifier] Jamal al-Din al-Khunsari has written a commentary in Persian which has been recently
printed by the University of Tehran through the efforts of the eminent scholar Mir Jalal al-Din,
the al-Urumawi traditionist.
Ali al-Jundi, dean of the faculty of sciences at the Cairo University, in the Introduction to the
book titled Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) : Shi`ruh wa Hikam cites a number of these collections some
of which have not yet appeared in print and still exist as manuscripts. These are:
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1. Dustur Ma`alim al-Hikam by al-Quda'i, the author of Al-Khutat;
2. Nathr al-La’a li’; this book has been translated and published by a Russian Orientalist in
one bulky volume.
3. Hikam Sayyidina Ali (A.S) : A manuscript of this book exists in the Egyptian library, Dar
al-Kutub al-Misriyya.
TWO DISTINCTIVE CHARACTERISTICS
Since the earliest times, two distinct merits have been recognized as distinguishing Ali's
discourses: Firstly, literary elegance (fasaaha) and eloquence (balaagha) ; secondly, their
characteristic multi-dimensional nature. Any of these two qualities suffices for regarding Ali's
words as valuable, but the combination of these two qualities (i.e. matchless eloquence, literary
elegance and their multi-dimensional natureCin that they deal with diverse and occasionally
incompatible spheres of life) has made it almost miraculous. For this reason, Ali's speech
occupies a position in-between the speech of the human being and the Word of Allah. Indeed, it
has been said of it that it is above the speech of beings and below the Word of the Creator. [12]
LITERARY BEAUTY AND ELEGANCE
This aspect of Nahjul-Balagha requires no introduction. Any reader of a cultivated literary
taste, one capable of appreciating linguistic elegance and charm, surely realizes it. Basically,
beauty is something perceived and experienced and not described or defined. Nahjul-Balagha,
even after nearly fourteen centuries, has retained the same attractiveness, freshness, charm and
beauty for the present-day audience that it provided the people of earlier days. Here, we do not
intend to give an elaborate proof of this claim. Nevertheless, as a part of our discourse, we shall
briefly describe the marvellous power of the words of Ali (A.S) in moving hearts and infusing
them with the feeling of wonder. We shall start with Ali's own times and follow the effect of his
discourses through the changes and variations in taste, outlook and mode of thought during
different successive ages up to the present day.
The companions of Ali (A.S) , particularly those who had a taste for language and literary
grace, greatly admired him as an orator. Abdullah ibn `Abbas is one of them. He, as al-Jahiz
points out in his Al-Bayan wal-Tbyin, [13] was a powerful orator. He did not conceal his passion
for listening to Ali (A.S) speak or the enjoyment he derived from it. Once, when Ali (A.S) was
delivering his famous sermon called al-Shaqshaqiyya, [14] ibn `Abbas was also present. While
Ali (A.S) was speaking, an ordinary man from Kufa handed him a piece of paper containing
some questions, thus causing Ali (A.S) to discontinue his speech. Having read the sheet of
paper, Ali (A.S) did not continue his speech in spite of Ibn `Abbas urging him to do so. Ibn
Abbas later expressed his deep regret on that occasion, saying, ANever in my life was I ever so
sorry for interrupting a speech as I was for interrupting this sermon. [15]
Referring to a certain letter that Ali (A.S) had written to Ibn `Abbas, the latter used to say,
AExcept for the speech of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , I did not derive so
much benefit from any utterance as I did from this one. [16]
Mu`awiyah ibn Abu Sufyan, Ali’s most contumacious enemy, also acknowledged the Imam’s
extra-ordinary eloquence. When Muhqin ibn Abu Muhqin forsook Ali (A.S) and joined
Mu`awiyah, in order to please Mu`awiyah, whose heart surged with ill-will and bitterness
towards Ali (A.S) , he told him, AI have left the dumbest of men and come to you. The flagrancy
of this kind of flattery was so obvious that Mu`awiyah himself reproached him saying: >Woe
unto you! Do you really call Ali (A.S) the dumbest of men?! Quraish knew nothing about
eloquence before him. It was he who taught them the art of eloquence.
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Effect of Ali’s Oratory
Those who heard Ali (A.S) speaking from the minbar were very much affected by his words.
His sermons made hearts tremble and drew tears from the eyes. Even today, who can hear or
read Ali’s sermons without a tremor passing through his heart? Sayyid al-Radhi, after narrating
Ali’s famous sermon al-Gharra', [17] says the following: AAs Ali (A.S) delivered his sermon,
tears flowed from the eyes of the listeners and hearts quivered with emotion.
Hammam ibn Shurayh, one of Ali’s companions, was a man with a heart full of love for Allah
and a soul burning with spiritual fire. At one time, he requested Ali (A.S) to describe the
qualities of the pious and the God-fearing. Ali (A.S) , on the one hand, did not want to turn down
his request and, on the other, he was concerned that Hammam might not be able to bear what Ali
(A.S) would say. He, therefore, evaded this request, giving only a perfunctory description of
piety and the pious. Hammam was not only dissatisfied with this, his eagerness was heightened,
so he beseeched Ali (A.S) to speak with greater elaboration. Ali (A.S) commenced his famous
sermon and began to describe the characteristics of the truly pious. He enumerated about one
hundred and five [18] qualities of such human beings and went on to describe more. But as Ali’s
words flowed in fiery sequence, Hammam was carried away to the very extremes of ecstasy. His
heart throbbed terribly and his spirit was driven to the furthermost limits of emotion. It advanced
in eagerness like a restless bird trying to break out of its cage. Suddenly, there was a terrible cry
and the audience turned around to find out that it came from no other man than Hammam
himself. Approaching him, they found out that his soul had already left its earthly abode to
embrace an everlasting life. When this happened, Ali’s remark, which carried both eulogy and
regret, was: AI feared this would happen. Strange, yet this is how effective admonition affects
sensitive hearts. [19] This is an example of the kind of influence which Ali’s sermons had over
the minds and the hearts of his contemporaries.
VIEWS OF ANCIENT AND MODERN SCHOLARS
After the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , Ali (A.S) alone has the distinction of
being one whose speeches and sayings were recorded and preserved by the people with particular
care.
Ibn Abul-Hadid quotes 'Abdul-Hamid al-Katib, the great master of Arabic prose [20] who
lived during the early part of the second Hijri century, as saying, AI learned by heart seventy
sermons of Ali (A.S) , and from that time onwards, my mind always overflowed [ with
inspiration ].
Ali al-Jundi also relates that when Abdul-Hamid was asked about what had helped him most
in attaining literary excellence, he replied, AMemorizing the discourses of the >bald one’. [21]
Throughout the Islamic history, the name of Abdul-Rahman ibn Nubatah is proverbial for
oratory among the Arabs. He acknowledges that his intellectual and artistic attainments are
indebted to Ali (A.S) . Ibn Abul-Hadid quotes him as saying: AI committed to memory about a
hundred discourses of Ali (A.S) ; since then, this has served me as an inexhaustible treasure [of
inspiration].
Al-Jahiz was a celebrated literary genius of the early third century of the Hijra, and his book
Al-Bayan wal-Tbyin is regarded as one of the four main classics of Arabic literature [22]. Often,
in his book, he expresses his great wonder and immense admiration for Ali’s discourses. From
his remarks, it is evident that a large number of Ali’s sermons were commonly known to the
people of his day. In the first volume of his Al-Bayan wal-Tbyin, [23] after mentioning that some
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people praise precision in speech or prefer silence and disapprove profusion, al-Jahiz writes the
following: AThe profusion of speech that has been regarded with disapproval is futile talk, not so
what is fruitful and illuminating; otherwise, Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and Abdullah ibn `Abbas
were men of prolific speech.
In the same volume of his work, he quotes this famous sentence of Ali (A.S) : [24] AThe
value of a man lies in what he has mastered. [25]
Al Jahiz then devotes half a page to expressing his admiration for this sentence and writes
further:
AIf our book did not contain anything but this sentence, it would suffice it. The best speech is
one the little of which makes you dispense with much of it, one in which the meanings are not
concealed within words but stand out.
Then he remarks saying, AIt appears as if Allah the Almighty has enveloped it with His glory
and covered it with the light of wisdom proportionate to the piety and taqwa of its speaker.
Al-Jahiz, in the same work, where he discusses the oratory of Sasa'ah ibn Suhan al-'Abdi [26],
says the following: ANo greater proof of his excellence as an orator is required than the fact that
Ali (A.S) occasionally came to him and asked him to deliver a speech.
Sayyid al-Radhi's following remarks in appreciation and praise of the speech of Imam Ali
(A.S) are famous: AAmir al-Mu'minin Ali (A.S) was the reservoir and fountainhead of
eloquence which derived its principles from his speeches and revealed its secrets through him.
Every orator of mark tried to imitate him and every preacher learned from him the art of
eloquence. Nevertheless, others lagged far behind him while he excelled them all. His speech
(alone) bears the imprint of Divine Wisdom and the fragrance of the Prophet’s eloquence.
Ibn Abul-Hadid is a Mu`tazilite scholar of the 7th. Hijri/13th A.D. century. He was a masterly
writer and an adept poet, and, as we know, a man who adored Ali’s discourses. Accordingly, he
expressed his profound admiration for Ali (A.S) repeatedly throughout his book. In the
Introduction to his famous commentary on Nahjul-Balagha, he writes the following: ATruly
have Ali’s discourse been regarded as inferior only to that of the Creator and superior to that of
all creatures. All people have learned the arts of oration and writing from him. Suffices to say
that people have not recorded even one-tenth of one-twentieth of the speech of any other
companion of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , of what they recorded and preserved
of Ali’s discourses, although there were many eloquent persons among them.
Again, it is sufficient that a man such as al-Jahiz has so much praise for Ali (A.S) in his book
Al-Bayan wa al-Tabyin.
Ibn Abul-Hadid, in the fourth volume of his commentary, says the following about Imam
Ali’s letter to Abdullah ibn `Abbas (written after the fall of Egypt to Mu`awiyah's forces and the
martyrdom of Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr, a letter in which Ali [] breaks the news of this
disaster to Abdullah, who was then in Basra) : [27]
ALook how eloquence has given its reins into the hands of this man and is docile to his every
signal! Observe the wonderful order of words coming one after the other to bow in his presence,
or gushing like a spring that flows effortlessly out of the ground. Praise to Allah! An Arab youth
grows up in a town like Mecca, one who has never met any sage or philosopher, yet his
discourses have surpassed those of Plato and Aristotle in eloquence and profundity. He has no
discourse with men of wisdom, yet he has surpassed Socrates. He has not grown up among
warriors and heroes but amongst traders and merchants, for the people of Mecca were not a
warrior nation but traders, yet he emerges as the greatest of all warriors of supreme courage who
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have ever walked on the face of earth. Khalili ibn Ahmed [al-Farahidi, the renown linguist] was
asked once: AOf Ali (A.S) , Bastam, and `Anbasah, who was the most courageous? Replied he,
ABastam and `Anbasah should be compared with other men; Ali (A.S) was superior to human
beings. He came from the Quraish who were not the foremost in eloquence, for the most
eloquent among Arabs were Banu Jurham, although they were not famous for wisdom or wit.
Yet Ali (A.S) surpassed even Sahban ibn Wa’il and Qays ibn Sa`dah in eloquence.
Modern Perspectives
During the fourteen centuries that have passed since Ali’s times, the world has seen
innumerable changes in language, culture and taste. One may be led to think that Ali’s
discourses, although they might have invoked the adoration of the ancient ones, may not suit the
modern taste. But one would be surprised to learn that such is not the case at all. From the point
of view of literary form and content, Ali’s discourses have the rare quality of transcending the
limits imposed by time and place. That Ali’s discourses are universal in their appeal to men of all
times we shall discuss later. Here, after quoting the views of classical writers, we shall quote the
relevant views expressed by our contemporaries.
The late Sheikh Muhammed `Abdo, formerly Mufti of Egypt, is a man who came to know
Nahjul-Balagha by accident. This preliminary acquaintance grew into a passionate love for the
sacred book, leading him into writing a commentary on it. It also prompted him to undertake
making it popular among the Arab youths. In the Preface to his commentary, he says the
following: AAmong all those who speak the Arabic language, there is not a single man who does
not believe that Ali’s discourses, after the Qur’an and the ahadith of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) , are the most noble, the most eloquent, the most profound and the most
comprehensive.
Ali al-Jundi, once Dean of the Faculty of Sciences at the Cairo University, in his book titled
Ali ibn Abu Talib: Shi`ruhu wa Hikamuh, writing about Ali’s prose saying the following: AA
certain musical rhythm which moves the innermost depths of the soul is characteristic of these
discourses. The phrases are so rhymed that it can be called poetic prose.
He then quotes Qudamah ibn Ja`fer as saying: ASome have shown mastery in short sayings
and others in long discourses, but Ali (A.S) has surpassed all others in both of these, even as he
has surpassed them in other merits as well.
Taha Husain, the renown Egyptian writer, in his book Ali wa Banuh (Ali [] and His Sons),
recounts the story of a particular man during the Battle of al-Jamal. The man is in doubt as to
which of the two sides is on the right track. He says to himself, AHow is it possible that such
personalities like Talhah and al-Zubayr should be at fault? He informs Ali (A.S) of his dilemma
and asks him whether it is possible that such great personalities and men of established repute
should be in error. Ali (A.S) answers him in the following: AYou are seriously mistaken and
have reversed the measure! Truth and falsehood are not measured by the worth of individuals.
First, find out what is true and what is false, then you will see who stands by the truth and who is
with falsehood.
What Ali (A.S) means is: AYou have reversed your measuring criteria. Truth and falsehood
are not measured by the nobility of birth or by how base and lowly one’s birth is. Instead of
regarding truth and falsehood as the measure of nobility and meanness, you prejudge persons by
your own pre-conceived notions of nobility and meanness. Reverse your approach. First of all,
find out the truth itself, then you will be able to recognize who are truthful. Find out what
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falsehood is, then you will identify those who are wrong. lt is not significant which person stands
by the truth and which one sides with falsehood.
After quoting Ali’s above-mentioned reply, Taha Husain says the following: ANext to the
Revealed Word of Allah, I have never seen a more glorious and admirably expressed view than
this reply of Ali (A.S) .
Shakib Arsalan, nicknamed "Amir al-Bayan" (the master of clear speech), is another
celebrated writer. Once in a gathering held in his honor in Egypt, a speaker mounted the rostrum
and, in the course of his speech, remarked saying, AThere are two individuals in the history of
Islam each one of whom can truly be called Amir al-Bayan: one is Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and
the other is Shakib [Arsalan]. It was then that Shakib Arsalan (1871-1946) felt very irritated. He
left his seat and walked to the rostrum. Deploring the comparison which his friend had just made
between Ali (A.S) and himself, he said: AWhat comparison can there be between Ali (A.S) and
me?! I am not worth to be compared even to the strap of Ali’s sandals! [28]
In the Introduction to the book titled Imam Ali (A.S) by George Jurdaq, a Lebanese Christian
writer, Michael Na`imah, also a Lebanese Christian writer, says the following: AAli (A.S) was
not only a champion on the battlefield but also a hero in all other fields: in the sincerity of heart,
in the purity of conscience, in the spell-binding magic of speech, in true humanitarianism, in the
fineness and warmth of faith, in the height of tranquility, in the readiness to help the oppressed
and the wronged, and in total submission to the truth wherever it may be and whichever form it
assumes. He was a hero in all these fields.
I do not intend to quote more from the writings of those who paid tributes to Ali (A.S) , for
the above-quoted remarks are sufficient to prove my point. One who praises Ali (A.S) extols his
own merit for:
He who admires the Sun’s brilliance extols himself:
My two eyes are bright and my vision is not clouded.
I conclude my discourse with Ali’s own statement about himself. One day, one of his
companions attempted to deliver a speech. He could not; he found himself tongue-tied. Ali (A.S)
said to him: AYou should know that the tongue is a part of man and under the command of his
mind. If the mind lacks stimulation and refuses to budge, his tongue will not assist him.
However, if the mind is ready, his speech will not give him a respite. Indeed, we (Ahl al-Bayt)
are the masters of (the domain of) speech. In us are sunk its roots and over us are hung its
branches. [29]
Al Jahiz, in the al-Bayan wa al-tabyin, relates from Abdullah ibn al-Hasan ibn Ali (A.S) that
Ali (A.S) once said: AWe (Ahl al-Bayt) are superior to others in five qualities: eloquence, good
looks, forgiveness, courage, and popularity with women! [30]
Now, we shall take up another characteristic of Ali’s discourses which, in fact, is the main
theme of this book, that is, multi-dimensionality.
NAHJUL-BALAGHA AMONG LITERARY CLASSICS
Most nations possess certain literary works which are regarded as Amasterpieces or Aclassics.
Here we shall limit our discussion to the classics of Arabic and Persian literature whose merits
are more or less perceptible by us, leaving the other classics of the ancient world, of Greece and
Rome and so on, and the masterpieces of the modern age from Italy, England, France and other
countries to be discussed and evaluated by those who are familiar with them and are qualified to
discuss them.
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Of course, an accurate judgment about the classics of Arabic and Persian is possible only for
scholars who have specialized in classical literature. But it is an accepted fact that everyone of
these masterpieces is great only in a particular aspect, not in each and every aspect. To be more
precise, every one of the authors of these classics displayed his mastery only in a single, specific
field to which his ingenuity was confined. Occasionally, if one left his special field to tread other
grounds, he failed miserably.
In Persian, there are numerous masterpieces in mystical ghazal, general ghazal, qasidah, epic,
spiritual and mystical allegorical poetry, etc. But, as we know, none of the world renown Persian
poets has succeeded in creating masterpieces in all these literary forms. Hafiz is famous for
mystical ghazal, Sa`di for anecdotes and general ghazal, Firdawsi for epic, Rumi for his
allegorical and spiritual poetry, Khayyam for his philosophic pessimism and Nizami for
something else. For this reason, it is not possible to compare them with one another or prefer one
over the other. All that can be said is that each one of them is foremost in his own field. If
occasionally one of these poetic geniuses left his special field to try another literary form, a
visible decline in quality was readily perceptible. The same is true of Arab poets of the Islamic
and pre-Islamic periods. There is an anecdote in Nahjul-Balagha that once Ali (A.S) was asked
this question: AWho is the foremost among Arab poets? Ali (A.S) replied: ATo be sure, all poets
did not tread one and the same path so that you may tell who is the leader and who is the
follower. But if one were forced to choose one of them, I would say that the foremost among
them was al-Malik al-Zilleel (the wantonly wandering king, nickname of >Imri’ul-Qays). [31]
In
his
commentary,
Ibn
Abul-Hadid
cites
with
isnad
(authentic
sources/references/transmitters) an anecdote under the above-mentioned comment. Here is what
he writes: ADuring the holy month of Ramadan, it was Ali’s custom to invite people to dinner.
The guests were offered meat, but Ali (A.S) himself abstained from eating the food which was
prepared for the guests. After the dinner, Ali (A.S) would address them and impart moral
instruction to them. One night, as they sat for dinner, a discussion commenced about the poets of
the past. After the dinner, Ali (A.S) , in the course of his discourse, said: >The faith is the
criterion of your deeds; taqwa is your shield and protector; good manners are your adornment,
and forbearance is the fortress of your honor. Then, turning to Abul->Aswad al-Du’ali, who was
present there and then and who had moments ago taken part in the discussion about poets, said,
>Let us see, who in your opinion is the most meritorious of poets?’
Abul->Aswad recited a verse of Abu Dawud al->Ayadi, remarking that in his opinion, Abu
Dawud was the greatest poet. AYou are mistaken; such is not the case, Ali (A.S) told him,
whereupon the guests, seeing Ali (A.S) taking an interest in their discussion, pressed him to
express his opinion as to whom he considered to be the best among poets. Ali (A.S) said to
them, AIt is not right to give a judgment in this matter for, to be certain, the pursuits of the poets
are not confined to a single field so that we may point out the forerunner among them. Yet, if one
were forced to choose one of them, then it may be said that the best of them is one who
composes not according to the period’s inclinations, nor out of fear and inhibition, [but he who
gives free rein to his imagination and poetic inspiration]. Asked as to whom this description
would fit, Ali (A.S) replied, AAl-Malik al-Dilleel, Imri’ul-Qays.
It is said that when someone inquired about who the most eminent poet of the Jahiliyyah (the
pre-Islamic period) was, Yunus ibn Habib al-Dhabbi (d. 798 A.D.), the famous grammarian,
answered as follows: AThe greatest of poets is Imri’ul-Qays when he mounts his steed [i.e. when
he composes epic poetry motivated by the feelings of courage and bravery and the passions
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roused on the battlefield], al-Nabighah al-Thubyani [the genius belonging to Banu Thubyan]
when he flees in fear [i.e. when he expresses himself on the psychological effects of danger and
fright], al-Zuhayr ibn Abu Sulma when he takes delight [in something], and al->A`sha [her name
meaning "one who cannot see very well"; male version is :"a'sha"], when he is in a merry and
joyful mood. Yunus meant to say that every one of these poets had a special talent in his own
field, one in which his works are considered as masterpieces. Each of them was foremost in his
own specialty beyond which his talent and genius did not extend.
`ALI’S VERSATILITY
One of the outstanding characteristics of Imam Ali’s sayings, which have come down to us in
the form of Nahjul-Balagha, is that such sayings are not confined to any particular field alone.
Ali (A.S) , in his own words, has not trodden one single path only but has covered diverse
grounds which occasionally are quite antithetical. Nahjul-Balagha is a masterpiece but not of the
kind which excels in one single field such as the epic, the ghazal, the sermon, the eulogy, the
satire or the love poetry. Rather, it covers multifarious fields as shall be elaborated on. In fact,
works which are masterpieces in a particular field do, indeed, exist; nevertheless, their number is
not great, and they are countable. The number of works which cover numerous subjects but are
not masterpieces is quite large. But the characteristic that a work be simultaneously a
masterpiece without restricting itself to any one particular subject is an exclusive merit of
Nahjul-Balagha. With the exception of the Holy Qur’an, which is altogether a different subject
to be dealt with independently, what masterpiece is comparable to Nahjul-Balagha’s versatility?
Speech is the spirit's envoy, and the words of a man relate to the sphere in which his spirit
dwells. Naturally, a speech which pertains to multiple spheres is characteristic of a spirit which is
too creative to be confined to a single sphere. Since the spirit of Ali (A.S) is not limited to a
particular domain but encompasses various spheres and he, in the terminology of Islamic
mystics, is al-Insan al-Kamil (a perfect man), al-kawn al-jami` (the complete microcosm) and
jami’ kullal-hadarat [32] (the possessor of all higher virtues), so his speech is not limited to any
one particular sphere. Accordingly, as we should say, in terms current nowadays, that Ali’s merit
lies in the multi-dimensional nature of his speech, that it is different from one-dimensional
works. The all-embracing nature of Ali’s spirit and his speech is not a recent discovery. It is a
feature which has invoked a sense of wonder since at least one thousand years. It was this quality
that had attracted the attention of Sayyid al-Radhi a thousand years ago, and he fell in love with
Ali’s speeches and writings. He writes saying, AOf Ali’s wonderful qualities, which exclusively
belong to him, none sharing them with him, is that when one reflects upon his discourses
regarding abstinence (zuhd), and his exhortations concerning spiritual awareness, for a while one
totally forgets that the speaker of these words was a person of the highest social and political
caliber, one who ruled over vast regions during his time, and his word was an order for all. Even
for a moment, the thought does not enter the reader’s mind that the speaker of these words might
have been inclined to anything except piety and seclusion, anything except devotion and
worship, having selected a quiet corner of his house or a cave in some mountain valley where he
heard no voice except his own and knew nobody except himself, being totally oblivious of the
world and its hustle and bustle. It is unbelievable that those sublime discourses on asceticism,
detachment and abstinence and those spiritual exhortations came from somebody who pierced
the enemy’s ranks and went fighting to the very heart of their forces, with a sword in his hand,
poised to sever the enemy heads, and who threw many a mighty warrior down from his steed,
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causing him to roll into blood and dust. Blood drips from the edge of his sword and yet he is the
most pious of saints and the most devoted of sages.
Sayyid al-Radhi adds saying, AFrequently, I discuss this matter with friends, and it equally
invokes their sense of wonder.
Sheikh Muhammed `Abdo, too, was profoundly moved by this aspect of Nahjul-Balagha, and
it made him marvel at its swiftly changing scenes which take the reader on a journey through
different worlds. He makes a note of it in the Introduction to his commentary of Nahjul-Balagha.
Aside from his speech, in general, Ali (A.S) had a spirit that was universal, all-embracing,
and multi-dimensional, and he has always been eulogized for this quality. He is a just ruler, a
devotee who remains awake all night long worshipping Allah; he weeps in the niche of prayer
(mihrab) and smiles on the battlefield. He is a tough warrior and a soft-hearted and kind
guardian. He is a philosopher of profound insight and an able general. He is a teacher, a
preacher, a judge, a jurist, a peasant and a writer. He is a perfect man whose great soul envelops
all spheres of the human spirit.
Safi al-Din al-Hilli (1277-1349 A.D.) says the following about him:
Opposites have come together in thy attributes,
And for that thou has no rivals.
A devout, a ruler, a man of forbearance, and a courageous one,
A lethal warrior, an ascetic, a pauper yet generous to others,
Traits which never gathered in one man and the like of which none ever possessed;
A gentleness and charm to abash the morning breeze,
A valor and might to melt sturdy rocks;
Poetry cannot describe the glory of thy soul,
Your multi-faceted personality is above the comprehension of all critics.
Apart from what has been said, an interesting point is that in spite of the fact that Ali’s
discourses are about spiritual and moral issues, in them his literary charm and eloquence have
attained their peak. Ali (A.S) has not dealt with popular poetic themes such as love, wine and
vainglory, which are fertile subjects for literary expression in prose and poetry. Moreover, he did
not aim at displaying his skills in the art of oratory. Speech for him was a means and not an end
in itself. Neither did he intend to create an object of art nor did he wish to be known as an author
of a literary masterpiece. Above all, his words have a universality which transcends the limits of
time and place. His addressee is the human being within every person; accordingly, his message
does not know any frontier although, generally, time and place impose limits on the outlook of a
speaker and confine his personality.
The main aspect of the miraculous nature of the Qur’an is that its subjects and themes are
altogether at variance with those current during the time of its revelation. It marks the beginning
of a new era in literature and deals with another world and a different sphere. The beauty and
charm of its style and its literary excellence are truly miraculous. In these aspects, too, as is the
case with its other features, Nahjul-Balagha comes closer to the Qur’an. In truth, it is the
offspring of the Holy Qur’an.
Themes of Nahjul-Balagha
The variety of topics and themes discussed in Nahjul-Balagha unfolds a wide spectrum of
problems that give colour and hue to these heavenly discourses. The author of this dissertation
has no pretension to possess the ability to do the book full justice and analyze it in depth. I just
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intend to give a brief account of the variety of its themes, and it is my firm belief that others will
come in the future who shall be able to do justice to this masterpiece of human power of speech.
A Glance at the Varied Problems Covered by Nahjul-Balagha
The various topics covered in Nahjul-Balagha, everyone of which is worthy of discussion,
may be outlined as follows:
Theological and metaphysical issues;
Mystic path and worship;
Government and social justice;
Ahl al-Bayt () and the issue of caliphate;
Wisdom and admonition;
The world and worldliness;
Heroism and bravery
Prophecies, predictions, and eschatology;
Prayers and invocations;
Critiques of the contemporary society;
Social philosophy;
Islam and the Qur’an;
Morality and self-discipline;
Personalities... and a host of other topics.
Obviously, as the titles of the various chapters of the present book indicate, the writer of this
Introduction does not make any claim that the topics cited above are all that can be found in
Nahjul-Balagha. Neither does he claim that he has done an exhaustive study of these topics, nor
has he any pretension to being considered competent for undertaking such a task. That which is
offered in these chapters is no more than a glimpse. Perhaps, in the future, with Divine
assistance, after deriving a greater benefit from this inexhaustible treasure, the writer may be able
to undertake a more comprehensive study. Or perhaps others may be blessed with the
opportunity to accomplish such an undertaking. Allah is wise and, indeed, His assistance and
help is the best.
SECTION TWO
THEOLOGY AND METAPHYSICS OF THE NAHJ AL-BALAGHAH
One of the basic issues dealt with in Nahjul-Balagha relates to theological and metaphysical
problems. All in all, there are about forty places where the sermons, letters, and aphorisms
discuss these issues. Some of these pertain to the aphorisms, but more often the discussion is
longer, covering sometimes several pages.
The passages on Tawhid (Divine Unity) in Nahjul-Balagha can perhaps be considered to be
the most wonderful discussions of the book. Without any exaggeration, when we take into
account the conditions in which they were delivered, they can almost be said to be miraculous.
The discussions of this theme in Nahjul-Balagha are of a varied nature. Some of them
constitute studies of the scheme of creation bearing witness to Divine creativity and wisdom.
Here, Ali (A.S) speaks about the whole system of the heavens and the earth, or occasionally
discusses the wonderful features of some specific creature like the bat, the peacock or the ant,
and the role of the Divine design and purpose in their creation. To give an example of this kind
of discussion, we may quote a passage regarding the ant:
Have you observed the tiny creatures that He has created? How He has made them strong and
perfected their constitution and shaped their organs of hearing and sight, and how He has styled
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their bones and skin? Observe the ant with its tiny body and delicate form. It is so small that its
features can hardly be discerned by the eye and so insignificant that it does not enter our
thoughts. See how it roams about upon the ground and arduously collects its livelihood. It carries
the grain to its hole and deposits it in its store. It collects during the summer for the winter and,
when winter arrives, it foresees the time to reemerge. Its livelihood is guaranteed and designed
according to its built. The Benefactor and the Provider does not forget or forsake it. He does not
deprive it, even though it should be in hard and dry stones and rocks. You will be amazed at the
delicate intricacy of its wonderful constitution if you investigate the structure of its alimentary
canals, its belly, and its eyes and ears which are in its head. (Sermon 185)
However, most of the discussions about Tawhid in Nahjul-Balagha are rational and
philosophical. The rare sublimity of Nahjul-Balagha becomes manifest in these discourses. In
these philosophical and rational discourses of Nahjul-Balagha on Tawhid, what constitutes the
focus of all arguments is the infinite, absolute and self-sufficing nature of the Divine Essence. In
these passages, Ali (A.S) attains the heights of eloquence, and none, neither before him nor after
him, has come close to him in this aspect.
Another issue dealt with is that of the absolute simplicity (al-basatat al-mutlaqa) of the
Divine Essence and negation of every kind of multiplicity, divisibility in the Godhead and
refutation of separability of the Divine Attributes from the Divine Essence. This theme occurs
repeatedly in Nahjul-Balagha.
Also discussed is a series of other profound problems which had never been touched before
him. They are: Allah being the First while also being the Last; His being simultaneously the
Manifest and the Hidden; His precedence over time and number, i.e. His pre-eternity is not
temporal and His Unity is not numerical; His Supremacy, Authority, and Self-sufficiency; His
Creativeness; that attendance to one affair does not prevent Him from attending to other affairs;
the identity of Divine Word and Act, the limited capacity of human reason to comprehend His
reality, that gnosis (ma’rifa) is a kind of manifestation (tajalli) of Him upon the intellects, which
is different from mental conception or cognition, the negation of such categories and qualities
such as corporeality, motion, rest, change, place, time, similitude, antithesis, partnership,
possession of organs or parts, limitation and number, and a series of other issues which we shall,
by the will of Allah, mention later and give examples of every one of them. Even a thinker who
is well-versed in the beliefs and views of ancient and modern philosophers would be struck with
wonder upon seeing the wide range and scope of the problems propounded in this wonderful
book.
An elaborate discussion of the issues raised and dealt with in Nahjul-Balagha would itself
require a voluminous book and cannot be covered in one or two articles. Unavoidably, we shall
be brief; but before we commence our brief survey, we are compelled to mention certain points
as an introduction to our discussion.
BITTER REALITY
We, Shi`a Muslims, must admit that we have been unjust with regard to our duty to the man
whom we, more than others, take pride in following or, at the very least, we must admit falling
short in our duty towards him. In substance, any kind of failure in fulfillling our responsibility is
an act of injustice on our own part. We did not want to realize the significance of Ali (A.S) , or
we had been unable to do so. All our energy and labor have been devoted to proclaiming the
Prophet’s statements about Ali (A.S) and to denouncing those who ignored them, but we failed
to pay attention to the intellectual side of Imam Ali’s personality.
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Sa`di, the poet, says the following:
The reality of musk in its scent lies,
Not in the perfumer’s advice.
Applying Sa`di’s words to our attitude regarding Imam Ali’s personality, we did not realize
that this musk, recommended by the Divine Perfumer, itself carried its own pleasant aroma and,
before everything else, we should have tried to know its scent and become familiar with it. That
is, we should have familiarized ourselves and others with its inner fragrance. The counsel of the
Divine Perfumer was meant to acquaint the people with its pleasant redolence, not for the
purpose that they may believe that it is musk and then devote all their energies to convince others
by arguing with them, without bothering to acquaint themselves with its real fragrance.
Had Nahjul-Balagha belonged to some other people, would they have treated it the way we
treated this great book? The country of Iran is the center of Shi`ism and the language of its
people is Persian. You have only to examine the translations and commentaries on NahjulBalagha to make a judgment about what our accomplishments amounts to.
To take a more general case, the Shi`i sources of hadith (tradition) and the texts of du`a’
(supplications) are incomparable with the texts of non-Shi`i works in the same field. This is also
true of Divine teachings and other subjects. The problems and issues discussed in works like alKulayni’s Al-Kafi, or Sheikh al-Saduq’s Al-Tawhid, or al-Ihtijaj of al-Tibrisi are nowhere to be
found among the works of non-Shi`is. It can be said that if occasionally similar issues are dealt
with in non-Shi`i books, the material is unmistakably spurious, for it is not only opposed to the
prophetic teachings but also contradictS the Qur’anic principles. There is a strong smell of
anthropomorphism which hangs around them. Recently, Hashim Ma’ruf al-Hasani, in his book
Dirasat fi Al-Kafi lil-Kulayni wal-Sahih li Bukhari, which is an original but a brief comparative
study of the Sahih of al-Bukhari and of al-Kulayni’s Al-Kafi, has dealt with the traditions related
to the problems of theology.
Shi`i Rationalism
The discussion of theological problems and their analysis by the Shi`i Imams, of which
Nahjul-Balagha is the earliest example, was the main cause of the emergence of rationalistic
approach and philosophic outlook in the Shi`i intellectual world since Islam’s earliest days. This
cannot be labelled as an innovation (bid`a) in Islam; rather, its basis was laid down by the Qur’an
itself. It was in accordance with the approach of the Qur’an and for the purpose of its
interpretation that the Imams of Ahl al-Bayt () expounded such issues. If anybody can be
reproached in this matter, it is those who did not adopt this method and abandoned the means to
follow it.
History shows that from the earliest Islamic era, the Shi`a, more than any other sect, were
interested in these problems. Among Ahl al-Sunna, the Mu`tazilites, who were nearer to the
Shi`a, did possess similar inclinations. But, as we know, the general view predominant among
Ahl al-Sunna did not welcome it and, as a result, the Mu`tazilite sect became extinct about the
end of the 3rd. Hijri/9th A.D. century.
Ahmed Amin, the Egyptian writer, confirms this view in the first volume of his Zuhur alIslam. Having discussed the philosophic movement in Egypt during the reign of the Fatimids,
who were followers of a Shi`a sect, he writes the following: APhilosophy is more akin to Shi`ism
than it is to Sunni Islam, and we witness the truth of this in the era of the Fatimid rule [in Egypt]
and in that of the Buwayhids [in Iran]. Even during the later centuries Persia, a Shi`ite country,
has paid more attention to philosophy than any other Islamic country. In our own times, Sayyid
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Jamal al-Din al-Asadabadi, who had Shi`ite inclinations and had studied philosophy in Iran,
created a philosophic movement in Egypt when he arrived here.
Curiously, Ahmed Amin, in his explanation of why the Shi`a showed more inclination
towards philosophy, commits an error, willfully or otherwise. According to him, AThe reason for
greater inclination on the part of the Shi`a towards rational and philosophical discussions is to be
found in their esotericism and their flair for ta’wil. [1] They were compelled to seek the
assistance of philosophy for defence of their esotericism. That is why the Fatimid Egypt and
Buwayhid Iran, and Iran during the Safawid and Qajar periods, were more disposed towards
philosophy than the rest of the Islamic world.
This is sheer nonsense on the part of Ahmed Amin. It was the Imams of the Shi`a School of
Yought who, for the first time, introduced the philosophical approach, and it was they who
introduced the most profound and intricate concepts with regard to theological problems in their
arguments, polemics, sermons, ahadith and prayers, of which Nahjul-Balagha is one example.
Even with regard to the prophetic traditions, the Shi`a sources are far more sublime and profound
than the traditions contained in the non-Shi`i sources. This characteristic is not confined to
philosophy alone but is also true of kalam, fiqh, and usul al-fiqh, in which the Shi`a enjoy a
position of distinction. All this owes its origin to one and the same source: emphasis on
rationalism.
Some others have tried to trace the origin of this difference [between the Shi`i and the Sunni
mindsets] in the concept of Athe Shi`ite nation. According to them, since the Persians are Shi`ite
and the Shi`a are Persian and, since the Persians are a people with a philosophical temperament,
fond of the intricacies of speculation and pure thought, with the help of their rich and strong
philosophical tradition, they succeeded in raising the level of Shi`a thought, giving it an Islamic
hue.
Bertrand Russell, in A History of Western Philosophy, expresses a similar view based on the
above-mentioned argument. With his habitual or inherent impoliteness, he puts forth this
opinion. However, Russell lacks the capacity of vindicating his claim, since he was totally
unfamiliar with Islamic philosophy and basically knew nothing about it. He was not qualified to
express any informed opinion about the origins of the Shi`a thought and its sources.
Our rejoinder to the upholders of this view is: First of all, not all Shi`as were/are Persian, nor
all Persians were Shi`a. Were not Muhammed ibn Ya`qub al-Kulayni, Muhammed ibn Ali ibn alHusain ibn Babawayh al- Qummi and Muhammed ibn Abu Talib al-Mazandarani Persian?! Were
not Muhammed ibn Isma`il al-Bukhari, Abu Dawud al-Sijistani and Muslim ibn Hajjaj alNishaburi Persian, too?! Was not Sayyid al-Radhi, the compiler of Nahjul-Balagha, of a Persian
origin?! Were not the Fatimids of Egypt of Persian descent?
Why was philosophical thought revived in Egypt with the inception of the Fatimid rule, and
why did it decline with their fall? And why was it revived later, after a long interval, only
through the influence of an Iranian Shi`a?
The truth is that the Imams of Ahl al-Bayt () were the only real dynamic force behind this
trend of thinking and this kind of approach. All scholars of Ahl al-Sunna admit that among the
Prophet’s Companions only Ali (A.S) was a man of philosophic wisdom, the man who had an
altogether distinct rational approach. Abu Ali ibn Sina (Avicenna) is quoted as having thus
remarked: AAli’s position among the companions of Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy
Household), was that of the >rational’ in the midst of the >corporeal’.
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Obviously, the intellectual approach of the followers of an Imam such as Ali (A.S) should be
expected to be radically different from that of those who followed others. Moreover, Ahmed
Amin and others have been susceptible to another similar misunderstanding. They express
doubts with regard to the authenticity of ascription of such philosophic statements [as exist in
Nahjul-Balagha ] to Ali (A.S) . They say that the Arabs were not familiar with such issues,
arguments and elaborate analyses like the ones found in Nahjul-Balagha prior to becoming
acquainted with the Greek philosophy, and evidently, according to them, these discourses should
have been composed by some later scholars familiar with the Greek philosophy then were
attributed to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S).
We also accept that the Arabs were not familiar with such ideas and notions. Not only the
Arabs, the non-Arabs, too, were not acquainted with them, nor were those notions familiar to the
Greeks and Greek philosophy. Ahmed Amin first brings down Ali (A.S) to the level of such
Arabs like Abu Jahl and Abu Sufyan, then he postulates his minor and major premises, building
his conclusion on their premises: AThe Arabs were unfamiliar with philosophical notions; Ali
(A.S) was an Arab: therefore Ali (A.S) was also unfamiliar with such philosophical notions.
One should ask him whether the Arabs of the Jahiliyya were familiar with the ideas and the
concepts propounded in the Holy Qur’an. Had not Ali (A.S) been brought up and trained by the
Messenger of Allah himself? Did not the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) introduce Ali
(A.S) to his companions as the most learned and knowledgeable among them? Why should we
deny the high spiritual status of someone who enriched his inner self by drawing on the
bounteous wealth of Islam in order to protect the prestige of some of the Prophet’s companions
who could never rise above the ordinary level?
Ahmed Amin says that prior to being acquainted with the Greek philosophy, the people of
Arabia were not familiar with the ideas and concepts found in Nahjul-Balagha. The answer to
this is that the Arabs did not become acquainted with the ideas and notions propounded in
Nahjul-Balagha even after centuries of familiarity with the Greek philosophy. Not only the
Arabs, even the non-Arab Muslims, were not acquainted with these ideas for the simple reason
that there is no trace of them whatsoever in the Greek philosophy itself! These ideas are
exclusively specific to the Islamic philosophy. Muslim philosophers gradually picked these ideas
up from the basic Islamic sources, incorporating them in their thought under the guidance of
revelation.
Philosophical Notions Concerning Metaphysics
As stated above, Nahjul-Balagha adopts two kinds of approach to the problems of theology.
The first kind of approach calls attention to the sensible world and its phenomena as a mirror
reflecting the Knowledge and Perfection of the Creator. The second approach involves purely
rationalistic and philosophical reflections. The latter approach accounts for the greater part of the
theological discussions of Nahjul-Balagha. Moreover, it is the only approach adopted with
regard to the discussion of the Divine Essence and Attributes.
As we know, the value of such discussions and the legitimacy of such reflections have always
been questioned by those who consider them improper from the viewpoint of reason or canon, or
both. In our own times, a certain group claims that this kind of analysis and inference does not
agree with the spirit of Islam and that the Muslims were initiated into such kind of speculations
under the influence of the Greek philosophy and not as a result of any inspiration or guidance
effused from the Qur’an. They say that had the Muslims adhered closely to the Qur’anic
teachings, they would not have entangled themselves with these tortuous webs. For the same
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reason, they view with suspicion the authenticity of such speculations found in Nahjul-Balagha
and their attribution to Imam Ali (A.S) .
During the second and third centuries, a group of people opposed such kind of discussions,
questioning their legitimacy and raising doctrinal objections thereto. They insisted that it is
obligatory on Muslims to be satisfied with the literal and commonly understood meaning of the
words of the Qur’an. They regarded every kind of inquiry into the meaning of the Qur’an as an
innovation (bid’ah) in religion. For instance, if someone inquired about the meaning of the
Qur’anic verse AThe all-Compassionate seated Himself upon the Throne (Qur’an, 20:5), he was
confronted by the displeasure of those who regarded such questions as not only improper but
distasteful. He would be told: AThe exact meaning is unknown and questioning is heresy. [2]
During the 3rd. A.H./9th. A.D. century, this group, which later came to be called Ash`arite,
overwhelmed the Mu`tazilites who considered such speculations to be within the bounds of
legitimacy. This victory of the Asharites delivered a severe blow to the intellectual life of Islam.
The Akhbaris, who followed a Shi`i school which flourished during the period between the 10th.
A.H./16th. A.D. and the 14th. A.H./20th. A.D. centuries, particularly during the 10th. A.H./16th.
A.D. and 11th. A.H./17th. A.D. centuries, followed the Asha`ris in their ideologies and
convictions. They raised doctrinal objections against ratiocination. Now we shall proceed to
discuss the objections raised from a rationalist point of view.
As a result of the triumph of the empirical and experimental method over the deductive
approach in Europe, especially in the physical sciences, the view began to prevail that rational
speculation was unreliable not only in the physical sciences but also in all scientific disciplines
and that the only reliable method was that of empirical philosophy. The result was that the
problems of theology were viewed with doubt and suspicion because they lay beyond the domain
of experimental and empirical observation.
The past victories of the Ash`arites, on one hand, and the amazing triumphs of the empirical
method, which followed one another in quick succession, on the other hand, drove some nonShi`ite Muslim writers to the extremes of excitement. The outcome was the eclectic opinion that
from the religious (Shar`i) as well as the rational point of view, the use of the deductive method
even in problems of theology should be discarded. From the Shar`i viewpoint, they made the
claim that according to the outlook of the Qur’an, the only valid theological approach was the
empirical and experimental method and the study of the natural phenomena and the system of
creation; the rest, they declared, is no more than an exercise in futility. They pointed out that in
scores of its verses, the Qur’an in most unequivocal terms has invited mankind to study the
phenomena of nature; it considers the keys to the secrets of the origin and the workings of the
universe to be concealed within nature itself. In this way, they echoed, in their writings and
speeches, the ideas expressed by the European proponents of empirical philosophy.
In Farid al-Wajdi’s book >Ala atlal al-madhhab al-maddi (On the Ruins of Materialism), and
in Sayyid Abul-Hasan al-Nadawi’s Matha khasira al-`alam bi-inhitat al-Muslimin (AWhat the
World Lost Through the Decline of Muslims), as well as the writers belonging to the Muslim
Brotherhood (al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun) such as Sayyid Qutb and others, have all supported this
view, vehemently attacking the opposite viewpoint.
Al-Nadawi, in his above-mentioned book, says the following: AThe prophets informed men
about the existence of Allah and His Attributes and acquainted them with the origin and the
beginning of life on the planet as well as the ultimate destiny of man, putting this free
information at their disposal. They relieved mankind of the need to understand and discuss these
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problems the basics of which lie beyond our reach (because these problems belong to the sphere
of the supra-sensible, and our knowledge and experience is limited to the physical and the
sensible, the tangible). But men did not value this blessing; therefore, they entangled themselves
in debates and speculations about these problems, striding into the dark regions of the hidden and
the unknowable. [3]
The same author, in another chapter of the same book, where he discusses the causes of the
decline of Muslims, under the heading AThe Neglect of Useful Sciences, criticizes the Muslim
`ulema’ in these words: AThe Muslim scholars and thinkers did not give as much importance to
practical and experimental sciences as they gave to debating about metaphysics, which they had
learned from the Greek philosophy. The Greek metaphysics and theology is nothing more than
the Greeks’ polytheistic mythology presented in a philosophical outfit and is no more than a
series of meaningless conjectures expressed in an absurd jargon. Allah has exempted the
Muslims from such a debate, speculation and analysis regarding these matters which are not
much different from the analytic pursuits of the Alchemists. But out of ingratitude for this great
blessing, the Muslims wasted their energy and genius in problems of this sort. [4]
Without any doubt, the views of the likes of Farid al-Wajdi and of al-Nadawi should be
regarded as a sort of return to Ash`arism, though dressed in contemporary style akin to the
language of empirical philosophy.
Here, we cannot enter into a philosophical discussion about the value of philosophic
reflection. In the chapters titled AThe Value of Information and AThe Origin of Multiplicity in
Perception in the book titled The Principles and Method of Realism, we have discussed the
matter in sufficient details. Here, we shall confine ourselves to the Qur’anic aspect of this
problem and investigate whether the Holy Qur’an considers the study of nature to be the only
valid method of inquiry into theological problems, or whether it allows for another approach
besides the one mentioned above.
However, it is essential to point out that the disagreement between the Ash`arites and the nonAsh`arites is not about the legitimacy of the use of the Book and the Sunna as sources in the
problems of theology; rather, the disagreement concerns the manner of their utilization.
According to the Ash`arites, their application should not exceed mute acceptance. According to
them, we assign the various Attributes like Unity, Omniscience, Omnipotence and the rest to
Allah because they have been ascribed to Him by the Shari`a (Islamic legislative code) ;
otherwise, we would not know whether or not Allah is as such because the basic principles and
essentials dealing with Allah are beyond our reach. Therefore, according to them, we are forced
to accept Allah as such, but we cannot know or understand that Allah is as such. The role of the
religious texts is that they prescribe for us the way we ought to think and believe so that we may
follow it in our ideology and convictions.
According to the contestants of this view, these issues, as is the case with any other rational
concept or idea, are amenable to human understanding, that is, there exist certain principles and
essentials which, if properly known, enable man to understand them. The role of the religious
texts lies in their capacity to inspire, motivate, and guide the human intellect by putting
understandable principles and essentials at its disposal. Basically, servitude in intellectual
matters is absurd. It is like ordering one to think in a certain fashion, and asking him to derive
certain prescribed conclusions. It is like ordering someone to see a thing in a certain fashion then
asking him the following: AHow do you see it? Is it big or small? Is it black or white?! Servitude
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in thinking does not mean anything other than absence of thinking and acceptance without
reflection.
In short, the question is not whether it is possible for man to go beyond the teachings of the
Revelation. Allah be our refuge, there is nothing that lies beyond them because that which has
reached us through Revelation and through the Household of Revelation (i.e. Ahl al-Bayt []) is
the utmost limit of perfection concerning the knowledge of the Divine. Here, our debate centers
upon the capacity of the human thought and reason, whether or not it can, when supplied with
the basic principles and essentials, undertake an intellectual journey through the world of
theological problems [5].
As to the invitation of the Qur’an to study and inquire about the phenomena of creation and its
emphasis on nature as a means for attaining the knowledge of Allah and the super-natural, it
should be said that it is, indubitably, a basic principle of the Qur’anic teachings. It is with
extraordinary insistence that the Holy Qur’an asks the human beings to inquire into the nature of
the earth, the sky, the plants and animals, and man himself, urging them to study them
scientifically. It is also indubitable that the Muslims did not take enough worthy strides in this
direction. Perhaps the real reason behind it was the Greek philosophy, which was deductive and
based on pure speculation. They used this approach even in the field of the physical sciences.
Nevertheless, as the history of science bears testimony, the Muslim scientists did not altogether
abandon the experimental method in their studies as did the Greeks. The Muslims, not the
Europeans, as is commonly thought, were the pioneers of the experimental method. The
Europeans followed on the tracks first laid by the Muslims.
The Value of Studying the Natural Phenomena
Aside from all of this, the question worthy of consideration is whether the Qur’an, besides its
emphasis on the study of the creating of earth, water and air, allows other ways of approaching
the issue, or if it closes all other doors. The question is whether the Qur’an, even as it invites
people to study the signs of Allah (ayat), also welcomes other modes of intellectual endeavor.
Basically, what is the value of inquiry into the works of creation (an inquiry which the Qur’an
urges us, explicitly or implicitly, to undertake), from the viewpoint of initiating us into the
awareness and consciousness which this heavenly Book aims to cultivate?
The truth is that the measure of assistance provided by the study of the works of the creation
in understanding the problems explicitly pointed out by the Holy Qur’an is quite restricted. The
Holy Qur’an has propounded certain problems of theology which are by no means
understandable through the study of the created world or nature. The value of study of the system
of creation is limited only to the extent to which it proves that the world is governed by a Power
which knows, designs, plans, and administers it. The world is a mirror, open to empirical
experiment, only to the extent that it points towards something that lies beyond nature and
discloses the existence of a Mighty Hand which runs nature’s cosmic wheels.
But the Holy Qur’an is not content that man should only know that a Mighty, Knowing, and
Wise Power administers this universe. This may perhaps be true of other heavenly scriptures, but
is by no means true of the Holy Qur’an, which is the final and ultimate heavenly message and
has a great deal to say about Allah and the reality transcending nature.
Purely Rationalistic Problems
The most basic problem to which the mere study of the world of creation fails to provide an
answer is the necessity of existence and uncreated nature of the Power which transcends natural
phenomena. The world is a mirror in the sense that it indicates the existence of a Mighty Hand
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and a Wise Power, but it does not tell us anything more about Its nature. It does not tell us
whether that Power is subservient to something else or not, or if it is self-subsisting. And if it is
subject to something else, what is that? The objective of the Holy Qur’an is not only that we
should know that a Mighty Hand administers the world, but that we may know that that
Administrator is AAllah and that AAllah is the indefinable: AThere is nothing like Him, the One
whose Essence encompasses all perfection or, in other words, that AAllah signifies Absolute
Perfection and is the referent of AHis is the loftiest likeness. How can the study of nature give us
an understanding of such notions and concepts?
The second problem is that of the Unity of Allah (Tawhid). The Holy Qur’an has stated this
issue in a logical form and used a syllogistic argument to explain it. The method of argument
which it has employed in this regard is called Aexclusive syllogism or Areductio ad impossible
(burhan al-tamannu`). Occasionally, it eliminates the possibility of multiplicity in the efficient
cause as in the following verse: [6] AIf there had been (multiple) gods in them (i.e. in the earth
and the heavens) other than Allah, they would surely go to ruin (21:22).
At other times, it argues by eliminating the possibility of multiplicity in the final cause:
AAllah has not taken to Himself any son, nor is there any god besides Him, for then each god
would have taken off that he created and some of them would have risen up over others (23:91).
The Holy Qur’an never suggests that the study of the system of creation can lead us to the
knowledge of the Unity of the Godhead so as to imply that the essential knowledge of the
transcendental Creator be considered attainable from that source. Moreover, such a suggestion
would not have been correct.
The Holy Qur’an alludes to various problems as indicated by the following examples:
Nothing is like Him (42:11).
And Allah`s is the loftiest likeness. (16:60)
To Him belong the most Beautiful Names. (20:8)
And His is the loftiest likeness in the heavens and the earth. (30:27)
He is Allah, there is no god but He. He is the King, the All-holy, the All-peaceable, the Allfaithful, the All-preserver, the Almighty, the All-compeller, the All-sublime. (59:23)
And to Allah belong the East and the West; whither so ever you turn, there is the Face of
Allah. (2:115)
And He is Allah in the heavens and the earth; He knows your secrets, and what you publish.
(6:3)
He is the First and the Last, the Outward and the Inward; He has knowledge of everything.
(57:3)
He is the Living, the Everlasting. (2:255)
Allah, is the Everlasting, [Who] has not begotten, and has not been begotten and equal to
Him is not any one. (112:2-4)
Why does the Holy Qur’an raise such issues? Is it for the sake of propounding mysterious
matters incomprehensible to man who, according to al-Nadawi, lacks the knowledge of its
essential principles, and then asking him to accept them without comprehending their meaning?
Or does the Holy Qur’an actually want him to know Allah through the attributes and descriptions
that have come in it? And, if this is true, what reliable approach does it recommend? How is it
possible to acquire this knowledge through the study of the natural phenomena? The study of the
creation teaches us that Allah has knowledge of all things; that is, all things that He has made
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were created knowingly and wisely. But the Holy Qur’an expects us not only to know this but
also stresses that:
Indeed Allah has the knowledge of everything. (2:231)
And not so much as the weight of an atom in earth or heaven escapes from thy Master, neither
is aught smaller than that, or greater, but in a Manifest Book. (10:61)
Say: AIf the sea were ink for the Words of my Master, the sea would be spent before the
Words of my Master are spent, though We brought replenishment the like of it. A (18:109)
This means that Allah`s knowledge is infinite and so is His power. How and wherefore is it
possible through perception and observation of the world of creation to reach the conclusion that
the Creator`s Knowledge and Power are infinite? The Holy Qur’an, similarly, propounds
numerous other problems of the kind. For instance, it mentions al-lawh al-mahfuz (the Protected
Tablet), lawh al-mahw wa al->ithbat (The Tablet of Expunction and Affirmation), jabr and
ikhtiyar (determinism and free will), wahi (revelation) and ilham (intuition), etc.; none of which
are susceptible to inquiry through the empirical study of the world of creation.
It must be admitted that the Holy Qur’an, definitely, has raised these problems in the form of
a series of lessons and has emphasized their importance through advice and exhortation. The
following verses of the Holy Qur’an may be quoted in this regard:
What?! Do they not meditate on the Qur’an? Or is it that there are locks upon their hearts?
(47:24)
(This is) a Scripture that We have revealed unto thee, full of blessing, that they may ponder on
its revelations, and that men of understanding may reflect. (38:29)
Inevitably, we are forced to accept that the Holy Qur’an assumes the existence of a reliable
method for understanding the meaning of these facts which have not been revealed as a series of
obscure incomprehensible things out of the reach of the human intellect.
The scope of problems propounded by the Holy Qur’an in the sphere of metaphysics is far
greater than what can be resolved or answered through the study of physical creation. This is the
reason why the Muslims have pursued these problems, at times through spiritual and gnostic
efforts, and at other times through speculative and rational approach.
I wonder whether those who claim that the Holy Qur’an considers the study of nature as the
sole, sufficient means for the solution of metaphysical problems, can give a satisfactory answer
with regard to the various problems propounded by it, a characteristic which is specifically
relevant to this great heavenly Book.
Ali’s sole source of inspiration in his exposition of the problems mentioned in the previous
chapters is the Holy Qur’an, and the sole motive behind his discourses is exegetical. Perhaps, had
it not been for Ali (A.S) , the rationalistic and speculative aspects of the Holy Qur’an would have
forever remained without an interpretation.
After these brief introductory remarks on the value of these issues, we shall go on to cite some
relevant examples from Nahjul-Balagha.
The Divine Essence and Attributes
In this section, we shall cite some examples of Nahjul-Balagha’s treatment of the problems of
theology relevant to the Divine Essence and Attributes. Later, we shall make a brief comparative
study of the issue in various schools then conclude our discussion on this aspect of NahjulBalagha.
However, before proceeding further, I solicit the reader`s pardon on account of the discussion
in the last three sections becoming a bit technical and philosophical, something which is not very
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welcome for those who are not used to it. But what is the remedy? Discussing a book such as
Nahjul-Balagha does entail such ups and downs. For this reason, we shall limit ourselves to
giving only a few examples from the book on this subject and refrain from any elaborate
discussion. This is so because if we were to comment on every sentence in Nahjul-Balagha, the
result will be, as is said,
My Mathnawi requires seventy mounds of paper.
THE DIVINE ESSENCE
Does Nahjul-Balagha have anything to say about the Divine Essence and how to define it?
The answer is: Yes, and a lot. However, much of the discussion revolves around the point that
the Divine Essence is the Absolute and Infinite Being, without a quiddity. His Essence accepts
neither limits nor boundaries, as is the case with other beings, static or changeable, which are
limited and finite. A changeable being is one which constantly transcends its former limits and
assumes new ones. But such is not the Divine Essence. Quiddity, which may qualify and confine
Him within limits of finitude, is not applicable to Him. None of the aspects of beings are devoid
of His Presence, and no kind of imperfection is applicable to Him except the absence of any
imperfection whatsoever: The only thing Amissing in Him is absence of defect or inadequacy of
any kind. The sole kind of negation applicable to Him is the negation of all negations. The only
kind of non-being attributable to Him is the negation of any kind of imperfection in relation to
Him. He is free from all shades of non-being which characterize creatures and effects. He is free
from finitude, multiplicity, divisibility and need. The only territory that He does not enter is that
of nothingness and non-existence. He is with everything, but not in anything, and nothing is with
Him. He is not within things, though not out of them. He is over and above every kind of
condition, state, similarity and likeness. This is so because these qualities relate to limited, and
they determinate beings characterized by quiddity:
AHe is with everything but not in the sense of [physical] nearness. He is different from
everything but not in the sense of separation. (Sermon 1 )
AHe is not inside things in the sense of physical [pervasion or] penetration and is not outside
them in the sense of [physical] exclusion [for exclusion entails a kind of finitude]. (Sermon 186)
AHe is distinct from things because He overpowers them, and the things are distinct from Him
because of their subjection to Him. (Sermon 152)
That is to say, His distinctness from things lies in the fact that He has authority and control
over them, all of them. However, His power, authority and sovereignty, unlike those of the
creatures, are not accompanied with simultaneous weakness, subjugation and subjection. His
distinction and separateness from things lie in the fact that things are totally subject to His power
and authority, and that which is subject and subordinate can never be like the one who subjugates
and commands control over it. His separateness from things does not lie in physical separation
but is on account of the distinction which lies between the Provider and the provided, the Perfect
and the imperfect, the Powerful and the weak.
These kinds of ideas are replete in Ali`s discourses. All the problems which shall be discussed
later are based on the principle that the Divine Essence is Absolute and Infinite, and the concepts
of limit, form and condition do not apply to it.
DIVINE UNITY: ONTOLOGICAL, NOT A NUMERICAL CONCEPT
Another feature of Tawhid (monotheism) as propounded by Nahjul-Balagha is that the Divine
Unity is not numerical but is something else. Numerical unity means the oneness of something
which has the possibility of recurrence or multiplicity. It is always possible to imagine that the
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quiddity and form of an existent is realizable in another individual being. In such cases, the unity
of an individual possessing that quiddity is numerical oneness and stands as the antithesis of
duplicity or multiplicity.
AIt is one means that there is unique, none, nobody, nothing is like it. Inevitably, this kind of
unity entails the quality of being restricted in number, which is a defect because one is less in
number as compared to two or more of its kind. But if a being is such that the assumption of a
recurrence with regard to it is impossible, since it is infinite and unlimited, and if we assume
another like it exists, it will follow that it is the same as the first being, or that it is something
which is not similar to it and, therefore, it cannot be called a second instance of it. In such a case,
unity is not numerical. That is, this kind of unity is not one opposed to duplicity or multiplicity.
And when it is said, AIt is one, it does not mean that there are no two, three or more of its kind,
but it means that a second to it is inconceivable.
This notion can further be clarified through an example. We know that the astronomers and
physicists are not in agreement about the dimensions of the universe, whether it is limited in size
or infinite. Some scientists have favored the idea of an unlimited and infinite universe; others
claim that the universe is limited in dimensions so that if we travel in any direction, we shall
reach a point beyond which there is no space. The other issue is whether the universe in which
we live is the only universe in existence, or if there are other universes existing besides it.
Evidently, the assumption of another physical world beyond our own is a corollary to the
assumption that our universe is not infinite. Only in this case is it possible to assume the
existence of, say, two physical universes each of which is limited and has finite dimensions. But
if we assume that our universe is infinite, it is not possible to entertain the assumption of another
universe existing beyond it. Whatever we were to assume would be identical with this universe
or a part of it.
The assumption of another being similar to the Being of the One GodCsuch as the assumption
of another physical universe besides an infinite material universeCamounts to assuming the
impossible, for the Being of Allah is absolute: Absolute Selfhood and Absolute Reality.
The notion that the Divine Unity is not a numerical concept, and that qualifying it by a
number is synonymous with imposing limits on the Divine Essence, is repeatedly discussed by
Nahjul-Balagha:
AHe is the One, but not in a numerical sense. (Sermon 152)
AHe is not confined by limits, nor is He counted by numbers. (Sermon 186)
AHe who points to Him admits for Him limitations; and he who admits limitations for Him
has numbered Him. (Sermon 1)
AHe who qualifies Him limits Him. He who limits Him numbers Him. He who numbers Him
denies His pre-eternity. (Sermon 152)
AEverything associated with unity is deficient except Him. (Sermon 65)
How beautiful, profound, and full of meaning is the last statement! It says that everything
except the Divine Essence is limited if it is one. That is, everything for which another of its same
kind is conceivable is a limited being and an addition of another individual would increase its
number. But this is not true of the Unity of the Divine Essence, for Allah`s Unity lies in His
greatness and infinity for which a peer, a second, an equal or a match is not conceivable.
This concept, that the Divine Unity is not a numerical notion, is exclusively an Islamic
concept, original and profound, unprecedented in any other school of thought. Even the Muslim
philosophers only gradually realized its profundity through contemplating on the spirit of the
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original Islamic texts, in particular the discourses of Ali (A.S) , ultimately formally incorporating
it in the Islamic metaphysical philosophy. There is no trace of this profound concept in the
writings of the early Islamic philosophers like al-Farabi and Ibn Sina (Avicenna). Only the later
philosophers ushered this concept into their philosophic thinking calling it AReally True Unity, in
their terminology.
Allah, The First and the Last; the Manifest and the Hidden
One of many issues discussed in Nahjul-Balagha is that Allah is the First and the Last, the
Hidden and the Manifest. Of course, like other notions, this, too, has been deduced from the
Holy Qur’an, although here we are not going to quote the verses of the Holy Qur’an. Allah is the
First, but His precedence is not temporal so as to be in contradiction with His being the Last. He
is the Manifest, but not in the sense of being physically visible or perceptible by the senses; His
Manifestness does not contradict His Hiddenness. In fact, His being the First is identical to His
being the Last; similarly, His being Manifest and Hidden are identical; they are not two different
things:
Praise to Allah, for whom one condition does not precede another, so that He may he the First
before being the Last or may be Manifest before being Hidden. (Sermon 65)
Time is not His accomplice, nor does He need the assistance of tools and agents His Being
transcends time. His Existence transcends nothingness and His pre-eternity transcends all
beginning. (Sermon 186)
The Divine Essence`s transcendence over time, nothingness, beginning, and end is one of the
most profound concepts of al-hikma philosophy. Allah`s pre-eternity does not mean that Allah
has always existed. Certainly Allah has always existed but The Divine pre-eternity (azaliyyah) is
something greater in meaning than >existence at all times`; because, >existing at all times`
assumes existence in time; but Allah`s Being has not only been at all times, It precedes time
itself. This is the meaning of The Divine pre-eternity. This shows that His precedence is
something other than temporal precedence. Praise to Allah Whose creation bears testimony to
His Existence; temporality (huduth) of whose creation is the evidence of His preternity the
similarity and likeness among whose creation proves that He is unique. The senses do not
perceive Him and nothing can conceal Him. (Sermon 152)
That is to say, Allah is both Hidden and Manifest. By Himself, He is Manifest but is Hidden
from, undetectable by, the human senses. His Hiddenness from the senses is due to man`s own
limitations, not because of Him.
It needs no proof that existence is synonymous with manifestation; the more powerful the
existence of a being, the more manifest it will be. Conversely, the weaker its being is and the
more intermingled with non-being, the less manifest it is to itself and to others.
For everything, there are two modes of being: its being-in-itself (wujud fi nafsih), and its
being-for-others (wujud fi ghayrih). The being of everything for us depends upon the structure of
our senses and on certain special conditions. Accordingly, the manifestation of a thing, a being,
is also of two kinds: its manifestation-in-itself (zuhur fi nafsih) and its manifestation-for-others
(wujud fi ghayrih).
Our senses, on account of their limitations, are able to perceive only a limited number of finite
objects possessing the characteristics of similarity and opposition. The senses can perceive
colours, shapes, sounds, etc., which are limited temporally and specifically; that is, their
existence is confined within a particular time and place. Now, if there existed a uniform light,
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always and everywhere, it would not be perceptible. A continuous monotonous sound heard
always, constantly, and everywhere, it would not be audible.
The Being of Allah, the Absolute Being and the Absolute Reality, is not confined to any
particular time or place and is hidden from our senses. But Allah in Himself is absolutely
manifest; the perfection of His manifestness, which follows from the perfection of His Being, is
itself the cause of His hiddenness from our senses. The two aspects of His manifestness and
hiddenness are one and the same in His Essence. He is hidden because He is perfectly manifest,
and this perfect manifestness conceals Him:
You art hidden on account of Your perfect brilliance; You Art the Manifest, the Hidden in
Your manifestness. The veil on Your face is also Your; so manifest You art, Your manifestness
conceals Thee from the world’s eyes.
AN APPRAISAL
An appraisal, however brief, of the approach of Nahjul-Balagha and its comparison with that
of other schools of thought is essential for discovering the true worth of its views on the
problems of theology. We shall confine ourselves to the brief, though not quite sufficient,
examples quoted in the foregoing pages and proceed to evaluate them.
The subject of the Divine Essence and Attributes is one which has been discussed a lot by the
ancient and modern philosophers, mystics and Sufis of the East and of the West. But, in general,
their method and approach is totally different from that of Nahjul-Balagha whose approach is
highly original and unprecedented. Only in the Holy Qur’an can a precedent for Nahjul-Balagha
be found. Apart from the Holy Qur’an, we do not find any other source that provides some
ground for the discourses of Nahjul-Balagha.
As pointed out earlier, some scholars, because of their failure to trace back to some earlier
source the notions elaborated in Nahjul-Balagha have questioned the authenticity of ascription of
these discourses to Ali (A.S) . They have suggested that these discourses appeared in a later
period, after the appearance of the Mu`tazilites and the assimilation of the Greek ideology,
heedless of the following saying: AThe mean earth with the sublime heaven does not compare!
How ignorant it is to compare the Mu`tazilite and the Greek ideologies with the teachings of
Nahjul-Balagha!
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Nahjul-Balagha and the Notions of Kalam
While ascribing all the Attributes of perfection to Allah, the Exalted One, Nahjul-Balagha
negates any separation of these Attributes from His Essence and does not consider them as an
appendage of the Divine Essence. On the other hand, the Ash`arites, as we know, consider the
Divine Attributes to be additional to the Essence, so the Mu`tazilites negate all Attributes.
An Ash`arite believes in the Separation [of the Attributes from the Essence]
A Mu`tazilite speaks of subservience [of the Attributes to the Essence]. This has led some
people to imagine that the discourses found in Nahjul-Balagha on this topic are fabrications of a
later period under the influence of Mu`tazilite views whereas anyone with some insight can
readily perceive that the Attributes negated by Nahjul-Balagha with respect to the Divine
Essence are qualities of imperfection and limitation: the Divine Essence, being infinite and
limitless, necessitates identity of the Attributes with the Essence, not negation of the Attributes
as professed by the Mu`tazilites. Had the Mu`tazilites reached such a notion, they would never
have negated the Divine Attributes, considering them subservient to the Essence.
The same is true of the views on the creating or temporality (huduth) of the Holy Qur’an in
sermon 184. One may imagine that these passages of Nahjul-Balagha relate to the latter heated
controversies among the Islamic theologians (mutakallimun) regarding the eternity (qidam) or
temporality (huduth) of the Holy Qur’an and which might have been added to Nahjul-Balagha
during the latter centuries. However, a little reflection will reveal that the discourses of NahjulBalagha relevant to this issue have nothing to do with the debate on the Holy Qur’an being either
created or uncreated, which was a meaningless controversy, but relevant to the creative
command (amr takwini), and to the Will of the Almighty. Ali (A.S) says that Allah`s Will and
Command represent the Divine Acts and, therefore, so are ahadith posterior to the Essence, for if
the Command and the Will were co-eternal and identical with His Essence, they will have,
necessarily, to be considered His associates and equals. Ali (A.S) says the following:
When He decrees the creation of a thing, He says to it, ABe, and it assumes existence; but not
through an audible voice which strikes the ear or a cry that can be heard. Indeed the speech of
Allah, glory be to Him, is but His created Act, which did not exist before [it came into
existence]. Had it (The Divine speech) been itself eternal, it would be another god besides Him.
(Sermon 186)
In addition, there are other musnad traditions on this subject related from Ali (A.S) , only
some of which have been collected in Nahjul-Balagha, and can be traced back to his time. On
this basis, there is no room for doubting their genuineness. If any superficial resemblance is
observed between the statements made by Ali (A.S) and some views held by the Mu`tazilites,
the probability to be allowed in this connection is that some of his ideas were adopted by the
Mu`tazilites.
The controversies of the Muslim theologians (mutakallimun), both the Shi`a and the Sunni,
the Ash`arites as well as the Mu`tazilites, generally revolved around the doctrine of rational basis
of ethical judgment concerning good and evil (al-husn wa al-qubh al->aqliyyan). This doctrine,
nothing but a practical principle operating in the human society, is considered by the
mutakallimun to be also applicable to the Divine sphere and govern the laws of creation; but we
find no trace of it in Nahjul-Balagha. Similarly, there is no sign of it in the Holy Qur’an. Had the
ideas and beliefs of the mutakallimun found their way into Nahjul-Balagha, first of all, the traces
of this doctrine should have been found in that book.
Nahjul-Balagha and Philosophical Concepts
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Some others, having come across certain words such as Aexistence (wujud), Anon-existence
(>adam), Atemporality (huduth) and Apre-eternity (qidam) and so on in Nahjul-Balagha, have
been led to assume that these terms entered the Muslim intellectual world under the influence of
the Greek philosophy and were inserted, intentionally or unintentionally, into the discourses of
Ali (A.S) . Had those who advocate this view gone deeper into the meanings of these words, they
would not have heeded such a hypothesis. The method and approach adopted in the arguments of
Nahjul-Balagha are completely different from thse of the philosophers who lived before Sayyid
al- Radi or during his time, or even those born many centuries after the compilation of NahjulBalagha.
Presently, we shall not discuss the metaphysics of the Greek or of the Alexandrians (the neoPlatonic) philosophy but shall confine ourselves to the metaphysical views propounded by alFarabi, Ibn Sina (Avicenna) and Khwajah Nasir al-Din al-Tusi. Undoubtedly, Muslim
philosophers introduced new challenges into philosophy under the influence of Islamic teachings
which had not existed before, and in addition to them, introducing radically original ways of
demonstration and inference to explain and argue their points with regard to some other
problems. Nevertheless, what we learn from Nahjul-Balagha is obviously different from this
approach. My teacher, `allama Tabataba`i, in the preface to his discourse on the traditions of
Islamic scholarship, writes: AThese statements help resolve a number of problems of theological
philosophy. Apart from the fact that Muslims were not acquainted with these notions, and they
were incomprehensible to the Arabs, basically there is no trace of them in the writings and
statements of pre-Islamic philosophers whose books were translated into Arabic and, similarly,
they do not appear in the works of Muslim philosophers, Arab or Persian. These problems
remained obscure and unintelligible, and every commentator discussed them according to his
own conjecture until the eleventh century of the Hijra (17th century A.D.). Only then were they
properly understood for the first time, that is, the problem of the True Unity (al-wahda al-haqqa)
of the Necessary Being (wajib al-wujud) (a non-numerical unity) ; the problem that the proof of
the existence of the Necessary Being is identical with the proof of His Unity (since the Necessary
Being is Absolute Existence, His Being implies His Unity) ; the problem that the Necessary
Existent is the One known-in-His-Essence (ma`lum bil dhat) ; the Necessary Being is known
directly without the need of an intermediary, and that the reality of everything else is known
through the Necessary Being, not vice versa. [7]
The arguments of early Muslim philosophers like al-Farabi, Ibn Sina and Khwajah Nasir alDin al-Tusi, such as the discussions on the Divine Essence and Attributes like Unity, Simplicity
(basata), Self-Sufficiency, Knowledge, Power, Will, Providence, and so on, revolve around the
conception of the necessity of existence (wujub al-wujud), from which all of them are derived,
and the necessity of existence itself is indirectly deduced. In this fashion, it is demonstrated that
the existence of all possible existent beings (mumkinat) cannot be explained without assuming
the existence of the Necessary Being. Although the argument used for proving the truth of this
argument cannot be called a demonstration of the impossible (burhan khulf), in view of its
indirect mode of inference, it resembles burhan khulf and, hence, it fails to provide a completely
satisfactory demonstration, for it does not explain the necessity of the existence of the Necessary
Being. Ibn Sina, in his Al->Isharat, claims that he has succeeded in discovering the AWhy?
(lima) of it and, hence, chooses to call his argument Aburhan al-siddiqin (burhan limmi, i.e.
causal proof). However, the latter philosophers considered his exposition of Athe Why? (lima) as
insufficient.
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In Nahjul-Balagha, the necessity of existence is never used to explain the existence of
possible beings (mumkinat). That on which this book relies for this purpose is the real criterion
of the necessity of existence, that is, the absolute reality and the pure being of the Divine
Essence.
`Allama Tabataba’i, in the above-mentioned work, while explaining one hadith by Ali (A.S) ,
found in Al-Tawhid of Sheikh al-Saduq, says the following: AThe basis of our discussion rests
upon the principle that the Divine Being is a reality that does not accept any limits or restrictions
whatsoever. Because Allah, the Most Exalted, is the Absolute Reality from Whom the existence
of all other beings is derived within the ontological limits and characteristics peculiar to
themselves, and their existence depends on that of this Absolute Being. [8]
In Nahjul-Balagha, the very basis of all discussions revolving on the Divine Essence rests on
the position that Allah is the Absolute and Infinite Being Who transcends all limits and finitude.
No point of space time, or anything at all is devoid of Him. He is with everything, in everything,
yet nothing is with Him or in Him. Since He is the Absolute and the Infinite, He transcends time,
number, limit and proximity (all kinds of quiddities). That is, time and space, number and limit
are applicable to a lower stage, i.e. the stage of the Divine actions and of creation. Everything is
from Him and returns to Him. He is the First of the first and the Last of the last. He precedes
everything and succeeds everything.
This is the idea that forms the axis of all discourses of Nahjul-Balagha and of which there is
no trace in the works of al-Farabi, Ibn Sina, Ibn Rushd, al-Ghazali, and Khwajah Nasir al-Din alTusi.
As pointed out by `allama Tabataba`i, these profound discussions of theology proper
(ilahiyyat bil-ma`na al->akhass) are based on a series of inter-related problems which have been
posited in metaphysics (al->umur al->ammah). [9] An elaborate discussion of those theological
problems and their relevant issues mentioned above is outside the scope of our present
discussion.
There are two reasons for rejecting the claims that the theological discussions of NahjulBalagha were inventions of later writers familiar with philosophical notions. Firstly, the kind of
problems discussed in Nahjul-Balagha were not at all raised by any philosopher till the time of
Sayyid al-Radhi, compiler of Nahjul-Balagha. That the Unity of the Necessary Being is not of
the numerical kind and that the Divine Essence precedes number, that the existence of the
Necessary Being implies Its Unity; the simple reality of the Necessary Being; His immanence
and other such notions were not known to philosophy during or before Sayyid al-Radhi`s times.
Secondly, the axes of arguments presented in this book are altogether different from the axes of
philosophical discussions which have been prevalent throughout history until the present day.
Nahjul-Balagha and Western Philosophic Yought
Nahjul-Balagha has played a great role in the history of Eastern Philosophy. Mulla Sadra,
who brought a revolution in theological thought (al-hikmat al->ilahiyya), was under the
profound influence of Ali`s discourses. His method of argument with regard to the problems of
Tawhid is the method of inferring the Essence from the Essence, and also deducing the Attributes
and Acts from the Essence, and all these arguments are based on the belief that there exists the
Necessary Being only. These arguments are based on radically different general principles which
are elaborated in his system of metaphysics.
Eastern theological thought (al-hikmat al->ilahiyya) attained fruition and strength from the
sources of Islamic teachings and was firmly established on inviolable foundations. However,
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theological philosophy in the West remained deprived of such a source of inspiration. The
widespread philosophical malaise of inclination towards materialism in the West has many
causes whose discussion is outside the scope of our discourse. But we believe that the major
cause of this phenomenon is the weakness and insufficiency of theological conceptions of
Western religious thought. [10] Anyone interested in making a comparative study of the
approaches pointed out in these chapters should first study the arguments advanced by Western
philosophers such as Anselm, Descartes, Spinoza, Leibnitz, Kant and others for proving the
existence of Allah and their discussions about acceptance or rejection of various arguments, then
he should compare them with the burhan al-siddiqin argument advanced by Mulla Sadra under
the inspiration of Ali’s words. He would see for himself the wide chasm that separates one from
the other.
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SECTION THREE
Suluk and `Ibada
`Ibada, or service, of the One God and the negation of everything else, as an object of service
and worship, is one of the essential teachings of God-sent Messengers, a feature never absent
from the teachings of any prophet. As we know, in the sacred religion of Islam, too, worship
occupies a prominent position, with the only difference that worship in Islam is not regarded as a
series of devotional rituals separate from everyday life and as pertaining solely to another world.
Worship in Islam is located in the context of life and is an unalienable part of the Islamic
philosophy of life.
Aside from the fact that some of the Islamic acts of worship are performed collectively, Islam
has structured them in such a fashion that their performance automatically ensures the
performance of other duties of life as well. For instance, salat is a complete expression of man`s
servitude and surrender to Allah. It has been specified in such a manner that even a man who
desires to pray in a lonely corner is forced to observe certain things of moral and social
relevance, such as cleanliness, respect for the rights of others, observance of punctuality,
possession of a sense of direction, control over one`s emotions, and expression of good-will and
benevolence towards other righteous servants of Allah.
From the Islamic point of view, every good and beneficial action, if performed with a pure,
God-seeking intention, is viewed as an act of worship. Hence, learning, acquisition of knowledge
and livelihood and social services, if performed for Allah`s sake, are acts of worship.
Nevertheless, Islam also specifies a system of rituals and formal acts of worship such as salat,
sawm (fasting) etc., each having a specific philosophy for performing it.
The Levels of Worship
Men have varying attitudes towards worship. Not all of them view it in the same light. For
some, worship is a kind of deal, a barter and an exchange of labour performed for wages. Like an
ordinary worker who spends his time and labour for the benefit of an employer and expects a
daily wage in return, the devotee also endeavours for the sake of the Divine reward, which,
however, he would receive in the next world. Like the labourer, for whom his labour bears fruit
in the form of his wages and who would not work except for a wage, the benefit of the devotee’s
worship, according to the outlook of this particular group of devotees, lies in the wages and
rewards which shall be granted to the devotees in the form of the things and the means of
comfort in the other world.
However, every employer pays wages in return for the benefit which he derives from his
employees, but what benefit can the Master of the heavens derive from the labours of a weak and
feeble servant of His? Moreover, if we assume that the Great Employer does remunerate His
servants in the form of the blessings and rewards of the Hereafter, then why does He not reward
them without any effort and consumption of labour and energy? These are questions which never
occur to this class of the pious. From their viewpoint, the essence of worship lies in certain
visible bodily movements and oscillations of the tongue. This is one attitude towards worship.
Unrefined and vulgar it may be, it is, in the words of Ibn Sina, as he puts it in the ninth chapter of
his book titled Al->Isharat, AThe attitude of the unenlightened and God-ignorant is acceptable
only by the plebeians.
Another approach towards worship is that of the enlightened. Here, the aforementioned
problems of worker and employer, labour and wage, have no relevance. How can they be
relevant when worship is viewed by them as the ladder to attain nearness to Allah, as the means
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of human sublimity, edification and upliftment of the soul and its flight to the invisible sphere of
spiritual greatness, an invigorating exercise of one’s spiritual faculties and a triumph of the spirit
over the corporeal? It is the highest expression of the gratitude and love of the human being
towards his Creator, his declaration of love for the Most Perfect and the Absolutely Beautiful
One and, finally, his wayfaring towards Allah!
According to this approach, worship has a form and a soul, an appearance and an inner
meaning. That which is expressed by the tongue and the movements of other parts of the body, is
the form, the outer mold, and the appearance of worship. Its soul and meaning is something else.
The soul of worship is inextricably connected with the significance attached to worship by the
devotee, his attitude towards it, his inner motive that drives him to it, the ultimate satisfaction
and benefit he derives from it, and the extent to which he covers the Divine path in his journey
towards Allah.
The Approach of Nahjul-Balagha
What is the approach and the attitude adopted by Nahjul-Balagha towards worship? NahjulBalagha takes an enlightened view of worship or, rather, it is, after the Holy Qur’an and the
Sunna of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , the main source of inspiration
towards the enlightened approach to worship in the Islamic tradition.
As we know, of the most sublime and imaginative themes of Islamic literature, both Arabic
and Persian, is the relationship between the ardent love of the devotee for the Divine Essence
expressed in delicate and elegant passages in the form of sermons, prayers, allegories, parables,
both in prose and in verse. When we compare them with the pre-Islamic notions prevalent in the
regions which subsequently constituted the domains of Islam, it is surprising to observe the
gigantic leap that was taken by Islam in bestowing depth, scope, sweetness, and delicacy to
human thought. Islam transformed a people who worshipped idols, images, fire, or degraded the
Eternal God to the level of a human AFather, and whose flight of imagination prompted them to
identify the AFather with the ASon, or who officially considered the Ahura Mazda to be a
material form whose statues they erected in every place, into a people whose intellect could
grasp and evolve the most abstract of concepts, the most sophisticated of ideas, the most elegant
of thoughts and the most sublime of notions.
How was the human intellect so radically transformed? What revolutionized those people’s
logic, elevated their thoughts, refined their emotions and sublimated their values? How did it all
happen? The al-Mu`allaqat al-sab`a and Nahjul-Balagha stand only one generation apart from
each other. Both of those generations of Arabs were proverbial in eloquence and literary genius.
As to the content, they stand as far apart as the earth and the sky. The former sing of the beauty
of the beloved one, the pleasures of love, of gallantry, of horses, spears, the nightly assaults and
compose eulogy and lampoon; the latter contains the most sublime of the ideologies of man.
In order to elucidate the approach of Ali (A.S) towards worship, we now shall proceed to cite
few examples from Nahjul-Balagha, beginning with a statement about the differences in various
approaches of people towards worship.
The Worship of Freemen
ASome people worship Allah out of their desire for rewards; this is the worship of traders.
Another group worships Allah out of fear; this is the worship of slaves. Yet another group
worships Allah out of gratitude; this is the worship of freemen. [1]
AEven if Allah had not warned those disobedient to Him of chastisement, it was obligatory by
way of gratefulness for His favors that He should not be disobeyed. [2]
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ALord! I have not worshipped Thee out of fear of Your Hell nor out of greed for Your
Paradise; but I found Thee worthy of being worshipped, so I worshipped Thee. [3]
Remembering Allah
The roots of all spiritual, moral and social aspects of worship lie in one thing: the
remembrance of Allah and the obliviousness towards everything else. In one of its verses, the
Holy Qur’an refers to the educative and the invigorating effect of worship and says the
following:
Salat protects from unseemly acts. (29:45)
Adhere to salat so that you may remain in My remembrance. (20:14)
This is a reminder of the fact that the person who prays remembers Allah and lives by the
knowledge that He is always observing and watching him. He does not forget that he himself is
His servant.
The remembrance of Allah, which is the aim of worship, is the burnishing of the heart and the
object of its purification. It prepares the heart for the reflection of the Divine Light in it.
Speaking of the remembrance of Allah and of the meaning of worship, Ali (A.S) says the
following:
ACertainly Allah, the Glorified One, has made His remembrance the burnishing of the hearts
which makes them hear after deafness, see after blindness and which makes them submissive
after unruliness. In all periods and times when there were no prophets, there were individuals to
whom He spoke in whispers through their conscience and intellect. [4]
These sentences speak of the wonderful effect of the Divine remembrance on the heart, to the
extent of making it capable of receiving the Divine inspiration and bringing it in intimate
communion with Allah.
The Levels of Devotion
In the same sermon are explained the various spiritual states and levels attained by the
worshippers in the course of their devotional pursuit. Ali (A.S) describes such men in these
words:
AThe angels have surrounded them and peace is showered upon them. The doors of heaven
are opened for them and the abodes of bliss, of which He had informed them, have been prepared
for them. He is pleased with their struggle and admires their station. When they call upon Him,
they breathe the fragrance of His forgiveness and mercy. [5]
Nights of the Devout
From the point of view of Nahjul-Balagha, the world of worship is another world altogether.
Its delights are not comparable with any pleasures of the three-dimensional corporeal world. The
world of worship effuses movement, progress and journey, a journey which is quite unlike
physical travel to new lands. It is a spiritual journey to the Anameless city. It does not distinguish
night from day because it is always drenched in light. In it, there is no trace of darkness or pain,
for it is purity, sincerity, and delight all over. Happy is the man, in the view of Nahjul-Balagha,
who sets his foot into this world and is refreshed by its invigorating breeze. Such a man, then, no
longer cares whether he lays his head on a silk pillow or on a stone:
ABlessed is he who carries out his duties towards his Master and endures the hardships they
entail. He allows himself no sleep at night until it overwhelms him. Then he lies down with the
palm of his hand under his head as his pillow. He is among those whom the thought of the Day
of Judgment keeps awake at nights, whose bed remains vacant, whose lips hum in Allah’s
remembrance and whose sins have been erased by their prolonged earnest supplication for
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forgiveness These are the AParty of Allah; A... surely [members of] Allah`s Party are the ones
who prosper! [6]
The nights of the men of Allah are like shiny days,
Gloomy nights do not exist for the enlightened.
The Profile of the Pious
In the last section we discussed the viewpoint of Nahjul-Balagha with respect to worship. We
found that Nahjul-Balagha does not regard worship as a series of cut-and-dried, lifeless rituals.
The bodily movements constitute the apparent motion of worship while its soul and meaning are
something else. Only when endowed with meaning and spirit is the worship worthy of its name.
Real worship means the transcending of the three-dimensional world into the spiritual sphere,
which is a world of perpetual delight and sublimation for the soul and the source of vigour and
strength for the heart which has its own pleasures.
There are many references to the characteristics of the pious and the devout in NahjulBalagha. Often, Nahjul-Balagha sketches the profiles of the pious and the devout and describes
their characteristic fear of Allah, their devotion and delight in worship, their constant sorrow and
grief over sins. It describes their frequent recitation of the Holy Qur’an, their occasional ecstatic
experiences and states which they achieve in the course of their worshipful endeavours and
struggle against their corporeal self. At times, it discusses the role of worship in lifting the
human soul from the pall of sins and black deeds and often points out to the effect of worship in
curing moral and psychological ailments. At other times, it speaks about the unadulterated,
unsurpassable and pure delights and ecstasies of the followers of the spiritual path, the sincere
worshippers of Allah.
Night Vigils
ADuring the night, they are on their feet reciting the verses of the Holy Qur’an one after the
other, tarrying to deliberate about their meanings and thereby instilling gnostic pathos into their
souls and by means of it seek remedy for their spiritual ailments. What they hear from the Holy
Qur’an seems to them as if they are witnessing it with their own eyes. If they come across a verse
arousing eagerness (for Paradise), they lean towards it eagerly, their souls clinging to it avidly, as
if they are approaching their ultimate goal. And when they come across a verse that instills fear,
their hearts’ ear is turned in attention to it as if they themselves hear the cracking sound of the
flames of Hell Fire. Their backs are bent in reverence and their foreheads, palms, knees and toes
rest on the ground as they beseech Allah for salvation. But when the day dawns, they are kind,
patient, scholarly, pious and righteous. [7]
THE SPIRITUAL EXPERIENCE
AHe has revived his intellect and slain his self until his body became lean and its bulkiness
shrunk, and stubbornness turned into tenderness (of heart). Then an effulgence, like a
thunderbolt, descended upon his heart, illuminating the path before him, opening all the doors
and leading him straight into the gateway of Peace. Now his feet, carrying his body, are firmly
rooted in the position of safety (on the Sirat) and comfort because he kept his heart busy with
good deeds and won the good pleasure of his God. [8]
As we observe, this passage speaks of another kind of life, the life of intellect. It speaks of
struggle against the carnal self (al-nafs al->ammara bil su’) and its destruction; it speaks of
exercises of the spirit and the body, about lightening which, as a result of such an exercise,
illuminates the being of the follower and brightens his spiritual world; it speaks of the stages and
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targets that the devotee’s earnest soul reaches on its way until it attains the last and the highest
stage of man’s spiritual journey. The Holy Qur’an says the following:
O man! You art labouring unto thy Master laboriously, and thou shalt encounter Him. (84:6)
Ali (A.S) , in the passage cited above, speaks about the inner peace, contentment and
tranquility of the soul which a man’s restless, disturbed and anxious heart ultimately attains:
Indeed, the hearts are at rest in Allah >s remembrance. (13:28)
In sermon 228, Ali (A.S) describes the significance attached by this class of devotees to
spiritual life-the life of the heart: AThey see that the worldly people attach great importance to
the death of their bodies, but they themselves attach much greater importance to the death of
hearts of the living (Sermon 230).
Ali (A.S) describes the ecstatic eagerness of the earnest souls which impels them to move
onwards on the path of spiritual perfection in these words: AThey lived in the society and
participated in its affairs with their bodies, while their souls rested in the higher spiritual spheres.
[10]
AHad there been no preordained time of death for each of them, their spirits would not have
remained in their bodies even for the twinkling of an eye because of their eagerness for the
Divine reward and their fear of chastisement. [11]
AHe did everything only for the sake of Allah, so Allah also made him His own. [12]
The esoteric knowledge and emanated insight, revealed to the heart of the follower of the
spiritual path as a result of self-education and self-refinement, is described in these words:
AThe knowledge that bursts upon them and surrounds them is endowed with absolute
certainty, and their soul attains the highest degree of conviction. They easily bear what the easygoing regard as harsh and unbearable. They endear what makes the ignorant recoil with horror.
[13]
The Purging of Sins
From the point of view of Islamic teachings, every sin leaves a black stain and the effects of
distortion in the human heart which, in turn, weakens a person`s aptitude for good and righteous
deeds. Consequently, it further causes him to deviate and commit other sins and foul deeds as
well. On the other hand, worship, prayer and remembrance of Allah develop a human being’s
religious consciousness, strengthen his aptitude for virtuous deeds and diminish his proneness to
sinning. This means that worship and remembrance of Allah efface the bad effects of sins,
replacing them with fondness for virtue and goodness.
In Nahjul-Balagha, there is a sermon which deals with salat, zakat and the delivering of the
trust back to its owner. Having emphasized the importance of salat, Ali (A.S) further says the
following: ACertainly, prayer removes sins like autumn strips leaves off from trees, and it
liberates you from the rope (of sins which is) tied around your neck. The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) likened it to a refreshing stream at one’s door in which one takes a purifying
bath five times during the day and the night. Will, after so much cleansing, any dirt remain on
him? [14]
Moral Remedy
In sermon 196, after making a reference to evil conduct, such as disobedience, oppression,
injustice and arrogance, Ali (A.S) says the following: AIt is on account of these perils that Allah
has encouraged His believing servants to perform salat and to pay zakat, to fast during the days
when fast is obligatory; these acts of worship provide their limbs with peace and rest, casting
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fear in their eyes, softening their spirits, cultivating a sense of humility in their hearts and
purging them from pride.
Intimacy and Ecstasy
ALord! You, of all beloved ones, are the most attached to Your lovers and the most ready to
trust those who place their trust in You. You see, You look into their secrets and know that
which lies in their conscience and are aware of the extent of their inner vision. Consequently,
their secrets are open to You and their hearts look up to You in eager apprehension. In
loneliness, Your remembrance is their friend and consolation. In distress Your help is their
protection. [15]
There are some people devoted to remembrance of Allah who have chosen it in place of all
worldly goods. [16]
In sermon 148, Ali (A.S) alludes to the coming times of the Promised al-Mahdi (), may
Allah hasten his appearance, and at the end of his discourse describes the courage, wisdom,
insight and attributes of the Imam () and his supporters. Then a group of people will be made
ready by Allah like the swords sharpened by the blacksmith. The ir sight would be brightened by
revelations the inner meaning of the Holy Qur’an would be familiar to their ears and they would
be given to drink the cup of wisdom every morning and evening. [17]
SECTION FOUR
GOVERNMENT AND JUSTICE
Nahjul-Balagha on State
One of the frequently discussed issues in Nahjul-Balagha is government and justice. To
anyone who goes through the book, it is evident to what extent Ali (A.S) is sensitive to the
issues related to government and justice. He considers them to be of paramount importance. For
those who lack an understanding of Islam but have knowledge of the teachings of other religions,
it is astonishing why a religious personality should devote himself to this sort of problem. Don’t
such problems relate to the world and worldly life?! Shouldn’t a sage keep aloof from the matters
of the world and society? They thus wonder.
On the other hand, such a thing is not at all surprising for one acquainted with the teachings of
Islam and the details of Ali`s life, i.e. that Ali (A.S) was brought up from childhood by the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Islam, that the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
, having taken him from his father as a child, had reared him in his home under his own care, that
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had trained Ali (A.S) and instructed him in his own
characteristic way, teaching him the secrets of Islam. Ali`s spirit had assimilated within itself the
doctrines of Islam and the code of its laws. Therefore, it is not unusual that Ali (A.S) should
have been as such; rather, it would have been astonishing if he was not as such, as we find him to
be. Does not the Holy Qur’an declare: AIndeed, We sent Our messengers with the clear signs,
and We sent down with them the Book and the Balance so that men might uphold justice (57:25)
?
In this verse, the establishment of justice has been declared as the objective of the mission of
all the prophets. The sanctity of justice is so stressed that it is considered the aim of all prophetic
missions. Hence, how were it possible that someone like Ali (A.S) , whose duty was to expound
the teachings of the Holy Qur’an and explain the doctrines and laws of Islam, might have
ignored this issue or, at least, accorded it a secondary importance?
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Those who neglect these issues in their teachings or imagine that these problems are only of
marginal significance, and that the central issues are those of ritual purity and impurity (taharah
and najasah), it is essential that they should re-examine their own beliefs and views.
The Importance of Politics
The first thing which must be examined is the significance and value attached to the issue of
government and justice by Nahjul-Balagha. Indeed, what is essentially the importance of these
problems in Islam? A thorough discussion of this question is obviously outside the scope of this
book, but by way of a casual reference, however, it seems inevitable to lightly touch upon. The
Holy Qur’an, in the verse where it commands the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) to
inform the people that Ali (A.S) would succeed him as the leader of the Muslims and the
Prophet’s khalifah, declares the following with extraordinary insistence: AO Messenger!
Communicate that which has been sent down to you from your Lord, for if you do not do so, you
will not have delivered His Message at all! (5:67).
Is there any other issue in Islam to which this much importance is attached? What other issue
is of such a significance that, if not communicated to the people, it would amount to the failure
of the prophetic mission itself?
During the battle of Uhud, when the Muslims were defeated and the rumor spread that the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had been killed, a group of Muslims fled from the
battlefield. Referring to this incident, the Holy Qur’an says the following: AMuhammed is
naught but a Messenger; Messengers have passed away before him. Why, if he should die or is
slain, will you turn about on your heels? (3:144)
`Allama Tabataba’i, in an article titled Wilayat wa-hakumat, derives the following conclusion
from the above verse: AIf the Messenger () is killed in battle, it should not in any way stall,
even temporarily, your struggle. Immediately afterwards, you should place yourselves under the
banner of the successor to the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and continue your
endeavor. In other words, if, supposedly, the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) is killed or
if he dies, the social system and military organization of the Muslims should not disintegrate.
There is one hadith wherein the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said, AIf (as few as)
three persons go on a journey, they must appoint one from among themselves as their leader.
From this, one may infer to what extent the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) regarded as
harmful the disorder and absence of authority that could resolve social conflicts and serve as a
unifying bond among individuals.
Nahjul-Balagha deals with numerous problems concerning the State and social justice, a few
of which, Allah willing, we shall discuss here.
The first problem to be discussed here is that of the necessity and value of a State. Ali (A.S)
has repeatedly stressed the need for a powerful government and, in his own time, battled against
the views propagated by the Kharijites who, in the beginning, denied the need for a State,
considering the Holy Qur’an as sufficient. The slogan of the Kharijites, as is known, was: AThe
right of judgment (or authority to rule) belongs exclusively to Allah (la hukm illa li-Allah), a
phrase adopted from the Holy Qur’an. Its Qur’anic meaning is that the prerogative of legislation
belongs to Allah or those whom Allah has permitted to legislate. But the Kharijites interpreted it
differently. According to Ali (A.S) , they had imparted a false sense to a true statement. The
essence of their view was that no human being has any right to rule others; sovereignty belongs
exclusively to Allah. Ali’s argument was:
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Yes, I also say la hukm illa li-Allah, in the sense that the right of legislation belongs solely to
Allah. But their claim that the prerogative to govern and to lead also belongs to Allah is not
reasonable. After all, the laws of Allah need to be implemented by human beings. Men cannot do
without a ruler, good or evil.[1]
It is under the protection of a State that the believers strive for Allah’s sake, and the
unbelievers derive material benefit from their worldly endeavors, and men attain the fruits of
their labor. It is through the authority of the State that taxes are collected, aggressors are repelled,
the security of highways is maintained, and the weak reclaim their rights (through the courts of
law) from the strong. (This process continues) until the good citizens are happy and secure from
the evils of miscreants. (Nahjul-Balagha, Khutab 40)
Ali (A.S) , like other godly men and spiritual leaders, despises temporal power and political
office for being lowly and degrading when it serves as an instrument of gratification of lust for
power and political ambition. He looks down upon it with extreme contempt when it is desired as
an end-in-itself and aspired as an ideal of life. He considers such kind of power to be devoid of
any value, considering it to be more detestable than Aa pig’s bone in a leper’s hand. But the same
power and leadership, if used as a means for the establishment and execution of social justice
and service to society, is regarded by him as a thing of paramount sanctity, something for which
he is willing to fight any opportunist and political adventurer seeking to grab power and
illegitimate wealth. In its defense, he does not hesitate to draw his sword against plunderers and
usurpers.
During the days of Ali’s caliphate, Abdullah ibn `Abbas once went to see him. He found Ali
(A.S) mending his old shoes with his own hand. Turning to Ibn `Abbas, Ali (A.S) asked him,
AHow much do you think this shoe is worth? ANothing, replied Ibn `Abbas. Ali (A.S) said,
AYet the same shoe is of more value to me than authority over you [folks] if it were not to me a
means for establishing justice, recovering the rights of the deprived and wiping out evil practices
(Khutab 33).
In sermon 216, we come across a general discussion about human rights and duties. Here, Ali
(A.S) states that every right always involves two parties. Of the various Divine duties, the ones
which Allah has ordained are duties of people towards people; they are framed in such a way that
each right necessitates a duty towards others; each right which benefits an individual or a group
holds the individual or group responsible to fulfill some duty towards others. Every duty
becomes binding when the other party also fulfills his duty. He says the following further
regarding this issue:
ABut the most important of the reciprocal rights that Allah has made obligatory is the right of
the ruler over the subjects and the rights of the subjects over the ruler. It is a mutual and
reciprocal obligation decreed by Allah for them. He has made it the basis of the strength of their
society and of their religion. Consequently, the subjects cannot prosper unless the rulers are
righteous. The rulers cannot be righteous unless the subjects are firm and steadfast. If the
subjects fulfill their duties toward the ruler and the ruler his duty to them, righteousness prevails
among them. Only then are the objectives of the religion realized, the pillars of justice become
stable and wholesome traditions become established. In this way, better conditions of life and
social environment emerge. People become eager to safeguard the integrity of the State and thus
frustrate the plots of its enemies (Khutab 126).
Justice: a Supreme Value
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The first outcome of the sacred teachings of Islam was the influence exercised on the minds
and ideologies of its adherents. Not only did Islam introduce new teachings regarding the world,
man and his society, but also changed the ways of thinking. The importance of the latter
achievement is not less than the former.
Every teacher imparts new knowledge to his pupils, and every school of thought provides new
information to its adherents. But the teachers and schools of thought who furnish their followers
with a new logic and revolutionize their ways of thinking altogether are few.
But how do the ways of thinking change and one logic replaces another? This requires some
elucidation.
Man, by virtue of being a rational creature, thinks rationally about scientific and social issues.
His arguments, intentionally or unintentionally, are based on certain principles and axioms. All
his conclusions are drawn from and judgments are based on them. The difference in ways of
thinking originates precisely in these first principles or axioms. This is used as the ground for
inferences and conclusions. Here, it is crucial what premises and axioms form the foundation for
inference, and here lies the cause of all disparity in inferences and conclusions. In every age,
there is a close similarity between the ways of thinking of those familiar with the intellectual
spirit of the age on scientific issues. However, the difference is conspicuous between the
intellectual spirits of different ages. But with regard to social problems, such a similarity and
consensus is not found even among persons who are contemporaries. There is a secret behind
this. To elaborate on it would take us outside the scope of the present discussion.
Man, in his confrontation with social and moral problems, is inevitably led to adopt some sort
of value-orientation. In his assessments, he arrives at a certain hierarchy of values in which he
arranges all issues. This order or hierarchy of values plays a significant role in the adoption of
the kind of basic premises and axioms which he utilizes. It makes him think differently from
others who have differently evaluated the issues and have arrived at a different hierarchy of
values. This is what leads to a disparity among the ways of thinking. Take, for example, the
question of feminine chastity, which is a matter of social significance. Do all people prescribe a
similar system of evaluation with regard to this issue? Certainly not. There is a great amount of
disparity between views. For some, its significance is near zero and it plays no part in their
thinking. For some, the matter is of utmost value. The latter regard life as worthless in an
environment where feminine chastity is regarded as unimportant.
When we say that Islam has revolutionized the ways of thinking, what is meant is that it has
drastically altered their system and hierarchy of values. It has elevated values like taqwa (Godfearing), which had no value at all in the past, to a very high status and attached an
unprecedented importance to it. On the other hand, it deflated the value of such factors as
lineage, race and the like which in the pre-Islamic days were of predominant significance,
bringing their worth to zero. Justice is one of the values revived by Islam and is given an
extraordinary status. It is true that Islam has recommended justice and stressed its
implementation, but what is very significant is that it elevates its value in the society. It is better
to leave the elaboration of this point to Ali (A.S) himself and see what Nahjul-Balagha says. A
man of intelligence and understanding put the following question to Amir al-Mu’minin Ali (A.S)
: AWhich is superior, justice or generosity? (Hikam 437)
Here, the question is about two human qualities. Man has always detested oppression and
injustice and has also held in high regard acts of kindness and benevolence performed without
the hope of reward or a return. Apparently, the answer to the above question seems both obvious
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and easy: generosity is superior to justice, for what is justice except observance of the rights of
others and avoiding violating them? But a generous man willingly foregoes his own right in
preference of another person over himself. The just man does not transgress the rights of others;
he safeguards their rights from being violated. But the generous man sacrifices his own right for
another’s sake. Therefore, generosity must be superior to justice.
In truth, the above reasoning appears to be quite valid when we estimate their worth from the
viewpoint of individual morality and generosity, more so than that of justice. This seems to be a
sign of human perfection and the nobleness of the human soul. But Ali’s reply is contrary to the
above answer. Ali (A.S) gives two reasons for the superiority of justice over generosity. Firstly,
he says the following: AJustice puts things in their proper place and generosity diverts them from
their (natural) direction.
The meaning of justice is that the natural deservedness of everybody must be taken into
consideration; everyone should be given his due worth according to his work, ability and
qualifications. Society is comparable to a machine whose every part has a proper place and
function.
It is true that generosity is a quality of great worth from the point of view that a generous man
donates to another what legitimately belongs to him, but we must note that it is an unnatural
occurrence. It may be compared to a body one of whose organs is malfunctioning while its other
healthy organs and parts temporarily redirect their activity to the recovery of the suffering organ.
From the social point of view, it would be far more preferable if the society did not possess such
sick members at all, so that the healthy organs and members may completely devote their
activities and energies to the general growth and perfection of the society, instead of being
absorbed with helping and assisting a particular member.
To return to Ali’s reply, the other reason he gives for preferring justice to generosity is this:
Justice is the general caretaker, whereas generosity is a particular reliever.
That is, justice is like a general law which is applicable to the management of all the affairs of
the society. Its benefit is universal and all-embracing; it is the highway which serves all and
everyone. But generosity is something exceptional and limited, which cannot be always relied
upon. Basically, if generosity were to become a general rule, it would no longer be regarded as
such. Deriving his conclusion, Ali (A.S) says the following: AConsequently, justice is the nobler
of the two and possesses the greater merit. This way of thinking about man and human problems
is one based on a specific value system rooted in the idea of the fundamental importance of the
society. In this system of values, social principles and criteria precede the norms of individual
morality. The former is a principle, whereas the latter is only a ramification. The former is a
trunk, while the latter is a branch of it. The former is the foundation of the structure, whereas the
latter is an embellishment.
From Ali’s viewpoint, it is the principle of justice that is of crucial significance in preserving
the balance of society, and winning the goodwill of the public. Its practice can ensure the health
of the society and bring peace to its soul. Oppression, injustice and discrimination cannot bring
peace and happinessCeven to the tyrant or to the one in whose interest the injustice is
perpetrated. Justice is like a public highway which has room for all and through which everyone
may pass without impediment. But injustice and oppression constitute a blind alley which does
not lead even the oppressor to his desired destination.
As is known, during his caliphate, >Othman ibn >Affan put a portion of the public property
of the Muslims at the disposal of his kinsmen and friends. After the death of >Othman, Ali (A.S)
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assumed power. Ali (A.S) was advised by some people to overlook whatever injustice had
occurred in the past and to do nothing about it, to confine his efforts to what would befall from
then on during his own caliphate. But to this his reply was: AA long standing right does not
become invalid [because of the passage of time]!
Then he exclaimed: ABy Allah! Even if I find that by such misappropriated money women
have been married or bondmaids bought, I would reclaim it and have it returned to the public
treasury. There is a wide scope and room in the dispensation of justice. [Justice is vast enough to
include and envelop everyone;] he who [being of a diseased temperament] finds restriction and
hardship in justice should know that the path of injustice and oppression is harder and even more
restricted (Khutab 15).
Justice, according to this concept, is a barrier and a limit to be observed, respected and
believed in by everyone. All should be content to remain within its limits. But if its limits are
broken and violated, and if both belief in it and respect for it are lost while human greed and lust,
being insatiable by nature, would not stop at any limit, the further man advances on this
interminable journey of greed and lust, the greater becomes his dissatisfaction.
Indifference to Injustice
Ali (A.S) regards justice to be a duty and a the Divine trust. To him, it is a the Divine
sanctity. He does not expect a Muslim who is aware and informed about the teachings of Islam to
be an idle spectator at the scenes of injustice and discrimination.
In his sermon called Aal-Shaqshaqiyya, after relating the pathetic political episodes of the
past, Ali (A.S) proceeds to advance his reasons for accepting the caliphate. He mentions how,
after the assassination of >Othman, the people thronged around him urging him to accept the
leadership of Muslims. But Ali (A.S) , after the unfortunate events of the past and being aware of
the extent of deterioration in the then prevailing situation, was not disposed to accept that grave
responsibility. Nevertheless, he saw that if he should reject the caliphate, the face of truth would
become still more clouded, and it might be alleged that he was not interested in this matter from
the very beginning, that he gave no importance to such affairs. Moreover, in view of the fact that
Islam does not consider it permissible for anyone to remain an idle spectator in a society divided
into two classes of oppressed and oppressors, one suffering the pangs of hunger and the other
well-fed and uneasy with the discomforts of over-eating, there was no alternative for Ali (A.S)
but to shoulder this heavy responsibility. He himself explains this in the aforementioned sermon:
ABy Him Who split the grain and created living things [do I swear]! Had it not been for the
presence of the pressing crowd, were it not for the establishment of (Allah’s) testimony upon me
through the existence of supporters, and had it not been for the pledge of Allah with the learned,
to the effect that they should not connive with the gluttony of the oppressor and the hunger of the
oppressed, I would have cast the reins of the caliphate on its own shoulders and would have
made the last one drink from the same cup that I made the first one to drink (i.e. I would have
taken the same stance towards the caliphate as at the time of the first caliph). You would have
seen then that in my view the world of yours is not worth more than a goat’s sneeze (Khutab 3).
Justice Should not be Compromised
Favoritism, nepotism, partiality and shutting up of mouths by big morsels, have always been
the essential tools of politicians. Now a man had assumed power and captained the ship of the
caliphate who profoundly detested these things. In fact, his main objective was to struggle and
fight against this kind of politics. Naturally, with the very inception of Ali’s reign, the politicians
with their hopes and expectations were disappointed. Their disappointment soon grew into
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subversive conspiracies against Ali’s government, creating for him many a headache. Wellmeaning friends, with sincere goodwill, advised Ali (A.S) to adopt a greater flexibility in his
policies for the sake of higher interests. Their advice was: AExtricate yourself from the ruses of
these demagogues, as is said, >sewing the dog’s mouth with a big morsel.’ These are influential
persons. Some of them are from among the elite sahaba of the dawn of Islam. Presently, your
real enemy is Mu`awiyah who is in control of a rich and fertile province, Syria. The wisdom lies
in setting aside, for the time being, the matter of equality and justice. What harm is there in it?
Ali (A.S) replied to them saying, ADo you really ask me to seek support through injustice [to
my subjects and to sacrifice justice for the sake of political gain]?! By Allah! I will not do it as
long as the world lasts and one star follows another in the sky [i.e. I will not do it as long as the
order of the universe exists]. Even if it were my own property, I would distribute it with justice.
And why not, since it is the property of Allah and I am His trustee? (Khutba 126).
This is an example of how highly Ali (A.S) valued justice and what status it held in his
opinion.
The Rights of the People
The needs of a human being are not confined to food, clothing and housing. It may be
possible to keep an animal happy by satisfying all its physical needs. But in the case of man,
spiritual and psychological factors are as important as physical ones. Different governments
following a similar course in providing for the material welfare of the public might achieve
differing results because one of them fulfills the psychological needs of the society while the
other does not.
One of the pivotal factors which contribute to the securing of the goodwill of the masses is the
way a government views them, if it regards them as its slaves, or as its masters and guardians, if
it considers the people as possessing legitimate rights and itself only as their trustee, agent and
representative. In the first case, whatever service a government may perform for the people is not
more than a kind of the master’s care of his beast. In the second case, every service performed is
equivalent to the discharging of duty by a right trustee. A State’s acknowledgment of the
authentic rights of the people and avoidance of any kind of action that implies negation of their
right of sovereignty, are the primary conditions for securing their trust and goodwill.
The Church and the Right of Sovereignty
At the dawn of the modern age, there was a movement against religion in Europe which also
affected, more or less, other regions outside Christendom. This movement was inclined towards
materialism. When we examine the causes and roots of this movement, we discover that one of
them was the inadequacy of the teachings of the Church from the viewpoint of political rights.
The Church authorities, in addition to some European philosophers, developed an artificial
relationship with and an association between belief in Allah on the one hand and stripping the
people of their political rights by despotic regimes on the other.
Naturally, this led to the assumption of some necessary relationship between democracy on
the one hand and atheism on the other. It came to be believed that either we should choose the
belief in Allah and accept the right of sovereignty bestowed by Him upon certain individuals,
who have otherwise no superiority over others, or deny the existence of Allah so as to establish
our right as masters of our own political destiny. From the point of view of religious psychology,
one of the causes of the decline of the influence of religion was the contradiction between
religion and a natural social need, contrived by religious authorities, especially at a time when
that need expressed itself strongly at the level of public consciousness. Right at a time when
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despotism and repression had reached their peak in European political life and the people were
thirstily cherishing the ideas of liberty and people’s sovereignty, the Church and its supporters
made an assertion that the people had only duties and responsibilities towards the State and had
no rights. This was sufficient to turn the lovers of liberty and democracy against religion, against
God in general and the Church in particular.
This mode of thought, in the West as well as in the East, was deeply rooted from ancient
times. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, in the Social Contract, writes the following: AWe are told by
Philo, the Emperor Caligula argued, concluding, reasonably enough on this same analogy, that
kings were gods or alternately that the people were animals.
During the Middle Ages, this outlook was revived again. Since it assumed the status of
religious faith, it induced a revolt against religion itself. Rousseau, in the same book, writes:
AGrotius denies that all human government is established for is the benefit of the governed, and
he cites the example of slavery. His characteristic method of reasoning is always to offer fact as a
proof of right. It is possible to imagine a more logical method, but not one more favorable to
tyrants. According to Grotius, therefore, it is doubtful whether humanity belongs to a hundred
men, or whether these hundred men belong to humanity, though he seems throughout his book to
lean to the first of these views, which is also that of Hobbes. These authors show us the human
race as divided into herds of cattle, each with a master who presents it only in order to devour its
members.[2]
Rousseau, who calls such a right Athe right of might (right equals force), replies to this logic
in this fashion: AObey those in power. If this means Ayield to force, the precept is sound but
superfluous; it has never, I suggest, been violated. All power comes from Allah, I agree; but so
does every disease, and no one forbids us from summoning a physician. If I am held up by a
robber at the edge of a forest, force compels me to hand over my purse. But if I could somehow
contrive to keep the purse from him, would I still be obliged in conscience to surrender it? After
all, the pistol in the robber’s hand is undoubtedly a power.[3]
Although he does not incline to Allah in his totalitarian logic, the basis of the philosophic
position of Hobbes, whose views have been referred to above, regarding political rights is that
the sovereign represents and personifies the will of the people, and he actually translates the will
of the people itself into his actions. However, when we closely examine his reasoning, we find
that he has been influenced by the ideas of the Church. Hobbes claims that the individual liberty
does not clash with the unlimited power of the sovereign. He writes: ANevertheless, we are not
to understand that by such liberty, the sovereign power of life and death is either abolished or
limited. For it has been already shown that nothing the sovereign representative can do to a
subject, on whatever pretense, can properly be called injustice or injury because every subject is
the author of every act the sovereign does, so that he never wants right to anything otherwise
than as he himself is the subject of Allah and is bound thereby to obscene the laws of nature.
And, therefore, it may and does often happen in commonwealths that a subject may be put to
death by the command of the sovereign power and yet neither do the other wrong__as when
Jephtha caused his daughter to be sacrificed; in which, and the like cases, he that so dies, had the
liberty to do the action for which he is nevertheless without injury put to death. And the same
hold also in a sovereign prince that puts to death an innocent subject. For though the action be
against the law of nature as being contrary to equity, as was the killing of Uriah by David, yet it
was not an injury to Uriah but to God.[4]
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As can be noticed, in this philosophy, the responsibility to Allah is assumed to negate the
responsibility towards the people. Acknowledgment of duty to Allah is considered sufficient in
order that the people may have no rights. Justice, here, is what the sovereign does and oppression
and injustice have no meaning. In other words, duty to Allah is assumed to annul the duty to
man, and the right of Allah overrides the rights of men. Indubitably, Hobbes, though apparently a
free thinker independent of the ideology of the Church, had ecclesiastical ideas not penetrated
into his mind, would not have developed such a theory. Precisely that which is totally absent
from such philosophies is the idea that faith and belief in Allah should be considered conducive
to the establishment of justice and the realization of human rights. The truth is that, firstly, the
belief in Allah is the foundation of the idea of justice and inalienable human rights; it is only
through the acceptance of the existence of Allah that it is possible to affirm innate human rights
and uphold true justice as two realities independent of any premise and convention; secondly, it
is the best guarantee for their execution in practice.
The approach of Nahjul-Balagha
The approach of Nahjul-Balagha to justice and human rights rests on the above-mentioned
foundations. In sermon 216, from which we have quoted before, Ali (A.S) says the following:
AAllah has, by entrusting me with your affairs, given me a right over you and awarded you a
similar right over me. The issue of rights, as a subject of discourse, is inexhaustible but is the
most restricted of things when it comes to practice. A right does not accrue in favor of any
person unless it accrues against him also, and it does not accrue against him unless that it also
accrues in his favor.
As can be noticed from the above passage, Allah is central to Ali’s statement about justice,
rights, and duties. But Ali’s stand is opposed to the aforementioned view according to which
Allah has bestowed rights on only a handful of individuals solely responsible to Him, and has
deprived the rest of people of these rights, making them responsible not only to Him but also to
those who have been granted by Him the unlimited privilege to rule others. As a result, the ideas
of justice and injustice with regard to the relationship between the ruler and the ruled become
meaningless.
In the same sermon, Ali (A.S) says the following: ANo individual, no matter how eminent
and high his station in religion maybe, is not above needing cooperation of the people in
discharging his obligations and the responsibilities placed upon him by Allah. Again, no man,
however humble and insignificant in the eyes of others, is too low to be ignored for the purpose
of his cooperation and his providing assistance.
In the same sermon, Ali (A.S) asks the people not to address him in the way despots are
addressed: ADo not address me in the manner despots are addressed [i.e. Do not address me by
the titles used to flatter despots and tyrants]. In your attitude towards me, do not entertain the
kind of considerations that are adopted in the presence of unpredictable tyrants. Do not treat me
with affected and obsequious manners. Do not imagine that your candor would displease me or
that I expect you to treat me with veneration. One who finds it disagreeable to face true and just
criticism would find it more detestable to act upon it. Therefore, do not deny me a word of truth
or a just advice.
The Rulers are the People’s Trustees, Not Their Masters
In the last chapter, we said that a dangerous and misleading view became current in the
thought of some modern European thinkers interlinking in an unnatural fashion the belief in
Allah on the one hand and the negation of peoples’ rights on the other. This correlation played a
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significant role in inducing a group to incline towards materialism. Duty and responsibility to
Allah was assumed to necessarily negate the duty and responsibility to the people. The Divine
obligations completely displaced human obligations. The belief and faith in Allah (Who,
according to the Islamic teachings, created the universe on the principles of truth and justice) was
considered to be in conflict with and contradict the belief in innate and natural human rights,
instead of being regarded as their basis. Naturally, belief in the right of people’s sovereignty was
equated with atheism.
From the Islamic point of view, the case is actually the reverse. In Nahjul-Balagha, which is
the subject of our discussion, the main topics are: tawhid and >irfan; throughout, the talk is about
Allah whose Name occurs repeatedly everywhere in its pages. Nevertheless, it not only does not
neglect to discuss the rights of the people and their privileges vis-a-vis the ruler, in fact regarding
the ruler as the trustee and protector of their rights, but also lays great emphasis on this point.
According to the logic of this noble book, the imam/ruler is the protector and trustee of the rights
of the people and is held accountable by them. If one is asked as to which of them exists for the
other, it is the ruler who exists for the people, not vice versa. Sa`di has a similar idea on his mind
when he says the following: AIt is not the sheep who are to serve the shepherd; it is the shepherd
who is there for their service.
The word ra`iyyah (lit. herd), despite the fact that it gradually acquired an abominable
meaning in the Persian language, has an original meaning which is essentially good and
humanitarian. The word ra`i for the ruler and ra`iyyah for the masses first appears in the speech
of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and is literally used thereafter by Ali (A.S) .
This word is derived from the root ra`a, which carries the sense of Aprotection and
Asafeguarding. The word ra`iyyah is applied to the people for the reason that the ruler is
responsible for protecting their lives, property, rights, and liberties.
A tradition related from the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) throws full light on
the meaning of this statement: ATruly, everyone of you is a ra`i responsible for his rai`yyah. The
ruler is the ra`i of his people and is responsible for them; the woman is the ra`i of her husband’s
house and is responsible for it; the slave is the ra`i of his master’s property and is responsible for
it; indeed, each of you is a ra`i and is responsible [for those under his charge/care]. [5]
In the preceding pages, we cited some examples from Nahjul-Balagha which illustrate Ali’s
outlook regarding the rights of the people. Here we shall give sample quotes from other sources,
beginning with the following verse of the Holy Qur’an:
Allah commands you to deliver trusts back to their owners, and that when you judge between
the people, judge with justice. (4:58)
Commenting on this verse, al-Tibrisi, in his exegesis Majma` al-Bayan, remarks thus: AThere
are several opinions regarding the meaning of this verse. Frstly, that it is about trusts in general,
including the Divine and the non-Divine, the material and the non-material trusts; secondly, that
it is addressed to the rulers, and that Allah, by making the returning of the trusts [to their rightful
owners] an obligation, is commanding such rulers to observe the rights of the people.
Then he further adds:
This is corroborated by the verse immediately following it: O believers, obey Allah, and obey
the Messenger and those in authority among you. (4:59)
According to this verse, people are bound to obey the commands of Allah, His Messenger and
those in authority (wulat al->amr). While the preceding verse mentions the rights of the people,
this one reiterates the complementary rights of those in authority. It has been related from the
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Imams that AOne of these two verses is ours (i.e. it establishes our rights in relation to you), and
the other is yours (i.e. it outlines your rights in relation to us). Imam al-Baqir () said that the
salat, zakat, sawm, and hajj are some of the trusts (mentioned in 4:58). One of the trusts
(amanat) is that the wulat al->amr have been commanded to justly distribute the ghana’im,
sadaqat and whatever belongs to the people.
In the exegesis Al-Mizan, in the part of the commentary upon this verse which deals with
tradition, the author relates a tradition from Al-Durr al-Manthur from Ali (A.S) that he said, AIt
is incumbent on the imam to rule according to the decrees revealed by Allah and to carry out the
responsibilities with which he has been entrusted. When he does that, it is incumbent upon the
people to pay attention to the Divine command (about obeying the wali al->amr), to obey him
and to respond to his call.
As noted earlier, the Holy Qur’an considers the ruler, the head of the State, as a trustee and a
guardian; it regards just government as a fulfilllment of a trust entrusted to the ruler. The
approach of the Imams (A.S), in particular that of Amir al-Mu’minin Ali (A.S) , corresponds
with the view which can be inferred from the Holy Qur’an.
Now that we know the Holy Qur’an’s view of this matter, we may go on to examine the
statements of Nahjul-Balagha dealing with this issue. More than anything else, we must study
Ali’s letters (epistles) to his governors, especially those which were meant to be official
circulars. It is in these letters that we would find glimpses of the teachings of Islam regarding the
functions of the ruler and his duties towards the people as well as their rights. Ali (A.S) , in his
letter to the governor of Azerbaijan, reminds him of his duties towards the people in these words:
ABeware lest you should consider this assignment as a bait [for acquiring personal gain]; rather,
it is a trust lying on your neck. You have been charged with care-taking [of the people] by your
superior [obligation towards them]. It is not for you to betray your duties with respect to the
people (ra’iyyah). (Epistle 5)
In another letter written as a circular to tax collectors, after a few words of advice and
admonition, Ali (A.S) says the following: AFulfill the demands of justice in your relationship
with the people and be patient in matters regarding their needs because you are treasurers of the
people (ra’iyyah), representatives of the community (umma), and envoys of your imams. (Epistle
51)
In the famous epistle to Malik al-Ashtar, which contains elaborate instructions about various
aspects of government, he writes: AAwaken your heart to kindness and mercy for the people
(ra’iyyah) and love and tenderness for them. Never, never should you ever act with them like a
predatory beast which seeks to be satiated by devouring them, for the people fall into two
categories: they are either your brethren in faith or your kindred in creation. Do not ever say, >I
have been given authority’ or >My command should be obeyed’ because it corrupts the heart,
consumes one’s faith, and invites calamities.
In another letter sent as a circular to his army commanders, he says the following: AIt is an
obligation that an official should not behave differently with the people (ra’iyyah) on account of
distinction which he receives or material advantage that he may achieve. Instead, these favors
from Allah should bring him nearer to Allah’s creatures and increase his compassion towards his
brethren. (Epistle 50)
Ali (A.S) shows an amazing sensitivity to justice, compassion towards the people and a great
respect for them and their rights which, as reflected in his letters, is an exemplary and unique
attitude towards this issue.
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There is another epistle in Nahjul-Balagha which consists of instructions to the collectors of
zakat, and is entitled: ATo the officials assigned to the job of collecting zakat. The title indicates
that it was not addressed to any particular official but sent either as a general instruction in
writing or delivered as a routine oral instruction. Sayyid al-Radhi has included it in the section of
Epistles, or letters, with the clarification that he is placing this letter here to show to what extent
Ali (A.S) was meticulous in matters pertaining to justice and the rights of the people, being
attentive not only to main points but also to minute details. Here are Ali’s instructions: ASet out
with the fear of Allah, Who is One and has no partner. Do not intimidate any Muslim. Do not
trespass upon his land so as to displease him. Do not take from him more than Allah’s share in
his property. When you approach a tribe, at first come down at their watering place, stay there
instead of entering their houses. Approach them with calm dignity and salute them when you
stand among them, grudge not a proper greeting to them. Then say to them, AO servants of
Allah! The Wali and Khalifah of Allah has sent me to you to collect from you Allah’s share in
your property. Is there anything of His share in your property? If there is, return it to His Wali. A
If someone says >NO,’ then do not repeat the demand. If someone answers in the affirmative, go
with him without frightening, threatening, or compelling him. Take whatever gold and silver he
gives you. If he has cattle or camels, do not approach them save with his permission, because the
major part belongs to him. When you arrive (into the cattle enclosure), do not enter upon them in
a bossy and rude manner. Epistle 25, also see 26, 27 and 46)
The passages quoted above are sufficient to throw light on Ali’s attitude as a ruler toward the
people under his rule.
SECTION FIVE
MORAL LECTURES AND APHORISMS
Inimitable Moral Teaching
Moral and spiritual teachings constitute the greater part of Nahjul-Balagha, making up almost
half of the book. More than anything else, the fame of Nahjul-Balagha is due to the sermons,
exhortations and aphorisms on ethical and moral subjects.
Aside from the moral teachings of the Holy Qur’an and a number of the sermons and sayings
of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , which are to be considered the source and
antecedent of Nahjul-Balagha, the teachings of Nahjul-Balagha are without a match in the
Arabic and Persian languages. For more than a thousand years, these sermons have played an
influential role serving as a matchless source of inspiration, yet retaining their original power to
quicken the heartbeat, to sublimate emotions, and to bring tears to the eyes. It seems that as long
as there remains any trace of humanity in the world, these sermons shall continue to exercise
their original power and influence.
A Comparison
The literature of Arabic and Persian is replete with works containing spiritual and moral
teachings of the highest sublimity and elegance, though mainly in the form of poetry. There is,
for example, the famous qasida by Abul-Fath al-Busti (360-400/971-1010) which begins with
the verse saying:
Worldly profit and achievement is loss,
And the gain unmarked by the seal of pure goodness...
There is also the eulogizing qasida by Abul-Hasan al-Tihami, which he wrote on the early
death of his youthful son; it begins with these lines:
The law of fate governs the destiny of creation,
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And this world is not a place to settle in.
Every one of these works is an everlasting masterpiece of its kind and shines like a star on the
horizons of the Arabic literature of the Islamic era, never to lose its freshness and charm. In
Persian, the Gulistan and the Bustan of Sa`di and his qasa’id serve as unusually attractive and
effective means of moral advice and are masterpieces of their own kind. To give some examples,
here are some famous verses of the Gulistan which start with:
Every breath is a fraction of life gone,
And when I see, not much of it does remain.
Or in another qasida where he says the following:
O people! The world is not a place for leisure and repose;
To a wise man, it is not worth the effort to possess.
Or at another place where he says the following:
The world on water and life on wind do rest;
Salute the brave ones who to them do not tie their hearts.
... and where he says the following:
Time and fortune are subject to endless change;
The wise man doesn’t attach his heart to the world.
Sa`di’s Bustan is full of profound and glowing spiritual pieces of advice and, perhaps, it is at
its best in the ninth chapter on APenitence and the Right Way. The same is true of some portions
of the Mathnawi of Rumi and works of all other Persian poets from whom we shall not further
quote any examples.
In Islamic literature, including the Arabic and the Persian, there exist excellent examples of
spiritual counsels and aphorisms. This Islamic literary genre is not confined to these two
languages but is also found in Turkish, Urdu and other languages. A characteristic spirit pervades
all of them. Anyone familiar with the Holy Qur’an, the sayings of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) , of Amir al-Mu’minin Ali (A.S) , of the other Imams, and of Muslim saints
of the first rank can observe a characteristic spirit pervading all Persian literature containing
spiritual counsel which represents the spirit of Islam embodied in the Persian language and
embellished with its charm and sweetness.
If an expert, or a group of experts, in Arabic and Persian literature acquainted with the works
in all other languages that reflect the spirit of Islam were to collect the masterpieces in the field
of spiritual counsel, the extraordinary richness and maturity of the Islamic culture in this field
will be revealed.
It is strange that as far as the works on spiritual counsel are concerned, the Persian genius has
mostly expressed itself in poetry; there is no such work of eminence in prose. All that exists of it
in prose is in the form of short sayings, like the prose writings of the Gulistan, a part of which
consists of spiritual counsels and is in itself a masterpiece, or the sayings ascribed to Khawajah
Abdullah al-Ansari.
Of course, my own knowledge is inadequate, but as far as I know, there does not exist in
Persian prose any remarkable work, except for short sayings, not even a passage, which is long
enough to be counted as a short discourse, especially a discourse which was originally delivered
extempore and later collected and recorded in writing.
There are discourses which have been related from Rumi or Sa`di meant as oral moral advice
to their followers; they also by no means possess the brilliance and charm of the poetic works of
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those masters and definitely are not worth being compared with the discourses of NahjulBalagha.
The same can be said about the writings which have reached us in the form of a treatise or
letter, such as the Nasihat al-Muluk by Abu Hamid Muhammed al-Ghazali, the Taziyaneh-ye
suluk by Ahmed al-Ghazali, the latter being an elaborate epistle addressed to his follower and
pupil A`Ayn al-Qudat al-Hamadani.
Spiritual Counsel and Wisdom
Moral counsel, according to the Holy Qur’an, is one of the three ways of invitation towards
Allah (hikma, maw`iza, al-jidal al-hasan, i.e. wisdom, good admonition, and honorable debate,
as mentioned in 16: 125).
The difference between hikma (wisdom, philosophy) and maw`iza (spiritual and moral advice
and admonition) lies in the fact that hikma is for instruction and imparting knowledge, while
maw`iza is meant for reminding. Hikma is struggle against ignorance and maw`iza is struggle
against negligence and indifference. Hikma deals with the intellect and maw`iza appeals to the
heart. Hikma educates, while maw`iza prepares the intellect for the employment of its reserves.
Hikma is a lamp and maw`iza is an eye-opener. Hikma is for ratiocination, while maw`iza is for
self-awakening. Hikma is the language of the intellect, while maw`iza is the message for the
spirit. Accordingly, the personality of the speaker plays an essential role in maw`iza, which is not
the case with hikma. In hikma, two minds communicate in an impersonal manner. But in
maw`iza, the situation is like the passage of an electric charge that flows from the speaker, who
is at a higher potential, to the listener.
For this reason, it has been said of maw`iza that: AIf it comes forth from the soul, then it
necessarily alights upon the heart. Otherwise, it does not go beyond the listener’s ears. It is about
the quality of maw`iza that it is said: AThe speech which originates from the heart enters another
heart, and the words which originate from the tongue do not go beyond the ears.
It is true that the words that come from the heart, being the message of the soul, invade other
hearts; but if they do not convey the message of the soul, they are no more than empty literary
devices which do not go beyond the listener’s ear-drum.
Maw`iza and Khitaba (Exhortation and Oratory)
Maw`iza also differs from khitaba (oratory, rhetoric). Although oratory also deals with
emotions, it seeks to stir and agitate them. Maw`iza, on the other hand, is intended to pacify
emotions, and it seeks to bring them under control. Oratory is effective when emotions are inert
and stagnant; maw`iza is required when lusts and passions become unmanageable. Oratory stirs
the passion for power and glory, the feelings of honor, heroism, chivalry, manliness, patriotism,
nobility, righteousness, virtue and service; it is followed by movement and excitement. But
maw`iza checks inappropriate passion and excitement. Rhetoric and oratory snatch control from
the hands of calculating reason, handing it over to tempestuous passions. But maw`iza appeases
the tempests of passions and prepares the ground for calculation and foresight. Oratory draws
one to the outside while maw`iza makes him turn to his inner self.
Rhetoric and counsel are both necessary and essential, and Nahjul-Balagha makes use of both
of them. The main thing is to judge the right time for the use of each of them. The impassioned
speeches of Amir al-Mu’minin (A.S) were delivered at a time when it was necessary to stir up
passions and to build up a tempest to destroy an unjust and oppressive structure, such as at the
time of the Battle of Siffin when Ali (A.S) delivered a fiery speech before the engagement with
Mu’awiyah’s forces. Mu’awiyah’s forces, arriving ahead of Ali’s army, had taken control of the
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river bank and stopped the supply of water to Ali’s camp. At first, Ali (A.S) strived to abstain
from resorting to force, desiring the problem to be solved through negotiation. But Mu’awiyah,
who had some other designs, considering occupation of the river bank a victory for himself,
refused every offer of negotiation. When things became difficult for Ali’s men, it was time when
he should stir the emotions of his soldiers through a fiery speech, creating a tempest that would
rout the enemy. This is how Ali (A.S) addressed his companions:
They are eager that you should make them taste the flavor of battle. So you have two
alternatives before you: either submit to disgrace and ignominy, or quench your swords’ thirst
with their blood and quench your own thirst with water. It is death to survive through defeat,
while true life is to die for the sake of victory. Mu’awiyah is leading a handful of deluded
insurgents and has deceived them by keeping them in the dark about the truth, with the result that
their throats are the targets of your deadly arrows. [1]
These words flared their emotions, provoked their sense of honor and made the blood surge in
their veins. It was not yet sunset before Ali’s companions had seized the river bank, throwing
back Mu’awiyah’s forces.
However, Ali’s mawa’iz were delivered in different circumstances. During the days of the
first three caliphs, particularly during >Othman’s rule, immeasurable amounts of wealth and
booty, won through consecutive Avictories, flowed into Muslim hands. Due to the absence of
any careful programs for correct utilization of that wealth, particularly due to the aristocratic, or
rather tribal, rule during the reign of >Othman, moral corruption, worldliness, and love of
comfort and luxury found their ways into the Muslim society. Tribal rivalries were revived, and
racial prejudice between Arabs and non-Arabs was added to it. In that clamor for worldliness and
mounting prejudices, rivalries, and greed for greater share of the war booty, the only cry of
protest charged with spiritual exhortation was that of Ali (A.S) .
God willing, we shall discuss in the coming chapters the various themes dealt with in Ali’s
mawa`iz, such as taqwa (piety), worldliness, zuhd (asceticism), desires, the dread of death, the
dreads of the Day of Judgment, the need to take lesson from the history of past nations and
peoples..., etc.
Nahjul-Balagha’s Recurring Themes
Out of the 241 fragments collected under the title AKhutab by Sayyid al-Radhi (though not all
of them are Khutab or sermons), about 86 can be classified as mawa`iz or at least contain a series
of spiritual pieces of advice. Some of them, however, are elaborate and lengthy, like khutba 176
which opens with the sentence AAvail yourselves of the Divine expositions, the khutba named
Aal-Qasi`a (which is the longest sermon in Nahjul-Balagha), and the khutba 93 (called Akhutbat
al-muttaqin, the Asermon of the pious).
Out of some seventy-nine passages that are classified as Aepistles, letters (which not all of
them are), about twenty-five, either completely or partially, consist of spiritual and moral
teachings. Some of them are quite lengthy and elaborate, such as letter 31, which constitutes of
Ali’s advice to his son Imam al-Hasan al-Mujtaba (), and the lengthiest of all, except the
famous directive sent to Malik al-Ashtar. Another is letter 45, the well-known epistle of Ali
(A.S) to Othman ibn Hunayf, his governor over Basra.
The Themes in Spiritual Pieces of Advice
Various themes are found in the spiritual pieces of advice of Nahjul-Balagha: taqwa (piety) ;
tawakkul (trust in Allah) ; sabr (patience, ortitude) ; zuhd(asceticism) ; therenunciation of
worldly pleasures and luxuries, the renunciation of inordinate desires and far-fetched hopes; the
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condemnation of injustice and prejudice, emphasis on mercy, love, helping of the oppressed and
sympathy toward the weak; emphasis on the qualities of fortitude, courage, and strength;
emphasis on unity and solidarity and condemnation of disunity; the invitation to take lesson from
history; the invitation to thought, meditation, remembrance, and self-criticism; the reminders
about the brevity of life and the swiftness of its pace; the remembrance of death; the hardships of
death-throes; experiences of the life after death; the reminders of the dreadful events of the Day
of Judgment, and so on. These are some of the frequent themes of the spiritual pieces of advice
of Nahjul-Balagha.
Ali’s Logic
In order to understand this aspect of Nahjul-Balagha, or, in other words, to understand Ali
(A.S) when he speaks as a moral and spiritual counsellor and to understand his didactic outlook,
so as to draw benefit from that everflowing source, it is not enough to enumerate the various
themes and topics dealt with by Ali (A.S) in his discourses. It is not sufficient merely to remark
that Ali (A.S) has spoken about taqwa, tawakkul or zuhd; rather, we must see what significance
did he attribute to these words. We must uncover his didactic philosophy regarding the
development of the human character and his perception of the human aspiration for piety, purity,
freedom, and deliverance from spiritual servitude and thraldom. As we know, these are words
employed by all-in particular those who are wont to play the role of a moralist; but all
individuals do not mean the same kind of things by these terms. Sometimes, the meanings one
person attributes to these words are quite contrary to those meant by another, and naturally lead
to conclusions which are quite opposite.
Consequently, it is essential to elaborate somewhat the specific meanings of these terms in
Ali’s vocabulary, starting with taqwa.
Taqwa
Taqwa is one of the most frequent motifs of Nahjul-Balagha. In fact it would be hard to find
another book which emphasizes this spiritual term to the extent of this book. Even in NahjulBalagha, no other term or concept receives so much attention and stress as taqwa. What is
taqwa?
Often it is thought that taqwa means piety and abstinence and so implies a negative attitude.
In other words, it is maintained that the greater the amount of abstinence, withdrawal, and selfdenial, the more perfect is one’s taqwa. According to this interpretation, taqwa is a concept
divorced from active life; secondly it is a negative attitude; thirdly, it means that the more
severely this negative attitude is exercised, the greater one’s taqwa would be. Accordingly, the
sanctimonious professors of taqwa, in order to avoid its being tainted and to protect it from any
blemish, withdraw from the bustle of life, keeping themselves away from involvement in any
matter or affair of the world.
Undeniably, abstinence and caution exercised with discretion is an essential principle of
wholesome living. For, in order to lead a healthy life, man is forced to negate and affirm, deny
and posit, renounce and accept, avoid and welcome different things. It is through denial and
negation that the positive in life can be realized. It is through renunciation and avoidance that
concentration is given to action.
The principle of tawhid contained in the dictum la ilaha illa Allah is at the same time a
negation as well as an affirmation. Without negation of everything other than Allah it is not
possible to arrive at tawhid. That is why rebellion and surrender, kufr (unbelief) and iman
(belief), go together; that is, every surrender requires a rebellion and every faith (iman) calls for a
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denial and rejection (kufr), and every affirmation implies a negation. The Holy Qur’an says the
following:
So whoever disbelieves in taghut and believes in Allah, has laid hold of the most firm bond.
(2:256)
However, firstly, every denial, negation, rejection, and rebellion operates between the limits
of two opposites; the negation of one thing implies movement towards its opposite; therejection
of the one marks the beginning of the acceptance of the other. Accordingly, every healthy denial
and rejection has both a direction and a goal, and is confined within certain definite limits.
Therefore, a blind practice and purposeless attitude, which has neither direction nor a goal, nor is
confined within any limits, is neither defensible nor of any spiritual worth.
Secondly, the meaning of taqwa in Nahjul-Balagha is not synonymous with that of
>abstinence’, even in its logically accepted sense discussed above. Taqwa, on the other hand,
according to Nahjul-Balagha, is a spiritual faculty which appears as a result of continued
exercise and practice. The healthy and rational forms of abstinence are, firstly, the preparatory
causes for the emergence of that spiritual faculty; secondly, they are also its effects and outcome.
This faculty strengthens and vitalizes the soul, giving it a kind of immunity. A person who is
devoid of this faculty, if he wants to keep himself free from sins, it is unavoidable for him to
keep away from the causes of sin. Since society is never without these causes, inevitably he has
to go into seclusion and isolate himself. It follows from this argument that one should either
remain pious by isolating himself from one’s environment, or he should enter society and bid
farewell to taqwa. Moreover, according to this logic, the more isolated and secluded a person’s
life is and the more he abstains from mixing with other people, the greater is his piety and taqwa
in the eyes of the common people.
However, if the faculty of taqwa is cultivated inside a person’s soul, it is no longer necessary
for him to seclude himself from his environment. He can keep himself clean and uncorrupted
without severing his relations with society.
The former kind of persons are like those who take refuge in mountains for fear of some
plague or epidemic. The second kind resemble those who acquire immunity and resistance
through vaccination and so do not deem it necessary to leave the city and avoid contact with their
townsfolk. On the other hand, they hasten to the aid of the suffering sick in order to save them.
Sa`di is alluding to the first kind of pious in his Gulistan, when he says the following:
Saw I a sage in the mountains,
Happy in a cave, far from the world’s tide.
Said I, AWhy not to the city return,
And lighten your heart of this burden?
He said, AThe city abounds in tempting beauties,
And even elephants slip where mud is thick.
Nahjul-Balagha speaks of taqwa as a spiritual faculty acquired through exercise and assiduity,
which on its emergence produces certain characteristic effects, one of which is the ability to
abstain from sins with ease.
I guarantee the truth of my words and I am responsible for what I say. If similar events and
experiences of the past serve as a lesson for a person, then taqwa prevents him from plunging
recklessly into doubts. [2]
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Beware that sins are like unruly horses whose reins have been taken way and which plunge
with their riders into hell-fire. But taqwa is like a trained steed whose reins are in the hands of its
rider and enters with its rider into Paradise. [3]
In this sermon taqwa is described as a spiritual condition which results in control and
command over one’s self. It explains that theresult of subjugation to desires and lusts and being
devoid of taqwa degrades one’s personality making it vulnerable to the cravings of the carnal
self. In such a state, man is like a helpless rider without any power and control, whom his mount
takes wherever it desires. The essence of taqwa lies in possessing a spiritual personality endowed
with will-power, and possessing mastery over the domain of one’s self. A man with taqwa is like
an expert horseman riding a well-trained horse and who with complete mastery and control
drives his tractable steed in the direction of his choice.
Certainly the taqwa of Allah assists His awliya (friends) in abstaining from unlawful deeds
and instils His fear into their hearts. As a result, their nights are passed in wakefulness and their
days in thirst [on account of fasting].[4]
Here Ali (A.S) makes it clear that taqwa is something which automatically leads to
abstention from unlawful actions and to the fear of Allah, which are its necessary effects.
Therefore, according to this view, taqwa is neither itself abstinence nor fear of Allah; rather, it is
a sacred spiritual faculty of which these two are only consequences:
For indeed, today taqwa is a shield and a safeguard, and tomorrow (i.e. in the Hereafter) it
shall be the path to Paradise. [5]
In khutba 157, taqwa is compared to an invincible fortress built on heights which the enemy
has no power to infiltrate. Throughout, the emphasis of the Imam () lies on the spiritual and
psychological aspect of taqwa and its effects upon human spirit involving the emergence of a
dislike for sin and corruption and an inclination towards piety, purity, and virtue.
Further illustrations of this view can be cited from Nahjul-Balagha, but it seems that the
above quotations are sufficient.
Taqwa is Immunity not Restraint
We have already mentioned some of the various elements found in the spiritual pieces of
advice (mawa`iz) of Nahjul-Balagha. We began with taqwa and saw that taqwa, from the
viewpoint of Nahjul-Balagha, is a sublime spiritual faculty which is the cause of certain
attractions and repulsions; i.e. attraction towards edifying spiritual values and repulsion towards
degrading materialistic vices. Nahjul-Balagha considers taqwa as a spiritual state that gives
strength to human personality and makes man the master of his own self.
Taqwa as Immunity
Nahjul-Balagha stresses that taqwa is for man a shield and a shelter, not a chain or a prison.
There are many who do not distinguish between immunity and restraint, between security and
confinement, and promptly advocate the destruction of the sanctuary of taqwa in the name of
freedom and liberation from bonds and restraint.
That which is common between a sanctuary and a prison is the existence of a barrier. Whereas
the walls of a sanctuary avert dangers, the walls of a prison hinder the inmates from realizing
their inner capacities and from benefiting from the bounties of life. Ali (A.S) clarifies the
difference between the two, where he says the following:
Let it be known to you, O servants of Allah, that taqwa is a formidable fortress, whereas
impiety and corruption is a weak and indefensible enclosure that does not safeguard its people,
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and does not offer any protection to those who take refuge in it. Indeed, it is only with taqwa that
the tentacles of sins and misdeeds can be severed. [6]
Ali (A.S) , in this sublime advice, compares sins and evil deeds which are afflictions of the
human soul to poisonous insects and reptiles, and suggests that the faculty of taqwa is an
effective defence against them. In some of his discourses, he makes it clear that taqwa not only
does not entail restraint and restriction or is an impediment to freedom, but on the other hand it is
the source and fountainhead of all true freedoms. In khutba 230, he says the following:
Taqwa is the key to guidance, the provision for the next world, the freedom from every kind
of slavery, and the deliverance from every form of destruction.
The message is clear. Taqwa gives man spiritual freedom and liberates him from the chains of
slavery and servitude to lusts and passions. It releases him from the bonds of envy, lust, and
anger, and this expurgates society from all kinds of social bondages and servitudes. Men who are
not slaves of comfort, money, power, and glory, never surrender to the various forms of bondage
which plague the human society.
Nahjul-Balagha deals with the theme of taqwa and its various effects in many of its passages;
but we don’t consider it necessary to discuss all of them here. Our main objective here is to
discover the meaning of taqwa from the point of view of Nahjul-Balagha, so as to unearth
thereason for so much emphasis that this book places on this concept.
Of the many effects of taqwa that have been pointed out, two are more important than therest:
firstly, the development of insight and clarity of vision; secondly, the capacity to solve problems
and to weather difficulties and crises. We have discussed this in detail elsewhere.[7] Moreover, a
discussion of these effects of taqwa here will take us beyond our present aim which is to clarify
the true meaning of taqwa. It will not be out of place to call attention to certain profound remarks
of Nahjul-Balagha about thereciprocal relationship between the human being and taqwa.
A Reciprocal Commitment
In spite of the great emphasis laid by Nahjul-Balagha on taqwa as a kind of guarantee and
immunity against sin and temptation, it should be noticed that one must never neglect to
safeguard and protect taqwa itself. Taqwa guards man, and man must safeguard his taqwa. This,
as we shall presently explain, is not a vicious circle.
This reciprocal guarding of the one by the other is comparable to the one between a person
and his clothes. A man takes care of his clothes and protects them from being spoiled or stolen,
while the clothes in turn guard him against heat or cold. In fact the Holy Qur’an speaks of taqwa
as a garment:
And the garment of taqwa -that is better. (7:26)
Ali (A.S) , speaking about this relationship of mutual protection between a person and his
tawqa’, says the following:
Turn your sleep into wakefulness by the means of taqwa and spend your days in its company.
Keep its consciousness alive in your hearts. With it wash away your sins and cure your ailments.
Beware, guard your taqwa and place your self under its guard. [8]
At another place in the same sermon, Ali (A.S) says the following:
O Allah’s servants, I advise you to cultivate the taqwa of Allah. Indeed it is a right that Allah
has over you and it is through it that you can have any right over Allah. You should beseech
Allah’s help for guarding it and seek its aid for [fulfillling your duty to] Allah. [9]
Zuhd and Piety
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Another spiritual motif conspicuous in the teachings of Nahjul-Balagha is zuhd, which after
taqwa is the most recurring theme of the book. >Zuhd’ means renunciation of the >world’, and
very often we encounter denunciation of the >world’, and invitation and exhortation to renounce
it. It appears to me that it forms one of the important themes of Nahjul-Balagha, which needs to
be elucidated and explained in the light of various aspects of Ali’s approach.
We shall begin our discussion with the word >zuhd’ the words >zuhd’ and >raghbah’
(attraction, desire), if mentioned without reference to their objects, are opposite to each other.
>Zuhd’ means indifference and avoidance, and >raghbah > means attraction, inclination, and
desire.
Indifference can be of two kinds: involuntary and cultivated. A person is involuntarily
indifferent towards a certain thing when by nature he does not have any desire for it, as in the
case of a sick person who shows no desire either for food, or fruits, or anything else. Obviously,
this kind of indifference and abstinence has nothing to do with the particular sense implied in
>zuhd >.
Another kind of indifference or abstinence is spiritual or intellectual; that is, things which are
natural objects of desire are not considered the goal and objective by a human being in the course
of his struggle for perfection and felicity. The ultimate objective and goal may be something
above mundane aims and sensual pleasures; either it may be to attain Thesensuous pleasures of
the Hereafter, or it may not belong to this kind of things. It may be some high ethical and moral
ideal, like honor, dignity, nobility, liberty, or it may belong to the spiritual sphere, like the
remembrance of Allah, the love of Allah, and the desire to acquire nearness to Him.
Accordingly the zahid (i.e. one who practises zuhd) is someone whose interest transcends the
sphere of material existence, and whose object of aspiration lies beyond the kind of things we
have mentioned above. The indifference of a zahid originates in the sphere of his ideas, ideals,
and hopes, not in his physiological makeup.
There are two places where we come across the definition of >zuhd’ in Nahjul-Balagha. Both
of them confirm the above interpretation of zuhd. Ali (A.S) , in khutba 81, says the following:
O people! zuhd means curtailing of hopes, thanking Allah for His blessings and bounties, and
abstaining from that which He has forbidden.
In hikma 439, he says the following:
All zuhd is summarized in two sentences of the Holy Qur’an: Allah, the Most Exalted, says,.
So that you may not grieve for what escapes you, nor rejoice in what has come to you. [57:23]
Whoever does not grieve over what he has lost and does not rejoice over what comes to him has
acquired zuhd in both of its aspects.
Obviously when something does not occupy a significant position among one’s objectives and
ideals, or rather is not at all significant in the scheme of things which matter to him, its gain and
loss do not make the slightest difference to him.
However, there are some points that need clarification. Is zuhd, or detachment from the world,
on which Nahjul-Balagha, following the Holy Qur’anic teachings, puts so much emphasis, to be
taken solely in an ethical and spiritual sense? In other words, is zuhd purely a spiritual state, or
does it possess practical implications also? That is, is zuhd spiritual abstinence only or is it
accompanied by an abstinence in practical life also? Assuming that zuhd is to be applied in
practice, is it limited to abstinence from unlawful things (muharramat), as pointed out in khutba
81, or does it include something more, as exemplified by the life of Ali (A.S) and before him
bythe life of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ?
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Proceeding on the assumption that zuhd is not limited to-muharramat only and that it covers
permissible things (mubahat) as well, one may ask: what is its underlying rationale and
philosophy? What is the use of an ascetic life that limits and confines life, rejecting its blessings
and bounties? Is zuhd to be practised at all times or only under certain particular conditions? Is
zuhd-in Thesense of abstinence from even permissible things-basically in agreement with other
Islamic teachings?
Apart from this, the basis of zuhd and renunciation of the world is the pursuit of supramaterial objectives and ideals. What are they from the point of view of Islam? In particular, how
does Nahjul-Balagha describe them?
All these questions regarding zuhd, renunciation, and curtailing of hopes-themes which have
so often been discussed in Nahjul-Balagha-need to be clarified. We shall discuss these questions
in the following pages and try to answer them.
Islamic Zuhd and Christian Asceticism
In the last section we said that zuhd, as defined by Nahjul-Balagha, is a spiritual state that
makes the zahid, on account of his spiritual and other worldly aspirations, indifferent towards the
manifestations of material existence. This indifference is not confined to his heart, intellect, and
feelings and is not limited to his conscience. It also manifests itself on the practical level of life
in the form of simplicity, contentment, and obstention from hedonistic urges and love of
luxuries. A life of zuhd not only implies that a man should be free from attachment to the
material aspects of life, but he should also practically abstain from indulgence in pleasures. The
zuhhad are those who in life are satisfied with the barest material necessities. Ali (A.S) was a
zahid, who was not only emotionally detached from the world but also indifferent to its pleasures
and enjoyments. In other words, he had >renounced’ the >world’.
Two Questions
Here, inevitably, two questions shall arise in thereader’s mind. Firstly, as we know, Islam has
opposed monasticism considering it to be an innovation of Christian priests and monks.[10] the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) has stated in unequivocal terms that:
There is no monasticism (rahbaniyyah) in Islam.
Once when the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was informed that some of his
Companions had retired into seclusion renouncing everything and devoting all their time to
worship and prayer in seclusion, he became very indignant. He told them: AI, who am your
prophet, am not such. In this way, the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) made them to
understand that Islam is a religion of life and society, not a monastic faith. Moreover, the
comprehensive and multi-faceted teachings of Islam in social, economic, political and moral
spheres are based on reverence for life, not on its renunciation.
Apart from this, monasticism and renunciation of life are incompatible with the world-view of
Islam and its optimistic outlook about the universe and creation. Unlike some other philosophies
and creeds, Islam does not view the world and life in society with pessimism. It does not divide
all creation into ugly and beautiful, black and white, good and evil, proper and improper, right
and wrong. Now The second question may be stated in these words: AAside from the fact that
asceticism is the same as monasticism-which are both incompatible with the Islamic spirit-what
is the philosophy underlying zuhd ?
Moreover, why should men be urged to practise zuhd? Why should man, seeing the limitless
bounties of Allah and good things of life around him, be called upon to pass by the side of this
delightful stream indifferently and without so much as wetting his feet? Are the ascetic teachings
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found in Islam, on this basis, later innovations (bid’ah) introduced into Islam from other creeds
like Christianity and Buddhism? And if this is correct, how are we to explain and interpret the
teachings of Nahjul-Balagha? How can we explain the indubitable details known about the
Prophet’s life and that of Ali (A.S) ?
The answer is that Islamic zuhd is different from Christian asceticism or monasticism.
Asceticism is retreat from people and society and seclusion for the purpose of worship.
According to it, the life and works of the world are separate from the works of the Here-after and
the one is alien to the other. One should, of necessity, choose either one of the two. One should
either devote oneself to worship of Allah which shall bear fruits in the Hereafter, or take up the
life of the world and benefit from its immediate pleasures. Accordingly, monasticism is opposed
to life and social relationships. It requires with-drawal from people and negation of responsibility
and commitment towards them.
On the other hand, zuhd in Islam, though it requires a simple and unaffected life-style and is
based on abstention from luxuries and love of comforts and pleasures, operates in the very midst
of life and social relations and is sociable. It draws inspiration, and proceeds, from the goal of
better fulfillment of social responsibilities and duties.
The conception of zuhd in Islam is not something that would lead to asceticism, because a
sharp distinction between this world and the next is nowhere drawn. From the viewpoint of
Islam, this world and the next are not separable, not alien to each other. The relation of this
world to the other is similar to that between the inward and outward sides of a single reality.
They are like the warp and woof of a single fabric. They are to each other as the soul to the body.
Their relation-ship can be assumed to be something midway between unity and duality. The
works of this world and those of the next are interrelated similarly. Their difference is that of
quality, without being essential. Accordingly, that which is harmful for the other world is also to
one’s detriment in the present world, and everything which is beneficial for the summum bonum
of life in this world is also beneficial for life in the next world. Therefore, if a certain work which
is in accordance with the higher interests of life in this world is performed with motives that are
devoid of the higher, supra-material, and transcendental elements, that work would be considered
totally this-worldly and would not, as the Holy Qur’an tells us, elevate man in his ascent towards
Allah. However, if a work or action is motivated by sublime aims and intentions and is executed
with a higher vision that transcends the narrow limits of worldly life, the same work and action is
considered >other-worldly.’
The Islamic zuhd, as we said, is grounded in the very context and stream of life and gives a
peculiar quality to living by emphasizing certain values in life. As affirmed by the Islamic texts,
zuhd in Islam is based on three essential principles of the Islamic world-outlook.
The Three Essential Principles
1)Enjoyments derived from the physical, material, and natural means of life are not sufficient
for man’s happiness and felicity. A series of spiritual needs are inbuilt in the human nature,
without whose satisfaction the enjoyment provided by material means of life is not enough to
make man truly happy.
2)The individual’s felicity and happiness is not separable from that of society. Since man is
emotionally bound to his society, and carries within him a sense of responsibility towards it, his
individual happiness cannot be independent of the prosperity and peace of his fellow men.
3)The soul, despite its fusion and a kind of unity with the body, has a reality of its own. It is a
principle in addition to the body which constitutes another principle in itself. The soul is an
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independent source of pleasure and pain. Like the body, or rather even more than it, it stands in
need of nourishment, training, growth, and development. The soul, however, cannot dispense
with the health and vigour of the body. At the same time, it is undeniable that total indulgence in
physical pleasures and complete immersion into the delights of sensual experiences does not
leave any opportunity for realizing the soul’s unlimited possibilities. Therefore, there exists a
kind of incompatibility between physical enjoyment and spiritual satisfaction. This is especially
true if the attention and attachment to physical needs were carried to the very extreme of total
immersion and absorption.
It is not true that all sorrow and grief are related to the soul and that all pleasures are derived
from the body. In fact, the spiritual pleasures are much profounder, purer, and lasting than bodily
pleasures. To sum up, one-sided attention to physical pleasures and material enjoyments finally
results in compromising the total human happiness. Therefore, if we want to make our lives
happy, rich, pure, majestic, attractive, and beautiful, we cannot afford to ignore the spiritual
aspects of our being.
With due attention to these principles, the meaning of zuhd in Islam becomes clear. The
knowledge of these principles allows us to understand why Islam rejects monasticism but
welcomes a form of asceticism which is rooted in the very heart of life and in the context of
social existence. We shall explain the meaning of zuhd in Islamic texts on the basis of these three
principles.
The Zahid and the Monk
We said that Islam encourages zuhd but condemns monasticism. Both the zahid and the
ascetic monk seek abstinence from pleasures and enjoyments. But the monk evades life in
society and therespon-sibilities and the duties it entails, regarding them as the low and mean
facets of worldly existence, and takes refuge in mountains or monasteries. On the other hand, the
zahid accepts society with its norms, ideals, duties, and commitments. Both the zahid and the
monk are otherworldly, but the zahid is a social otherworldly. Also their attitudes to abstinence
from pleasures are not identical; the monk disdains hygiene and cleanliness and derides married
life and procreation. The zahid, on the contrary, considers hygiene and cleanliness, matrimony
and parenthood to be a part of his duties. Both the zahid and the monk are ascetics, but whereas
the >world’ renounced by the zahid is indulgence and immersion in pleasures, luxuries, and
comforts (he rejects the attitude which considers them to be life’s ultimate goal and objective),
the >world’ renounced by the monk includes life’s work and activity, and the duty and
responsibility which go with social life. That is why the zahid’s zuhd operates in the midst of
social life, and is, therefore, not only compatible with social responsibility and commitment but
is moreover a very effective means of discharging them.
The difference between the zahid and the monk arises from two different world-outlooks.
From the viewpoint of the monk, this world and the next are two different spheres, separate from
and unrelated to each other. To him, happiness in this world is not only independent of happiness
in the next but is incompatible with it. He considers the two forms of happiness as irreconcilable
contradictories. Naturally, that which leads to felicity and happiness in this world is considered
different from the works and deeds which lead to success in the Hereafter. In other words, the
means of acquiring happiness in this world and the next are regarded as being incompatible and
contradictory. It is imagined that a single work and action cannot simultaneously be a means for
acquiring happiness in both the worlds.
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But in the world-view of the zahid, the world and the Hereafter are interconnected. The world
is a preamble to the Hereafter. It is a farm of which the Hereafter is the harvest. From the zahid’s
viewpoint, that which gives order, security, uprightness, prosperity, and flourish to life is
application of other-worldly criteria to the life of this world.
The essence of felicity and happiness in the other world lies in successful accomplishment of
commitments and responsibilities of this world, performed with faith, piety, purity, and taqwa.
In truth, the zahid’s concept of zuhd and the monk’s rationale for his asceticism are
incompatible and contradictory to each other. Basically, monasticism is a deviation introduced
by men into the teachings of prophets, due to ignorance or vested interests. Now we shall explain
the philosophy of zuhd in the light of the teachings of the Islamic texts.
Zuhd and Altruism
One of the ingredients of zuhd is altruism. Ithar (altruism) and atharah (egoism) are derived
from the same root. Atharah means giving precedence to one’s interests over those of others. In
other words it implies monopolizing everything for oneself and depriving others. But Ithar
means preferring others over oneself and bearing hardship for the comfort and good of others.
The zahid, by virtue of his simple, humble, and content living, is hard upon himself so that
others may live in ease. He sacrifices for the sake of the needy because with his sensitive heart
which feels the pains of others he can relish the world’s bounties only when there does not exist
a single man oppressed by need. He derives greater satisfaction by feeding and clothing others
and working for their ease than if he did those things for himself. He endures deprivation,
hunger, and pain, so that others may be well fed and live without hardships.
Ithar represents the most magestic and sublime manifestation of human greatness, and only
very great human beings climb to its noble heights.
The Holy Qur’an refers to the episode of Theself-sacrifice of Ali (A.S) and his honored
family in the glorious verses of Surat Hal Ata. Ali (A.S) , Fatima (S.A), and their sons once gave
away whatever they had-which was no more than a few loaves of bread-to the poor for the sake
of Allah, and despite their own distress. That is why this story circulated among the angels and a
verse of the Holy Qur’an was revealed in the praise of their act.
Once when the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) came to visit Hadrat al-Zahra’
(), observing that his daughter had put on a silver bracelet and hung a new curtain on the door,
signs of unease appeared upon his face. Al-Zahra’ () was quick to discern the cause of her
father’s reaction. When the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) left, without losing time, she
took out her bracelet and removing the curtain from the door, sent them to be carried to the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) so that he might give them to the needy. When alZahra’s messenger brought them to the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) he looked at
them with amazement. He was glad that his daughter had taken the hint and foregone her
simplest luxuries for the benefit of others.
>The neighbours first’, was the maxim in the household of Ali (A.S) and Fatima (S.A). In
khutba 193, which describes the qualities of the pious, Ali (A.S) says the following:
The man of [taqwa] subjects his own self to hardships so that the people may live in comfort.
The Holy Qur’an describes the Ansar (the Helpers), who in spite of their poverty welcomed
the Muhajirun (the Emigrants) as their own brethren, giving them preference over their own
selves, in these words:
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They love whosoever has migrated to them, not finiding in their breasts any need for what
they have been given, and prefer others above themselves, even though poverty be their lot.
(59:9)
Obviously, the altruistic ingredient of zuhd comes into play only under certain conditions. In
an affluent society, altruism is less frequently required. But in conditions where poverty and
deprivation are prevalent-as in the society of al-Medina during the Prophet’s time-its need is
greater. This is one of Thesecrets of the apparent difference of the life-styles of Ali (A.S) and
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) with therest of the Imams.
In any case, zuhd with its underlying altruistic motives has nothing in common with
monasticism and escape from society; instead it is a product of man’s gregarious instincts and a
manifestation of his noblest feelings, which reinforce the social bonds between fellow human
beings.
Sympathy and Kindness
The sympathy and the willingness to share the suffering of the needy and the deprived is
another ingredient of zuhd. When the destitute witness the luxuries and comforts of the richer
classes, their anguish is multiplied. To the hardships of poverty and destitution is added the
stinging feeling of deprivation and backwardness in relation to others.
Man, by nature, cannot tolerate to remain a silent spectator while others, who have no merit
over him, eat, drink, enjoy and relish freely at the cost of his deprivation. When society is
divided into haves and have-nots, the man of Allah considers himself responsible. In the first
place, as Amir al-Mu’minin (A.S) says, he should strive to change the situation which permits
the gluttony of the rich oppressor and the hunger of the oppressed, in accordance with the
covenant of Allah with the learned men of the umma.[11] In The second place, he strives to
ameliorate the state of affairs through altruism and self-sacrifice by sharing whatever he
possesses with the needy and the deprived. But when he sees the situation deteriorating beyond
reparation and it is practically impossible to alleviate the misery of the poor through sympathy,
he practically shares their deprivation and tries to soothe their wounded hearts by adopting a lifestyle similar to that of the poor.
Sympathy with others and sharing their suffering is of essential importance especially in the
case of the leaders of the umma on whom all eyes are fixed. Ali (A.S) , more than at any other
time, lived a severely ascetic life during the days of his caliphate. He used to say: AIndeed Allah
has made it obligatory for just leaders that they should maintain themselves at the level of the
poor class so that they do not despair of their distress.[12] Should I be content with being called
Amir al-Mu’minin while refusing to share the adversities of the times with the people? Or should
I be an example to them in the distress of life? [13]
In the same letter (to >Othman ibn Hunayf), he says the following: AIt is absolutely out of
question that my desires should overpower me and my greed should lead me to relish the
choicest foods while in Hijaz and Yamama there may be some people who despair of even a
single loaf of bread and who do not get a full meal. Shall I lie with a satiated belly while around
me are those whose stomachs are hungry and whose livers are burning? [14]
At the same time, Ali (A.S) would reproach anyone else for practicing the same kind of
asceticism in life. When faced with their objection as to why he himself practiced it, he would
reply, AI am not like you. The leaders have a different duty. This approach of Ali (A.S) can be
observed in the conversation with >Asim ibn Ziyad al-Harith. [15]
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In volume 9 of Bihar al-Anwar, it has been related from Al-Kafi that Amir al-Mu’minin (A.S)
said:
AAllah has appointed me as the leader of the people and made it my duty to adopt a way of
living, in food and clothing, on par with the poorest classes of the society so that, on the one
hand, it may soothe the distress of the poor and, on the other, restrain the rich from revolting.
[16]
An incident is related from the life of the great faqih Wahid Behbahani, may Allah be pleased
with him. One day he observed one of his daughters-in-law wearing a garment made of a fabric
usually worn by women of rich families of those days. He reproached his son (the late Aqa
Muhammed Isma`il, the lady’s husband) in that regard. The son recited this verse of the Holy
Qur’an in reply to his father’s remarks: ASay: Who has forbidden the ornament of Allah which
He has brought forth for His servants and the good things of His providing? (7:32).
The father said: AI don’t say that putting on good dresses, eating good food, and making use
of Allah’s bounties is forbidden. Not at all. Such restrictions do not exist in Islam. However,
there is one thing to be remembered. We are a family charged with the duty of the religious
leadership of Muslims and have special responsibilities. When the people of poor families see
the rich live luxuriously, their frustration is aggravated. Their only consolation is that at least the
Aqa’s family lives like they do. Now if we, too, adopt the life-styles of the rich, that will deprive
them of their only consolation. However, we cannot practically change the present social
condition, but let us not grudge at least this much of sympathy.
As can be clearly seen, zuhd, which derives motivation from sympathy and readiness to share
the sufferings of others, has nothing common with monastic asceticism. It is not based on
escapism from the society. The Islamic concept of zuhd is a means of alleviating the sufferings
of the society.
Zuhd and Freedom
Another ingredient of zuhd is love of freedom and independence. The union between zuhd and
freedom is as primordial as it is indissoluble.
The dictates of need and exigency are the criteria of opportunists, whereas independence from
want is characteristic of free men. The deepest aspiration of the free men unattached to the world
is non-encumbrance, buoyancy, absence of hindrance and freedom of movement.
As a result, they adopt zuhd and contentment so as to reduce their wants to a minimum, thus
liberating themselves from the bondage of need for things and persons.
The life of a human being, like that of any other [rational] animal, requires a series of natural
and indispensable necessities like air, shelter, food, water and clothing. Man cannot free himself
entirely from attachment to such needs and other things such as light and heat so as to make
himself, in philosophical terminology, Aself-sustaining (muktafi bidhatih).
However, there are series of other wants which are not necessary and natural but are imposed
upon one in the course of one’s life either by oneself or by social and historical factors beyond
his control, which nevertheless set limits upon his freedom. Such constraints are not very
dangerous as long as they are not transformed into inner needs, such as certain political
constraints and compulsions. The most dangerous of compulsions are those which emerge as
inner needs from within one’s own self to shackle him.
The mechanism of these needs which lead to inner weakness, impotence and defeat, operates
in such a way that when one turns to luxuries and comforts in order to add charm, delight and
glamour to one’s life so as to feel more secure and strong in order to derive a greater gratification
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from life, one is impelled to possess more and more things. In the course of time, one gets
gradually accustomed to and engrossed in the means of comfort, luxury and power. These habits
gradually result in a deeper attachment to and love for those things, and he is bound to them with
invisible bonds, thus becoming helpless and impotent in front of them. That is, the same thing
which had once added charm and delight to his life later deprives his personality of its vigor, and
the same thing which once made him feel powerful against nature now turns him into a helpless
slave without a will of his own.
Man’s inclination towards zuhd is rooted in his love of freedom. By nature, he is disposed
toward possession of things and their exploitation. But when he realizes that the things, to the
very extent they make him outwardly powerful and successful, inwardly transform him into a
weakling without a will-power and a slave, he rebels against this slavery. This rebellion of man
is what we call zuhd.
Our poets and sages have spoken a lot about freedom and liberation. Hafiz calls himself Athe
slave of the magnanimity of Him Who is free of everything under the blue sky that carries any
taint of attachment. Among the trees, he admires the cypress which to him seems Afree of all
woes. What those great men meant by Afreedom is freedom from attachment, freedom from
being possessed, bewitched, and captivated by anything.
But freedom implies something greater than being devoid of attachments. The ties which
make a man weak, helpless, dependent, and impotent are not only those which originate in the
heart or emotional attachments; to these must be added the various bodily, physical and
psychological conditionings and artificial appendages that are first acquired for adding charm
and glory to life and for satisfaction of the lust for power and strength, later growing into a form
of addiction or rather becoming a second nature. These, while they may not involve one’s
emotional attachments, or may even be regarded by one as reprehensible, should be counted as
even stronger means of human servitude and which may bring greater even degradation than
emotional attachments.
Take the example of an enlightened Aarif with a heart free of worldly attachments, for whom,
nevertheless, addiction to tea, tobacco or opium has become a second nature, or for whom
abstention from foods to which he is accustomed may endanger his life. Can such a man lead a
free existence?
Liberty from attachments is a necessary condition of freedom, but it is not sufficient in itself.
Accustoming oneself to a minimum of the niceties of life and abstention from affluent living is
another condition of freedom.
The first thing to strike Abu Sa’id al-Khudri, one of the honored Companions, when
describing the station of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , is:
The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah, may peace be upon him and his
Household, could manage with the minimum necessities of life.
Is it a merit to be able to do with a minimum of means? If we take only the economic aspect
into view, we should say that the Prophet’s level of consumption was quite low. In this respect,
therefore, the answer would be: ANo, not at all; it is not a significant merit. But if viewed from a
spiritual viewpoint, that is when examined by the criterion of freedom from worldly bondage, we
have to admit that it is a great merit indeed. Because it is only by acquisition of this merit that a
human being can live with any measure of unfettered freedom and unimpeded mobility, and
participate in the incessant struggle of life with agility and vigor.
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This matter is not restricted to habits involving the individual; binding oneself to social habits
and customs, to modes and manners of dealing with people, the mesh of social connections and
gatherings, adherence to styles and fashions in dress and demeanour-these and the like of these
encumber life and deprive it of dynamism
Freedom of movement in the arena of life is like swimming; lesser the interference and
incumbrance for the swimmer, the greater is his ability to move around in water. Too many
attachments will not only deprive him of his mobility but bring the danger of drowning.
Athir al-Din Akhsikati (d. 577 or 579/1181 or 1183) says the following:
To cross the river of life, shed your robes;
Nakedness is a condition of keeping afloat.
Farrukhi Yazdi says the following:
Of nakedness the sage does not complain,
A sword of good steel would not rust without a sheath.
Baba Tahir has a ruba’i which though intended for some other purpose is nevertheless
relevant here:
O heart, thy path is better when covered with thorns;
Your track is better when stretched on heavens high;
Nay, if thou can strip the skin off thine flesh,
Do it, for the lighter thy burden the better it be.
Sa`di, too, relates a relevant fable in the chapter 7 of his Gulistan, although it also aims at
some other purpose:
I saw a rich mans son squatting by the side of his father’s grave, and bragging thus before a
darwish’s son: AMy father’s tomb is constructed of rare stones. Inside, it is paved with marble
with enlaid turquois. And look at the one of your father’s! An unbaked brick or two was fetched,
on which a handful of earth was thrown.
The sage’s son heard these remarks and replied: AYet before your father is able to budge
under the pile of those stones, my father would have reached the paradise itself.
These are allegories underlining the significance of lightness and freedom from bondages,
which is the essential condition for dynamism, nobility, and nimbleness. Leaps, movements, and
struggles were achieved by individuals who were practically freer of bondages and attachments;
that is, in some sense they were zahids. Gandhi, with his ascetic mode of life, brought the British
imperialism to its knees. Ya’qub Layth Saffar, in his own words, Adid not set aside his diet of
bread and onions until he became a terror for the caliph. In our own times, the Vietcongs were
such an example. Their surprising power of resistance was drawn from what in Islamic idiom has
been called Alightness of provisions. A Vietcong could sustain for days in his shelter with a
handful of rice and continue his battle with the enemy.
Which leader, religious or political, living in luxury and comfort has brought about drastic
upheavals in world history? Which monarch who founded a dynasty, having transferred power
from another family to his own, has been a lover of luxuries and comforts?
Ali (A.S) ibn Abu Talib, may peace be upon him, was the freest of the world’s free men. He
was a free man in the complete sense of the word, because he was a zahid in the profoundest
sense of the word. Ali (A.S) , in Nahjul-Balagha, lays great emphasis on renunciation of worldly
pleasures and comforts as a means of liberation. In one of the hikam (aphorisms), he says the
following:
Greed is everlasting slavery. [17]
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In a sermon he describes the zuhd of Jesus, the son of Mary, in these words:
He was free of any abasing greed. [18]
At another place he says the following:
The world is a place of transit, not a place to abide. Its people fall into two categories: those
who sell away their souls into slavery, and those who ransom their souls and liberate them. [19]
In a letter to AOthman ibn Hunayf, Ali (A.S) is more explicit than elsewhere. Towards the
end of the letter, addressing the world and its pleasures, he reveals to us the philosophy of zuhd
and Thesecrets of renunciation:
O world! Get away from me! I have thrown thy reins on thy shoulders, have freed myself
from thy claws, and released myself from thy snares. Go, get thee away! By Allah, I shall not
surrender to thee so that thou should abase me! I shall not follow thee tractably that thou may
control me and lead me wherever thou willeth.
Yes. Ali’s zuhd is a rebellion against abasement and indignity on account of pleasures. It is a
rebellion against human weakness and impotence before the tyranny of desires. It is a defiance of
servitude to the world and obsequiousness before its charms.
Zuhd And Spirituality; Zuhd, Love, and Worship
Another fountainhead of zuhd and renunciation of hedonism is the aspiration to avail of
spiritual bounties. Presently we do not intend to undertake any argument to the effect that man
and the universe possess an undeniable spiritual aspect. It is another story by itself. It is evident
that from a materialistic outlook of the world, therejection of hedonism, materialism, and love of
money and wealth as a prerequisite for acquisition of spiritual virtues is devoid of any meaning.
We have, here, nothing to say about the followers of materialism as a school of thought. At
present, we address only those who have experienced the aroma of spirituality. For, anybody
who has smelled its fragrance knows that as long as one does not liberate oneself from the
bondage of desire, as long as the infant soul is not weaned away from the breasts of nature, and
as long as the material aspects of life are seen as not being the ultimate end of life and are seen as
means, the domain of the heart is not ready for the emergence of chaste emotions, majestic
thoughts, and angelic feelings. That is why, it is said, that zuhd is the essential condition for
exuberance of gnosis and is inalienably linked with it.
The worship of Allah, in its real sense, that is, ardour of love and zeal of devotion and service
in the way of Allah, His constant presence in thoughts and His remembrance, Thesense of
delight and ecstasy in His adoration and worship-it is not at all compatible with self-adoration,
hedonist attitude, and being captured by the glamour and charm of material things.
The need of zuhd is not characteristic solely of the worship of Allah; rather, every kind of
love and adoration, whether it pertains to one’s country, creed, conviction, or something else,
calls for some kind of zuhd and indifference towards material aspects of life.
It is characteristic of love and adoration, as opposed to knowledge, science or philosophy, that
they have to deal with the heart and as such do not tolerate any rivals. Nothing prevents a
scientist or a philosopher who is enslaved to money and wealth from devoting and concentrating
his intellectual powers, when necessary, on the study of the problems of philosophy, logic,
physics, or mathematics. But it is not possible, at the same time, that his heart should be full to
the brim with love, especially love of a spiritual nature, such as for humanity, or his religion and
creed. Certainly, it cannot burn with the light of the Divine love nor can it receive an
enlightenment or inspiration of a the Divine sort. Consequently, the essential condition for
reception of spiritual grace and realization of authentic humanhood is purging the temple of the
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heart from every trace of materialistic attachments and exterminating from the Ka’bah of the
heart all the idols of gold and silver and destroying them.
As we have said before, we should not be led to misinterpret freedom from the bondage of
gold and silver, and indifference towards what these metals can be exchanged for, as monastic
asceticism which is an attempt to evade responsibility and commitment. Instead, it is only in the
light of such zuhd that responsibility and commitment reacquire their real significance and are no
longer empty words without content and hollow claims. The personality of Ali (A.S) , upon
whom be peace, is a glorious example of it. In him zuhd and commitment were combined
together. While he was a zahid who had renounced the world, at the same time, he had a heart
that was most sensitive to the demands of social responsibility. On the one hand he used to say:
What has Ali (A.S) to do with perishable niceties and short-lived pleasures. [20]
On the other hand, a small injustice or the sight of someone in distress was enough to snatch
sleep from his eyes at nights. He was ready to go to bed with an empty stomach lest someone in
his dominion might have remained hungry:
Shall I stuff my belly with delicious foods while in the Hijaz and Yamama there may be
people who have no hope of getting a loaf of bread or a full meal? [21]
There was a direct relation between that zuhd of his and this sensitiveness. Since Ali (A.S)
was a zahid, indifferent to the world and unselfish, with a heart that overflowed with the
exuberance of the love of Allah, he looked at the world, from the minutest particle to the greatest
star, as a unit entrusted with responsibility and duty. That is why he was so sensitive towards the
matters of social rights. Had he been a hedonist devoted to his own interests, he would never
have been theresponsible and committed person that he was.
The Islamic traditions are eloquent with regard to this philosophy of zuhd and Nahjul-Balagha
lays particular emphasis upon it. In a hadith, it is related from Imam Ja’far al-Sadiq () that he
said:
All hearts that harbour doubt or entertain shirk shall be inauthentic; that is why they adopted
zuhd so that hearts may be emptied and made ready for the Hereafter. [23]
As can be seen from this tradition, every kind of hedonism and attachment to pleasures is
considered shirk and contrary to the worship of the One Allah. Masterna (Rumi) describes the
zuhd of the Aarif in these words:
Zuhd means taking pains while sowing; Mystic knowledge (ma’rifah) is (care during) its
cultivation; the Aarif is the soul of the Law and the spirit of taqwa; For mystic knowledge is the
fruit of the labours of zuhd.
Abu Ali (A.S) ibn Sina, in the ninth namat of his al-AIsharat, which he devotes to the
description of various stations of the mystics (maqamat al-Aarifin), differentiates between the
zuhd of the Aarif and that of the non-Aarif. He writes:
The zahids who have no knowledge of the philosophy of zuhd, make a certain deal in their
imagination: they barter the goods of the world for the goods of the Hereafter. They forego the
enjoyments of the world in order that they may enjoy the pleasures of the Hereafter. In other
words, they abstain here in order to indulge there. But an aware zahid, acquainted with the
philosophy of zuhd, practises it because of his unwillingness to engage his inner self with
anything other than Allah. Such a man, out of his self-respect, regards anything other than Allah
to be unworthy of attention and servitude.
In another section of the same book where he discusses spiritual discipline, Ibn Sina says the
following:
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This training has three ends in view. First, removal of impediments from the path towards
Allah; second, subjugation of the earnal self (al-nafs al-Aammarah) to the contented self (al-nafs
al-mutma’innah), third, refinement of the inward (batin).
Then he proceeds to mention the effective means of realization of these three ends. He tells us
that true zuhd helps in achieving the first of these objectives, that is, removal of impediments, the
non-Allah, from the way.
The Contradiction Between the World and the Hereafter
The problem of the conflict between the world and the Hereafter and the contradiction
between them as two opposite poles, such as the north and the south, which are such that
proximity to the one means remoteness from the other-is related to the world of human heart,
conscience, human attachment, love and worship. Allah has not given two hearts to man:
Allah has not assigned to any man two hearts within his breast. (33:4)
With one heart one cannot choose two beloveds. That is why once when questioned about his
old and worn-out clothes, Ali (A.S) replied:
These make the heart humble, subdue Theself, and induce the believers to follow it as an
example. [23]
That is, those who have no new clothes to wear are not ashamed to put on old and worn-out
dress. They no longer feel humiliation on their account for they see that their leader himself
hasn’t put on any better. Then Ali (A.S) goes on to add that the world and the Hereafter are like
two irreconcilable enemies. They are two divergent paths. Anyone who loves the world and
chooses its bondage is, by nature, led to loathe Hereafter and detest everything that is related to
it. The world and the Hereafter are like the east and the west, the north and the south. Anyone
who approaches the one gets farther from the other. They are like two wives.
In one of his epistles, he writes:
I swear by Allah that, Allah willing, I shall so discipline my own self that it would rejoice to
have a single loaf of bread for eating and be content with only salt to season it. (In prayer) I shall
empty my eyes of tears until they become like dried up springs. The cattle fill their stomachs on
the pasture and lie down to repose. The goats graze, devour green herbs, and enter their
enclosures. Should Ali (A.S) in a similar manner swallow whatever he ean lay his hands on and
lie down to doze’? Congratulations! For, if he does that’ after long years he has chosen to follow
the wild grazing animals and the cattle led out to pasture. [24]
Then he goes on to add:
Happy is the man who fulfills his duties to Allah and overcomes hardships like a mill grinding
the grain, who allows himself no sleep at nights and when it overpowers him lies down on the
ground with his hand for a pillow. He is accompanied by those who keep their eyes awake in fear
of the Day of Judgment, whose bodies are ever away from their beds, whose lips constantly hum
in the Master’s remembrance, whose sins have been erased by prolonged supplications for
forgiveness. They are the party of Allah; why surely Allah’s party-they are the ones who prosper.
(58:22) [25]
The two passages quoted above completely illustrate therelation-ship between zuhd and
spirituality. To sum up, one has to choose one of the two paths; either to drink, eat, browse and
hanker after sensual pleasures in utter indifference to Thesecrets of the spirit, to avoid the
agonies of love and its tears, to speak not of enlightenment and progress, not to take a step
beyond the threshold of bestiality; or to resolve on a journey into the valley of authentic
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humanhood, towards the effulgence and-exuberance of the Divine grace which descends upon
chaste hearts and enlightened souls.
Zuhd: Minimum of Intake for Maximum Output
Some days ago I was in Isfahan on a visit for a few days. During it, in a gathering of the
learned, a discussion started about zuhd. The various aspects of it were scrutinized in the light of
the multi-faceted teachings of Islam. Everyone wanted to find a comprehensive and articulate
definition of zuhd. Among them a learned high school teacher, [27] who (I later came to know,
that he was writing a treatise on the subject, the manuscript of which he showed me later)
suggested a wonderfully eloquent definition of zuhd. He said:
Islamic zuhd is minimizing the intake and maximizing the output.
This definition fascinated me and I saw that it was in conformity with my own earlier
understanding and the conclusions that I have drawn in the foregoing chapters. Here I, with the
permission of that learned man, making a little amendment in his definition, would say:
Zuhd in Islam means drawing a minimum of intake for the sake of maximizing the output.
That is, there exists a relation between drawing as little as possible of material benefits of life
on the one hand and aiming at maximizing one’s output on the other. Human Aoutputs, whether
in the sphere of the actualization of one’s potentialities, whether on the level of emotion and
morality, or from the point of view of individuals role in social co-operation and mutual help, or
from the aspect of realizing spiritual edification and refinement, all in all have a converse
relationship to his intake of material benefits.
It is a human characteristic that the greater one’s enjoyment of material benefits and
indulgence in such things as pleasures, luxuries, and affluence, the greater is one’s weakness,
indignity, impotence, sterility, and impoverishment. Conversely, abstinence from indulgent and
extravagant enjoyment of nature-of course, within definite limits-refines and purifies human
nature and invigorates and strengthens two of the highest of all human powers: thought and will.
It is true only of animals that greater benefit from the possibilities provided by nature
contributes to their animal development and perfection. Even in animals it is not applicable when
we consider what is called the Amerit’ desirable in a beast. For example, sheep and cattle which
are reared for obtaining greater amount of meat, milk, or fleece should be given greater attention
and care and fed well. However, this is not true of a race horse. It is impossible for a common
stable horse to show any good performance in a race. The horse which has to run and win races
is given days or rather months of training with a controlled diet until its body becomes lean and
nimble, shedding all its excessive fat so that it can acquire the desirable agility and speed or the
Aexcellence of which it is capable.
Zuhd is also an exercise and discipline for man. But it is the exercise of the soul. Through
zuhd the soul is disciplined; shedding all excessive appendages, and becoming, as a result, light,
agile, and nimble, it takes an easy flight into the skies of spiritual merits.
Incidentally, Ali (A.S) also describes taqwa and zuhd as Aexercise and practice. The word
riyadah originally meant exercising horses intended for racing. Physical exercise is also called
riyadah. Ali (A.S) says the following:
Indeed, as to my self, I shall exercise it and discipline it through taqwa. [27]
What about plant life? Like animals that which may be, loosely speaking, called the merit of a
tree or shrub is its capacity to thrive with a minimum amount of nourishment from nature. Ali
(A.S) , also, makes an allusion to this point in one of his letters to his governors. In that letter,
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after describing his own ascetic life-style, characterized by a minimum of consumption, Ali
(A.S) encourages him to emulate it. He says the following:
I can already anticipate your criticism. Someone might say that if this is what the son of Abu
Talib eats then weakness should have made him unfit for an encounter with the enemy’s
warriors. Remember the untended tree that thrives in the harsh conditions of the desert-its wood
is firm and tough; even the fire lit from it is more enduring and fierce.
This law, which applies to all living things, is more effective in the case of man because of the
various characteristics special to him which are summed up under the term Ahuman personality.
[28]
The word Azuhd’, despite its sublime human meaning, has suffered an evil fate, and is fiercely
denounced particularly in our own times. Sometimes, the term is advertently or otherwise
misinterpreted; some-times it is equated with sanctimoniousness and show of piety; at other
times, it is considered equivalent to monasticism and ascetic seclusion. Everybody is free to coin
terms of his own with any meaning of his own choice. But no one has the right to condemn any
concept or term by imparting to it a wrong and misconceived meaning and sense. In its system of
ethics and education, Islam has used a certain term, zuhd. Nahjul-Balagha and the Islamic
tradition are replete with it. Before we make any judgment about zuhd in Islam, first, before
everything, we must understand its Islamic connotation. The meaning of zuhd in Islam is what
we have tried to explain, and the philosophy behind it is what we have discussed in the light of
Islamic texts. If anyone finds any fault with this meaning and philosophy, let him inform me so
that I too might be benefited.
What school of thought and what kind of logic can justify monasticism? What school of
thought can recommend and justify the worship of money, consumerism, love of goods, lust for
position, or-to use an expression which includes them all-worldliness? Is it possible for man to
be the slave and prisoner of material things-or in the words of Amir al-Mu’minin Ali (A.S) , Athe
slave of the world and the slave of him who exercises control over it’-and yet speak of Ahuman
personality?
Here, it would not be out of place to cite the views of a Marxist writer about therelation
between love of money and human personality. In a useful and concise book regarding capitalist
and Marxist economies, he points out the moral consequences of the power of money for society.
He writes:
The extraordinary power of Agold over our contemporary society is something deeply
detested by men of sensitive nature. Men in search of truth have always expressed their strong
aversion towards this filthy metal, and consider it to be the main cause of corruption in
contemporary society. However, those little round pieces of a shining yellow metal called Agold
are really not to be blamed. The power and domination of money as a general manifestation of
power and authority of things over man is the essential characteristic of a disorderly economy
based on barter and exchange. In the same way as the uncivilized man of ancient times adored
and worshipped idols made by his own hands, the contemporary man also worships the product
of his own labour, and his life is overwhelmed by the power of things he has made with his own
hands. In order that the worship of consumer goods and the worship of money, which is the
filthiest form evolved of idolatry, may be completely eradicated, the social causes which brought
them into existence should be eliminated and the society should be so organized that the power
and authority of the little coins of this yellow brilliant metal would be thoroughly obliterated. In
such an organization of society, things will no more wield their present power over human
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beings. On the other hand, man’s power and predominance over things shall be absolute and
according to a preconceived scheme. Then worship of money and things shall give their place to
honor and reverence for the human personality.
We agree with the author that the power of things over man, and in particular the authority of
money, is opposed to the demands of human dignity and nobility, and is as condemnable as
idolatry. However, we do not agree with his suggested exclusive prescription for solution of this
problem.
Here we are not concerned with the question whether collective ownership is preferable from
a social or economic point of view. Nevertheless, morally speaking, this suggestion, instead of
redeeming society’s spirit of honesty, eliminates right away the very object of honesty!
Man can reclaim his identity only by liberating himself from the power of money and by
bringing money under his own control. True human personality can emerge when the danger of
money and goods remains possible without overcoming man, who is not ruled by them but rules
them. This kind of personality is what Islam calls zuhd.
In the educational system of Islam, man regains his personality without the need to obliterate
the right of property. Those who are trained in the school of Islamic teachings are equipped with
the power of zuhd. They strip money and goods of their power and subjugate them to their own
authority.
SECTIONS SIX & SEVEN
THE WORLD AND WORLDLINESS
Renunciation in Nahjul-Balagha
Of the frequent themes of Nahjul-Balagha is strong warning against the dangers of
worldliness. Our preceding discussion about zuhd (asceticism) and its aims also serves here to
shed a light on the meaning of worldliness because zuhd, which is strongly enjoined, is the very
opposite of the worldliness which is severely condemned. To define and explain any one of them
is to define and explain the other. However, in view of the tremendous emphasis laid in Ali’s
moral sermons upon the warning against the dangers of worldliness, we considered it appropriate
to devote a separate chapter to this topic with a view to further explaining this concept so that all
ambiguities in this matter are removed.
The first point to be investigated is: Why so much attention has been given to the concept of
zuhd in the sayings and sermons of Amir al-Mu’minin to the extent that no other issue has been
so much underscored by him, and neither the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) nor
any of the other Imams has spoken as repeatedly about the deceptions of worldly life, its
ephemeral and temporal nature, the disloyalty of its slippery comforts and the dangers of wealth,
affluence and immersion in and complete surrender to worldly pleasures and comforts.
The Danger Created by War Booty
This was not a matter of accident. Rather, it was something related to the conditions that came
into existence during Ali’s times, that is, during the days of the past caliphs, especially during the
caliphate of AOthman. A series of serious dangers visited the world of Islam in the wake of the
influx of huge amounts of wealth and riches. Ali (A.S) sensed its dangerous consequences and
struggled against them. This struggle is reflected in his practices and policies during the period of
his caliphate, in the course of which he ultimately gave up his life. This struggle, at the
ideological level, is also reflected in his sermons, letters, and sayings.
The Muslims were blessed with great victories in battles that diverted huge amounts of
property and wealth into the Muslim world. However, instead of being utilized for public benefit
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or distributed justly among the people, the wealth fell into the hands of a few individuals and an
elite Aclass. Especially during the days of AOthman, this imbalance became greatly pronounced.
Persons who possessed nothing only a few years ago appropriated for their personal use fabulous
amounts of wealth. This was the time when worldly tendencies gained momentum in the Muslim
society and the Muslim umma started on a course of moral decline and degeneration.
It was following the awareness of this great danger to society that Ali (A.S) raised his cry of
protest to warn the umma of Islam. Al-Mas’udi, writing about the days of AOthman, says the
following: AOthman was a man of extraordinary generosity (of course, it was exercised at the
cost of the public treasury). The government officials and the people followed his example. He
was the first among the caliphs to build a mansion of stone and mortar with wooden doors made
of teak and juniper. He amassed other properties, such as gardens, orchards and springs in
Medina. When he died, there were 150,000 dinars and a thousand thousand (million) dirhams in
cash with his treasurer. His property in Wadi al-Qura, Hunain, and elsewhere was valued above
100,000 dinars. His legacy consisted of a large number of horses and camels.
Then he writes he following: ADuring his reign, a group of his associates also hoarded similar
amounts of wealth. Al-Zubayr ibn al-AAwwam built a mansion in Basra which still stands intact
in the year 332 H. [al-Mas’udi’s own time]. It is also well known that he built similar mansions
in Egypt, Kufa, and Alexandria. When al-Zubayr [ibn al-`Awwam] died, he left 50,000 dinars in
cash, a thousand horses and thousands of other things. The brick, mortar and teak mansion which
Talhah ibn AAbdullah built in Kufa still exists and is known as Dar al-Talhatayn. Talhah’s daily
income from his properties in Iraq was one thousand dinars. He had one thousand horses in his
stables. A one-thirty-second (1/32) part of the wealth that he left at his death was estimated at
84,000 dinars.
Al-Mas’udi mentions similar amounts of wealth in the possession of Zayd ibn Thabit, Ya`li
ibn Umayyah and others. Evidently, such huge amounts of wealth do not emerge from under the
ground nor fall from the sky. Such immense riches are never amassed except by the side of
extreme and horrifying poverty. This is why Ali (A.S) , in sermon 129, after warning the people
of the dangers of worldliness, says the following: AYou live in a period when virtues recede and
evils advance step by step, and Satan becomes greedier in his eagerness to ruin human beings.
Today, his equipment have been reinforced, his traps are set in every place, and his prey comes
easily. Look around; you will see either a poor man hardly able to breathe in extreme poverty
and penury, or a rich man who has transformed Allah’s blessings into his own infidelity, or you
will see a miser who makes stinginess in discharging the obligations imposed by Allah a means
of increasing his own wealth, or you will find the rebellious whose unruly hearts are deaf to
moral admonition. Where are the virtuous, the righteous among you? Where are the free men and
the magnanimous? Where are those who avoid every trace of deceit in their dealings and pursue
piety and honesty in their ways?
The Intoxication of Affluence
Amir al-Mu’minin (A.S), in his utterances, has used the phrase sakarat al-ni’mah, meaning
Aintoxication induced by comfort and affluence’, which is inevitably followed by a vengeful
disaster. In sermon 151, he warns them thus: AYou, O people of Arabia, would be victims of
calamities which are drawing near. Beware of the intoxication induced by affluence and fear the
vengeful disaster which will follow it.
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Then he describes the misfortunes caused by such immoderation. In sermon 187, he foretells
the future calamities that were to befall the Muslim society. He says the following: AThis would
happen when you would be intoxicated, not by drinking wine, but with wealth and affluence.
Yes, the flow of immense amounts of wealth into the coffers of the Islamic domain and the
unjust distribution of this wealth, together with nepotism and partiality, infected the Islamic
society with the disease of worldliness and the race for affluence.
Ali (A.S) struggled to save the Islamic world from this grave danger. He was severely critical
of those who were responsible for the infection to set in. He set an example of an altogether
different life style in his own personal living and, on attaining caliphate, he gave the top priority
to the campaign against these dangers in his revolutionary program.
The General Aspect of Ali’s Warnings
This prologue was intended to cast light at the particular aspect of the warnings of Amir alMu’minin (A.S) against worldliness as a specific reaction to a particular social phenomenon of
his time. Yet, aside from this particular feature, there is a general aspect to Ali’s words that is not
confined to his own time and applies to all times and all people as an essential part of Islamic
teachings. This specific logic emanates from the teaching of the Holy Qur’an which is followed
up in the sayings of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , Amir al-Mu’minin (A.S)
and the rest of Imams (A.S), as well as in the writings of great Muslim sages. However, it is a
logic which needs a detailed analysis. In the present discussion, our concern will be more with
the general aspect of the discourses of Amir al-Mu’minin (A.S) in the sense that in them, Ali
(A.S) addresses himself to all human beings of all times.
The Terminology of Every School
Every school of thought has a terminology which is specific to it. In order to understand the
concepts and issues of a certain school, it is essential to be familiar with its terms. On the other
hand, in order to understand its particular terminology, it is necessary, in the first place, to
understand its general view of the universe, life and man: that is, its Weltanschauung.
Islam has a clear view of being and creation. It has a particular way of looking at man and
his life. One of the fundamental principles of the Islamic world outlook is the notion that there is
no duality of any kind whatsoever in being; that is, the world of creation is not divisible into two
domains of Agood and Aevil. That is, it is not true that some existent beings are good and
beautiful and should have been created, whereas some are evil and ugly and should not have
been created but nevertheless exist. Such a view is regarded as kufr in the Islamic world outlook
and is considered contrary to the principle of tawhid. According to Islam, the creation of all
things is based on goodness, wisdom and beauty: AYou see no imperfection [whatsoever] in the
creation of the All-merciful One (67:3).
AHe knows the unseen and the seen, [He is] the Almighty, the all-Compassionate Who made
everything He created good. (32:6-7)
Accordingly, Islam’s condemnation of Athe world does not apply to the world of creation.
The Islamic world outlook rests on the foundation of pure Tawhid and lays great emphasis on the
Unity of the Acting Principle; it does not admit the existence of any partner who would share
Allah’s sovereignty. Such a world outlook can never be pessimistic. The idea of an evil world
abounding in crookedness and wickedness is not an Islamic notion. Then why does it denounce
Athe world?
The Condemned AWorld
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Commonly, it is said that attachment to the Aworld is condemned and disapproved by Islam.
This is both true and false. If what is implied is an emotional attachment, it cannot be true
because man, in relation to the total system of creation, has been created with a series of
congenital emotional attachments and inclinations. In addition, he does not acquire these
inclinations, nor are they superfluous or incongruous. Even as in the human body there is no
superfluous organ-not even a single nerve ending-so also there are no redundant congenital
tendencies of attachment in his nature. All innate human tendencies, and aptitudes have a
purpose which is wise and sagacious. The Holy Qur’an regards such tendencies as the Asigns of
the Divine Wisdom and the Creator’s consummate design:
And of His signs is that He created for you, of yourselves, spouses, that you might repose in
them, and He has set between you love and mercy. (30:21)
These attachments and sentiments form a series of channels of communication between man
and his world. Without them man would not be able to pursue the course of his development.
Consequently, it should be said that the Islamic world outlook, even as it does not permit us to
denounce and reject the world, it also does allow us to regard the natural attachments and the
channels of communication as superfluous, useless, and breakable, because such sentiments and
tendencies are a part of the general pattern of creation. In fact, the prophets and the awliya’ were
endowed with these sentiments and emotions to a high degree of exuberance.
The truth is that what is implied by Aattachment to the world’ are not these natural and innate
inclinations; instead, what is meant is bondage to material and worldly affairs and total surrender
to them, which leads to spiritual stagnation and inertia, deprives the human spirit of its freedom
of movement and buoyancy, and makes it immobile and dead. That is what Islam calls
Aworldliness and has severely campaigned against it as something contrary to the evolutionary
system of creation. Not only this, Islam considers this struggle as being in tune with the laws of
the evolutionary processes of creation. The expressions employed by the Holy Qur’an in this
regard are miraculous, as we shall explain in the following sections.
Therelation Between Man and the World
As made explicit in the last chapter, that which is regarded as disapprovable by the Holy
Qur’an and the Nahj al-balaighah is neither the world-in-itself, nor the natural and innate human
urges and attachments. In the view of Islam, neither has the world been created without a
purpose, nor has man strayed into it aimlessly.
There have been, and are, some schools of thought which view the world with pessimism. In
their view, the existing order of the universe is far from being perfect. There have existed other
schools which considered man’s entry into the world of existence to be theresult of some cosmic
error, as if man had strayed into it. According to them, man is a total stranger in this world with
which he has no ties of consanguinity, and is a prisoner of existence. Like Joseph, he has been
thrown into the black-hole of being by his evil brethren where he is confined and his every
endeavour should be aimed at finding an exit from this abyss.
Obviously, when therelation of man to the world and nature is regarded as the one between a
prison and its prisoner, and an abyss and one eptrapped in it, his ultimate aim cannot be anything
but seeking Adeliverance’.
The Logic of Islam
But from the viewpoint of Islam, therelation of man to the world is not that of a prisoner with
his prison; or that of one entrapped in a well with the well; rather it is the kind of relation that
exists between a peasant and his farm [1] , or a horse and the racecourse [2] , or a merchant and
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the marketplace [3] , or a devotee and his temple [4]. The world, from the Islamic point of view,
is a school for man, his training ground, and the place where he can acquire perfection.
There is an anecdote related in Nahjul-Balagha of a man who condemned the world in Amir
al-Mu’minin’s presence. Ali (A.S) rebuked him for his confusing Athe world which is
condemned by Islam with the actual physical world and informed him about his error [5]. Sheikh
Farid al-Din AAttar has rendered this incident into verse in his Musibat nameh:
In the presence of the Tiger of Providence,
A man denounced the world with vehemence.
AThe world A, exclaimed Hayder, Ais not to be blamed A.
Wretched are you, being far from wisdom.
The world, son, is a farm To be attended to day and night.
Whatsoever is of the honor and riches of faith,
An in all it is to be acquired from this world.
Tomorrow’s fruit is the blooming of today’s seed;
And one who is idle here, shall taste the bitter fruit of regret.
The world is the best place for you,
Where in you can prepare provision for the Hereafter.
Go into the world, but don At get immersed in the ego.
And prepare yourself for the other world.
If you act thus, the world will suit you,
Hence befriend the world just for this aim.
Nasir Khusrow AAlawi, justifiably considered a philosopher among the poets (Hakim alshu’ara’), is one of the most profound and truly religious among Persian poets. He has composed
a eulogy about the world, simultaneously highlighting both the good and evil qualities of it,
which is as much in conformity with the Islamic outlook as it is extraordinarily beautiful from
artistic viewpoint. This eulogy appears in his collected poetical works (diwan), and is included in
his book Jami’ al-hitmatayn. He says the following:
O world, how apt and essential you are,
Even though you haven’t been loyal to any.
Sick and wretched you appear to the afflicted eye,
Yet fine and healthy if one looks at your inside.
If sometimes you have broken a robust man or two,
Many a broken one you have joined and restored.
You are filthy to the unclean,
To the pure unstained.
If any one should blame you, say,
AYou know me not. A
You have grown out of me.
If you are wise,
Why blame the tree of which you are a branch?
The Master made me a path for your ascending journey,
And you have settled down on this lowly road.
Allah planted a tree from whose trunk you have grown;
If you grow out straight, you will be saved,
And if crooked, confined to the flames.
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Yes, everyone burns crooked branches,
And asks not AIs it teak or walnut?
You are the arrow of Allah aimed at His enemy,
Why have you hurt yourself with this weapon?
Now it is evident that man’s relation to the world is similar to the one that exists between the
farmer and his field of cultivation, between the merchant and the marketplace, between the
devotee and the temple. It is not possible for man to alienate himself from the world or sever his
ties with it or to develop a kind of relationship which is wholly negative. There exists a design
and intelligent planning behind every natural urge. Man has neither come to this world by
cheating or fraud, nor should he go from here as an accused.
There is a general force of attraction and gravitation that encompasses the whole universe. All
the particles in it attract each other according to a set pattern. This pattern of mutual attraction
and absorption is determined by a judicious design. Moreover, the force of attraction and love is
not confined to man alone. No particle in the universe is devoid of this power. The difference,
however, is that man, contrary to other things, is aware of his own leanings and inclinations.
Wahshi Kirmani says the following:
Every dancing particle is permeated with the same force of attraction
That draws it towards a certain specific goal.
It carries one Rower to the side of another,
And urges one spark to pursue the company of its likes,
From fire to wind, from water to dust,
From underneath the moon to the top of the heavens,
From flock to flock and from horde to horde,
You will observe this attraction in every moving thing
From heavenly spheres to the terrestrial bodies.
Accordingly, from the viewpoint of Islam the world is neither without a purpose nor is human
being created by any error, nor are man’s innate tendencies undesirable and evil. Then what is
meant by Athe world that the Holy Qur’an and Nahjul-Balagha regard as undesirable and
condemnable?
Before embarking on the issue, a few preliminary principles need to be clarified. It is
characteristic of man that he is inherently an idealist and a lover of perfection. He is in Thesearch
of something with which he wants to develop a relationship closer than an ordinary attachment.
In other words, he is by nature a devotee and a worshipper in search of something which is the
ultimate object of his desire and the end of his entire being.
However, if he is not rightly guided, or not on his guard, his relation with things and
inclination towards them is transformed into a relation of reliance and attachment, changing
means into end and an association into bondage. As a result his spirit of mobility, freedom and
capacity to quest are transformed into inertia, complacence and captivity.
This is what is undesirable and contrary to the perfection-seeking order of the world. It is a
defect and a kind of non-being, not a merit or a positive mode of being. It is a dangerous malady
and a disaster for man, and this is against which the Holy Qur’an and Nahjul-Balagha warn.
Without any doubt, Islam does not regard the material world and life in it-even if it involves
the greatest material achievements-as a fitting goal of man’s highest aspirations. This is because,
firstly, in the Islamic world outlook, this world is followed by the eternal and everlasting world
of the Hereafter where conditions of life would be determined by the deeds, good or evil, of a
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person in this world. Secondly, the worth of a human being is too great to warrant his surrender
to the slavery of and servitude to the material aspects of life.
That is why Ali (A.S) so often points out that the world is a good place, but only for him who
knows that it is not a permanent abode, but only a road or a caravanserai.
What a good abode it is for him who would not want to make it a home. [6]
This world indeed is a transit camp, whereas the Hereafter is a place of permanent abode. So
take from the transit what you need for your destination. [7]
From the viewpoint of humanistic philosophies there is no doubt that everything which binds
man to itself and immerses him completely within itself violates his human identity by making it
inert and frozen. The process of human perfection knows no limit or end, and every halt, delay
and bondage is injurious to it. As we find no reason to controvert this view, we accept it without
any argument. However, there are two other points that need to be discussed here.
Firstly, does the Holy Qur’an and following it Nahjul-Balagha confirm such a relation
between man and his world? Is it true that what the Holy Qur’an condemns is attachment and
bondage to the world when taken as the ultimate end of life, an attitude which retards man’s
movement towards perfection and represents inertness, stagnation, and non-being? Does the
Holy Qur’an abstain from absolutely condemning worldly ties and sentiments so long as they do
not become man’s ultimate goal of life and stall his progress?
Secondly, if it is admitted that human attachment to beings other than himself causes bondage
and servitude, and retards the development of human personality, does it make any difference if
that being is Allah or something else?
The Holy Qur’an negates every form of bondage and servitude and calls man to welcome
every kind of spiritual and human freedom. It does not, however, condemn servitude to Allah; it
does not invite man to liberate himself from Allah in order to acquire absolute freedom. Instead,
the invitation of the Holy Qur’an is based on liberation from everything besides Allah and
complete surrender to Him. It is based on therejection of obedience to anything except Him and
the acceptance of submission to Him.
The expression ALa ilaha illa Allah’ (There is no god except Allah) is the foundation of the
Islamic faith. It implies simultaneously a negation and an affirmation, a rejection and an
acceptance, and kufr and iman. It signifies the negation, therejection, therenunciation, and the
kufr in relation to the non-Allah, and the affirmation, the acceptance, the submission, and the
iman in relation to Allah. The essential testimony required by Islam is neither just a AYes’ nor
merely a ANO; it is a combination of both a AYes and a ANO.
If the needs of the growth of the human personality demand that man should liberate himself
from every kind of bondage, servitude, and submissiveness to anything whatsoever, that he
should revolt against everything that compromises his absolute freedom, that he ought to say
ANO to everything-as the Existentialists say-what difference does it make whether that thing is
Allah or something else? And if it is to be decided that man should renounce his freedom and
adopt slavery, servitude and submission to something, what difference does it make, after all,
whether it is Allah or something else?
Is there a difference between accepting Allah as the supreme ideal and accepting some other
thing as the Summum Bonum? Does it mean that only Allah is such that servitude to Him is
freedom in itself, and that losing oneself in Him is identical with therealization of one’s self and
therecovery of one’s true identity and personality? And if this is true, what is the basis of this
claim? How can it be justified?
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In our opinion, here we arrive at one of the subtlest, most profound, and progressive teachings
of Islam and one of the most glorious of human ideas. It is here that the sublimity of the logic of
Islam and the insignificance and pettiness of other ideologies becomes evident. We shall answer
these queries in the following sections.
AThe World’ in the Holy Qur’an and Nahjul-Balagha
In the last chapter we said that that which is execrable from the viewpoint of Islam with
regard to man’s relation with the world is that it should grow to the extent of becoming a malady
and an affliction of the human soul. It is the bondage and the enslaving attachment to the world
against which Islam has waged an unrelenting struggle considering it as undesirable, not the
mere relation and attachment with it. It is the life of captivity that is condemnable, not the life of
freedom. The world is rejected as a goal and objective and not as a way or a means.
If therelation of man to the world develops into his servitude and subjugation, it leads to the
negation and obliteration of all higher human values; man’s worth lies in the greatness of his
pursued ends and objectives. Obviously, if, for instance, his ultimate objectives do not go beyond
filling his belly to satisfaction, and if all his efforts and aspirations were to revolve around his
stomach, his worth will not surpass that of his stomach. That is why Ali (A.S) says the
following: AThe worth of a man whose only aim is to stuff his belly is equal to that which is
excreted from it.
The question is what kind of relation is appropriate between the human being and the world
and what form should it have. In one kind of relation, his personality is effaced and sacrificed to
things, and since the worth of anyone in pursuit of an objective is lower than the objective itself,
he is, to use a Holy Qur’anic expression, bound to sink to the level of Athe lowest of the low’
(asfal al-safilin), becoming thereby the most abject, degenerate and the most contemptible
creature in the world. He, then, loses not only his higher values but also his human identity. In
the other kind of relation the world and worldly things are sacrificed at the altar of his humanity
and are used to serve man while he reclaims his higher ideals. That is why it has been said in a
hadith-e qudsi:
O son of Adam! I have created everything for thy sake,
but I have created thee for My Own Self.
We have already cited two passages from Nahjul-Balagha indicating its position in
denouncing the degenerate and distorted kind of relationship between man and the world of
nature that leads to man’s servitude and bondage. Here we shall quote a few verses from the
Holy Qur’an to endorse this viewpoint, and return to Nahjul-Balagha for further relevant
references.
The Holy Qur’anic verses relating to man and the world are of two kinds: the first group of
verses is of an introductory nature; that is, it lays the ground for The second group of verses. In
truth, the first group can be regarded as representing the major and the minor premises of a
syllogism of which The second group constitutes the conclusion.
The first set of verses consists of those which emphasize the changeability, the inconstancy
and the ephemeral nature of this world. In these verses thereality of material objects is depicted
as being changeable, fleeting, and transitory. For instance, the world is compared to the
vegetation that sprouts from the ground. In the beginning it is green and flourishing but little by
little turns yellow, shrivels, and ultimately dries up. Then the elements break it into bits and
scatter it into the wind. Such is life in the present world.
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Obviously, whether man should like it or not his physical life is not much more durable than
that of thereed, and is subject to a similar fate. If man must base his outlook on reality and not on
fancy and if it is only through the discovery of truth and not by flight of imagination and
hallucinations that he can hope to attain felicity and true happiness, then he should not forget this
truth.
This set of verses constitutes a kind of a background argument for denying the importance of
material things as ultimate ideals worthy of man’s adoration. These verses are followed
immediately by thereminder that man should know that there exists another world which is
eternal and everlasting. Don’t imagine that the present life is everything that there is; and since it
is not worthy of man, do not conclude that life is futile and meaningless, they remind.
The second set of verses illuminates the solution to the problem of man’s relation to the
world. It can be clearly seen from these verses that the execrable form of relation is one that
grows to the extent of becoming a bondage, requiring man’s submission, willing surrender and
servitude to the transitory things of the world. It is in these verses that the crux of the Holy
Qur’an’s logic comes to light:
1)Wealth and sons are the adornment of the worldly life; but the abiding things, the deeds of
righteousness (which survive one’s death and continue to benefit other people), are better with
Allah in reward and better in hope. (18:46)
This verse, as can be seen, speaks of the ultimate aspiration of man. His ultimate aspiration is
the thing for which he lives and without which life has no meaning in his eyes.
2)Surely those who look not to encounter Us and are well-pleased with the present life and
are at rest in it, and those who are heedless of Our signs, those-their refuge is the Fire, for that
they have been earning. (10:7-8)
In this verse, that which is considered execrable is the absence of hope in the next life and the
satisfaction and contentment with material things.
3)So turn thou from him who turns away from Our remembrance, and desires only the present
life. That is their attainment of knowledge. (53:29-30)
4)And they rejoice in this world’s life; and this world’s life is nothing compared with the
Hereafter but a temporary enjoyment. (13:26)
5)They know an outward part of the present life, but of the Hereafter they are heedless. (30:7)
There are many other verses which have a similar meaning. In all of them the same theme
recurs, that is the negation of the world as the goal and ideal of man’s highest aspirations and the
ultimate object of his desire, and the only source of his happiness and delight. It is held that this
form of relation between man and the world, instead of putting the world at man’s disposal,
sacrifices man to it and dispossesses him of his humanity.
In Nahjul-Balagha as in the Holy Qur’an we encounter a similar twofold argument. In the
first set of statements the transitory nature of the world is depicted in profound, forceful
metaphors, allegories and parables put in precise and elegant phrases which follow one another
in an absorbing rhythm. In The second category, conclusions are drawn which are exactly the
same as those derived by the Holy Qur’an.
In Khutbah 32, people are at first divided into two categories: the worldly and the
otherworldly. The worldly people are again divided into four groups.
In the first group are put those who are meek and tractable like sheep. They are the most
innocuous of creatures, never seen to commit any overt injustice or aggression, or covert deceit
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or subversion. Not that they detest such things but because they lack the power and daring to
carry them out.
To The second category belong those who possess both the power and the daring to carry out
such ambitions. They muster their will to amass money and wealth, to acquire power and
authority, or to occupy important posts and offices and do not stop short of any degree of
perverseness.
Those belonging to the third group are wolves in the skins of sheep. They are slaves of the
world in the garb of the otherworldly and the pious. The y, sanctimoniously, hang their heads in
affected humility, walk with the slow steps of a sage and dress like the devout. Through their
hypocrisy they win the confidence of the people and become their most confident trustees.
To the fourth group belong those whose hearts burn regretfully with the fire of ambition but
their feeling of inferiority has forced them to retire to seclusion. They put on the dress of piety
and zuhd in order to conceal their deep sense of inferiority and dejection.
All the four kinds of people, regardless of the diverse degrees of their success and failure, are
regarded by Ali (A.S) ( A) to constitute, spiritually, a single class on account of their commonly
shared attitude: worldliness. Why? Because all of them have one common characteristic: they are
like the unfortunate birds whom the world has made its prey one way or another. Captured, they
enjoy no longer the freedom of flight. They are slaves and prisoners of the world.
In the same sermon, Ali (A.S) describes the qualities of the other-worldly, the opposite
group, and says the following:
Evil is the barter of those who purchase this world at the cost of their souls.
In the eyes of Ali (A.S) the whole world with everything in it is too inferior to be the price of
a man’s humanity; hence it ends in the great loss of one who exchanges it for his human identity.
Nasir Khusrow has the same theme in mind, when he says the following:
Never shall I fall an easy prey to the world,
For no more do its woes burden my heart.
In fact, I am the hunter and the world my prey,
Yough once it did pursue me on its hunt.
Yough many a man has fallen pierced by its arrows,
The world could not make me a target.
My soul flies over the world’s tides,
And no more do I worry about its waves and tides.
This theme that one should never sacrifice one’s humanity for anything in the world is a
theme that recurs a lot in the sayings of the leaders of the Islamic faith. Amir al-Mu’minin Ali
(A.S) in his famous will to al-AImam al-Hasan () which is included in Thesection of Epistle
(letters) in Nahjul-Balagha, says the following:
Keep your self above every contemptible thing, because, whatever it should be, it is not worth
the compromise of your self.
In the account of his life given in the Bihar al-Aanwar, al-AImam Ja’far al-Sadiq () is
reported to have said:
The price of my soul is (the good-pleasure of) its Master the whole of creation doesn At equal
its worth.
In the Tuhaf al-Auqul, the following tradition is recorded:
Al-AImam al-Sajjad () was asked, AWho is the most important among people? He replied,
AThe one who does not regard the whole world to be equal to his worth.
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There are many traditions which deal with a similar theme, but we shall abstain from quoting
more for the sake of brevity.
A close study of the Holy Qur’an, Nahjul-Balagha, and the sayings of other religious leaders,
will reveal that Islam has not depreciated the world; rather it has elevated the station and worth
of the human being as compared to it. For Islam, the world is for the sake of man and not the
other way round. It aims to revive human values, not to disparage the world.
Freedom and Bondage
Our discussion about the meaning of Aworldliness in Nahjul-Balagha has become somewhat
drawn out. However, one issue, which cannot be omitted, remains unanswered. We raised it
earlier in the form of a question which we had promised to answer later. The question was this: If
attachment and bondage to anything is a kind of unhealthy condition that leads to abandonment
of human values and cause stagnation, inertness, and inertia of the human personality, what
difference does it make whether that thing is something material or spiritual, this worldly or
otherworldly, or, as goes the saying, Athe Master or the apple? It may be said that if the aim of
Islam by prohibiting attachment and warning against bondage to temporal things is to safeguard
the human being’s identity and to rescue him from servitude and to protect him from stagnating
and vegetating in life, it should have encouraged man to acquire absolute freedom and to
consider everything that compromises and confines it as kufr; for such is the standpoint of some
modern schools of philosophy which consider freedom to be the essence of man’s human
identity. These schools of thought equate man’s human identity with his capacity to rebel and
disobey every form of servitude and to assert his absolute freedom. Accordingly, every manner
of bondage, confinement, and submission is, according to them, inconsistent with man’s real
identity and leads to self alienation.
They say that man realizes his true humanity only by refusing to submit and surrender. It is
characteristic of attachment that the object of love absorbs man’s attention and compromises his
self-awareness. This results in his forgetting his own self and, subsequently, this aware and free
being called man, whose identity is summarized in his awareness and freedom, becomes a
slavish creature devoid of freedom and self-awareness. In forgetting his own identity, man also
becomes oblivious of his human values. In this state of bondage and servitude he ceases to
progress and edify his self and becomes stagnant and frozen at some point. If Islam’s philosophy
of struggle against worldliness aims at theresurrection of human identity and personality, it
should oppose every form of servitude and liberate man from every form of bondage. This,
however, is not the case, for Islam, undeniably, advocates liberation from material for the sake of
spiritual servitude. Freedom from the world is acquired for the sake of the fetters of the Hereafter
and the apple is renounced for the sake of the Master.
The Aurafa who advise absolute freedom from attachments, however, do allow an exception.
Hafiz says the following:
I am the slave of the magnanimity of him
Who is free of the taint of attachment to anything under the blue sky
Except the love of the moon-cheeked one,
The joy of whose love redeems all sorrows and woes.
Openly do I declare, and am delighted to proclaim,
I am the slave of Love and free from both the worlds.
Except for the Beloved As Name inscribed on the slate of my heart,
The teacher did not teach me another word.
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From the viewpoint of Airfan, one must be free of both the worlds but should surrender totally
to love. As Hafiz says, the tablet of the heart must be clean of every name except that of the
Beloved. The heart should be cleansed of every attachment except the love of Athe mooncheeked one’, that is Allah, whose love brings redemption from all sorrows and woes.
However, from the viewpoint of the so-called humanistic philosophy freedom of the Aarif,
being only relative, does not take us anywhere, because it is freedom from everything for total
surrender and servitude to one being, whatever that may be. Servitude is after all servitude and
bondage is bondage, regardless of the agent towards which it is directed.
This is the objection raised by the followers of modern humanistic philosophies. In order that
the issues involved may be further illuminated, we are compelled to refer to certain philosophical
issues.
First of all, one may point out that to assume that there exists a kind of human selfhood and
identity and to insist that this identity should be safeguarded, in itself amounts to the negation of
movement, progress and development of this selfhood, because, motion and change necessarily
result in alienation from this selfhood. This is because movement means becoming: that is,
becoming something one is not; it implies continuous transcendence of selfhood and embracing
of otherness. Obviously, if we accept this view, it is only by the means of immobility and
stagnation that one can preserve his identity; for development necessitates self-alienation. For
this reason, some ancient philosophers defined motion in terms of otherness and selfestrangement. Accordingly, to assume that there exists a certain kind of human Aself and to insist
that this self should be safeguarded and protected from becoming Anon-self, and to speak of
movement, progress, and evolution in the same breath, involves an unresolvable contradiction
Some, in order to free themselves from this contradiction, have said that man’s identity lies in
being devoid of any kind of Aself whatsoever. Man, they say, is a creature absolutely undefined
in his essence and free from any kind of limit, form, or essence. His essence lies in his being
without any defined essence. Man is a creature devoid of a fixed nature and essential necessity.
Any attempt to define, limit and confine him amounts to depriving him of his real self and
identity.
Such a view may be aptly considered poetry and flight of imagination rather than a
philosophy. The absolute absence of a fixed form and essence is possible in one of the two cases:
Firstly, such a being should possess infinite perfection and pure and unlimited actuality; that is, it
should be a being unlimited and unconfined, encompassing all times and places and predominant
over all existents, such as the Being of the Creator. For such a being, movement and growth are
impossible; because motion and development involve overcoming of defects and imperfections,
whereas such a being cannot possibly be supposed to possess any imperfection. Secondly, it may
apply to a being devoid of every kind of actuality and merit. That is, it should be pure possibility
and sheer potentiality, a neighbour of nothingness, existing only on theremotest frontiers of
existence. It should be devoid of any innate reality and essence though capable of assuming any
form or essence Such a being, which itself absolutely undefined, is always associated with a
definite being; though shapeless and colourless in itself, it exists in the protective shadow of a
being possessing form, shape and colour. Such a being is what the philosophers call Athe primal
matter. It occupies the lowest status in the hierarchy of existence and stands on the extremity of
being, even as the Divine Essence, being absolute perfection, stands on the other extremity of
existence-with the difference that the extremity occupied by the Divine Essence circumscribes all
the contents of being. Man, like all other creatures, is situated somewhere between these two
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extremes and so cannot possibly lack any defined essence. Admittedly, he is different from other
creatures, but, unlike them, there is no limit to his movement towards perfection. Whereas other
creatures remain confined to certain definite limits which they cannot transcend, there is no end
to the possibilities of human development.
Man possesses a special kind of being. But contrary to the view of the philosophers who
believe in the precedence of essence and reduce the being of everything to its quiddity, and who
deny the possibility of transcendence and essential change as being self-contradictory, and
consider all changes to occur at the level of accidents, the existential nature of man, like that of
any other material thing, is fluid, with the difference that its movement and fluidity know no
final limits.
Some commentators of the Holy Qur’an, in their explanations of the verse: AO people of
Yathrib, there is no abiding here for you (33:13), have generalized it to cover all humanity. They
hold that man is a creature which does not move to a certain and definite stage or halt; the further
he moves the greater are the possibilities open to him. Here we do not wish to indulge in
discussing the legitimacy of imposing such interpretations on Holy Qur’anic verses; we only
intend to show that Muslim scholars have thought about man in such terms.
In the hadith about the Prophet’s Ascension (al-mi’raj), Gabriel who accompanies the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) , at a certain point, gives up his journey declaring: AI will get
burnt if I move an inch further, while the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) leaves him
behind and moves further. This is an allusion to the truth mentioned above.
Also, as we know, there is a debate among Muslim scholars about the salawat (Benedictions)
upon the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and Ahl al-Bayt, which we make as a
prayer to Allah to shower greater blessings upon them. Now the debate is whether the salawat is
of any benefit to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , who is the most perfect man.
In other words, is there any possibility of ascension in the Prophet’s station? Or does the salawat
benefit only the person who pronounces it and beseeches Allah to bless the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) , a favor that has already been granted?
The late Sayyid Ali (A.S) Khan opened this debate in his commentary on al-Sahifat AlKamilah. A group of theologians believe that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) is
always ascending and climbing higher in his station, and this movement is never halted.
Yes, such is the station of man. That which makes man such is not the absolute absence of a
defined essence but a certain kind of essence which is ordinarily referred to as Ahuman nature
and other similar expressions.
Man does not have any ultimate limits but he has a path. The Holy Qur’an lays great emphasis
on what it calls the Straight Path, which is an unambiguous path before man. Man is not
constrained by stages so as to be forced to stop at every stage in his journey. Instead there is an
orbit in which he should move. This is the orbit of human perfection which is different from
those of the animals. This means the movement in a specified orbit, a movement which is orderly
not haphazard.
The Existentialist Viewpoint
Existentialism has been rightly criticized for its refusal to acknowledge any kind of
determination or definition of the human nature, for its considering every determination (even in
the form of path or orbit) as contrary to his humanity, and for its emphasis on his absolute
freedom and capacity for rebellion; for this philosophy necessarily leads to the breakdown of
social morality and the negation of the individual’s commitments and responsibilities.
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Does Evolution Involve Self-Ali (A.S) enation?
Now returning to what we said earlier, does movement and evolution necessitate alienation
from one’s self? Should every being, in order to remain itself, abstain from change and
evolution? Does it mean that either man should retain his human identity or, if he chooses an
evolutionary course, become something alien to his essence?
The answer is that the true evolution of anything is a movement towards the perfect state
which conforms to its nature. In other words, the transformations during movement on the
straight path of nature by no means necessitate any loss of specific identity.
That which constitutes thereal self of a being is its existence, not its essence. Accordingly, any
change in essence does not imply mutation of the Aself’ into a Anon-self. Mulla Sadra, who is the
champion of this philosophy, holds that man does not have any definite essence; rather every
developing being passing through the stages of its evolution is not a single species but a plurality
of species. The relation of an imperfect being with its ultimate stage of perfection is not a
relation of otherness; rather it is a relation of the thing to itself. It is therelation of an imperfect
self to the perfect self. A thing while evolving toward its perfect state is in movement from its
self to its self. In a sense, it can be said to be in movement from the non-self towards its true self.
A seed that breaks the ground and sprouts leaves, and sends out branches and flowers, does not
move from Theself to the non-self. If it were aware of itself and aware of its ultimate evolution,
it would not feel self alienated.
That is why the love of true perfection is the love of a higher self, and a praiseworthy love is
in itself a desirable and praiseworthy egotism or self-love. Sheikh al-AIshraq Shihab al-Din alSuhrawardi has an elegant ruba’i on this subject:
Beware lest you lose the wisdom As thread,
And lose your self for the sake of water and bread.
You are the traveller, the way, the destination,
Beware lest you lose the path from Theself to Theself.
On the basis of what has been said it can be surmised that there is a great difference between
desiring Allah, the movement towards Allah, the love of Allah, the attachment and Theservitude
to Allah and submission to Him, and the love, the submission, and Theservitude to other things.
The servitude to Allah is freedom itself. It is the only relation and tie which does not stagnate the
human personality or make it inert and immobile. It is the only kind of worship which does not
imply self-forgetfulness and self-alienation. Why? Because He is the Absolute Perfection and the
Ultimate Goal and the Destination of all existents: AAnd unto thy Master will be the end of all
things (53:42).
Now we have reached a point from where we can proceed to explain the position of the Holy
Qur’an that forgetting Allah is forgetting one’s own self and Theseparation from Allah is
absolute annihilation.
Forgetting and Losing Theself
I remember that about eighteen years ago while discussing the exegesis of certain verses of
the Holy Qur’an in a private gathering, for the first time the point struck me that the Holy Qur’an
very often employs typical expressions about a certain group of human beings, such as those who
Alose, Aforget, or Asell their selves. For instance, it says the following:
They have indeed lost their selves, and that which they were forging has gone astray from
them. (7:53) Say: ASurely the losers are they who lose their selves and their families on the Day
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of Resurrection (39:15) Be not as those who forgot Allah, and so He caused them to forget their
selves; those-they are the ungodly. (59:19)
The question might occur to a mind with a philosophic bent. Is it possible for a man to lose
his self? the loss of anything necessitates two things: the loser and the thing lost. Now how is it
possible for a human being to lose its self? Is it not self-contradictory?
Likewise, is it possible for a man to forget himself? A living human being is always immersed
in itself and perceives everything as something other and additional to its own self; its attention
is, before everything else, focussed on itself. Then what is meant by forgetting one’s self?
Later I realized that this matter occupies a significant place in Islamic teachings, especially in
the prayers and some traditions as well as in the writings of Muslim Aurafa. It shows that often
man mistakes Anon-self’ as his self, regards that non-self as his real self. Then imagining the
non-self to be his self, he treats the non-self and takes care of it as he would have treated and
cared for his true self. The true self, as a result, falls into neglect and oblivion, and occasionally
under goes a metamorphosis. For instance, when man imagines his body to represent his total
entity, all his endeavour revolves about his body, it means that he has forgotten his self
conceiving the non-self to be his real self. Such a man, in the words of Rumi, is like the one who
owns a piece of land somewhere; he carries building materials and hires masons and workers to
build a house for him; after much toil, the house is made ready for living; the doors and windows
are painted, the floor is carpeted, curtains are hung and the house is furnished beautifully in
every way; however, one day when he prepares to move into the new house, all of a sudden he
realizes his mistake; to his dismay, he notes that instead of erecting the house on his own land, he
has constructed it on a land that belongs to somebody else, while his own plot lies abandoned
elsewhere:
Don At build your house on the land of another,
Work for your own self and toil not for the stranger.
Who is the stranger except your own earthen frame?
On whose account are all your sorrows and woes?
So long as you nurse and pamper your body,
The soul would not prosper, nor would it become sturdy.
At another place Rumi says the following:
You, who have lost your self in a losing encounter,
Distinguishing not the other from your own true self;
At every shadow you are quick to exclaim,
AAh! This is me! By Allah it is not you!
Isolate yourself for a while from the crowd,
And immerse yourself to the neck in thought.
Indeed you shall find that you are one with the One,
Beautiful, serene, and blessed is your self.
Amir al-Mu’minin Ali (A.S) has a saying in this regard which is as profound as it is elegant:
I wonder at the man who searches for his lost things but doesn’t care to recover his lost self.
[8]
Losing oneself and forgetting oneself is not confined to man’s error in recognizing his true
identity and essence-such as the ordinary man’s self-identification with the body, or the Aarif’s
occasional identification of himself with his barzakhi body. We have said in the last chapter that
actually every being in the natural course of its development moves from Theself to Theself; that
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is, it moves from a lower, weaker self to a self which is powerful and higher. Accordingly, the
deviation of every existent from the path of its perfection and development is deviation from
Theself towards the non-self. Man, more than any other creature, being endowed with a free will
and freedom of choice, is subject to this deviation. By choosing a deviant objective as ultimate
for himself, in reality he replaces his true self with the non-self, mistaking the non-self to be
Theself. It is on this basis that the human being’s total immersion in material aspects of life has
been regarded as condemnable.
Therefore, the adoption of devious goals and ends is one of the factors of self-alienation that
leads man to forget his true self and finally to lose it.
Devious goals and objectives not only result in the disease of self loss; they lead ultimately to
the metamorphosis of man’s human essence, a metamorphosis that is determined by that
particular devious goal. A significant part of Islamic teachings is devoted to drive home the point
that on the Day of Resurrection every human being shall be raised with the object of his love.
Our traditions declare unequivocally:
Everyone, on the Day of Judgment shall be raised in the company of his object of love,
whatever that should be, even if it is a stone. [9]
With attention to the indubitable and unequivocal Islamic teaching that on the Day of
Judgment man would be raised in the form of what he acquired in this world, it becomes clear
that thereason for a person’s resurrection together with the objects of his love is that the love and
attachment for that object make it the ultimate goal of the path of his becoming. However
devious that objective may be, it causes the soul and the inner reality of a person to transform
into that object.
This subject has been given great attention by Muslim sages and philosophers, who have
made great many interesting observations in this regard. For brevity’s sake, we shall quote only
one ruba’i on this topic: Theseeker of a mine of diamonds is himself a mine; Theseeker of the
spirit is himself the spirit; I will divulge Thesecret of this matter: You are whatever you seek,
you are the object of your quest.
The Discovery of Theself and of Allah
Therediscovery of Theself, in addition to the above two, requires to fulfill one more condition,
and that is therealization and knowledge of the Cause of one’s creation and existence. That is, it
is impossible for man to recognize himself and know himself by viewing himself in separation
from the Cause of his creation. The real Cause of every existent is prior to it and nearer to it than
it is to itself:
And We are nearer to him than his jugular vein. (50:16) And know that Allah stands between
a man and his heart. (8:24)
The Muslim mystics have laid great emphasis on the point that the knowledge of Theself
(ma’rifat al-nafs) and the knowledge of Allah (ma’rifat Allah) are not separate from one another.
To experience the spirit, which according to the Holy Qur’an is Allah’s Abreath’, is, to
experience the Divine Essence. The Muslim mystics have raised severe objections against the
statements of Muslim philosophers regarding the problem of self-knowledge and consider them
to be inadequate.
Sheikh Mahmud al-Shabistari was sent a series of versified questions by someone from
Khurasan. His poem Gulshan-e raz is thereply he gave to the questions. In one of the questions,
the enquirer asks:
Who am I?
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Inform me about my self.
What is meant by AJourney within thy self?
The Sheikh’s reply is elaborate. There he says the following:
Forms and spirits, from the same light are derived,
Reflected of mirror or beaming from the lamp.
I’ the word is everywhere in all your speech.
It refers to the soul, the spirit. AI’ and AYou A,
are greater than the body and the spirit,
Which are together parts of Theself.
Go then, my good man, first know well your self,
And remember: edema is different from robustness. [10]
Leave one of them to soar over the undulations of space and time,
Abandon the world to become a world in yourself.
A further elaboration of this theme will take us outside the scope of our present discussion. To
be brief, it should be said that the gnosis of Theself is inseparable from that of Allah. This is
exactly the meaning of the famous saying of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , and the
same theme recurs in therecorded statements of Imam Ali (A.S) : AHe who knows his own self
knows his Master.
In Nahjul-Balagha it is reported that Imam Ali (A.S) was asked by somebody: AHave you
seen your Allah? Ali (A.S) replied: AWould I worship what I have not seen? Then he elaborated
his answer thus:
He is not visible to the eyes but the hearts perceive Him through (the factual experience of)
faith (iman). [11]
An interesting point that is implicit in the statements of the Holy Qur’an is that man is in
possession of himself as long as he Apossesses’ Allah. Only through the remembrance of Allah
does he remember his self and become fully aware of it, and to forget Allah is to neglect one’s
own self. Forgetting Allah is accompanied by self-forgetfulness:
Be not as those who forgot Allah, and so He caused them to forget their selves. (59:19)
Rumi, following his verses quoted above, says the following:
Even if the body should lie amidst fragrance and musk,
On death it will petrify and give out its stink.
So scent not the body, but perfume the soul with musk,
What is that musk except the Name of the Glorious Master ?
Hafiz says the following:
Hafiz, if you desire presence,
Do not be absent from Him.
If you desire His rendezuous,
abandon the world and forget it.
This shows why the remembrance of Allah is essential for the life of the heart; it awakens and
illumines the heart and gives peace to the soul; it revives, purifies, refines, and humbles the
human conscience and fills it with delight. How profound and beautiful are Ali’s words in
Nahjul-Balagha where he says the following:
Certainly Allah Almighty has made His remembrance a means for cleaning and polishing the
hearts. It makes them hear after deafness, see after blindness, and makes them submissive to
guidance after being stubborn and resisting. In all periods and times when there were no
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prophets, there were individuals to whom He whispered through their thoughts and spoke to
them through their intellects. As a result they were enlightened with a light awakening their
hearts, their vision and their hearing. [12]
Worship and therediscovery of Theself
There is so much that can be said about worship that if we were to be elaborate we would
have to devote scores of chapters to this subject. Here we shall make a brief reference to the
value of worship in therediscovery of Theself.
As much as the bondage to material matters and immersion in them severs man from his true
self and induces self-alienation, worship helps him in recovering his own self. Worship awakens
and arouses man from his spiritual slumber. It rescues him from drowning in Thesea of selfneglect and forgetfulness and saves his identity from being lapsed in the world of material things.
It is in the mirror of worship and Allah’s remembrance that man can observe himself as he really
is and become aware of his failings and faults. It is in worship that he acquires the true
perspective of being, life, space and time, like watching a city from a high mountain, and
perceives the insignificance, pettiness and abjectness of his materialistic hopes, desires, and
ambitions. It is in worship that a yearning is awakened in his heart to attain to the very core of
being.
I have always marvelled at the following words of the famous scientist of our age, Albert
Einstein. What adds to my amazement is that he was a physicist and a mathematician, not a
psychologist, theologian or philosopher. After dividing religion into three stages, he calls the
third stage of religious experience as the one arising from Acosmic religious feeling. He
describes this religious experience in these words:
The individual feels the futility of human desires and aims, and the sublimity and marvellous
order which reveal themselves both in nature and in the world of thought. Individual existence
impresses him as a sort of prison and he wants to experience the universe as a single significant
whole.[13]
William James, writing about prayer, says the following:
The impulse to pray is a necessary consequence of the fact that whilst the innermost of the
empirical selves of a man is a self of the social sort it yet can find its only adequate socius (its
Agreat companion) in an ideal world. Most men, either continually or occasionally, carry a
reference to it in their breasts. The humblest outcast on this earth can feel himself to be real and
valid by means of this higher recognition. [14]
Iqbal also has something profound to say about worship and prayer and their value for
therediscovery of Theself. He writes:
Prayer as a means of spiritual illumination is a normal vital act by which the island of our
personality suddenly discovers its situation in a larger whole of life. [15]
We conclude our discussion of this extensive subject right here.
Some Relevant Issues
Now that our discussion about the concept of the world in Nahjul-Balagha is nearing its
conclusion, I want to clarify some issues with attention to the principles discussed above.
Life in this World versus the Hereafter
Some Islamic traditions seem to imply that there exists a kind of conflict between the world
and the Hereafter. For instance, it is stated that they are like Atwo rival wives’ who can never be
reconciled, or it is said that they are like the East and the West: one cannot approach any one of
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them without moving farther from the other. How should one interpret these statements in order
to reconcile them with what has been said above?
The answer is that, firstly, as has been expressly stated in most Islamic traditions, a
reconciliation between winning the world and the Hereafter is not only possible but is a necessity
of the Islamic creed. That which is impossible is their reconciliation as ultimate ends and goals.
The enjoyment of the good things of the world does not necessarily require deprivation from
the blessings of the next world. That which deprives one of therewards of the next life is a series
of mortal sins, not the enjoyment of a wholesome, comfortable life and the availing of pure and
lawful bounties provided by Allah. Similarly, that which leads to deprivation in the world is not
taqwa or righteous deeds or the endeavour for the Hereafter; a number of other factors are
responsible for it.
Many prophets, Imams, and pious believers, whose virtuousness and piety are indubitable,
have been among those who benefited greatly from the legitimate bounties of the world.
Accordingly, even if it be assumed that thereligious texts do imply irreconcilability between the
enjoyment of the world and that of the Hereafter, they would not be acceptable because of the
incontrovertible evidence to the contrary.
Secondly, if we scrutinize such traditions closely, an interesting point comes to the surface in
whose light we observe no contradiction between them and the incontrovertible principles of
Islam. But before that this point may be explained, we should examine three possible
relationships between the world and the Hereafter:
Therelation between enjoyment of the good things of the world and enjoyment of therewards
of the Hereafter.
Therelation between the world as the ultimate goal and the Hereafter as such.
Therelation between adoption of one of these as the ultimate goal with the enjoyment of the
other.
There is no conflict whatsoever involved in the first case. Accordingly a reconciliation
between the two is quite possible. The second case, however, involves a contradiction; for there
is no possibility of reconciling these two opposite goals.
As to the third, it involves in turn two cases: first, the adoption of the world as the ultimate
end and the enjoyment of the Hereafter; second, the adoption of the Hereafter as the ultimate
goal and the enjoyment of the world. The first case involves a contradiction, whereas The second
doesn’t.
The Primary and The secondary
The conflict between the adoption of either the world or the Hereafter as ultimate ends and the
enjoyment of the other is the kind that exists between a perfect and an imperfect end. If the
imperfect is made the ultimate goal, the perfect is necessarily missed; whereas if the perfect were
one’s end and goal, it would not necessarily preclude the imperfect. The same is true of anything
primary in relation to its secondaries. If something secondary were made the aim, it would result
in deprivation from the primary. But if the primary is made the aim and goal, The secondary,
being a corollary of the primary, is automatically included. This is most eloquently explained in
Hikma 269 of Nahjul-Balagha:
There are two types of workers among the people of the world: (One type is represented by)
the man who works in this world for this world and his involvement in the world makes him
forget the Hereafter. He is worried about those whom he shall leave behind (on death) lest
poverty should strike them as if he were himself secure of it (in the Hereafter). So he spends his
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life for the (worldly) benefit of others. The other type of man works in the world for the sake of
the Hereafter and secures his share of the world effortlessly. Thus he derives benefit from the
both and comes to possess both the worlds. As a result he acquires honor before Allah, Who
grants him whatever he asks of Him.
Rumi offers an interesting allegory. He compares the Hereafter and the world to a train of
camels and the trail of dung that it leaves behind. If one’s aim were to own the train of camels he
would also have the camels’ dung and wool. But if one wants only the dung and the wool, he
will never come to acquire the train of camels and will always be collecting dung and wool of
camels which belong to others.
Hanker you after faith for its pursuit yields
Beauty, wealth, honor, and good fortune.
Consider the Hereafter as a camel train;
The world is a trail of wool and dung in its rear.
If you want only the wool, you will never the camels own;
Yet if you own a camel train, isn At its wool your own ?
That therelation of the world to the Hereafter is like that of a secondary thing to its primary;
that worldliness, being a pursuit of The secondary, leads to deprivation from the benefits of the
Hereafter; and that other worldliness by itself ensures the benefits of the world, is a teaching that
originates in the Holy Qur’an. Verses 145-148 of the Surat al-AImran expressly, and verses 18
and 19 of the Surat al-AIsra’ together with verse 20 of the Surat al-Shura implicitly present this
view.
A Tradition
There is a well-known tradition found in the texts of hadith as well as other books and is also
mentioned in the last will of al-AImam al-Hasan al-Mujtaba (). This is the text of the tradition:
In regard to the world be as if you were going to live for ever. With respect to the Hereafter be
as if you were going to die tomorrow. [16]
This tradition has been highly controversial in that it has led to contradictory interpretations.
Some interpret it as implying that one should deal with worldly matters with relaxed inattention
and without hurry. Whenever one is faced with an affair of worldly life, one should say to
himself AThere is still a lot of time, why hurry? But when performing good deeds for the
Hereafter, one should imagine as if he were not going to be alive after tomorrow and say to
himself: AThere isn’t much time left; it is already too late.
Others with the conviction that Islam would never recommend negligence and carelessness,
which certainly has not been the practice of the leaders of the faith, have said that what is
implied is that one should always approach the worldly affairs as if he were immortal, attend to
them with attention and care, and not perform them in a perfunctory manner with the pretext that
life is fleeting. Rather, they say, the works of the world should be done with firmness and great
foresight and attention, as if one were going to live till the end of the world. The rationale for this
is that if one were to die, others will derive benefit from one’s works. The affairs of the
Hereafter, however, are in Allah’s hand; so think of them as if you were going to die tomorrow
and there is not much time left for anything.
As can be noticed, the first one of these two interpretations recommends negligence and lack
of commitment towards the affairs of the world, whereas The second one advises a similar
attitude towards the Hereafter. Obviously, none of these two interpretations can be regarded as
acceptable.
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In our opinion, this, one of the most subtle of traditions, consists of an invitation to action,
care, and attention and avoidance of negligence and indifference, whether with respect to the
worldly activities or those which relate to the Hereafter.
Suppose a person living in a house knows that sooner or later he will have to move to another
house where he will stay permanently. However, he does not know the day, the month or the
year when he shall have to make the shift. Such a man is in a state of dilemma with regard to
matters relating to his present home and his plans about his future house. If he knows that he will
move tomorrow, he would not pay any attention to therepairs and upkeep of his present house,
and attend only to matters concerning the planned Shift. But if he knows that he would not be
shifting his residence for several years, he will act in an opposite manner; presently he will
devote all his attention to the present house, knowing that there is much time left to deal with
those relating to his future residence.
Now this person, in a state of doubt about the exact date of the shift, not knowing whether he
will have to shift in near future or remain in his present house for years, meets a friend who
wisely advises him to attend to the affairs of his present house as if he were to continue living
there for a long time and not to neglect its upkeep. As to the other house, the wise friend advises
him to get it ready as if he were going to move tomorrow and have it furnished as soon as
possible. This advice will have the consequence that it will make him adopt a serious and active
attitude towards both his houses.
Suppose someone wants to start a work, like writing a book or founding an institution or
taking up a project which requires years of pursuit. If such a person thinks that he will not live
long enough to finish his work, he might desist from starting it. That is why it is said that one
must think that he will live for long. But the same person, from the point of view of repenting for
his sins and compensating for the past excesses with regard to religious duties or the rights of the
people he has transgressed-all of which require little time for their accomplishment given the will
to do so-may keep on postponing them every day so that the promised tomorrow may never
come.In such cases, contrary to the first kind of attitude, to assume that one has still enough time
and there is no reason to hasten, would result in negligence and delay in fulfillment of one’s
duties. Therefore, here one should assume that there isn’t much time left.
Therefore, we see that in one case to assume that one has enough time encourages action and
endeavour and the assumption that there is no time left would lead one to abstain from action and
endeavour. In the other case, theresult is quite the opposite. Here, the assumption that one has
still a lot of time leads to negligence and procastination, and the assumption that there isn’t much
time left leads to quick accomplishment of duties.
In the light of this, the hadith means to say that with regard to one kind of duties one should
assume that he is going to live on and with respect to another kind suppose that not much
remains of his life.
This interpretation is not baseless. There are several traditions which confirm the above
interpretation. The reason that this tradition gave rise to controversy is that attention was not paid
to such traditions.
Safinat al-bihar, under rifq, relates a tradition of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) addressed to Jabir:
Indeed this (i.e. Islam) is a firm religion. So (do not make it hard on yourself but) act in it with
mildness. Cultivate like him who thinks he will never die and work (for the hereafter) like him
who is afraid he will die tomorrow.
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In volume XV of Bihar al-Aanwar (Thesection on akhlaq, Bab 29), it is related from Al-Kafi
that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) addressed Ali (A.S) , saying:
This (Islam) is a firm religion. So work like him who hopes to live for long and be cautious
like him who is afraid that he would die tomorrow. That is, when commencing a useful project
that requires a long time for its completion, assume that you will live long enough to complete it.
However, with regard to matters which you might postpone thinking that you have enough time
to handle them, assume that you shall die tomorrow, so that time is not wasted and delay is
avoided.
In Nahjul-Balagha, it is related from the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) that he
said:
Attend to the affairs of the world; but with respect to the Hereafter be such as if you were
going to die tomorrow.
In the same book, the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) is related as saying:
Work like the man who imagines that he will never die; and be cautious like him who knows
he is going to die tomorrow.
In another tradition the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) is reported to have said:
The mu’min is the most vexed of men, for he must attend to the affairs of the world as well as
those of the Hereafter.
In Safinat al-bihar, under nafs, a hadith of al-AImam Musa al-Kazim () is related from
Tuhaf al-Auqul to the effect that:
He who abandons the world for his Hereafter or abandons his Hereafter for his world is not
from us.
The above discussion on the whole confirms our interpretation of the hadith and also shows
that this approach finds recurring echo in the teachings of the leaders of the Islamic faith.
Concluded; walhamdu lillah.
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NOTES/ REFERENCES
Notes B Section One
This is the first part of Martyrs Mutahhari’s book Sayri dar Nahjul-Balagha, and consists of
the introduction and the first section of the book. The introduction, which the author, presumably
wrote before giving the book to the publishers is dated Muharram 3, 1995 (January 15, 1975).
[1] This is a reference to the following words of Ali (A.S) , taken from Nahjul-Balagha, (ed.
Subhi al-Salih, Beirut 1387), Hikam, No 147 AO Kumayl! the mankind consists of three kinds of
people: the sage adept in the knowledge of the Divine (alim rabbani), the novice of the path of
deliverance (muta’allim Aala sabili najat) and the vulgar populace’.
[2] Faqih means an expert in Islamic Law, the Shariah, whose study is called fiqh. Equivalent
terms are mufti, mujtahid, and ayatullah. (Tr.)
[3] Nahjul-Balagha, Khutab, No. 193
[4] Minbar is a raised platform with steps, the Islamic pulpit. Traditionally as a rule, the
function at speaking at mourning gatherings, the majalis, has been performed in Iran by the
Mullahs, or ruhaniyyun, as they are called in Iran. (Tr.)
[5] Husainiyyeh Irshad is a building in Tehran founded by the late Dr. Ali (A.S) Shariati.
(Tr.)
[6] This is in reference to an Arabic maxim: That which cannot be attained in entirety is not
to be abandoned completely.
[7] Here it is not clear whether al-Mas’udi means that Ali’s sermons were recorded in writing,
in books, or if he implies that people preserved them by memorizing them, or if he means both.
[8] al-Mas’udi, Muruj al-Thahab, (Beirut, 1983), Vol. II, p. 431
[9] al-Tha’alibi quoted by Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Household) Abdo, Sharh NahjulBalagha, Introduction, p. 9
[10] Nahj means open way, road, course, method or manner; balaghah means eloquence, art
of good style and communication, rhetoric etc
[11] Here the author adds that Atill now four volumes of this have been published’.
[12] the arabic is: fawq kalamil makhluq wa duna kalam ul khaliq
[13] al-Jahiz, al-Bayan wa al-tabyin, Vol. I p. 230
[14] Nahjul-Balagha, Khutab, No. 3
[15] Ibid.
[16] Ibid., Rasa’il, No. 22
[17] Ibid., Rasa’il, No. 83
[18] According to my own counting, if I have not made a mistake
[19] Nahjul-Balagha, Khutab, No. 193
[20] Abdul-Hamid was a scribe (katib) at the court of the last Umayyad caliph, Marwan ibn
Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Of Persian origin, he was the teacher of the famous
ibn al-Muqaffa. It was said of him, Athe art of writing began with AAbdul-Hamid and ended with
ibn al-Amid’. Ibn al-Amid was a minister to the Buyids.
[21] Asla means someone whose frontal position, portion of the head is bald. Abdul-Hamid
while confessing the greatness of Imam Ali (A.S) , mentions him in a detracting manner due to
his attachment to the Umayyad court
[22] the other three being: Adab al-kitab of ibn Qutaybah, Al-Kamil, of al-Mubarrad, and alNawadir of Abu Ali (A.S) al-Qali: quoted from the introduction to Al-Bayan wal-Tabyin by ibn
Khaldun in his Muqaddamah.
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[23] al-Bayan wa al-tabyin, Vol. I p. 202
[24] Ibid., Vol. I p. 83
[25] Nahjul-Balagha, Hikam, No. 81. See also Sayyid al-Radhi’s comment on this aphorism.
[26] Sasa’ah ibn Suhan al-AAbdi was of the eminent companions of Imam Ali (A.S) . When
after the death of the third Caliph, Ali (A.S) became the Caliph, it was Sa’sa’ah who said to him:
You [by assuming the caliphate] have given it beauty, while caliphate has not added lustre to
your personality. You have raised its worth, and it has not raised your station. It stands in
greater need of you than you need it.
[27] Nahjul-Balagha, Rasa’il, No. 35
[28] This anecdote was related by Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Household) Jawad
Mughniyyah, a contemporary Lebanese scholar, at the occasion of a reception party given in his
honor in the holy city of Mashad.
[29] Nahjul-Balagha, Khutab, No. 230
[30] al-Jahiz, op. cit., Vol. 2, p. 99
[31] A poetic form much popular in classical Arabic and Persian poetry. Ghazal is also
another poetic form.
[32] Umru al-Qays (500-540 AD) the famous poet of the pre-Islamic era (Jahiliyyah), the
author of the first Mu’allaqat. AAl-Malik al-Dillili is his nickname.
Notes B Section Two
[1] the term ta’wil has been defined variously, but generally when used in the opposition to
tafsir (which is applied to the explanation of the literal and explicit meanings of the Holy
Qur’anic texts) it is applied to interpretation of the Holy Qur’anic verses which goes beyond
their literal meaning. According to Imamiyyah Shi’a, no one except the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) and the twelve Imams is entitled to draw tawil of the Holy Qur’anic verses. To
illustrate what is meant by ta’wil consider these examples: (1) According to Shi’a hadith, the
verse 2:158, Where ever you maybe, Allah will bring you all together’, pertains to the 313
companions of Imam al-Mahdi () whom Allah will gather in a certain place from various parts
of the earth in a single night. (2) According to another hadith the verse 67:30, ASay: What think
you? If your water (in wells) should have vanished into the earth, then who would bring you
running water? pertains to the ghaybah (occultation) of Imam al-Mahdi (). Such interpretations,
which obviously go beyond the apparent meaning of the Holy Qur’anic verses, are called ta’wil.
[2] Aallama S.M.H Tabatabai, Usul e falsafah wa rawish e riyalism (The Principles and
Method of Philosophy of Realism), Introduction to Vol. I
[3] Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Household) Sulayman Nadawi, Madha khasara al-alam
bi inhitat al-Muslimin, Vol. IV, p. 97
[4] Ibid., p. 135
[5] Aallama Tabatabai, op. Cit
[6] Ibid., Vol. V
[7] Maktab e tashayyu, No. 2 p. 120
[8] Ibid., p. 126
[9] Ibid., p. 157
[10] See Murtada Mutahhari, Ilal e garayesh beh maddigari (The causes of inclination
towards Materialism), under the chapter: Naresa iha ye mafahi me falsafiI (The inadequacies of
[Western] Philosophical Ideas)
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Notes - Section Three
[1] Nahjul-Balagha, Hikam, No. 237
[2] Ibid., Hikam, No. 290
[3] Source of reference not indicated (Tr.)
[4] Ibid.,. Khutab, No. 222
[5] Ibid.,. p. 343
[6] Ibid.,. Rasa’il, No. 45
[7] Ibid.,. Khutab, No. 193
[8] Ibid.,. Khutab No. 220
[9] Ibid., Khutab No. 230
[10] Ibid., Hikam, No. 147
[11] Ibid., Khutab No. 193
[12] Ibid., Khutab No. 87
[13] Ibid., Hikam, No. 147
[14] Ibid., Khutab No.199
[15] Ibid., Khutab No.227
[16] Ibid., Khutab No.222
[17] Ibid., Khutab No.150
Notes - Section Four
[1] That is, in the absence of a righteous government, an unjust government, at least preserves
law and order in society, which is, of course, better than chaos and rule of jungle.
[2] Jean Jacques Rousseau, the Social Contract (trns. by Maurice Granston Penguin Books,
1978, p. 51
[3] (Ibid. p. 53)
[4] Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan, the Liberal Arts Press, New York, 1958, p. 173
[5] Bukhari, Kitab al-Nikah, Vol. VIII
Notes - Section Five
[1] Nahjul-Balagha, Khutab, No. 51 pp. 88-89
[2] Ibid., Khutab 16
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid., Khutab 114
[5] Ibid., Khutab 191
[6] Ibid., Khutab 157
[7] See Guftar e mah, Vol. I, The second speech
[8] Ibid., Khutab 191
[9] Ibid.,
[10] Bihar al-Anwar, Vol. XV Bab al-nahy an al-rahbaniyyah wa al-siyahah. Rumi in the
sixth part of his Mathnawi, refers to this tradition in the story of the bird and the hunter.
[11] This is a reference to to Khutab No. 3 p. 50
[12] Ibid.,. Khutab 209
[13]Ibid., Khutab 45
[14] Ibid.,
[15] Ibid., Khutab 209
[16] Bihar al-anwar (Tabriz) (Vol. IX. p. 758)
[17] Nahjul-Balagha, Hikam,No. 103
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[18] Ibid., Khutab, No. 160
[19] Ibid., Khutab, No. 133
[20] Ibid., Khutab, No. 224
[21] Ibid., Epistle, No. 45
[22] al-Kulayni, Al-Kafi, Vol. 2I p 194-5
[23] Nahjul-Balagha, Hikam, No. 103
[24] Ibid., Epistle, No. 45
[25] Ibid., 420
[26] the person referred here is Akbar Parwarish
[27] Ibid., Epistle 45
[28] Usul e Iqtisad e Nuhsin, AShakl e arzish e pul.
Notes - Section Six & Seven
[1] This is a tradition of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
[2] This is in reference to a sentence from Nahjul-Balagha, Khutab, No. 28
[3] This is in reference to a sentence from Nahjul-Balagha, Hikam, No. 131
[4] This is in reference to a sentence from Nahjul-Balagha, Hikam, No. 131
[5] Nahjul-Balagha, Hikam, No. 131
[6] Ibid., Khutab, No. 223
[7] Ibid., Khutab, No. 203
[8] al-Amudi, al-Shurar wa al-durar, Vol. 4 p. 340
[9] Safinat ul Bihar, under hubb
[10] This reference to the famous words of ibn al-Arabi about one who imagines to have
known the mysteries of Theself through the statement of the philosophers.
[11] Nahjul-Balagha, Khutab, No. 179
[12] Ibid., Khutab, No. 222
[13] A. Einstein, Ideas and Opinions (London 1973) based on Mein Weltbild; ed by Carl
Seeling, p. 38
[14] Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Household) Iqbal, thereconstruction of Religious Yought
in Islam, Lahore 1971, p. 89
[15] Ibid., p. 90
[16] Wasail al- Shi’a, Vol. 2 p. 535 (Bab No. 82, hadith No. 2)
NAHJUL-BALAGHA
WHAT IS SHI’ISM
1 - Shi’ism in the contemporary world
Today, according to the latest statistics there are more than one hundred and thirty million
Shi’ites in different parts of the world. They are concentrated mostly in Iran, Iraq, Pakistan,
India, Indonesia, Syria, Jordan, the Yemen, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Kuwait,
Turkey, Caucasia, Egypt and other Muslim countries of North and Central Africa.
From the quantitative point of view Shi’ism comprises about one fourth of the total Islamic
community throughout the world. From the point of view of intellectual and scholarly activity a
notable portion of the intellectual treasures of the Islamic world has been created by Shi’ite
scholars.
Yet, unfortunately still there are many people everywhere who are not acquainted with the
principles of Shi’ite thoughts. Even our Sunni brothers who comprise three fourths of the Islamic
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community and in many countries live along side us are not completely informed of our method
of thought and beliefs.
For those who live in the East this situation should not cause much surprise for Aagents of
colonialism who see the preservation of their interests in causing internal conflicts in this region,
have explored every avenue possible to cause hatred and division between these two groups of
Muslims. In order to achieve this end they have even inverted the truth itself.
As a consequence of this pessimism there have been occasional fights between the two groups
of Muslims, fights which have incurred nothing but loss upon the Islamic community.
Yet, for those who had fixed their covetous eye on the extensive and vital resources of this
vast region, such disputes were considered as a great victory.
Fortunately as a result of the awakening of the East and the spread of means of
communication as well as the disappearance of unworthy prejudices this situation has changed
completely today.
This change is indicated by the fact that about 20 years ago on behalf of the professors and
directors of al-Azhar University in Cairo, one of the leading centers of learning of the Sunni
world, there was established a center called Athe center for rapprochement between Islamic
schools with the collaboration of Shi’ite scholars.
The aim of this center as certified by its name is to bring about familiarity and proximity
between the Muslims of the world.
Its members are comprised of well-known Shi’ite and Sunni scholars and by chance the
general secretary is an Persian Shi’ite.
This Center publishes a learned journal called Risalat al-Islam in which scholars of both
schools write articles based on sound proofs in order to illuminate the minds of the general
Muslim public throughout the world.
The late rector of al-Azhar University and the Grand Mufti of the Sunnis, Sheikh Mahmud
Shaltut, for the first time declared openly the official recognition of thereligious teaching of the
Shi’ite school.
He permitted all Sunnis to perform their religious duties according to Shi’ite beliefs if they
wish to do so. (Of course the background of this declaration had been prepared before by other
scholars such as Sheikh Abdal Masjid Salim.). This declaration had a very good effect on the
great Muslim public opinion and was very effective in creating mutual understanding between
the two groups.
Only a few fanatically minded people were disturbed by it.
2 - Centers of Shi’ite learning
Shi’ism possesses several universities in different parts of the world where Islamic sciences
can be studied. The most important among them are the centers of Najaf, Qum and Meshed.
Most of the outstanding leaders of Shi’ism come from these three centers and all of them are
professors who teach in these universities. In these and other centers of learning there are
numerous scholars, writers, propagators of the faith and preachers.
A relatively large number of students are studying in Qum, Meshed and Najaf. These students
after terminating their studies are sent to different regions as directors of religious affairs or
religious preachers. Or if necessary they are called upon to become teachers and lecturers in the
centers of learning.
An important segment of the scholarly and intellectual treasures of Islam has been written by
Shi’ite scholars.
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Also according to reliable and trustworthy documents at hand all or most of the Islamic
sciences have been founded by Shi’ite scholars, that is, they have been the first to create and
establish those sciences. Shi’ite preachers are trained in such a way that contrary to other
speakers they can deliver from memory and without any notes instructive scientific and social
lectures as well as warm and pleasing sermons, each exceeding one or two hours.
The late great leader and guide of the world of Shi’ism Ayatullah Buruiridi, showed much
interest in making Shi’ism known to the whole world.
He was certain that if the beliefs of Shi’ite Muslims were to be made known to the world in a
correct way they would be rapidly accepted and people would find in them a shelter within
which they could find solutions for the social and moral difficulties facing the modern world.
Islam can provide an answer for the needs of the humanity of our age. For this reason he
endeavored to send propagators of Shi’ism to Europe and America, and sent competent preachers
of the faith to these regions.
Unfortunately the possibilities did not permit any more than this. In West Germany in
Hamburg (on the bank of the beautiful Alster lake) plans were made for a majestic mosque called
Athe mosque of Persians.
This mosque which was the first Shi’ite religious building in the Western world has been
constructed on a four thousand square meter lot and with heavy expenses. A large number of
Muslims - Shi’ite and Sunni alike - perform their religious rites in this mosque.
Tourists visiting Hamburg come to see this beautiful and interesting mosque in which are
combined Oriental and Occidental schools of art and architecture and where the Oriental and
Islamic aspects is very obvious.
In Shi’ite universities especially those of Najaf, Qum, Meshed and Tehran there are large
libraries most of whose books consist of works of Islamic scholars. It is also of interest of note
that the great al-Azhar University of Cairo and the Islamic Qarawiyin University in Morocco
which are among the eldest universities in the world were founded by Shi’ites, the first by the
Fatimid caliphs and The second by the Idrisid sultans.
3 - the origin of Shi’ism
Occasionally certain people, because of mis-information or ill-intention, make it appear as if
Shi’ism is something other than thereligion promulgated by Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) upon whom be blessings and peace, the great leader of the Islamic world, and that
Shi’ism came into being in later centuries.
The truth is that Shi’ism is nothing but Islam and Shi’ites consider as unworthy and without
authority anything that has the least conflict with thereligion of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) of Islam - upon whom be blessings and peace - and the Holy Qur’an.
Altogether it must be remembered that Shi’ism is not a special religion visa-vis Islam about
whose origin one could debate. Shi’ism from its own point of view is none other than the sacred
religion of Islam itself as founded by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ,
Muhammed ibn AAbdullah, upon whom be peace. Only Shi’ism believes that the best means to
know Islam and the teachings of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) is through his
family who were the closest to him and were brought up in the atmosphere of revelation.
Therefore the date of origin of Shi’ism is same as Islam itself.
The Holy Qur’an, according to Shi’ism, is the most important untouched source of Islam
which has reached us without any change from the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . For
this reason the Holy Qur’an is made the criterion and means of judgment of the authenticity or
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falsehood of sayings which have reached us from the great leaders of religions, the means to
judge between authentic sayings and those that are forged. Any saying that has been handed
down, if it accords with the Holy Qur’an is acceptable and if not, rejected.
Taking these truths into view, there is no need to remind people that Shi’ism begins with the
first instance when therevelation descended upon the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of
Islam.
4 - Shi’ites and other Muslims
What distinguishes the Shi’ites from other Muslims? the answer to this question is clear. The
first point that distinguishes the Shi’ites from Sunnis is the question of succession to the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Shi’ism believes that the position of succession and vicegerency
(caliphate) of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) is a sacred and responsible function
which like that of prophecy itself must be designated by Allah. A person who occupies this
position is called the Imam. The first Imam who was chosen by Allah through the prophet was
Ali (A.S) upon whom be peace. After him eleven other members of the family of the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) were chosen for this position.
AThe first of them is Ali (A.S) ibn Abu Talib upon whom be peace. Ali (A.S) was the cousin
and son-in-law of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and according to the confession of
the scholars of Islam the most learned, self-sacrificing and courageous of the companions of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . He was the first man to accept the faith and never
separated from the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) throughout his life.
During the last year of his life the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , while returning
from pilgrimage to Medina in a place called Ghadir Khumm, officially designated Ali (A.S) as
his successor before a large gathering of Muslims.
Before this event also he had referred several times to this matter. Furthermore, the
intellectual, spiritual and religious distinctions of Ali (A.S) were such that there was no one
more worthy of becoming the successor of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) than he.
However, after the death of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) political and tribal
competition prevented him from becoming officially the caliph and leader of Muslims.
At the same time many of the outstanding personalities among the well-known companions
and aides of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) remained faithful to him and were proud
to follow him. But in order not to create any dissension or breach in the ranks of Muslims, they
did not oppose openly the caliph of the time.
But after 25 years and the caliphate of three other men, Muslims turned to him again and
selected him as their leader.
Without doubt the period of rule and caliphate of Ali (A.S) which was unfortunately short,
having lasted about five years, and which terminated with his martyrdom, was the most perfect
and exalted example of just and truthful government and fight against all unjust inequalities. This
is a matter which no historian can deny. Today his meaningful and wise sayings have survived
and make known his school. The Shi’ites of the world boast in having such a leader. Even the
word Shi’a which etymologically means Apartisan or Afollower has come into being through the
fact that the members of this group are the partisans of such a leader.
Shi’ites believe that after Ali (A.S) , eleven of his descendants became consecutively the
successors and vicegerents of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and with Ali (A.S)
himself comprise the ATwelve Imams.
Their names are as follows:
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1 - Ali ibn abi Talib (A.S).
2 - Hasan ibn Ali (A.S) .
3 - Hussein ibn Ali (A.S) .
4 - Ali ibn al-Hussein ().
5 - Muhammed ibn Ali (A.S) .
6 - Ja’far ibn Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
7 - Musa ibn Ja’fer ().
8 - Ali ibn Musa ().
9 - Muhammed ibn Ali (A.S) .
10 - Ali ibn Muhammed ().
11 - Hasan ibn Ali (A.S) .
12 - Muhammed ibn Hasan ().
From these excellent leaders we have today available and abundant traces of Islamic sciences.
Shi’ism believes that the earth can never be without the special representative of Allah (the
prophet and their vicegerents). They have been ordered to guide, lead and train the people of the
world and continue to do so. Shi’ism believes that the Twelfth Imam is right now alive and
endowed with a long life.
This matter is neither beyond the power of Allah which all religious people believe in nor
against the principles of modern biology.
Shi’ites, like all Muslims, believe that finally a day will come when mankind will reach an
impasse because of injustice, struggles, wars and bloodshed. Then with a sacred spiritual
revolution guided by one of the descendants. Peace, justice and faith in Allah will dominate
everywhere and all peoples and nations will live in a lasting peace and tranquillity. Only, Shi’ism
believes that the leader of this revolution will be none other than the Twelfth Imam.
5 - Shi’ite beliefs
Shi’ism believes that Islam is not only a series of commands or ceremonial regulations which
man performs at particular hours or days of the week. Rather, it believes religion is comprised of
a series of exalted instructions and beliefs and a group of life-giving regulations and laws which
are intertwined with man’s individual and social life.
The aim of religion is to provide felicity for man in all aspects of life.
The basis of Shi’ite beliefs like those of other Muslims, is threefold.
1. Unity of God (Tawhid)
Shi’ism believes Allah to be one without any associate or like or progeny. Shi’ism is violently
opposed to every form of polytheism, idol worshipping and deviation from unity and also to all
kinds of taking human being as masters beside Allah and addressing prayers to them.It believes
that Allah is the creator of the whole universe, and therefore holds that throughout the universe
nothing is created but for a benefit and purpose.
Shi’ism believes that Allah is neither body nor matter. Rather, He is above all that is material
and therefore has no specific place or location. He is omnipresent and omniscient. He is closer to
us than ourselves. He sees everything and hears every sound but His vision and hearing are not in
our case with eyes and ears.
The near and remote past and future are alike for him and all things indifferently known and
evident in His knowledge. He has even knowledge of thoughts that pass through our minds. He is
one in every way and does not consist of parts. Even His Qualities, such as His power and
knowledge, are identical with His Pure Essence. His Being has no beginning nor end. It is pre107
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eternal and past-eternal (He exists from eternity to eternity). He is in every way Absolute Being.
His Qualities do not resemble the qualities of the creatures for these are in all aspects limited
whereas, He is in every way unlimited. Forgiving the sins of his servants is solely at his own
absolute discretion, and nobody even the prophet of Islam or the Imams can do anything for
remission of the sins.
2. The sending of Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) s (Nubuwwa)
Shi’ism believes that Allah, in order to guide His creatures and lead them from the darkness
of ignorance and misery to the light of knowledge and happiness, has sent a number of prophets.
For Allah has created man for felicity and happiness and has created the means for the attainment
of this end in the existence of the universe itself.
Sending prophets is also with the purpose of perfecting this goal. That is why the teachings of
the prophets and the Divine laws are always the supplement for creation organization of human
being. Any law which is opposed to the primordial nature and creation of man is surely not
revealed by Allah.
Shi’ism believes that the aim of the prophets has never been to propagate unintelligible
matters such as the endurance of every kind of disagreeable situation and torture or sacrifice for
the sins of others. Rather, their aim has been that same correct instruction and training, the
strengthening of moral principles and therelation between men, and the establishment of the
principles of justice among mankind.
The Holy Qur’an in many verses has clearly reminded man of this truth.
Shi’ism respects all prophets of Allah without exception but believes that as a result of the
passage of time their holy books have become mixed with kinds of superstitions and have
suffered various forms of deviation. A living witness to this fact is the unjust and childish
qualities mentioned in these books about Allah and His prophets.
According to Shi’ism all the prophets of Allah, even Muhammed, Moses and Jesus Christ are
recognized as Theservants of Allah, but they were qualified as obedient servants to whom Allah
inspired. That is, the convictions is that all of the prophets and Imams have neither committed
any sin nor any omission or error during their life time.
3. Belief in the Day of Resurrection
Shi’ism, like all Islam believes that in a determined time all men will be resurrected and in
another world which is everlasting and eternal and will receive thereward or punishment of their
good or evil works. The least good or evil action is accounted for and its account is preserved by
Allah. No one will be treated with injustice or oppression.
Those who have performed good works shall go to eternal paradise in which is found every
kind of spiritual and corporeal blessing and evil doers will be sent to the inferno unless they
repent in this world. Repentance means that one would seriously and cordially repent from his or
her past sins, and decide definitely not to adhere to such sins in the future, as well as indemnify
and make good what would be deemed repayable and where he or she has infringed and violated
the rights of other individuals, to restore and repair them to the rightful party.
6 - Distinctions of Shi’ism
Shi’ism shares the three above-mentioned principles with other Muslims but there are two
points which are its distinguishing marks:
1 - Belief in the Twelve Imams who are the vicegerents of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) and whose account has already been given.
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2 - Belief in the Divine justice. By this it means that Shi’ism believes Allah never deals with
injustice or oppression toward others which is a sign of either ignorance or lack of power,
whereas Allah is omniscient and omnipotent. As a consequence of this principle Shi’ism also
believes that all human beings possess the freedom of will. No one is forced to obey or rebel.
The destiny of each person is in his own hands. No one bears the weight of the sins of others nor
is anyone punished for the wrong doings of others.
7 - Sources of Shi’ite religious instructions
Shi’ism has received its religious instructions which concern all aspects of private and social
life from the closest source of knowledge to the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , that is,
the household of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) (the Twelve Imams) who have
received their knowledge either directly or through intermediaries from the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) himself. In its method the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) which all
Muslims remember from him: AI am departing from you but I have among you two precious
things: the Holy Qur’an, the book of Allah, and my household who will never separate from each
other.
In order to discern and distinguish religious obligations Shi’ism follows, in addition to the
Holy Qur’an and the traditions of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and the Imams,
that which meets the consensus of the Aulama’ (learned men) and also that which reason can
judge with certainty. These four principles (the Holy Qur’an, traditions of the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) and Imams, consensus of the Aulama’ and reason) are called the fourfold
proofs.
Shi’ism believes that it is a duty of religious scholars to investigate these sources and deduce
thereligious obligations and instructions of Islam from them. Or one could say that the gate of
ijtihad (giving judgment and opinion on religious matters) is open to all the Aulama’.
In the principles of Islamic injunctions and laws there is no difference of opinion between
Shi’ite and Sunni scholars.
The only difference of view is in certain aspects of the details of problems.
Shi’ism holds that Islam is an everlasting religion which is at the same time easy to accept and
can be followed by one at all places. Shi’ite scholars have collected the individual and social
duties and instructions of Islam in detail in books called the Abooks in jurisprudence (fiqh) and
have created numerous sciences for therefinement and examination of these injunctions.
Shi’ism like all of Muslims believes that each Muslim must pray five times a day, fast one
month a year during Ramadan and in case he or she possesses the financial and physical ability
and means to participate once during his or her lifetime in the great Islamic congress, the Hajj, in
Mecca and to perform special ceremonies that are full of majesty and spirituality with other
Muslim brothers. Also each Muslim is obliged to pay to the public treasury to Islam a certain
amount of his wealth (of course under special conditions) as Zakat in order to help the needy,
perform charitable acts and defend the borders of Muslim countries.
Shi’ism also believes that in addition to this Islamic tax there is another tax described as
Khums for individuals having financial ability according to special regulations.
Shi’ism also believes that in case Muslim countries are invaded by an enemy all who have the
ability must take up arms and as a religious duty in the path of Adefending their homeland to
fight with the enemy unto death. Martyrdom in such a path is considered as a great honor.
Moreover, all Muslims have the duty to act in a correct and logical manner to guide and
instruct individuals who have perverted the right way toward the good and to combat individual
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and social corruption. This Agreat national supervision, following the inspiration of the Holy
Qur’an, is called Aamr be ma’ruf and nahy az munkar.
8 - Social and moral duties
Shi’ism believes that a true and conscientious Muslim is one who does not forget Allah under
any condition, who is truthful, trustworthy, upright and friendly, who is aware of the condition of
his brother Muslims and does not refuse any kind of help to them. (One must remember that
Muslims address each other as brothers and this is the closest relation that exists between two
human beings on the basis of mutual respect and equality. In this matter they have been inspired
by the Holy Qur’an that has said, AAll Muslims are brethren). No racial, class or family
distinction can cause one person to become superior to another. The only distinction is what
pertains to piety and chastity. Therefore, from our point of view every form of racial
discrimination is rejected.
Shi’ism possesses extensive teachings concerning rights which it has received from the
Imams. Even the animals have rights. To molest them without reason is condemned. On the
contrary they should be protected.
Shi’ism asserts that no one should stop striving and trying in order to earn a livelihood and
that no one should become a burden to society. At the same time striving to have a better life
should not disregard moral principles and virtue.
Shi’ism prohibits alcoholic beverages, narcotics, pork, gambling, sexual promiscuity and
usury and its like.
It considers the principle of cooperation as the most important basis of social life and the first
duty of a Muslim toward others. Like other Muslims, Shi’ites consider human life as particularly
significant so that for murder, blood-shed and injury upon others heavy penalties have been
foreseen in Islamic penal codes.
Also special rights and much importance are held for the family, the upbringing of children,
kindness towards relatives, even distant ones, and neighbors.
Shi’ism like therest of Islam respects the rights of women as a basic principle of the family
and in contrast to many other religions gives complete economic independence to women.
Like other Muslims, Shi’ites are permitted to have more than one wife but not only is this
matter non-obligatory but has heavy conditions imposed upon it. Taking these conditions into
considerations, only in case one’s wife cannot bear children or perform the material act or if a
woman does not have someone to look after her and is in need of such care or in similar cases
does marriage to more than one wife take place.
Contrary to what many westerners think the number of men in Islamic countries having more
than one wife does not exceed one percent. It is obvious that this polygamy under stringent
conditions is quite virtuous and cannot in any way be compared with the illicit and unconditional
sexual relations of non-Muslim men with a large number of women.
Shi’ism believes that all Muslims should participate in all social and political problems that
pertain to them and should pursue these problems with awareness. It is opposed to solitary life,
retirement from the world and monasticism.
Shi’ism believes that Islamic societies should base their rule upon the teachings and laws of
Islam, and consider the welfare of the individuals with inspiration drawn from the teachings of
Islam and according to the needs and requirements of the moment. They should try their utmost
to advance in all spiritual and material domains.
NAHJUL BALAGHA
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One cannot help liking young Ali (A.S) . A noble-minded person, as he shows himself, now
and always afterwards; full of affection, a fiery darling. Something chivalrous in him: brave as
lion; yet with a grace, a truth and affection worthy of Christian knighthood.
- Thomas Carlyle, Heroes and Hero-Worship, page 77 Edition 1968)
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THIS BOOK
This book is a translation of the sermons, letters, orders and some of the sayings of Imam Ali
(A.S) as compiled by Sayyid al-Razi and called ANahjul-Balagha, the path to eloquence.
These sermons and preachings of Imam Ali (A.S) were so highly valued and venerated in the
Islamic world that within a century of his death they were taught and read as the last word on the
philosophy of monotheism, as the best lectures for character building, as exalted sources of
inspiration, as very persuasive sermons towards piety, as guiding beacons towards truth and
justice, as marvelous eulogies of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and the Holy
Qur’an, as convincing discourses on the spiritual values of Islam, as awe inspiring discussions
about the attributes of Allah. As an historic masterpiece in literature alone Nahjul-Balagha is the
original and undisputed model in the Art of Rhetoric.
IN THE 1ST CENTURY A.H.
According to the famous book of biographies Rijal al-Kabir, the first person to collect these
sermons in a book form was Zaid ibn Wahab al-Juhni, who died in 90 A.H. and who was
regarded as a narrator of ahadith. Thus, within thirty years of Imam Ali’s death and during the
first century of Hijra, his sermons, letters, ahadith etc., were collected quoted and preserved.
IN THE 2ND CENTURY
With the dawn of 2nd century, Ibn Wahab’s example was followed by (1) the famous
caligraphist of the early Abbaside regime, Abdul Hamid ibn Yahya (132 A.H.), (2) and then ibn
al-Muqaffa’ (142 A.H.) took up this work of compilation. Jahiz al-AOthmani says ibn alMuqaffa’ had very carefully studied these sermons and used to say that he had saturated himself
from the Fountains head of knowledge and wisdom and was daily getting fresh inspirations from
these sermons (3) ibn Nadim in his biographies book titled the Fahirst says that Hisham ibn alSa’ib al-Kalbi (146 A.H.) had also collected these sermons (Fahrist: ibn Nadim, section VII page
251).
Thence onward century after century Muslim scholars, theologians, historians and
traditionists were citing these sermons, quoting them, discussing the meanings of the words and
phrases used by Imam Ali (A.S) , and referring them when they needed an authority on theology,
ethics, the teaching of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and the Holy Qur’an or
on literature and rhetoric.
IN THE 3RD CENTURY
During the third century five famous men took up this work.
1. Abu AOthman AOmer ibn Bahr al-Jahiz, who died in 255 A.H. (868 A.D.), quoted many
sermons in his book Al-Bayan wal Tabyin.
2. Ibn Qutaybah al-Daynuri, who died in 276 A.H., in his books AUyun al-Akhbar and Gharib
al-Hadith quoted many sermons and discussed meanings of many words and phrases used by
Imam Ali (A.S) .
3. Ibn Wazih al-Ya’qubi, who died in 278 A.H., cited many sermons and sayings of Imam Ali
(A.S) in his History.
4. Abu Hanifah al-Daynuri (280 A.H.) in his history Akhbar al-Tiwal quoted many sermons
and sayings.
5. Abul-Abbas al-Mubarrad (286 A.H.) in his book Kitab al-Mubarrad collected many
sermons and letters.
IN THE 4TH CENTURY
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1. The famous historian ibn Jarir al-Tabari, who died in 310 A.H., quoted some of these
sermons in his Tarikh al-Kabir.
2. Abu Muhammed Hasan ibn Ali ibn Shu’bah al-Halabi (320 A.H.) had collected some
sermons in his book Tuhaf al-AUqul. This book was later printed in Iran.
The following writers have also extensively quoted the sermons and sayings of Imam Ali
(A.S) in their respective books.
3. Ibn Warid (321 A.H.) in his book ALMOOJTHABNEE.
4. Ibn Abd Rabbih (328 A.H.) in Al-AIqd al-Farid.
5. Thiqatul-Islam al-Kulayni (329 A.H.) in his book titled Al-Kafi.
6. Ali ibn Muhammed ibn Abdullah al-Madani (335 A.H.) collected sermons, letters and
sayings of the Imam () in his book. Yaqut al-Hamawi mentions of this book in Mu’jam alUdaba’ page 313 Vol. 5.
7. The historian al-Mas’udi (346 A.H.), in Muruj al-Thahab, has quoted some of the letters
and sermons of the Imam ().
8. Abul-Faraj al-Isbahani (356 A.H.) in his book titled Al-Aghani,
9. Abu Ali QUALI (356 A.H.) in his Nawadir, and
10. Sheikh al-Saduq (381 A.H.) in Kitab al-Tawhid, has extensively quoted these sermons,
letters and sayings.
IN THE 5TH CENTURY
1. Sheikh al-Mufid (413 A.H.) in Al-Irshad has quoted many sermons, ahadith sayings and
letters of the Imam ().
2. Sayyid al-Razi (420 A.H.) compiled the book titled Nahjul-Balagha.
3. Sheikhul Ta’ifa Abu Ja’fer Muhammed ibn al-Hasan al-Tusi (460 A.H.) was a
contemporary of Sayyid al-Razi and had collected some of these sermons etc., long before
Sayyid took up his work.
What Sayyid al-Razi could compile in Nahjul-Balagha does not contain all the sermons letters
and sayings of Imam Ali (A.S) . Mas’udi (346 A.H.) in his famous history Muruj al-Thahab
(Vol. 2, p. 33 printed at Cairo) says that only sermons of Imam Ali (A.S) , which have been
preserved by various people, number more than four hundred and eighty. These were
spontaneous orations, people have copied them one from another and have compiled them in
book forms; they have cited them and have quoted passages from them in their books.
Apparently out of these four hundred and eighty sermons some were lost and Sayyid al-Razi
could lay hand on only about 245 sermons, in addition he collected about 75 letters and more
than 200 sayings. Almost everyone of the sermons, letters and sayings collected in NahjulBalagha is to be found in books of Authors who died long before Sayyid al-Razi was born, while
some are found in works of such authors who, though his contemporaries, yet were older to him
and had written their books before Nahjul-Balagha was compiled. In the Index No. 2:A,B and C,
I have given a list of the names of these authors, books and the number of sermons, etc. found in
those books.
If I quote all of what has been said by the Muslim and the Christian Arab scholars,
theologians, philosophers and historians in praises of these sermons, sayings and letters, it will
cover a volume as big as this book, therefore I shall briefly quote only a few of them:
1. Abu Sa’adah Mub arak ibn al-Athir al-Jazri (606 A.H.) is recognized unto this day not only
as a narrator of ahadith but also as a lexicologist of great eminence. His book Al-Nih aya, is a
study of the history and meanings of the difficult words of Holy Qur’an and the traditions. In this
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book he has at great length discussed many words, phrases and the sentences of the Imam Ali’s
sermons from the book Nahjul-Balagha. He says that so far as comprehensiveness is concerned
Ali’s words come next only to the Holy Qur’an.
2. Aallama Sheikh Kamalludin ibn Muhammed ibn Talhah, the Shafi’ite, (who died in 652
A.H.) in his famous book Matalib al-Su’l, writes the following: AThe fourth attribute of Imam
Ali (A.S) was his eloquence and rhetoric. He was such an Imam in these arts that none can
aspire to rise up to the level of the dust of his shoes. One who has studied Nahjul- Balagha can
form some idea of his supreme eminence in this sphere.
3. Aallama Abu Hamid Abdul Hamid ibn Hibathullah, known as ibn Abil Hadid, the
Mu’tazilite, who died in 655 A.H., and who has written a really great commentary on these
sermons says the following:
i
AHis speeches, letters and sayings are so supremely eminent that they are above the
sayings of man and below only the words of Allah. None can surpass it but the Holy Qur’an.
ii In another place, he says, AHis sayings are (the actualized) miracle of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) . His prophecies show that his knowledge was super-human.
4. Aallama Sa’ddud-Din al-Taftazani (791 A.H.), in Sharh al-Maqasid, says, Ali had a
supreme command over the language, over ethics, and over the tenets of thereligion. At the same
time, he was a great orator. His sermons, compiled in Nahjul-Balagha, bear witness to these
facts.
5. Aallama Ala’ud-Din al-Qawshaji (875 A.H.), in Sharah al-Tajrid, says, AThe book NahjulBalagha, that is, the sermons and sayings contained therein, prove that none can surpass it on
these lines but the Holy Qur’an.
6. The mufthi of Egypt, Sheikh Muhammed Abdoh (1323 A.H.), has written a commentary on
the book, Nahjul-Balagha. He was among those modern thinkers, who made the modern world
realize the beauties of the teaching of Islam. His introduction on his own commentary of NahjulBalagha deserves careful study.
In this introduction he says that everyone who fully understands Arabic language must agree
that the sermons and sayings of the Imam () are next only to the words of Allah and the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Ali’s words are so full of meanings and they convey
such great ideas that this book Nahjul-Balagha should be very carefully studied, referred and
quoted by students as well as teachers. This professor of Arabic literature and philosophy
persuaded the universities of Cairo and Beirut to include the book Nahjul-Balagha in their
courses for advance studies of literature and philosophy.
7. The famous author and orator Sheikh Mustafa Ghalaini of Beirut, who is considered as an
authority on commentaries (tafsir) of the Holy Qur’an and also on Arabic literature in his book,
Arij al-Zahr and from the chapter titled AThe Style of Language is written: AWho can write
better than Ali except the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and Allah. Those who
want to study eminent standards of literature should study the book Nahjul-Balagha. It contains
such depth of knowledge and such wonderful advises on the subjects of ethics and religion that
its constant study will make a man wise, pious and noble-minded and will train him to be an
orator of great standing.
8. Muhammed Mohiuddin, a professor of Arabic at Al-Azhar University of Cairo, says that
Nahjul-Balagha is a collection of the works of Imam Ali (A.S) . It is compiled by Sayyid alRazi. It contains such examples of chaste language, noble eloquence and superior wisdom that
none but Ali can produce such a work because next to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
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Household) , he was the greatest orator, the greatest authority on language and literature and the
greatest source of wisdom of thereligion (Islam). He was such a philosopher that from his words
flow streams of knowledge and wisdom.
9. Abdul Wahhab Hammudah, an authority on Arabic literature and on traditions and also a
professor at the Fu’ad I University of Cairo, wrote the following in 1951: AThe Book NahjulBalagha contains all that great scholars, professor of ethics, philosophers, scientists, authorities
on religions and politicians can say or write. The wonderful force of advises and the superfine
way of presenting arguments and the depth of vision prove that it is the work of a super mind
like that of Ali (A.S) .
10. Abdul Maseeh al-Antaki, the Christian editor of the Egyptian magazine AAlamran, in his
famous book titled Sharh al-Quasa’id al-AAlawiyya writes: AIt cannot be denied that Ali (A.S)
was the Imam of speakers and orators, and he was the teacher and leader of writers and
philosophers. There is truth in this assertion that his sayings are superior to that of any man and
are inferior only to the sayings of Allah the Almighty. He undoubtedly was the man from writers,
speakers, philosophers, theologians and poets have drawn inspirations, have improved their
styles and have mastered their arts. The compilation of his work is named Nahjul-Balagha,
which should be read often.
11. Fu’ad Afram al-Bust ani, a professor of Arabic literature, in the Qiddis Yousuf [Saint
Joseph] College of Beirut, is a Roman Catholic. He has compiled a book containing selections
from the works of philosophers, scientists, theologians and essayists. He starts this book with the
following words, AI want to start this work of mine with Theselections from the book NahjulBalagha. It is a work of the greatest thinker of the world Imam Ali-Ibn Abu-Talib.
12. The famous Christian moralist, author and poet, Paulis Salamah, in his famous book
Awwal Malhama al-Arabiyya (printed at al-Ans ari Press of Beirut) says, AThe famous book
Nahjul-Balagha is the work which makes one realizes the great mind of Ali ibn Abu Talib. No
book can surpass it but the Holy Qur’an. In it, you will find pearls of knowledge strung in
beautiful chains, flowers of language making ones mind fragrant with sweet and pleasing smell
of heroism and nobility, and streams of chaste language sweeter and cooler than the famous
stream of the Kawthar flowing constantly and refreshing minds of readers.
THE AUTHOR: Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
1. His Genealogy:
Imam Ali (A.S) the master of the faithful was the first cousin of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) . His father, Abu Talib, and the father of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) , Abdullah, were sons of Abdul-Muttalib, and children of the same mother,
Fatima (S.A), the daughter of Asad son of the famous Banu Hashim. Thus, his (Imam Ali’s)
parents were cousins. His genealogical table is as follows., etc. (Refer to Index 1)
2. His Birth:
Hazrat Ali (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was born on the 13th of Rajab 30 A.H. (in the Year
of Elephant) (about 610 A.D.), i.e. 23 years before the Hijra of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) . Historians say that he was born in the precincts of Ka’ba. In this connection
please refer the following books: 1. Imam Hakim, in his Mustadrak, 2. Al-Mas’udi, in his Muruj
al-Thahab, p. 125, 3. Izalatul-Khafa, 2nd subject, p. 251, and 4. Aallama al-Alusi in Sharh alAiniyya.
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3. His Name:
At the time of his birth his father and his cousin, Muhammed, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) , were out of Mecca, his mother gave him the names of AAsad and AHayder;
when his father returned he called him AZaid. But when the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) came back to the city, he took his young cousin in his charge and gave him the
name Ali, saying that it was the name decreed for him by Allah.
(1) Imam Noodi, the commentator of Bukhari
(2) Ibn al-AArabi in his book Yawaqit
(3) Sibt ibn al-Jawzi, in his book Tathkirat Khawas al-A’imma.
Hazrat Ali (A.S) has called himself Ali and AHayder.
4. His Kunya
Among various kunyas, the most famous were AAbdul-Hasan, AAbul-Sibtain, and AAbu
Turab. (Refer to the note below).
5. His Titles:
His titles were: Aal-Murtada (the pleased one), AAmir al-Mu’minin (the Commander of the
Faithful), AImamul-Muttaqin (the leader of the pious).
His Physique:
The famous historian and biographist Aallama Ali ibn Muhammed, in his book titled Usd alGhaba fi Tamyiz al-Sahaba (Vol. IV, page 398), says that he was a man of middle height with
very black and very big and piercing eyes, very handsome cast of face, very clear and fair
complexion, broad shoulders, powerful arms, vast chest, strong and roughened hands, a long
muscular neck, a broad forehead and he had few hairs on the top of his head.
Note: Names derived on account of some relation or some connection. It is an Arab system
that respectable people are addressed with their kunya and not with their names. Imam Hakim, in
his Mustadrak (Vol. 3), Kamil ibn Athir in his Tarikh al-Khamis, Ibn Abdul Birr, in his Isti’ab
(Vol. 2, p. 486) and Aallama Tabrani, in his Riyaz al-Nazira (Vol. 2 pp. 202 and 218) agree with
the above description. Tabrani further says that he used to walk with very light tread and was
very agile in his movements, had a very smiling face, very pleasing manner, a jovial
temperament, very kind disposition and very courteous behavior. He would never lose his
temper.
7. His Upbringing:
He was born three years before the marriage of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) with Hazrat Khadeeja (S.A). Soon after his birth the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) took him under his holy care and Ali was like a son unto him. He used to live
with the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , used to sleep with him, was fed by him, washed
and dressed by him, and even carried by him on a sling whenever he would go out. The historian
al-Mas’udi, in Ithbathal-Wasiyya (p. 119) says that when the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) married Khadija, she adopted this child as her son. Hazrat Ali himself has described
his childhood in Akhutbat al-qasi’a saying, AI was still a new born baby when the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) took me from my parents. I used to cling to him; he would make
me sleep in his bed, pressing my body against his and making me smell his fragrance and feel its
warmth; he used to feed me, and (when I grew a little older) he never found me uttering a lie or
feigning a deceit. To me he was like a guiding star and I used to carefully follow his actions and
deeds. I was attached to him like a young camel attached to its mother. He used to place before
me high values of morality, and used to advise me to follow them; every year he would spend
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some days at the grotto of the Hera mountain. And I used to be with him, I was his only
companion then and none else could meet him at Hera, there I used to see the light of revelation,
and used to smell the fragrance of Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) hood. Once the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said to me, Ali! You have attained a very eminent place.
You see what I see and you hear what I hear.
Both hafiz Abu Na’im in his book Hilyat al-Awliya’, (Vol. 1, p. 67) and imam al-Sayyuti in
his Tafsir al-Durr al-Manthur say that once Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said to
Hazrat Ali (A.S) , AO Ali! Allah has ordered me to keep you near me. You are to me like an ear
that retain everything, because you are theretaining ears that the Holy book (Holy Qur’an) has
praised.
8. The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and Hazrat Ali (A.S) : How they loved
each other
(i) Ibn Abil Hadid, the Mu’tazilite scholar and commentator of Nahjul-Balagha, cites
Abdullah ibn Abbas saying, AOnce I asked my father: ASir, my cousin, Muhammed, has many
sons. They all died while still infants. Which of them did he love the most? He replied: Ali ibn
Abu Talib’. I said, ASir, I was inquiring about his sons. He replied, AThe Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) loved Ali (A.S) more than all of his sons. When Ali was a child I
never saw him separated from Muhammed for half an hour, unless Muhammed went out of the
house for some work. I never saw a father love his son so much as the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) loved Ali, and I never saw a son so obedient, so attached and so loving to
his father as Ali was to Muhammed.
(ii) The same author cites the companion of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ,
Joobair-Ibn Mut’imm ibn AAdiyy ibn Nawfil, saying that once his father addressed him and
some young men of his family Ahave you noticed the child Ali loving, venerating and obeying
that young man, Muhammed, instead of his own father, what an intensity of love and veneration.
I swear by our gods, the Laat and the Uzza, that instead of having so many offspring of Naufil
around me I had a son like Ali.
(iii) Aallama Tirmithi (Jama al-Tirmithi - Vol. I, p. 38, Mishkauth Vol. 2, p. 8 and Musnad of
Imam Ahmed, Vol. I, p. 146), quotes the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) saying,
AO Ali, I wish to achieve every such thing for you that I desire to acquire myself and I want to
keep you away from all those things whose contact I abhor.
(iv) ‘allama Tabrani (in his Oasuth) and Imam Hakim (in his Sahih) say that whenever the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was angry, nobody dared to speak to him but Ali.
(v) Ibn Abil Hadid (commentary of Nahjul-Balagha Vol. 2I p. 251) once again quotes the
uncle of Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , Abbas saying that they (Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) and Ali) loved each other intensely. The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) was so fond of Ali that once when Ali was a young boy he sent him out on
some errand and the child took a long time to return, he started getting worried and anxious and
in the end he prayed to Allah APlease Master do not let me die unless I behold Ali once again.
(This incident is also quoted by Tirmithi).
(vi) Ali started acting as the bodyguard of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
even when he was just a boy of 13 or 14 years. The young men of Quraish under instigation of
their parents used to stone the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Ali took up the
work of acting as his defender. He fell upon those young men, broke the nose of one, teeth of the
other, pulled the ears of the third and threw down the fourth. He often fought against those who
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were older than himself, was often himself hurt, but he never forsook Theself imposed duty.
After some days he got the nickname of AQazeem (one who breaks or throws away) and nobody
dared to throw anything at the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) when Ali (A.S) was
with him, and he would not let the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) go out of the
house alone (A’yan Vol. 3, p. 280).
Offering himself as a sacrifice at the night of Hijra (migration) and his subsequent behavior in
all the battles are enough proofs of the intensity of Ali’s love to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household)
9. His Character:
I. Jurjy Zaidan (George Gordan) who died recently was a famous Christian historian, linguist,
philosopher and poet of modern Egypt. Arabic was his mother tongue, but he was so well- versed
in English, French, Germany, Persian and Latin that he used to contribute to historical and
philosophical magazines of France, Germany and England. About Hazrat Ali he says the
following:
None can praise to the extent that he (Ali) deserves. So many instances of his piety and fear of
Allah are cited that one starts loving and venerating him. He was a true, strict and scrupulous
follower of Islam. His words and deeds bore stamps of nobility, sagacity and courage of
conviction. He was a great man having his own independent views about life and its problems.
He never deceived, misled, or betrayed anybody. In various phases and periods of his life he
exhibited marvelous strength of body and mind which were due to his true faith in religion and in
his sincere belief in truth and justice. He never had servants and never allowed his slaves to work
hard. Often he would carry his household goods himself and if anybody offered to relieve him of
the weight he would refuse.
II. The famous Egyptian philosopher and Professor of Islamics of Alazhar University,
Aallama Muhammed Mustafa Beck Najeeb in his equally famous book AHima’ethul Islam says
the following: AWhat can be said about this Imam? It is very difficult to fully explain his
attributes and qualities. It is enough to realize that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) had named him the gateway of knowledge and wisdom. He was the most learned
person, the most brave man and the most eloquent speaker and orator. His piety, his love of
Allah, his sincerity and fortitude in following religion were of such high order that none could
aspire to reach him. He was the greatest politician because he hated diplomacy in the way of
unjustice and loved truth and justice, his was the policy as taught by Allah. On account of his
sagacity and thorough knowledge of human mind he always arrived at correct conclusion and
never changed his opinions. His was of the best judgment, and had he no fear of Allah he would
have been the greatest diplomat among the Arabs. He is loved by all, and everyone has a place
for him in his heart. He was a man of such surpassing and pre-eminent attributes and such
transcending and peerless qualities that many learned men accepted perplexed about him and
imagined him to be an incarnation of Allah. Several men among the Jews and Christians love
him and such philosophers who came to know of his teachings bow down before his
incomparable vast knowledge. Roman kings would have his pictures in their palaces and great
warriors would engrave his name on their swords. (Hima’ethul Islam, part I, p. 98)
III. Another philosopher and historian of Egypt, namely Prof. Muhammed Kamil Hatha, pays
his tributes in the following words: His life is a agglomeration of pleasing incidents, bloody
encounters and sad episodes. His personality is very prominent on account of his transcending
and high qualities. Each aspect of his life is so lofty and glorious that a study of one phase would
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make you feel that it was the best phase of his character and the most beautiful picture of his
personality, while contemplation of any other phase will enchant you more and you will come to
the conclusion that no human being can attain that height, and a third aspect will fascinate you
equally and you will realize that before you is a personality of such great eminence that you
cannot fully appreciate its greatness and you will feel that Ali was an Imam (Leader) in
battlefield, was an Imam (Leader) in politics, was an Imam in religion, and also an Imam in
ethics, in philosophy, in literature, in learning and wisdom. It is not difficult for Allah to create
such a person (a review on the character of Ali by Ustad (Professor) Muhammed Kamil Hatha, P.
40)
IV. The historian John J. Pool (author of the Life of H.M. Queen Victoria) in his book Studies
in Muhammedanism makes the following points:
(i) This prince was a man of mild and forbearing character, wise in counsel and bold in war.
Muhammed had given him the surname of Athe Lion of Allah.
(ii) Ali (A.S) and his sons Hasan () and Husain () were truly noble men; men of
righteousness, men of a brave, a humble and a forgiving spirit. Their lives deserve to be
commemorated for there was a peculiar pathos about them (their lives) which were not spent
selfishly or in vain. As Mathew Arnold (Essays in Criticism) says Athe sufferers of Kerbala’ had
aloft to the eyes of millions the lessons so loved by the sufferer of Cavalry (Representation of
Crucifixion) :-- ALearn of Me, for I am meek and lowly in heart, and Ye shall find rest unto your
souls. He further says that Ali (A.S) was the first Caliph to protect and encourage national
literature. This prince was a scholar himself and many of his wise sayings and proverbs are
published in a book. It is a remarkable work and deserves to be more widely read in the West.
V. Ibn Abul-Hadid, the Mu’tazilite commentator of Nahjul-Balagha, says the following:
Hazrat Ali had a personality in which opposite characteristics had so gathered that it was difficult
to believe a human mind could manifest such a combination. He was the bravest man that history
could cite and such brave persons are always hard hearted, cruel, and eager for bloodshed. On
the contrary Ali was kind, sympathetic, responsive and a warm-hearted person, qualities quite
contradictory to the other phase of his character and more suited to pious and Allah fearing
persons.
He was an extremely pious and God-fearing person and often pious and religious persons
avoid society and do not care to mix with men of sins and men of wrath. Similarly, warriors,
kings, and dictators are usually arrogant and haughty. They consider it below themselves to mix
with poor, lowly and humble persons. But Ali (A.S) was different. He was a friend to all. As a
matter of historical fact it is known that he had a tender spot in his heart for the poor and humble,
and for the orphans and the cripples. To them he was always a kind friend, a sympathetic guide
and a fellow sufferer; he was meek unto them but haughty and arrogant against famous warriors
and generals, so many of whom he had killed in hand to hand combat. He was always kind but
strict with wayward persons, sympathetically teaching them the ways of Allah. He always smiled
and passed happy and witty rejoinders, it was difficult to overcome him in any debate or
repartee, his rejoinders and retorts always bore high marks of culture, education and knowledge.
He was a scion of a very illustrious, rich and noble clan, as well as son-in-law and great
favorite of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . At the same time he was the
greatest warrior and marshal of his time, yet in spite of his riches he ate, dressed and lived like a
poor person. To him wealth was for the use of other needy persons, not for himself and his
family. Change of times and change of circumstances did not bring any change in his bearing,
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mien, or character. Even when he ascended the throne of Arabia and was acclaimed as the
Caliph, he was the same Ali (A.S) as they had found him to be during the previous regimes.
Once in the society of Abdullah, son of Imam Malik ibn Hanbal, a discussion took place about
Ali and his caliphate. Abdullah brought the discussion to an end saying that the caliphate did not
bring any honor or glory to Ali, but it was itself honored and glorified by Ali and it received the
status actually due to it.
Ibn Abul-Hadid also says that, in this world, an example cannot be found of any person other
than Ali who was a first class warrior and a marshal, a philosopher, a moralist and a great teacher
of religious principles and theology. A study of his life shows that his sword was the only help
that Islam received during its early days of struggle and its wars of self-defense. For Islam he
was the first line of defense, The second line of defense and the last line of defense. Who was
with him in the battles of Badr, Uhud, Khundak, Khayber and Hunain? This is one aspect of his
life. Yet the other phase of his character is portrayed by his sermons, orders, letters and sayings.
What high values of morality they teach, what ethics they preach, what intricate problems of
Unitarianism they elucidate, how rich they are in philosophy. How they try to train us to be kind,
good, benevolent and Allah fearing rulers, and faithful, sincere and law abiding subjects. How
they persuade us to be warriors who can fight only for Allah, truth and justice, and not
mercenaries murdering and plundering for wealth and riches; and how they instruct us to be
teachers who can teach nothing injurious and harmful to mankind. Was there any such
combination before and will there ever be?
VI. To M. Oelsner, the famous French Orientalist and author of Les Effets de La Religion de
Mohammed, Ali (A.S) was the beau ideal of chivalry: and personification of gallantry, bravery
and generosity.
He says the following: APure, gentle and learned without fear and without reproach, he set for
the world the noblest example of chivalrous grandeur of character. His spirit was a pure
reflection of that of Muhammed, it overshadowed the Islamic world and formed the animating
genius of succeeding ages.
VII. Robert Durie Osborn, in Islam under the Arabs, says that Ali (A.S) had been advised by
several of his counselors to defer the dismissal of the corrupt governors previously appointed
until he himself was sure against all enemies. The standard of Islam, the hero without fear and
without reproach, refused to be guilty of any duplicity or compromise with injustice. This
uncompromisingly noble attitude cost him his state and his life; but such was Ali, he never
valued anything above justice and truth.
VIII. Edward Gibbon, in Vol. 5 of the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
says, A. The zeal and virtues of Ali were never out-stripped by any recent proselyte. He united
the qualification of a poet, a soldier and a saint. His wisdom still breathes in a collection of moral
and religious sayings; and every antagonist in the combats of tongue or of sword was subdued by
his eloquence and valor. From the first hour of mission to the last rites of his funeral, the
Messenger was never forsaken by this generous friend, whom he delighted to name his brother,
his vicegerent and the faithful Aaron of a second Moses.
IX. Al-Mas’udi, the famous historian of Islam, says, AIf the glorious name of being the first
Muslim, a comrade of the prophet in exile, his faithful companion in the struggle for the faith, his
intimate associate in life, and his kinsman, if a true knowledge of the spirit of his teachings and
of the Book, if self-abnegation and practice of justice, if honesty, purity, and love of truth and if
knowledge of law and science constitute a claim to pre-eminence, then all must regard Ali as the
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foremost Muslim. We shall search in vain to find, either among his predecessor (save the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ), or among his successor, those virtues with which Allah
had endowed him.
10. His Faith
As has been declared by all the historians of Islam, since his childhood, Ali (A.S) was
adopted and looked after by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . It was only natural
that his religious tendencies from his childhood were those of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) . The question as to when he embraced Islam is out of consideration. He was
Muslim from the very beginning. His religion was thereligion of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) . At the age of 5th, 7th, 10th, 12th, and 14th year he was following thereligion
which the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had at his 35th, 37th, 40th, 42nd, and
44th year of his life. The difference between therespective ages of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) and Ali was about 30 years. If the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) at any period of his life was a non-Muslim, then Ali at that period was also a nonMuslim. This is the logic of facts. Imam Nur ad-Din Ali ibn Ibrahim, the Shafi’ite, in his book
Al-Sira al-Halabiyya says AAli was like a son unto the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) therefore his religion from the very beginning was thereligion followed by the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . the famous historian Mas’udi says AThe general census
of opinion among the Muslim historians and theologians is that Ali was never a non-Muslim and
never prayed before idols. Therefore the question of his embracing Islam does not and cannot
arise.
11. His Wife, Children and Life at Home
Hazrat Ali was married to Hazrat Fatima (S.A), the only daughter of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) from Hazrat Khadija. He had been betrothed to her several days
before the expedition of Badr. But the marriage was celebrated three months later, Hazrat Ali,
being 21 years old, and Hazrat Fatima (S.A), beingr 15, (as stated in the Spirit of Islam), was
very happy in his blessed marriage. The transcendental distinctiveness of their respective
characters blended with each other so well, so much so that they never quarreled nor complained
about each other, leading a happy and contented life. Each one of them was rich in his own
rights. Fatima (S.A) was the only heir of one of the richest women of Arabia, Khadija, and had
inherited many orchards and gardens in Mecca and Medina. Besides, that she was the daughter
of the head of a rich clan and a king of a fast growing kingdom. Ali was a marshal who had very
handsome shares from the spoils of wars. Yet all that they owned went to the poor, crippled and
orphans, and they themselves often starved. Their only luxury in life was prayer, and the
company of each other and their children. They willingly shared the sorrows and suffering of the
poor. They were given a slave girl, Fizza, but the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
had made arrangements that every alternate day was the off day of Fizza and her mistress would
do all the household work. Even when Hazrat Fatima (S.A) was ill on Fizza’s off day, Fizza
would not be allowed to attend to the duties, but Hazrat Ali would work; and the hero of Badr,
Uhud, Khandaq, Khayber and Hunain was seen grinding oats, lighting the oven, preparing the
bread and looking after the children. Salman says AWhat a household, the only daughter of the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and wife of his vicegerent leading the life of a poor
laborer. If they had spent one-tenth of what they were distributing daily they would have led a
life of ease and comfort. From Hazrat Ali the Lady of Light (Fatima [S.A]) had four children and
the fifth (Mohsin) was a still birth. The causes of this mishap and also that of her death are very
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sad and pathetic incidents of their lives. The names of these four children were Hasan, Husain,
Zainab (wife of Abdullah ibn Jafar) and Umm al-Kulsoom (wife of Obaydullah ibn Ja’fer).
During the lifetime of Hazrat Fatima (S.A) Hazrat Ali did not marry another woman. After her
death he married Yamama. After the latter’s death, married another lady, having the name of
AHanafiyya by whom he had a son, Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya. After her death, he married
again, thus he had many children some of whom had unparalleled places in the history of
mankind, e.g. Hasan, Husain () (the hero of Kerbala’), Zainab (the defender of true Islam in
Kufa and Damascus), Abbas (commander of Husain’s army in Kerbala’) and Muhammed ibn alHanafiyya, the hero of Nahrawan.
12. Ali Among his Friends and Foes and Among the Rich and the Poor
I have cited below a few cases which typically exemplify the characteristics of Ali ibn AbuTalib’. He was, as Pool says, ATruly a noble man, a man of righteousness, and a man of brave,
humble and forgiving spirit, and as Oelsner says APure, gentle and learned without fear and
without reproach, setting the noblest example of character to the world. Out of hundreds and
hundreds of cases to select I find it rather difficult which to choose and which not to choose. I
have selected a few according to the standard of my knowledge and visualization.
I. Ali’s behavior with his foes
(1) Talhah ibn Abu Talhah was not only a bitter enemy of Islam, but was a personal enemy of
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and Ali (A.S) . His exertions to harm these two
and their mission is historically verifiable. In the battle of Uhud he was the flag-bearer of the
army of Quraish. Ali (A.S) faced him and in a hand to hand encounter dealt him such a severe
blow that he reeled and fell down. Ali (A.S) left him like that and walked away from him. Many
Muslim warriors ran up to Ali (A.S) and advised him to finish Talhah, saying that he was Ali’s
worst enemy. Ali (A.S) replied AEnemy or no enemy, he cannot defend himself now, and I
cannot strike a man who is not in a position to defend himself. If he survives, he is welcome to
live as long as his life-span lasts.
(2) In the Battle of Jamal, in the thick of the encounter, his slave Qambar brought some sweet
syrup saying AMy master the sun is very hot and you have been constantly fighting, have a glass
of this cold drink to refresh yourself. Ali (A.S) looked around himself and replied AShall I
refresh myself when hundreds of people around me are lying wounded and dying of thirst and
wounds? Instead of bringing sweet syrup for me take a few men with you and give each of these
wounded persons a cool drink. Qambar replied AMy master, they are all our enemies. Ali (A.S)
said AThey may be but they are human beings and attend to them.
(3) In the battle of Siffin Mu’awiyah reached the river Euphrates before the army of the Imam
(), and took position of the river. When Hazrat’s army reached there he was informed that they
would not be allowed a drop of water from the river. The Imam () sent a messenger to
Mu’awiyah saying that this action was against the canons of humanity and orders of Islam.
Mu’awiyah replied saying that Aa war is a war and therein one cannot accept principles of
humanity and doctrines of Islam. My sole aim is to kill Ali (A.S) and to demoralize his army
and this stop. of water will bring about these results easily and quickly. the Imam () ordered
Imam Husain to attack and get back the river. The attack took place and river side position was
captured. It was then Mu’awiyah’s turn to beseech permission to get water from the river. His
messengers arrived and Ali (A.S) told them to take as much water as they like and as often as
they require. When his officers told him that those were the very people who had refused water
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to them, should they be allowed a free run of the river? He replied Athey are human beings and
even though they have acted inhumanely, I cannot follow their example and cannot refuse a man
food and drink because he happens to be my worst enemy.
(4) It was the battle of Nahrawan and he himself was fighting like any other ordinary soldier.
During this battle a man came to face him and in the encounter lost his sword. He realized his
hopeless plight of standing before Ali (A.S) without any weapon in hand. Ali’s hand was raised
for a blow when he saw the antagonist trembling with fear he lowered his hand slowly and said
ARun away friend. You are not in a position to defend yourself. This attitude made the man bold
and he said AAli (A.S) why do not you kill me it would have made one enemy less for you. Ali
(A.S) replied AI cannot strike a man, who cannot defend himself. You are begging for your life
and it was spared. the opponent got bolder and said, AI am told that you have never refused a
beggar. Now I beg you of your sword, will you grant it to me? Ali (A.S) handed him over the
sword. Taking possession of the sword he said ANow Ali (A.S) who is going to defend you
against me and save you from my killing blow. He replied AOf course Allah, He will defend me
if He so wills. He has appointed my death to be my guarding angel none can harm before it is
due and none can save me when it arrives. Nobility of thought and action effected the foe and he
kissed the bridle of Ali’s horse and said AO master, you are a great man indeed. You cannot only
forsake the life of your enemy in a battlefield but also you can grant him your sword. May I have
the honor to act as your bodyguard and to fight for you? He replied AFriend fight for truth and
justice and do not fight for persons.
(5) During 39 and 40 A.H., Mu’awiyah organized bands of murderers and brigands to enter
border towns and to carry on loot, plunder, arson and rape. Kumail was at that time the governor
of Hayeth. He asked Hazrat’s permission to organize similar bands and carry plunder in the
province of Circiea which was under the control of Mu’awiyah. Hazrat Ali (A.S) replied to him
AI never expected such a suggestion from a man like you. It is more noble and more moral to
guard your people and province than to plunder others. They might be our enemies but they are
human beings. They consist of civil population compromising of women and children. How can
one kill, loot and plunder them? No, never even dream of such a venture.
(6) It was the month of Ramadan, the month of fasting. It was the time of the morning
prayers. The mosque was full of Muslims. Ali (A.S) was kneeling before Allah and when he
raised his head a terrible blow fell upon it giving a very deep cut. There was a great disturbance
and commotion in the mosque. The murderer started running. The Muslims followed, caught and
bound him in ropes and brought him before Ali (A.S) who was on the prayer carpet drenched in
blood and was reclining upon his sons. He knew the blow was fatal and he could not survive it
but when the murderer was brought before him, he saw that the rope which had bound him was
so tightly bound that it was cutting into his flesh. He turned towards those Muslims and said,
AYou should not be so cruel with your fellow being. Slacken his ropes. Do you not see that they
are cutting into his flesh and he is in agony?
So was Ali (A.S) . Islamic history repeatedly notes well the incidents of his chivalrous and
merciful treatment towards his enemies.
II. Let us see what the history says about his behavior with his friends and relatives.
1. Abdullah, a son of his brother Ja’fer, was his favorite nephew, whom he had brought up
since the death of Ja’fer and to whom he had given his most favorite daughter, Zainab, into
marriage. This Abdullah came to him, requesting an advance installment of his share from Baitul
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Mal. Ali (A.S) refused and when the young man persisted, he said, ANo my son, not a day
before all the others, and a pie more!
2. Aqil, his elder brother, was financially in a very unhappy condition, he asked for something
more than his share and before the time was due. The Imam () refused, saying that he could not
resort to dishonesty. Aqil must wait till the time of distribution, and must bear the sufferings
patiently. He had cited this incident in one of his sermons.
3. Ibn Hanif was his trusted disciple and a faithful follower. He was governor of a province
and was once invited to a function which was followed by sumptuous dinner. When Hazrat heard
of this he wrote him a severe letter, criticizing his action and said, AYou went to a dinner where
only rich people were invited and the poor were scornfully excluded. This letter can be seen in
Nahjul-Balagha.
III. Ali (A.S) among his servants and slaves
He had two slaves, Qambar and Sa’id: After his death Qambar related that he very seldom had
the occasion to serve his master. The Imam () used to do his work for himself; washing his own
clothes, and patching them when patching was needed. He also drew water from the well for his
own daily use. He would give them good food and decent dresses, and would himself eat and
dress like a very poor man. Let alone whipping or beating he never even got angry with us. He
never used a cane even on his horse, camel or mule. These animals apparently understood his
mood and desire and would trot and walk as he wished them to do. His often used phrase with
them was Ago easy child’ Continuing, Qambar said AOnce and only once he got annoyed with
me. It was the occasion when I showed him the money that I had hoarded. It was from my share
of income given to me like others from the Muslim treasury and the gifts I had received from the
members of his family. I had no immediate use of it and had collected the amount. It was not
much, being barely 100 dirhams. When I showed him the amount he looked annoyed and what
pained me more he looked very sad. I inquired as to why he was so sad, he said AQambar, if you
had no use of this money, were there not people around you who were in need of it? Some of
them might have been starving and some ill and infirm, could you not have helped them? I never
thought that you could be so heartless and cruel, and could love wealth for the sake of wealth.
Qambar I am afraid you are not trying to acquire much from Islam, try more seriously and
sincerely. Take these coins out of my house. I took them out and distributed them among the
beggars in the Kufa mosque.
Sa’id says, AIt was a very hot day. The Imam () was writing some letters. He wanted to send
me to call some of his officers. He called me once, twice and the third time. Each time I
purposely remained silent and did not reply. He got up to go himself and saw me sitting not very
far from him. He asked me why I did not respond to his call. I replied, ASir, I want to find out
when and how you get angry. A smile played on his lips and he replied: AYou cannot rouse my
anger with such childlike tricks. Then he set me free and kept on supporting me till his death.
IV. Ali (A.S) among his subjects
(i) Once AUbaydullah ibn Abbas, as governor, ill-treated Banu Tamim clan. They complained
to the Imam (). He wrote to ibn Abbas, AYou should not behave like a beast with your subjects.
They are respectable people and should be treated respectfully. You are representing me and
your treatment is considered as that of mine. Your first consideration should be the welfare of
those over whom you rule and then to treat them with due respect and consideration.
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(ii) Once a group of non-Muslim subjects waited on the Imam (), complaining that Abdullah
ibn Abbas always treated them with contempt and scorn. They were farm tillers and agricultural
laborors. It had then become a practice that non-Muslims were usually treated scornfully. The
Imam () wrote to Abdullah, AThe agricultural population of your province complains about
your harsh, contemptuous and cruel treatment. Their complaints require careful considerations. I
feel they deserve a better treatment than what was met out to them. Give them a chance to
approach you, and meet them kindly and politely. They may be heathens and polytheists, but
being your subjects and human beings, they do not deserve to be driven from us and to be treated
harshly and contemptuously.
(iii) Hazrat Ali (A.S) was passing through AAmbaz with his army. The rich men of the
province, as was the custom of those times, came out to greet him. They offered the best Persian
horses as presents, and requested his permission to act as hosts to his army. He met them very
courteously, but very politely refused to accept the gifts and the invitation, saying, AYou have
paid your taxes. To receive anything more from you, even when you offer it voluntarily and
willingly, is a crime against the state. But when they persisted and pressed their request, he
ordered that the horses could be accepted against their taxes, and so far as the feast was
concerned it must be paid out of the war expenses.
(iv) In the Magazine Al-Hukam, Vol. 2, No. 47 of 1906, there appeared an article saying that
the Russians in 1905 found an order of Hazrat Ali (A.S) , in his own handwriting which was in
Kufic script. This was found in a monastery of Ardabil, chief town of Azerbaijan. This letter was
an amnesty deed to the monastery and the Christians of Ardabil. A translation of this deed
appeared in the Russian newspapers and thence it was translated in the Turkish papers and in the
Arabic magazines of Cairo and Beirut, and lots of commentating articles on the spirit of
toleration and the treatment of conquered by Islam were written by the Russians and Arab
Christians. Apparently from the Magazine Al Habl al-Mateen, it was translated by Al-Hukam.
In this deed, the Imam () says that as the caliph and ruler, he promises safety and security of
life, property, honor, social status and religious freedom of Armenian Christians. This order
should be obeyed by his officers and his successors. The Christians should not be maltreated or
looked down upon because they are non-Muslims. So long as they do not try to betray and injure
the cause of the state of Islam. They should not be molested and should be allowed to practice
their religion and trades freely and openly. Islam teaches us to carry a message of peace with us
and improve the status of society wherever we go and the best way to achieve this is to create
amity, friendliness and concord between human beings. Therefore, Muslims should try to
develop friendship of these people and should never resort to the wrong use of power, force and
arrogance. They should not be over-taxed, humiliated and forced out of their homes, lands and
trades. Their priests should be treated with due respect, their monasteries should be protected;
they should be allowed to carry on their lectures, teachings and preaching as usual and their
religious ceremonies should not be prohibited. If they want to build their places of worship, then
fallow and ownerless lands should be allotted to them. One who disobeys this order, is going
against the orders of Allah and the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and will deserve
His wrath.
(v) Harith ibn Shuhail, one of the governors of the provinces was in Kufa, and while riding
through the city he saw Imam Ali (A.S) also riding. He got down from his horse to accompany
the Imam () on foot. The Imam () stopped his horse and said, AIt ill becomes a man to lower
himself before anybody but his Allah. Please get back upon your horse. Even had you not been
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an officer of the State, still I would not allow you to lower yourself like this. The sight of such
humiliation of man before another man never pleases me. It is the worst form of tyranny which
can be practiced.
(vi) There is a letter of the Imam () which is actually a system of rules and regulations for
the administration of benign government and a code for higher values of morality. It is included
in Nahjul-Balagha and it is referred to so very often by historians of Europe and philosophers of
Arabia. Even Justice Kayani refers to it in his presidential address in Karachi on April 16, 1960,
that it now needs no further introduction. In it, there are orders which show that he wanted his
officers to remember that the people over whom they ruled are exclusively entrusted to them by
Allah and should be treated as such.
V. Ali (A.S) Among the Poor
He had a very soft corner in his heart for old, weak, infirm, disabled and poor, and children
were always his favorites.
(i) It was the hottest day of The season, he had finished his noon-prayers in the mosque and
was passing through the bazaar when he saw a young slave-girl piteously weeping on the road.
He asked her thereason. She said that her master had given her some money to get dates from the
bazaar. The dates which she brought were not liked by her master and he wanted them to be
returned and his money refunded. The fruit seller refused to take them back, her master was
beating her for the money and seller had also caned her for going to him over and over again.
She did not know what to do and whom to approach for help. The Imam () accompanied her to
Theseller and advised him to take back the dates. He was a new comer to Kufa and did not
recognize the Imam () and was rude to him. A passerby intervened and told him who the Imam
() was. He jumped from his shop and begged of the Imam () to excuse him and said that he
would give back the money immediately to her. The Imam () replied that it was really mean of
him to treat an honest suggestion disdainfully and haughtily and to cower before power and
might so abjectly and humiliatingly. The owner of the slave-girl had also heard the news of this
incident and ran to meet the Imam () to apologize for the trouble caused by the slave-girl. The
Imam () told him, AYou have no mercy for a person who is under your power and cannot
forgive her mistake. Have you then a right to expect mercy and forgiveness from our Master?
You people have acquired nothing from Islam but its name.
(ii) One day, he saw an old woman carrying a heavy load of firewood which she could illafford to lift. She was tottering under the weight. The Imam () relieved her of her weight and
carried it to her hamlet, and on her request, lit her oven for her and gave her some money. She
did not know who the Imam () was and was thanking him for his kindness when a neighbor
entered the hamlet, recognized the Imam () and told her who he was. Only then she realized
that who had served her like an obedient servant was the caliph and the king.
(iii) Only after his death the world came to know that he had provided a shelter outside of the
town for a leper in an advanced stage of the disease. He used to go there daily, dress his wounds,
feed him with his own hands (because the leper had lost his hands), wash him, put his bed in
order and carry him out of the shelter for a little time so that he could get fresh air. Accidentally,
relatives and friends of the Imam () came across this shelter, found the leper in it, learned his
history and told him the Imam () was murdered and they had just then buried him. The news so
effected the poor cripple that he died on the spot.
13. Ali’s Diet
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Imam Ali (A.S) always ate the kind of food and dressed in such a way that even the poorest
could afford better. It was not because he was poor but because he wanted to lead the life of the
poorest person and spend all that could be spared on the poor. I have noted below certain cases
quoted by the historians. These incidents are of the time when he was the ruler and king of the
entire Muslim Empire except Syria.
(i) Imam Ahmed ibn Hanbal, in his Musnad, cited Suwayda ibn Ghaflah saying, AOne day I
went to see Ali (A.S) at the government house (Darul Imara). It was the time of breakfast and
before him there was a cup of milk and some barley bread. The bread was dry, stale, hard and did
not contain any butter or oil. It could not be easily broken into pieces. The Imam () was
exerting himself to break and soften it. I turned towards his slave, Fizza and said AFizza! have
you no pity upon your old master and why cannot you give him softer bread and add some butter
or oil to it? She replied AWhy should I pity him when he never pities himself. He has given strict
orders that nothing is to be added to his bread and even chaff and husks are not to be separated
from the flour. We, ourselves, eat much better food than this, though we are his slaves. Hearing
this, I said to him, AO Master! Have pity on yourself! Look at your age, your responsibilities,
your hard work and your food. He replied: AO Suwayda! You have no idea what the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) used to eat. He never ate to satiety for three consecutive
days.
(ii) Aallama Kamalud-Din Muhammed ibn Talhah al-Shafi’i, in his book titled Matalib alSu’l, quotes Abdullah ibn Zurarah saying, AI went to see Imam Ali (A.S) on an Eid day. He
asked me to join in his breakfast. I agreed. A very poor kind of food was served before us. I told
him, O Master, you are such a rich man, a caliph and a king. I was expecting that game would be
served before us but what do I see? the Imam () replied, AO Ibn Zurara! You have heard of
mighty kings who have lead life of luxury. Let me be a ruler leading the life of a poor and
humble person - a humble laborer.
(iii) Al-Milani, in his book titled Sira, and Imam Ahmed, in his Musnad, quote the famous
tabi’i Ibn Abu Rafi’ saying that he went to the Imam () on an Eid day and while he was sitting
there a bag was brought before the Imam () which he thought might contain jewels. The Imam
() opened the bag but it only contained dried pieces of bread, which he softened with water. Ibn
ee Abee Rafay asked him as to thereason of sealing such a kind of food which even a beggar
would not care to steal. The Imam () smiled and said AI keep it sealed because my children try
to substitute softer bread, containing oil or butter in it. ibn Abee Rafay said, AHas Allah
prohibited you to eat better kind of food? He replied ANo, but I want to eat the kind of food
which the poorest of his realm can afford at least once a day. I shall improve it after I have
improved their standards of life. I want to live, feel and suffer like them.
14. His Clothing
(i) Imam Ahmed, in his book Al-Manaqib, and Ibn Athir in his history book, quote Harun ibn
Anzah saying that he accompanied his father (Anzah) to the Khawarnaq castle to meet Imam Ali
(A.S) . Those were winter days and the winter was very severe. He found the Imam () in a very
thin cotton garment, and the cold wind was making him shiver. Anzah asked him, AO
Commander of faithful! Allah has reserved a share for you and your family from Baitul-Mal
(treasury). Why do you not make use of it? He replied, AO Anzah! I do not want anything from
your treasury, this is the dress I have brought with me from Medina.
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(ii) Imam Ahmed quotes Zaid ibn Wahab saying that once the Imam () came out of his
house and there were patches sewn to his dress. Ibn Na’jah, a Kharijite and an enemy, was
allowed by the Imam () to lead a peaceful and comfortable life at Kufa taunted the Imam () on
the very poor and coarse kind of dress put on by him. He replied ALet go, what have you to find
objection in my dress? It is the kind which our masses can afford. Why can you not think of their
lives and dresses? I shall improve my standard after I have succeeded in improving theirs. I shall
continue to live like them. Such kind of dress makes one feel humble and meek, and is helpful as
a reminder and an encouragement to give up vanity, haughtiness and arrogance.
(iii) Al-Muttaqi al-Hindi, in his books titled Kanzul-AUmmal, and al-Tabari in Al-Riyaz alNazira, quote AOmer ibn Quais saying that once he asked the Imam () as to thereason of his
having patches in his dress. He replied, AO AOmer! Such type of dress makes you soft-hearted; it
vanishes vanity from your mind, and it is the kind which poor Muslims can conveniently afford.
(iv) Shaikul-Islam Imam AAbu AOmer, Youuf ibn Abdul-Birr, in his book Al-Isti’ab quotes
Hussan ibn Jermoze saying that his father once saw the Imam () coming out of the Kufa
mosque in a shirt made of jute cloth. Around him were people so well dressed that compared to
him they looked like princes. He was instructing them as to how they might better understand
their own submission to the Will of Allah (Islam).
(v) Imam Ahmed quotes Abu Noziah, theready-made cloth merchant of Kufa, saying that the
Imam () purchased two shirts from his shop, one was of superior quality, which he handed over
to his slave Qambar to put on. The other was of a rough cloth, very coarse and cheap which he
reserved for himself.
15. His services to Islam and the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
(i) the first occasion on which Ali (A.S) offered his services to the cause of Islam was when
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was first ordered by Allah to preach Islam
openly.
For three years the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was preaching Islam under
absolute secrecy. At the end of the third year (i.e. The fourth year after ABaysuth’, in 45 AAmulFil) he received orders to preach his near relations and to admonish them. AThe Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) directed Ali (A.S) to prepare an entertainment and to invite the
sons and grandsons of Abdul-Muttalib. This was done and about forty of them came, but Abu
Lahab, made the company break up before Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) had
an opportunity to speak. The next day a second invitation was issued. When they came and the
frugal meal was served the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) rose and declared his
sacred character and offered the treasures of time and of eternity to whomsoever should become
his disciples. He then concluded by demanding, AWho among you will aid me to bear this
burden, who will be my Lieutenant and Vizier, just as Aaron was to Moses? the assembly
remained mute with astonishment, not one venturing to accept the offered perilous office, until
Ali (A.S) , Muhammed’s cousin, stood up and exclaimed AO Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) ! I will, though I am indeed the youngest of these present, the most rheum of them
as to the eyes and the slenderest of them as to the legs; I, O Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) , will be thy Vazir over them. On which throwing his arms around the generous and
courageous youth, and pressing him to his bosom, Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy
Household) declared; ABehold my brother and my Vizier and obey him. (John Davenport, An
apology for Muhammed and Holy Qur’an)
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Many historians are of the opinion that it was a monumental declaration and indeed a
momentous occasion, and that Ali’s declaration was the first and greatest service done in behalf
of the Islamic cause. Had the appeal of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) been
left unanswered, the propagation of Islam would have been nipped in the bud. To them the whole
idea was the actualization of an adult person preaching Monotheism and Submission, and a
young courageous youth offering his services vehemently appeared completely foreign to the
gatherings’ traditional sensibilities. They laughed at both of them and dispersed, advising Ali’s
father to obey his youngest son from that day onward. These two, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) and Imam Ali (A.S) proved to the world that there was nothing laughable
in their declaration. They proved to the world that their wisdom and courage was enough for
Allah to make their mission a success. Carlyle says that in his opinion, young Ali (A.S) had the
kind of personality as could be liked, loved and venerated by everybody. He was a man of such
excellent character, so loving and lovable and so intensely brave that if anything stood against
his bravery it was consumed as if by fire, yet he was so gentle and kind that he represented the
model of a Christian knight.
As was said this was really the first and the greatest service to the cause of Allah;
Monotheism and Submission to His Will alone (Islam). From this day to the last day of his life,
Imam Ali (A.S) sincerely, bravely and nobly acted as the defender of the faith.
(ii) The second great occasion was when the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
was forced to leave Mecca, making somebody stay in his place in such a way that his enemies
would believe that he was still in his house and thus he might safely go away in the darkness of
the night. This departure to Medina is called the Hijra and the Muslim era is named after this
event. It took place during the month of September, 662 A.D. Thursday the 26th Safar (thirteen
years after the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , A.S., started preaching Islam). The
people of Medina were favorably inclined towards Islam and some had embraced this religion
and had promised every kind of support to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
Many Muslims had left for Medina and were handsomely treated by the Ansars of Medina. The
Quraish, realizing that Islam was gaining a good support and a firm hold at Medina and those
who had fled from Mecca were being happily settled there, decided to strike at the root cause.
Their hatred of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was so intense that nothing
would satisfy them but his death. They gathered at Noodva and decided that a few people from
each clan of Quraish would jointly attack the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and
strike him with their swords at one and the same time. Thus no individual of any single clan
would be responsible of his death. Banu Hashim would not be able to kill any person in return or
to fight against any single clan and as they were not strong enough to fight against all the clans
of Quraish at the same time they would be forced to be satisfied with blood-money (diyya). They
further decided to surround the house of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) during
the night so that he could not get away and then to kill him the next morning. Thus forty men got
ready and surrounded his house. Allah revealed to His Messenger of the intrigue planned against
him and ordered him to leave Mecca the very same night. It was a serious and dangerous
occasion. He was ordered by Allah to go and to go in such a way that none of his enemies might
suspect his departure and, if possible, none of his friends might know of it. The walls of his
house were barely seven feet high and anyone placing a stone and standing upon it could easily
peep into the house. He knew the house was surrounded. Whenever he asked someone to sleep in
his bed, he would cover him with the Prophet's coverlet. Such a person was expected not to
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expose his identity till dawn (by which time the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) would
be safe and out of danger). This person was also to be unarmed so that he might not rouse the
suspicion of the peeping enemies. He should thus be willing to bear the brunt of the enemies’
anger in the morning, and be ready to be killed. To whom but Ali (A.S) could be Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) turn at this most dangerous moment? In detail he informed Ali
(A.S) of the whole plan and of the positive danger of taking his place in details saying that the
least that could be expected of those enemies would be death and torture. Ali (A.S) asked, AIf I
take your place and leave you alone to go through the gathered enemies, will your life be safe?
AYes, replied the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . AAllah has promised me a safe
passage through them. Ali (A.S) bowed his head before Allah as a sign of thanksgiving. He lied
down on the bed of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and covered himself with
the Prophet’s coverlet. During the night, many stones and arrows were aimed at him. Stones hit
him in the back and on the head and arrows embedded in his legs but he did not even turn in his
bed. In the morning he was found out by the enemies only when one of them pulled back the
coverlet. When they wanted to attack him, knowing that he was Ali (A.S) not Muhammed, only
then did he unsheathe his sword.
In Medina, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was forced to defend himself and
his followers, and was thus forced to fight many battles. At each and every battle Ali (A.S) was
the hero. And it was he who fought single-handedly with the famous warriors of Arabia, defeated
the enemies and brought a victory to Islam.
Records of these battles carry with them chronicles of his bravery, courage and chivalry. Even
the enemies sang songs of his valor and gallantry.
Every one of these battles was an outcome of very grave circumstances and conditions, and a
complex combination of intricately serious events initiated by quite real and extremely harmful
forces launched against the peace and well being of Muslims and Islam. There were many such
encounters but I have briefly mentioned only five of those instances where the events had far
reaching effects. In each of them Ali (A.S) alone broke through evil combinations and carried
the Muslims and Islam to a position of safety, eminence and power.
(iii) the first of these battles was Badr. It took place in the month of Ramazan of the 2nd year
of Hijra. Muslims were not prepared for a battle and could ill-afford to fight against superior
forces. But Medina was being invaded and the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was
necessarily forced to defend himself and his followers. He decided to leave Medina and fight out
the battle in an open field. He had only 313 Muslims who were not adequately armed for a battle,
many of them were nervous of an encounter and were suffering from inferiority complex. The
Quraish had come with an army of about 1000 warriors which had frightened the Muslims even
more. The battle took place and about 36 Quraish were killed by Ali (A.S) ; some of them were
very important persons and famous warriors of the Quraish.
Ali (A.S) killed every one of those 36 antagonists in hand to hand combat, and most of them
were the persons who had surrounded the house of Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
on the night of the Hijra. During this encounter he was wounded, but by his bravery and courage
he brought home to Muslims that he would act as the first line of defense for Islam, that they had
no cause to suffer from inferiority pangsand that Allah would defend them against heavy odds.
Among the Quraish were two of the worst enemies of Islam, Abu Jahl and Abu Sufyan; and in
this battle Abu Jahl was killed. Ali (A.S) was the hero of this battle and brought the first victory
in Islam in armed encounters with its enemies.
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(iv) The second most important battle was that of Uhud. The Quraish and their leader Abu
Sufyan were smarting under the defeat of Badr and had sworn to retaliate. The idolaters were
burning for revenge. They made formidable preparations for another encounter and succeeded in
obtaining the assistance of Tihama and Kinana tribes. Abu Sufyan’s wife, Hind, mother of
Mu’awiyah, took a keen interest in all arrangements and preparations. She had written poems to
entice Quraish against Islam and had organized a band of women minstrels who accompanied the
army of Quraish to the battlefield. Thus they had mobilized an army of 3000 infantry and 2000
cavalry. The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) could muster only 700 Muslims to
face this horde. They faced each other in the battlefield of Uhud. The battle took place on the
11th Shawal 3 A.H. (a year after the battle of Badr). The command of the Muslim army was
divided between Ali (A.S) and Hamza and Abu Sufyan had appointed Khalid ibn al-Walid,
Akram ibn Abu Jahl and AOmer ibn al-As as the three commanders to command the right wing,
left wing and the center respectively.
The first encounter took place between Ali (A.S) and Talhah ibn Talhah. This encounter
carries with it an incident of marvelous chivalry by Ali (A.S) , which I have narrated elsewhere.
Talhah suffered defeat at the hands of Ali (A.S) and died. He was the flag bearer of Quraish’s
army. His death brought his four sons and one grandson to face Ali (A.S) , and each one of them
was killed by him. As other flag bearers followed them, they were in turn killed by Ali (A.S) .
Then a general encounter took place in which Ali (A.S) and Hamza carried the day and the
Muslims were victorious. ABut eagerness of spoils threw the ranks of the Muslim army into
disorder, Ali (A.S) however tried to keep them in order, but it was not to be. Khalid ibn al-Walid
immediately attacked them from therear and the flank. He wounded the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) with a javelin and had also stoned him. The face of the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) was also wounded and he had fallen down from the horse. Khalid ibn alWalid started shouting with a loud voice: AThe lying Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) is
slain! Without stopping to verify this claim, the followers of Islam fled, panic-stricken
(Davenport). The wounded Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was left in the battlefield
with only Ali (A.S) , Hamzah, Abu Dujanah and Thakwan to defend him. These brave warriors
fought fiercely and during this encounter, Hamzah was killed, Zakwan and Abu Dajana lay
seriously wounded and Ali (A.S) was left alone in the battlefield. He had received 16 wounds
but he searched and found the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) lying wounded and
surrounded by enemies under command of Khalid who were trying to kill him. He fought against
these six men, killed two of them and scattered therest. He bodily lifted the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) and carried him to a mount while he kept on attacking the
rallying armies of the enemy and shouted that Athe Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
is alive! and calling Muslims to Acome back! Those Muslims who had not fled very far came
back and saw the wounded Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) with his daughter, Fatima
(S.A) (who had come out of Medina upon hearing the rumor of her father’s death) to look after
him. They took heart and gathered again under the command of Ali (A.S) , and starting to fight
again, victory was gained. The most peculiar aspect of this battle was that the greed of the
Muslim warriors had converted a hard-earned victory into a ignominious defeat and Ali (A.S)
had reconverted this defeat into a glorious victory. He thus once again saved the day by saving
the face of the fleeing Muslims. Most important of all, he saved was the life of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) , for without Ali (A.S) the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) would have been killed.
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Twenty eight famous warriors of Arabia were killed by Ali (A.S) in this battle of whom
seventeen were flag bearers of the Quraish. The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
declared that the Angel Gabriel was loud in the praise of Ali (A.S) and had said Athere is no
braver youth than Ali (A.S) and no better sword than his Zulfiquar. A detailed account of this
battle may be read in
1. Al-Waqidi’s History of Prophets
2. Shah Isma’il al-Hamawini’s History
3. Tabari’s Tarikh
(v) the third momentous armed encounter of the Muslims with the Quraish is called the battle
of the clans (Ahzab) or battle of the moat or ditch (Khandaq). It is so called because many clans
of Arabs were persuaded by Abu Sufyan to help him to annihilate Islam and the Muslims.
Because these forces invaded Medina, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was
obliged to dig a moat or ditch around his army. This battle also proves that the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) was forced to take up arms in defense of his followers and his
mission. It took place on the 23rd of Thil-Qi’da in the year 5 A.H.
The defeat at Uhud was a crushing blow to the Quraish and their leader Abu Sufyan. While
retreating from Uhud, he promised that he would come back again to avenge the defeat. He
instigated the clans of Banu al-Nazir, Banu Ghatfan, Banu Sleem and Banu Kinanah and also
succeeded in persuading Banu Qurayzah who, till then, had not sided with any party, to join their
forces against Islam. Abu Sufyan was very sure of his success. He especially relied upon the
fame of AOmer ibn Abd Wudd, who was as famous in Arabia as Rustam was in Iran. He had
gathered an army of about 9 to 10 thousand soldiers under command of this famous warrior.
They marched upon Medina, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) could barely
muster 2000 Muslims to face this army. For nearly a month the armies stood facing each other
and one day AOmer jumped the moat and faced the Muslim army, challenging them for an
encounter. He was accompanied by AIkrimah ibn Abu Jahl, Abdullah ibn al-Mugheerah, Zurarah
ibn al-Khattab, Nawfal ibn Abdullah and others. His bravery, valor and courage were so well
known in Arabia that none of the Muslims except Ali (A.S) dared face him. The assemblage of
famous warrior tribes and the presence of AOmer ibn Abdul-Woodh as their commander had
made the Muslims so nervous that even the Holy Qur’an says that ATheir eyes were petrified and
their hearts were beating violently and they were thinking of running away. Thrice AOmer ibn
Abdul-Woodth challenged them and every time none but Ali (A.S) stood up and asked the
permission of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) to face him. Twice the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) refused him the permission, but in the end he allowed
him, saying that AToday faith in embodiment is facing embodied infidelity then he raised his
hands in prayers and beseeched Allah, saying AMaster! I am sending Ali (A.S) alone in the
battlefield, do not allow me to be left alone, you are the best Companion and the best Guardian.
Muslims were so certain of Ali (A.S) being killed by AOmer that some of them came forward to
have a last look at his face. The encounter ended in Ali’s success and Omer’s death. After
AOmer he faced Abdullah ibn Mughirah and Nawfal ibn Abdullah and killed them both. Thus, a
victory was won without any Muslims, except Ali (A.S) , coming out of the ranks. In the
encounter with AOmer and the defeat and death of this great warrior, Ali (A.S) again exhibited
such a chivalrous attitude that the sister of AOmer composed a poem in praise of the man who
faced the brother, fought bravely against him and paid such a noble and chivalrous tribute to his
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vanquished enemy. In it she said Aif anyone else than Ali (A.S) had killed her brother, she
would have wept over the infamy her life long, but not now. the death of AOmer had completely
demoralized the various clans gathered and they started leaving the army and going back to their
countries. The Quraish went back to Mecca sad and dejected.
Thus Ali (A.S) brought an end to the hostilities of Quraish in three encounters of Badr, Uhud
and Khandaq. Their best warriors were killed, their unity against Islam was crushed, their pride
was humiliated and their prestige before the Arab clans was lowered by him and by him alone.
He further raised the status of Muslims among the haughty, merciless and warring tribes of
Arabia. In all of these three battles not more than sixty Muslims were killed. He alone had killed
more than seventy enemies of Islam, every one of whom was the head of some clan or a subclan, a warrior famous for his bravery or a deadly enemy of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) and Islam.
For a detailed account of this battle following books may be consulted:
1. Shah Waliyyullah Dehlawi’s Ithbatul-Ghafa’
2. Kamil ibn al-Athir’r History, Vol. 2
3. Al-Sayyuti’s Al-Durr al-Manthur
4. Tabari’s Tarikh
(vi) In their struggle for existence Muslims had to face a very serious opposition from the
Jews. In the beginning they tried to help the Quraish against Islam surreptitiously and then
openly. But when Ali (A.S) broke through the enmity of the Quraish and when the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) was forced to banish the Jews from Medina, they decided to try
their fate against Islam with the help of Banu Asad, Banu Kinana and Banu Ghatfan. Khayber
was the province which they had occupied since the times of their banishment from Palestine. It
contained a few fortresses, the biggest of them was called Qumoose, which was on a steep hill.
In these fortresses they started gathering in large numbers. After raising an army of 10 to 12
thousand warriors their misguided venture was to include a march on Medina. Hearing this
serious news the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) decided to face them at Khayber
only. He marched at the head of an army of 3000 soldiers. This battle took place in Muharram of
the year 7 A.H.
Ali (A.S) then was suffering from an eye problem and was left at Medina. The Muslim army
succeeded in defeating the Jews in minor skirmishes but when they tried to capture the main fort
of Qumoose they had to face a set back. They could not succeed though they tried for days at a
stretch. The defeats sustained sadly demoralizing the Muslim army. Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) had allowed every important person to command the Muslim forces day by day.
Yet each day theresult was fresh defeat, fresh demoralization, fresh boldness of Jews and daily
increasing danger of some more clans, emboldened by the weakness and defeats of Muslims,
joining hands with the Jews. There were still many such tribes who were deadly against Islam
and wanted to harm it, but Muslims victories at Badr, Uhud and Khandaq had made them
nervous. The news of the defeats at Khayber were making them bold. AThe Jews of Khayber
united by an ancient alliance with a Beduin horde of Banu Ghatafan were incessantly working
for the formation of a powerful coalition against the Muslims. The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) knew fully well the power possessed by the desert races to injure the Muslims.
(Spirit of Islam). There was further danger of the Munafiqueen (hypocrites and double dealers)
staging a revolt in Medina. Prompt measures were needed to avert these evils. Only a victory
could have saved the situation which was getting more and more critical day by day. The Prophet
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(P.B.U.H. and His Household) was himself ill and sadly felt the need of Ali (A.S) at his side.
He knew that although he himself was ill, Ali (A.S) had not left him alone and had followed
him. Therefore ill or not ill Ali (A.S) had to come to the succor of Muslims, Islam and the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . When the news of the last disastrous repulses of the
Muslims were brought to him, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said,
ATomorrow I shall give the command (the flag, an insignia of the command) of this army to a
man who is brave, who will keep on attacking, who will not run away from the battlefield, who
loves Allah and His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and is beloved by Allah and His
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . He will not come back to me without success. the next
day Ali (A.S) was called from his bed and was handed over the command. He took the fort by
storm; killed Marhab, Antar, Murrah, Al-Harith and four other tribal chieftains of the Jews in
hand to hand combat. He broke the door of the fort single-handedly, carried his army inside the
fort and within four hours he flew the flag of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) on
the biggest fortress of Arabia. He once again moved the cause of Allah ever closer towards an
ultimate Islamic Victory at the hands of Muslims, and on that day saved Islam from disastrous
ends.
The news of success pleased the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) so much that
he, though ill, came out to greet the victor, embraced him said Ali (A.S) had I not been afraid
that Muslims will start regarding you as Christians regard the Christ, I would have said things
about you which would have made the Muslims venerate you and to consider the dust of your
feet as something worth venerating. But it will suffice to say that you are from me and I am from
you; you will inherit me and I will inherit you; you are unto me what Aaron was unto Moses.
You will fight for my cause, you will be nearest to me on the day of Judgment and you will be
next to me on the fountain of Kawthar. Enmity against you is enmity against me; a war against
you is a war against me; your friendship is my friendship. To be at peace with you is to be at
peace with me; your flesh is my flesh; your blood is my blood; who will obey you will obey me.
Truth is on your tongue, in your heart and in your mind. You have as much faith in Allah as I
have. You are a door to me. As per orders of Allah I give you these tidings that your friends will
be rewarded in the Heaven and your enemies will be punished in the Hell.
For further details of the above Hadith and the battle of Khayber, following books may be
consulted:
1. Ma’arij al-Nubuwwa, Vol. 4, p. 216.
2. The Manaqib of Akthab al-Kharzami
3. Mullah Ali Hamdani’s Yanabi’ al-Mawadda
4. Ibn Hisham’s Sira, p. 187
5. Tabari’s Tarikh.
(vii) the victory which Ali (A.S) brought to Islam in Khayber proved of great consequence to
its mission and its followers. It gave such an importance and prestige over the infidels of the
Quraish that they, who till then had complete control and sway over Mecca and did not even
allow the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and his followers to come for hajj and
Aumra and had forced them for the treaty of Hudaybiya, were now obliged to surrender the city
to him. Mecca fell before the superior forces of Islam.
The causes of the invasion and fall of Mecca are not to be discussed here. Suffice it to say that
Abu Sufyan who had brought it all upon the heads of Quraish, later leaving the country and
countrymen to the devil, started running after every important person to secure his own and his
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family’s freedom of life and property from the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
Through the mediation of Abbas (uncle of Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) he
received the pardon that he sought. The behavior of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) against these murderers of Muslims and the enemies of Islam was so merciful,
benign and humane that he pardoned every one of them, a clemency and kindness which was and
shall ever remain unparalleled in the history of mankind. When Mecca was taken over by the
Muslims, the precincts of Ka’ba were cleared of all idols by the person of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) and Ali (A.S) , and it ceased to exist as the center of infidelity
and polytheism in Arabia.
The fall of Mecca which took place in the Ramadan of 8 A.H. (January 630 A.D.) was
accompanied with serious repercussions. The success of Islam since the Hijra had brought many
followers to its fold. These were of three types. Some had seen the truth in its preaching and had
accepted it sincerely and faithfully. Some were such that they wanted to bask in the glory of a
religion which was fast becoming a mighty temporal power and they wished to make their
worldly positions good through its influence and had accepted it with those ulterior motives.
While there were some whose conversion was under false impression that unless they had
accepted Islam their lives and properties were not safe. The fall of Mecca had a very sad effect
upon those two latter groups. They were not expecting that Abu Sufyan and the Quraish would
succumb so easily to the pressure of Muslim invasion. The clearing of idols from the precincts of
Ka’ba and closing its doors to the infidels was a heavy blow. It became more poignant when they
found out their age-long enemy, the man whose valor and whose sword brought all these
victories to Islam as well as disastrous defeats to their side, Ali (A.S) was the flag bearer a
(commander) of the Holy Prophet’s () forces on the occasion of the fall of Mecca. Along with
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) he was the man who cleared the Ka’ba of its
idols. There still were many polytheist clans in Arabia. To them Mecca was the center of
worship. Among them there were two powerful bedouin tribes; Banu Hawazin and Banu Thaqif.
They now were joined by Banu Nusair, Banu Sa’d, Banu Hashim and Banu Hilal. Those tribes
decided to stage a comeback and were quietly promised help by the hypocrites.
(viii) the whole thing was arranged so quickly and so stealthily that by the time the Muslims
could come out of the sweet pleasure of success at Mecca there was an army of 20,000 warriors
at Tayef ready to face them. The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) marched to Ta’if
at the head of an army of 15,000 Muslims. Some of them were freed slaves of the Muslim’s
conquest of Mecca and many more were the hypocrites of the types mentioned above. There
were a few thousand of those Muslims who had accompanied him from Medina.
The hostile tribes decided to attack the Muslim army at a point of vantage at Hunain and
selected two prominent locations where they concealed their archers. The Muslims were very
proud of their strength and were very sure of their success, but their behavior during the
encounter was shamelessly timorous and cowardly. The Almighty Master discussing their
attitude in this battle says AAllah came to your help on so many occasions. Yet, on the day of
Hunain, your vanity in the number of your soldiers and your arrogance did not prove of any avail
to you, you were badly defeated and could not find any place of shelter. You started running
away without shame (section 9, Tauba).
This encounter took place in the month of Shawwal 8, A.H. (January/February 630 AD).
When the Muslim army marched towards the place where the archers were concealed the enemy
opened the campaign with such a severe onslaught of their archery that the Muslim army could
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not stand it. The assault was fierce and the confusion in the Muslim ranks made the archers
bolder and they came nearer and attacked from both flanks and from the front. The Muslims
could not stand the attack any longer. They started running without putting up any resistance and
had lost their senses and touch with reality so much that they even left the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) unprotected beyond their cares (Bukhari’s Sahih).
The first battalion to run in trouble was the one commanded by Khalid ibn al-Walid (Rawzat
al-Safa, Vol. 2, p. 137, Tarikh al-Anbiya’, Vol. 2 p. 388). He was accompanied by Banu Saleem
and therecently converted Quraish of Mecca. This was followed by such a disorderly and
tumultuous flight of Muslims that only ten persons out of an army of 15,000 were left with the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Eight of them were Banu Hashim (Abbas and his
two sons, Ali (A.S) , Aqil and three other cousins of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) .
Abbas was shouting at the Muslims to return, reminding them of oaths of allegiance taken and
promises made, but it was of no avail. Those who had accepted Islam for wealth and power or
under false fears were not willing to risk their lives. They ran as fast as they could. Many of them
who had carefully hidden their enmity of the rising power were happy at the defeat. They
gathered around Abu Sufyan, started congratulating him and saying that AThe magical spell of
the lying prophet is broken! They were praying for the comeback of polytheism (Abul-Fida’, p.
349, Rawzat al-Safa, p. 136 Vol. 2, Tarikh al-Anbiya’, p. 389 Vol. 2).
Once again it fell to the lot of Ali (A.S) to save the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) and Islam. Armies of Banu Hawazin and Banu Thaqif under the cover of their
archers were rushing down the hillock, and were getting ready for a fierce onslaught. Ali (A.S)
divided the small band of faithful Muslims in three divisions; to Abdullah ibn Mas’ud, AAbbas
ibn Abdul-Muttalib and his nephew Abu Sufyan ibn al-Harith, he assigned the duty of guarding
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . To three others he gave orders to guard therear
while he faced the onslaught with only three warriors along with him. He fought and fought, was
wounded, but faced the commander of the hostile army, Abu Jerdal in a hand to hand combat and
killed him with one stroke of sword. He attacked the enemy’s rank once again, bringing the
number of those whom he had slain on that day to forty. His aides had a glorious example before
them. Rhey also fought bravely and killed thirty more men.
The day was saved, the commander of the enemy’s army was killed, their ranks were broken,
they had no courage to face Ali (A.S) and started retreating. The sight of a powerful enemy
under retreat made the fleeing Muslims bold and they came back afterwards as victory was won
for them.
A detailed account of this encounter is to be found in
1. Rawzat al-Safa, Vol. 2, p. 136.
2. Tarikh al-Anbiya’, Vol. 2, p. 388
3. Sirat ibn Hisham, Vol. 2, p. 621
4. Kunzul-Ummal, Vol. 5, p. 307
(ix) During the lifetime of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , Imam Ali (A.S)
was sent on many occasions for the propagation of Islam and on many missions of mercy and
peace. He carried out these duties to the satisfaction of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) and Allah. For instance in the words of AThe Spirit of Islam’, AThe men of Khalid
ibn al-Walid, under the order of this newly converted warrior killed Banu Khazimah’s bedouins.
The news of this wanton bloodshed deeply grieved the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
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and he prayed AO Master! I am innocent of what Khalid has done. He immediately dispatched
Imam Ali (A.S) to make every possible preparation for the outrage committed. Such a mission
was congenial to Ali’s nature and he executed it faithfully. After making a careful enquiry as to
the number of persons killed, their status, and the losses incurred by their families, and paid the
diyya strictly. When every loss was made good he distributed theremainder of the money he had
brought among the kinsman of the victims of other members of the tribe. This gladdened every
heart by his gentleness and benevolence and while carrying with him the blessings of the whole
people, he returned to the prophet who overwhelmed him with praises and thanks.
Similarly in 8 A.H. when other missions failed to bring the powerful Yemeni tribe of Banu
Hamdan to the folds of Islam, Ali (A.S) was sent there. Ibn Khaldun says that on the first
occasion he gathered the tribesmen some of whom were very learned and spoke before them of
the truths which Islam preached. This sermon was so effective that some of those learned persons
immediately embraced Islam. This was followed by long discussions with others. He made them
realize the rationality of the doctrines of Islam. The discussions ended in the whole-hearted
conversion of Banu Hamdan, who followed their learned leaders. This news pleased the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) to the extent that he bowed down before Allah in thanks
and thrice said APeace be to Banu Hamdan and to Ali (A.S) . Again in 10 A.H. his sermons and
preaching proved so effective that the whole province embraced Islam as one entity.
16. Designation of Ali (A.S) as Vicegerent
It is generally supposed that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had not
expressly designated anyone as his successor in the spiritual and temporal government. Yet this
notion is framed on an incorrect apprehension of fact, for there is abundant evidence that many
times the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had openly indicated Ali (A.S) as his
successor. (The Spirit of Islam, p. 292)
(i) the first occasion was when he was ordered by Allah to openly and unreservedly invite his
kith and kin to Islam. This occasion is called Ada’wat al-Asheera (inviting therelatives to Islam).
In the words of Rev. Sale, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said, AAllah has
commanded me to call you unto Him; who therefore, among you will be assisting to me herein
and become my brother and my vicegerent? All of them hesitating and declining the matter, Ali
(A.S) at length rose up, and declared that he would be his assistant and threatened those who
should oppose him. Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household), upon this, embraced Ali
(A.S) with great demonstration of affection and desired all those present to listen to and to obey
him as his Deputy.
Thus, at this occasion of the introduction of Islam as a religion Imam Ali (A.S) was declared
by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) as his Deputy. The value of Ali’s support to
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and his designation as a vicegerent at this stage
is fairly well assessed by theologians, historians and thinkers of the West and the East.
Refer to:
1. Al-Tabari’s Tafsir, Vol. 19, p. 68
2. Tafsir Ma’alim al-Tanzil, p. 663
3. Imam Ahmed ibn Hanbal Vol. I p. 163
4. Mustadrak Imam Hakim Vol. 2I p. 133
5. Tarikh of Tabari Vol. 2 p. 216
6.Al-Tarikh al-Kamil, Vol. 2 p. 26
7.Tarikh of Abul-Fida’, Vol. I p. 116
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(ii) The second occasion was at the time of Ali’s conquest of Khayber. The words of the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) quite clearly, positively and expressively give his
opinion about Imam Ali (A.S) and his desire to leave Imam Ali (A.S) as the guardian and the
propagator of his mission. He said AYou are from me and I am from you, you will inherit me.
You are unto me what Aaron was unto Moses. you will be nearest to me on the day of Judgment
and next to me on the fountain of Kawthar, enmity against you is enmity against me, a war
against you is a war against me. you have as much faith in Allah as I have. You are a door to me.
(Refer to p. 26 the Battle of Khayber) What more can one say? Can there be anything more
forceful, more eloquent, more pregnant with clear indications and more categorical than the
words which the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) has used? Do they leave any
shadow of doubt? Has the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ever used such words for
anybody else?
(iii) the third instance was the occasion of the invasion of Thabook. To understand the
occasion and the cause of remarks of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) it is
necessary to know the historical background of the incident. It was the summer of 9 A.H. and the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had received the information that the Roman King
was mobilizing his forces to invade the Islamic State and many Arab tribes were gathering round
him. He decided to face them in their own land and not to allow them the run of the Muslim state
so that they may not lay waste to the lands through which they would pass. The situation had
become very serious because there was famine in Hijaz, Ta’if and Yemen. The Hypocrites (the
Munafeqeen) were carrying on an intensive propaganda campaign to try to make the people
believe that the famine was the sign that Allah was angry with Muslims and wants to exterminate
them with the worst form of death (cannibalism). And in case of a defeat against the Roman
armies there was eminent danger of revolt. It was imperative that the state should be left in the
hands of a faithful and powerful guardian otherwise there was every possibility of being
sandwiched between the two enemies. The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
therefore decided that Imam Ali (A.S) should act as a regent in his place so the world might
realize that in the opinion of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , none could look
after the temporal as well as spiritual welfare of the Muslims during his absence but Ali (A.S) .
He called Ali (A.S) and told him that he would have to act as the last line of defense for him and
Islam, saying AO Ali (A.S) ; nobody could look after the center of the Muslim state but you or I.
(Imam Hakim in Mustadrak, Aallama ibn AAbdul-Birr in Isti’ab, Shah Waliyyullah in IzalatulKhafa’, Sibt ibn al-Jawzi in Tathkiratul-Khawass and Aallama al-Muttaqi al-Hindi in KanzulAUmmal). Imam () Ali’s stay at Medina disappointed the Amunafiqun (hypocrites) as they
constituted the majority of those left behind by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
They claimed that the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had lost faith in Imam Ali (A.S)
and had therefore left him behind and that it was positively certain that the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) was going to suffer a defeat. Imam Ali (A.S) naturally felt
anxious for the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and annoyed at aspersions against
him. He left Medina immediately, met the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) at the place of
Jerf and told him all that was said at his back. Thereupon the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) said Ali (A.S) ! they are lying against you as they have lied against me. They have
called me an epileptic, a magician, a sorcerer and a necromantic and have always portrayed me
as a liar. I have appointed you as my vicegerent and my caliph over all which I have left behind.
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Are you not satisfied to realize that you are unto me what Aaron was unto Moses (Bukhfari’s
Sahih, Ch. 145, p. 387 and Ch. 18, p. 89).
(IV) the fourth time was (in the wording of the Spirit of Islam) : ANotably the occasion of
thereturn journey from the performance of AThe Farewell Pilgrimage’, during a halt at a place
called Khumm, he had convoked an assembly of the people accompanying him, and used the
words which could leave little doubt as to his intention regarding a successor. Ali (A.S) , said he,
is to me what Aaron was to Moses. The Almighty Allah be a friend to his friends and a foe to his
foes; help those who help him and frustrate those who betray him (The Spirit of Islam, p. 292).
I would be doing a great disservice to the cause of truth and to the history of Islam if I do not
sketch at least a bare outline of this incident. More than fifty thousand people had gathered on
that occasion and many of them narrated all that took place there. Among those narrators we find
such luminaries as Abu Bakr, AOmer, AOthman, al-Zubair ibn al-AAwwam, Abdullah ibn
AOmer, Abdullah ibn AAbbas, Mother of the Faithful AA’isha, Mother of the Faithful Umm
Salamah, Abdullah ibn Mas’ud and Hassan ibn Thabit (The book Arjahul-Matalib cites 100
names of the companions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Among these,
there are among about 153 historians and collectors of the Holy Prophet’s traditions and authors
of ASihah books, mu’jams and musnads from the 1st Century A.H. right up to 1300 A.H. These
have all narrated the entire incident in detail and have drawn practically the same inference as the
author of the Spirit of Islam. The book Arjahul-Matalib again gives a list of them in
chronological order of 13 centuries, from which I have quoted a few names at the end of this
section.
The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was returning from the AFarewell
Pilgrimage and had reached the place Khumm, (which in the words of the famous historian and
geographer Ibn Khallikan is a valley lying between Mecca and Medina and in the neighborhood
of Juhfa). It contains a pond, a Aghadir, near which the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
pronounced his invocation. This took place on the 18th of Thul-Hijja and the 18th of this month
is the anniversary of the Feast of Ghadir (Eilul-Ghadir).
There, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) suddenly made his camel stop and
said that just then a message of Allah was revealed unto him which must be immediately
conveyed to the Muslims. He dispatched messengers towards those who had gone ahead and
those who were following him leisurely to come back or to hurry up and join him at once. When
all of them were gathered he performed the noon-prayers in that blazing hot summer sun. A
pulpit was erected for him and from this eminence he preached a sermon which is rightly
considered as a masterpiece of Arabic literature and a brief survey of what the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) had taught and achieved for the Muslims. Then he said that he
had just then received therevelation which said, AO Messenger! proclaim the whole of what
which hath been sent down to thee from Your Master, for it thou dost it not, it will be as if thou
hast not all performed the duty of His prophethood. And Allah will protect thee (thy mission)
from evil men, verily Allah guides not the unbelievers, and he was standing there to convey that
message to the Muslims and to perform the duty he was ordered to perform. Continuing
Thesermon he said AO people! Shortly I shall be called (to the Heaven), and if I go back I shall
have to give an account as to how I have conveyed His Message to you and you (in your turn)
will also be asked as to how you have accepted and carried out my teachings. Now tell me what
you will say. Thereupon all the gathering as one man declared AO Messenger of Allah! we
testify and declare that you have conveyed the message of Allah in full details, you have striven
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your utmost to guide us to the right path, and taught us to follow it. You were most kind to us
and you never wished for us but our good, may Allah repay you for all that. Thereupon he asked
the gathering ADo you not testify that there is no god but Allah, that Muhammed is His creature,
His servant and His Messenger, that there is the Heaven and the Hell? Do testify that death will
overtake every one of you, that you will be brought back from your graves, that the day of
resurrection will surely dawn and human beings will be resurrected from their graves to account
for their deeds? the gathering declared AWe believe and testify to all of this. Hearing this
declaration he said AI am leaving among you two of the most important things worthy of
obedience, the Holy Qur’an and my progeny (descendants). Take care how you treat them, they
will not separate from each other till they reach me on the Fountain of Kawthar. Then said he
AThe Almighty Allah is my Master (mawla) and I am the Master of all Muslims and have more
right and power on their lives than they themselves; do you believe in this assertion of mine? In
one voice, they all replied AYes O Messenger of Allah. Thrice he asked the same question and
thrice he received the same reply. On this solemn affirmation he said AHear and remember that
to whomever I am Master of mawla Ali (A.S) is the Master and mawla to him. He is to me what
Aaron was unto Moses. The Almighty Allah be a friend to his friends and a foe to his foes. The
Almighty will help whoever helps him and frustrate those who betray him. While saying this he
raised Imam Ali (A.S) so that the gathering could have a look at the man, who would be Master
and mawla of those who believe the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) to be their
Master and mawla. Thereupon the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) received
therevelation, AThis day I have perfected your religion for you and have filled up the measure of
my bounties upon you and I am pleased with Submission to His Will alone (Islam) to be your
religion.
After performing this ceremony and receiving the above revelation the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) came down from the pulpit, prostrated before Allah in prayers
and ordered a tent to be fixed. In this tent Imam Ali (A.S) was made to take his seat and people
were ordered to pay homage to him and to address him as Amir al-Mu’minin (Master of the
faithful). The first person to congratulate and address him as such was the Imam () AOmer ibn
al-Khattab, saying AI congratulate you, O Ali (A.S) . Today you have become my mawla
(Master) and Master of every Muslim man and woman.
Refer to:
1. The Musnad of Imam Ahmed ibn Hanbal (Vol. 5, p. 281)
2. Imam al-Ghazali in Siyar al-AAlamin.
Theremarks of Imam al-Ghazali about this event and the inferences he has drawn are
instructive readings. If I have space at my disposal I shall add them as a separate index otherwise
Sirul-Aalemeen may be referred.
List of some out of the famous 153 authors and books which contain the above event:
1. Ibn Shihab al-Zuhri (125 A.H.)
2. Muhammed ibn Ishaq (152 A.H.)
3. Ibn Rahooya(238 A.H.)
4. Imam Ahmed ibn Hanbal, Musnad, Vol. 5, p. 281 (243 A.H.)
5. Jarir al-Tabari (310 A.H.)
6. Al-Tirmithi (320 A.H.)
7. Imam Hakim (Mustadrak) (400 A.H.)
8. Imam al-Ghazali (Siyar al-AAlamin) (505 A.H.)
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9. Sibt ibn al-Jawzi (654 A.H.)
10. Ibn Subbaq al-Malekee(855 A.H.)
11. Soyoothee (1011 A.H.)
12. Sheikh Abdul Huq Mohaddis Dahlavi (1052 A.H.)
13. Shah Waliyyullah Mohaddis Dahlavi (1176 A.H.)
14. Aallama Muhammed Mu’in (1280 A.H.)
15. A brief survey of the Imam Ali’s life from the Hijra to the death of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) (1 A.H. to 40 A.H.)
When the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) left his house at Mecca in the night
and Ali (A.S) was found in his bed, the Quraish at first thought of killing him, but when they
found him ready to defend himself they gave up idea and dispersed in search of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
Ali (A.S) as per orders of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) stayed three days
at Mecca and handed back all the articles which were entrusted to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) for sole custody, mostly by his enemies, secured their receipts and left the
city in broad daylight.
He was entrusted by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) for the safe transport of
the Holy Prophet’s daughter, Fatima (S.A), the daughter of Hamzah, another Fatima, his own
mother, a third Fatima, and his aunt, the daughter of Abdul-Muttalib, a fourth Fatima (S.A). The
Quraish wanted to prevent the departure of these four ladies. Eight prominent people came out to
fight. Ali (A.S) fought single handed with them. He killed Junah with a stroke of his sword and
scattered therest and continued the journey. On account of scarcity of mounts he had to travel on
foot and thus he reached Medina with bleeding feet. Awaiting the arrival of Imam Ali (A.S) the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was staying at Quba’, two miles away from
Medina, when he reached Quba’, on the 12th of Rabi’ al-Awwal (probably the end of June) the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) embraced him, dressed his bleeding feet and
entered Medina along with him.
Before his migration to Medina the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had created
a bond of brotherhood between the Muslims. He had fraternized Abu Bakr to the Imam ()
AOmer, AOthman to Abdul Rehman ibn Oaf, the Imam () Hamza to Zaid ibn Haresa and
Talhah to al-Zubair. On that occasion he had fraternized Imam Ali (A.S) to himself, saying, AO
Ali (A.S) , you are my brother in this world as well as in the next, (Tharikh al-Khamees Vol. I p.
398).
1st A.H.
Five months after his arrival at Medina, he created a fraternity between the Muhajirun (the
immigrants) with the Ansars (the supporting citizens of Medina). On that occasion, he again
called Ali (A.S) and said AO Ali (A.S) you are my brother in this world and hereafter. the
historian ibn Hisham says AThe Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) caught the hand of
Imam Ali (A.S) and said Ahe alone is my brother. Thus the Messenger of Allah, who was
actually the leader of all the prophets as well as of all the pious men of the world and who had no
parallel among human beings by fraternizing with Imam Ali (A.S) , showed that Ali (A.S) also
had no parallel among mankind except the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
(Seerath al ibn Hisham Vol. 2, Abul-Fida’ Vol. I p. 127, Mustadrak of Imam Hakim Vol. 2I and
Fath al-Bari, commentary of Sahih Bukhari Vol. VII p. 211).
2nd A.H.
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During the 2nd year of Hijra Imam Ali’s marriage took place with the Holy Prophet’s
daughter Fatima (S.A). The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was receiving many
offers for his daughter from very rich people of Medina, from some of the Muhajirun and from
chiefs of mighty clans of Arabia. He had refused even to consider these offers and sometime felt
annoyed at them. At the end he closed the door by saying that he was awaiting the orders of
Allah. The book Usd al-Ghaba fi Tamyeez al-Sahaba, gives a detailed account of these offers
and the way of refusal by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Some of the Ansars
suggested to Imam Ali (A.S) to place a proposal for himself before the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) . Imam Ali (A.S) went before him feeling shy and modest. This was the
first time in his life that he talked reservedly to a man who was like a father unto him and to
whom he was like a dear son. When the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) heard the
proposal he was so pleased that he smiled and said (it is a welcome and happy proposal) Tarikh
al-Khamees Vol. I p. 407, Ibn Sa’d, Vol. 8, pp. 11, 12, and Usd al-Ghaba).
The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) took the consent of Fatima (S.A) for this
proposal. The marriage ceremony was very simple and without pomp and ostentation. There was
a sermon from the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) in which he praised Allah
mentioning some of His attributes and citing verses of the Holy Qur’an and concluding with
theremarks that he was ordered by Allah to give Fatima (S.A) into marriage with Imam Ali (A.S)
. This was followed by a khutba from Imam Ali (A.S) , praising Allah and the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) and desiring the gathering to witness his marriage with Fatima
(S.A), the daughter of Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . After this happy ceremony
somebody reminded the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of his late companion in
life the mother of Fatima (S.A), Khadija, and he said AKhadija! Where is Khadija? Who can be
like Khadija? She testified for me when the world was falsely accusing me as a liar. She relieved
me of much of my weight, she was my partner in my work and she helped me when others were
creating obstruction in my mission.
After reaching Medina, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) stayed in the house
of Kulthum ibn Hadam for seven months and Imam Ali (A.S) was staying with him. When the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) finished the construction of mosque he built houses
for his wives around it and in the center of them he built a house for Imam Ali (A.S) (Bukhari’s
Sira, Ch. 14 p. 387). Following his example, many of his companions except Abu Bakr built
their houses around the mosque. Abu Bakr was staying in the locality of Banu AAbd AAwf
where the marriages of both of his daughters took place and later on he shifted to Sukh (Bukhari,
Vol. 1). The doors of all the houses built around the mosque opened in the mosque. One day the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ordered that except the doors of his houses and that
of Ali (A.S) all the other doors should be closed. Some of the companions requested him to
allow them to keep a small window open. He replied, ANo, not a pin hole, Allah so willed it.
(Imam Ahmed’s Musnad, the Mustadrak of Imam Hakim, the Khasa’is of al-Nisa’i)
In the year 2 A.H., the Battle of Badr took place (refer to Section 15, p. 22).
3rd A.H.
In the year 3 A.H., the first child to Imam Ali (A.S) and Fatima (S.A) was born and he was
named Hasan () by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
In the same year (3 A.H.), the Battle of Uhud took place (Refer to Section 15, p. 22) which
was followed by the dispatch of an expeditionary force to Hamra’ul-Asad under Imam Ali (A.S)
.
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4th A.H.
In the year 4 A.H., Imam Ali (A.S) and Fatima (S.A) had The second child Husain (Imam
Husain []) who was also named by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . In the
same year a battle took place with Banu Nazir and Imam Ali (A.S) brought it to a successful end
and Banu Nazir were forced to vacate their fortress.
5th A.H.
In the year 5 A.H., three battles took place, the Battle with Banu Mostaliq, the Battle of
Khandaq (the moat) and the Battle with Banu AAnzah. In all of them, Ali (A.S) was the
Commander of the army. The most important of them was the Battle of Khundaq (which I have
narrated in Section 15 p. 23).
6th A.H.
In the year 6 A.H., an expedition to Fadak was sent under the command of Imam Ali (A.S)
and without a battle or skirmish he brought the whole province under control of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
In Thul-Qi’da of this year, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , along with
fourteen hundred Muslims left for Mecca with the intention of hajj (pilgrimage). He had no
desire to fight anybody and had left all the armaments at Medina. When the Quraish came to
know about this intending pilgrimage they refused to allow the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) to enter Mecca. Khalid ibn al-Walid came out with a force of two hundred wellequipped cavalry men to obstruct the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and if
necessary to fight over the issue. At an oasis called Hudaybiya the opponents faced each other. A
chieftain named Aurwa from Quraish came out to discuss the situation with the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) and instead of a battle, a treaty was arranged, and it was written
by Imam Ali (A.S) . The last clause of the treaty was that the present intention of the pilgrimage
would be given up until the following year although the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) and Muslims could come for Umra.
7th A.H.
In the year 7 A.H., two battles took place, the Khayber and the Wadi al-Qura. The more
important of them was Khayber which I have accounted in section 15 p. 25.
In the same year the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) along with Muslims went
to perform Aumra, it was very peaceful mission. The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) and many of the Muslims had their wives and children with them. The Aumra was
performed without incident.
8th A.H.
In Islamic History, the year 8 A.H. held some important events in its unfolding.
The first of them was the Liberation of Mecca. The terms of the treaty of Hudaybiya were
dishonored by the Quraish. Within two years of the treaty, they killed twenty persons from Banu
Khuza’a’s clan without any justifiable reason. Representatives of the clan came to the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , asking for his promised support. He was annoyed at this
flagrant dishonoring of the treaty and said, AI am not helped if I do not help them.
The arrangement for the invasion of Mecca was being carried on by the Muslims. In the
meanwhile, Hatib, a companion of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) who was
with him in the battle of Badr, wrote a letter to his family, informing them of the intention of
Muslims. This espionage, under the orders of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
was detected by Imam Ali (A.S) and he brought this letter to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
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His Household) . It was being sent through an Abyssinian slave girl. Hatib confessed his crime
and was mercifully pardoned by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) (Bukhari).
When all the arrangements were ready, the army of invasion, numbering ten thousand,
marched towards Mecca. The command of the army this time was given to Sa’d ibn AAbadah
Ansari, with orders to enter Mecca as the advancing party.Sa’d entering Mecca, saying AToday
is going to be a big day, a day of retaliation, a day when Mecca will be looted. Abbas, the uncle
of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , hearing this came to the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) and said, AO Messenger of Allah!Sa’d has very serious
intentions against Quraish. He may carry on a massacre. the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) called Imam Ali (A.S) and said AO Ali (A.S) ! you go and take the command from
Sa’d and do what’s needed. He would not be unhappy in handing over the command to you and
to you alone. Imam Ali (A.S) took over the command of the expedition and entered the city,
declared perfect amity and peace and waited for the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
. When the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) entered Mecca he went straight to the
Ka’ba and started removing the idols placed there. Some of them were placed on a very high
platform where his hands would not reach, he asked Ali (A.S) to mount on his back and remove
the idols. Ali (A.S) obeyed the order, mounted on his back and was removing the idols when the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) asked AO Ali (A.S) ! how do you find yourself?
Imam Ali (A.S) replied, AO Messenger of Allah! I find myself on such an eminent place that I
feel as if my head is resting on the Empyrean of Allah the Almighty. Thereupon the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) replied AO Ali (A.S) , how fortunate you are, doing the
work of Allah and how fortunate I am that I am bearing your burden. (Imam Ahmed’s Musnad,
Vol. I p. 151).
At the occasion, a poet presented a eulogy in praise of Imam Ali (A.S) .
AI am asked to praise Ali (A.S) in verses,
Because recital of his praises will
Release a man from Hell.
I replied to them, how can I praise
A man whose attributes are so sublime
That men got confused over these attributes
And started apotheosizing him.
He has placed his foot at such an eminent
Place, that according to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ,
It is the place on which, on the night of
Meraj, Allah has placed His hand of
Grace and Mercy.
Hearing this eulogy, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) rewarded the poet
handsomely.
The second important event was the massacre of Banu Jazima by Khalid ibn al-Walid and
reparations carried by Imam Ali (A.S) under orders of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) (Refer to section 15 p. 28).
During the month of Shawwal of that year, the Muslims faced certain powerful tribes of
Arabs on the battlefield of Hunain. Ali (A.S) again secured a victory for them (Refer to section
15 p. 28). Hunain was followed by an expedition to Thaef under the command of Imam Ali (A.S)
. Those who had run away from Hunain had gathered there and wanted to measure their strength
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once again. The commander of their army who was the chiefs of Banu Zaigham clan was killed
by Imam Ali (A.S) , which broke the back of resistance and various parties of hostile clans
started dispersing. Seeing the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) raised the siege and
brought the expedition to an end.
In the same year Imam Ali (A.S) was sent to Yemen on a missionary service. He carried on
this work so successfully and his speeches there proved so effective that the tribe of Banu
Hamdan embraced Islam as one entity. (Refer Section 15 p. 29)
9th A.H.
The 9th year of the Hijra relates four important incidents of Imam Ali’s life.
The first was the expedition to Thatul-Salasil. Ali (A.S) brought it to a successful end,
defeated the clans gathered there to invade Medina and brought the happy news to the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . The Messenger of Allah came out of Medina to
welcome the warrior. Ali (A.S) was riding a horse at the head of his army, saw the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) walking towards him and jumped from his horse. The Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) told him Akeep on riding, do not dismount, Allah and His
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) are really pleased with your services. The Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) made him remount his horse and he walked along with the horse
(Refer to Hamra’ul-Ashira and Ma’arijul-Nubuwwa).
The second event was the Holy Prophet’s expedition in person to Thabook, which I have
narrated in Section 16 p. 30.
The third important event in the life of Ali (A.S) and in the history of Islam was thereading of
the Chapter (Sura) Bara’at before the infidels of Mecca. This Sura declares that Allah and his
Messenger in the future will have nothing to do with the infidels and polytheists. All the treaties
which existed till then were now annulled and cancelled. No polytheist or infidel would, in the
future, be allowed to enter the city of Mecca or the precincts of Ka’ba. Imam Hakim in his
Mustadrak Vol. 2I, p. 32, Al-Riazul-Nazira, Vol. 2, p. 203, the Musnad of Imam Ahmed ibn
Hanbal, Vol. I p. 331, Al-Isab fi Ma’rifatil-Sahaba, Vol. IV, p. 270 and Izalatul-Khafa’, Section
2, p. 261 say that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) first ordered Abu Bakr to
carry this Sura to Mecca and to read it at the Ka’ba. But immediately after him he sent Imam Ali
(A.S) to replace Abu Bakr on the mission. When Abu Bakr complained about this change, the
Messenger of Allah replied AI have done it under orders of Allah which came explicitly that
either I should perform this duty or somebody who is like me.
The fourth event took place in Najran, a city in the province of Yemen. It was center of the
Christian Missionary activities in Southern Arabia. The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) had written to the Chief priest of the city to realize the blessings of Islam. In reply
he wrote that he would like to personally discuss the teachings of this new religion. His name
was Harith. He was invited and came with a retinue of fourteen priests. The priests stayed at
Medina as guests of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Long discussions about
monotheism versus trinity took place and it was realized that these priests were not open minded.
Oon the contrary, they were prejudiced against Islam. The Almighty Master ordered the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) to explain to them that AVerily Jesus is as Adam in the
sight of Allah. He created him out of dust. He then said unto him ABe’ and he was. AThis is the
truth from Your Master; be not therefore one of those who doubt; and whoever shall dispute with
thee after the knowledge which hath been given thee, say unto them, come let us call together
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our sons and your sons, our women and your women and ourselves and yourselves. Then let us
make imprecations and lay the curse of Allah upon those who lie. (Surat Ali Imran, Chap. III).
According to AAmir ibn Sa’d and Ummul-Mu’minin AA’isha, when the above verses were
revealed to the Messenger of Allah he called Ali (A.S) , Fatima (S.A), Hasan and Husain () and
said AMaster! This is my family and progeny (Ahl al-Bayt). (Bukhari’s Sira, Parts VII p. 77,
Saree Muslim, Vol. 2 p. 278, al-Tirmithi, P. 421, Misquath Vol. 8, p. 129).
Imam Fukhrud-Din al-Razi (in Al-Tafsir al-Kabir, Vol. 2, p. 701, printed in Egypt) says that
when the above verses were revealed the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah
covered himself with a black coverlet, took in it Ali (A.S) , Fatima (S.A), Hasan and Husain ()
and said AMaster! This is my progeny, my household and my family (Ahl al-Bayt). Thereupon
the Messenger of the Master received therevelation AVerily Allah desireth to remove from you
every abomination of sin and evil, and you are the household of the prophet, and to purify you by
a perfect purification. Tafsir Khshshaf, Vol. I, p. 308 agrees with Imam Fakhrud-Din al-Razi.
Hearing the glad news of the Divine Purification, Sanctification and Consecration, the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) decided to take only these four persons along with him
for the ceremony of trial by imprecations as ordered by Allah. That is, Ali (A.S) representing the
Aselves as mentioned in the above verses, Fatima (S.A) representing women, Hasan and Husain
() representing Asons.
The Christian priests were then informed of these orders of Allah and said AThey agreed next
morning to abide by the trial as a quick way of deciding which of them were in the wrong.
Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) met them accordingly accompanied by his
daughter Fatima (S.A), his son-in-law Ali (A.S) and his two grandsons Hasan and Husain ()
and desired them (the Christian priests) to wait till he had said his prayers. But when they saw
him kneel down their resolution failed them and they dared not venture to curse him and his
party, but agreed to sign a treaty and pay tribute to him. (Rev. George Sale)
AAhl al-Bayt (), people of the household (of Muhammed []), is the designation usually
given to Fatima (S.A), Ali (A.S) and their children and descendants. This is the name by which
ibn Khaldun invariably designates them, and followers and disciples, Shi’as or adherents of the
APeople of the House. Sanai (the famous Sufi poet whom Rumi praises) represents the general
feeling with which the descendants of Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) were
regarded in the following verses of poetry:
AExcepting the book of Allah and his family (Descendants)
Nothing has been left by Ahmed the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ,
Memorial such as these can never be obtained till the day of
Judgment
See the Spirit of Islam , p. 313; note, Kanzul-AUmmal Vol. VI , p. 159, Tafsir al-Kushshaf,
Vol. 1, p. 308, al-Hamadani in Mawaddat al-Qurba, and Aallama Ibn Hajar al-Makki in AlSawa’iq al-Muhriqa, while discussing this event and the verses referred above, have given their
opinion that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , by translating the word ASelves as
himself and Ali (A.S) , the word AWomen as Fatima (S.A) and the word ASons as Hasan and
Husain () have shown to the Muslim the estimation in which these four persons are held by
Allah and by himself. They and they alone are his Ahl al-Bayt () who deserve the Divine
purification, sanctification and consecration.
10th A.H.
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During this year, Ali (A.S) was sent once again on a propagation mission to Yemen and then
on an expedition against AAmr ibn M’adi Karb. He performed both the duties successfully.
Imam Ahmed ibn e-Hanbal in his Musnad Vol. V , p. 356, Imam Nisa’i in Khasa’is and Aallama
ibn Hajr al-Makki in Al-Sawa’iq al-Muhriqa, p. 2, say that from the later expedition Khalid ibn
al-Walid sent a letter containing complaints of Imam Ali (A.S) to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) . This letter was carried by Buraydah, a companion of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) . On receipt of this letter, the Messenger of Allah was annoyed
and got angry and said, Ayou are fabricating lies and fictitious complaints against Ali (A.S) , he
is from me and I am from him, he is your master (wali) after me. Whoever annoys him actually
annoys me and whoever forsakes him forsakes me. He is made of the same material that I am
made of and I am made of the same material that Abraham is made of and my status before Allah
is superior to that of Abraham.
The end of the 10th A.H. saw the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) performing
the AFarewell Pilgrimage and while returning from there, for the last time he designated Imam
Ali (A.S) as his Vicegerent. I have narrated this incident in Section 16 , p. 30).
11th A.H.
The year 11th A.H. was the saddest year of Imam Ali’s life. He lost two of his best friends.
One of whom he loved and venerated like a father, like a master and like the dearest friend, the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) who died during the early months of the year. His
death was followed by the death of Imam Ali’s dearest companion, his wife, Fatima (S.A), the
lady of the Light.
The last year of Holy Prophet’s life was spent at Medina. An envoy of his was killed by the
Syrians and he had ordered an expedition against the Byzantines under Usamah ibn Zaid and he
had ordered all his companions except Imam Ali (A.S) join this expedition, and had ordered the
troops to be encamped outside the city (Al-Tabari’s Tarikh, Tarikh al-Kamil ibn Athir. Tabaqat
al ibn Sa’d and Al-Sira al-Halabiyya, Madarij al-Nubuwwah, Vol. 2 , p. 766). Yough he was ill
yet in spite of his weakness he came out, arranged the flag (the Insignia of the command) with
his own hands and handed it over to Usamah. He felt that people were not willing to join this
expedition, because of the young age of Usamah. He got annoyed and said AMay the curse of
Allah be on those who forsake the army of Usamah. (Millal-o-Nahal of Aallama Shahristani and
Sharah Mawahib al-Laduniyya).
The cause of this illness was the poison which had been given to him and which had slowly
penetrated into his system and had now begun to show its effect. It became evident that he had
not long to live. The news of his approaching end led to the stopp. of the expedition (The Spirit
of Islam). At the last stage of illness the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was
staying at the house of Ummul Mu’minin AA’isha. From there he came out for the last time to
lead the prayers. He was so weak that he was actually carried there by the sons of Abbas ibn
Abdul-Muttalib. He, himself, led the prayers (Fath al-Bari, Sharah Sirat al-Bukhari, Ch. 3 , p.
372).
This exertion proved too much for the Messenger of the Master and when he returned home
from the mosque he fainted. His condition was very serious at that time and the fainting fit was
of long duration. His children and members of family, and his companions started weeping and
lamenting. He came out of the swoon and looked at those tear sprinkled faces around him and
said, ABring a pen, some ink and paper so that I may write a will for you that will keep you on
the straight path. Some of his companions wanted to offer him the pen and paper while AOmer
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was of opinion that he was talking insanely on account of the intensity of illness. He argued that
they had the Holy Qur’an with them which would suffice them. This discussion took a serious
turn and people started arguing in loud voices. The Messenger of Allah got annoyed at this and
asked them to go away and to leave him alone. (Saree-Bukhari Ch. 12 , p. 126, Ch. 8 , p. 100,
Ch. 23 , p. 384, Minhaj al-Sunna of Aallama Ibn Taymiyyah, Shah Sahih Muslim of Aallama
Noodi, gives a detailed account of this event).
This was Sunday the 27th Safar. After the above incident the Messenger of Allah called Ali
(A.S) and said Ali! You will be first to meet me on the fountain of Kawthar. After me when
hardship and reverses face you then do not lose patience and when you find people running after
worldly gains then you busy yourself in the way of truth and Allah. (Rawzat al-Ahbab, Vol. I , p.
559, Madarij al-Nubuwwah, Vol. 2 , p. 551). On the next day, Monday the 28th of Safar, the
Messenger of Allah passed away to therealm of His Grace, Blessings and Majesty.
Last Moment and the Last Rights of Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Aallama Muhammed ibn Sa’d, in his famous book Tabaqat (Vol. 2, Section 2, pp. 51, 61)
relates that during the caliphate of the Imam () AOmer once the famous Jew, Ka’b al-Ahbar
(who later embraced Islam), asked of the caliph: ASir, please tell me what were the last words of
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . AThe Caliph told him to ask Imam Ali (A.S)
about it. Ka’b came to him and asked him the same question. The Imam () replied, ADuring the
last moments of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) his head was resting on my
shoulder and his words were Salat! Salat! (AUphold prayers, prayers!). Ka’b declared, AVerily,
the last moments of all of the prophets have always been thus, they are ordained for it and they
carry the message even with their last breath. Then Ka’b went to AOmer and asked him. AWho
performed the ablutions of the body of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) after his
death? the caliph told him to ask Imam Ali (A.S) about that also. He again came to Imam Ali
(A.S) and repeated the question. Imam Ali (A.S) replied. AThe Messenger of Allah had willed
that none but I should perform those ablutions because if any other person looked at his naked
body he would get blind. A curtain was hung and from the other side of the curtain Fazl ibn
Abbes and Osaama, blind-folded, were handing water to me and I was performing the ablutions.
These facts, that Imam Ali (A.S) was the only person to be with the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) at his last moments and to have performed the last rights, are also
acknowledged by the books Thazkeray Khasul A’imma Cha, p. II , p. 16, Kanzul AUmmal, Vol.
4, p. 55, Mustadrak of Imam Hakim, Vol. 3, p. 139, Riaz al-Nazira, printed in Egypt, p. 80 and
Mu’jam al-Kabir of al-Tabrani.
After the last ablutions and after shrouding the august of the Messenger of Allah as per his
will, first Imam Ali (A.S) performed the Adeath prayers’ alone. Then the parties of the Muslims
came and offered the death prayers without any leader (Imam). Aallama ibn Abdul Birr in
Isthee’ab says that after Imam Ali (A.S) offered his ADeath prayers’ alone then Banu Hashim
offered the prayers, then the Muhajirun and then the Ansars.
Burial of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
After the death prayers were said. Imam Ali (A.S) , Abbas, Fazl ibn Abbas and Osaama ibn
Zaid got busy with the arrangements of the burial of the Messenger of Allah. At therequest of the
Ansars, Aos ibn Kholee Ansari, who was also a Badri (a participant in the Badr campaign), was
allowed to join them. Osaama dug the grave in the house of Ummul Mu’minin AA’isha. Aos got
into the grave and Imam Ali (A.S) lifted the august body in his hands and lowered it into the
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grave. He stayed in the grave for some time while weeping bitterly. Usamah says AI have never
seen Ali (A.S) weeping like that before or after this occasion. Then he came out of the grave and
lifting his hands said, AMaster! he was Your first creation, his apparent death is not a sign of his
mortality, he lifted the gloom prevailing before the creation started, he was a proof of Your
Glory and Benevolence, he had come to us from therealm of Your Love and Glory, and was our
guide towards that Realm. His soul was the Emblem of Your Supreme Might, his body was the
masterpiece of Your Creation and his mind was Your Treasure house. Then he covered the grave
(Irshad Sheikh Mufid).
When Ali (A.S) and Banu Hashim were busy with the last rites of the burial of the Messenger
of Allah, some Muhajirun and some Ansars gathered at the saqifa and decided that Abu Bakr
should be the first caliph. Imam Ali (A.S) was asked to accede to this decision. He refused. Abu
Sufyan came to Medina and went to Abbas (uncle of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) and said to him, AThese people have taken away the caliphate from Banu Hashim.
You are uncle of the Messenger of Allah and oldest among the Quraish, you have been kind to
them also, they will accept your lead. Let you and I swear allegiance to Ali (A.S) . If anybody
opposes us we shall kill him. They both came to Ali (A.S) and Abu Sufyan told him Ali (A.S) ,
if you like I shall overflow Medina with infantry and cavalry, accept our proposal. Put out your
hand and let us swear the oath of allegiance. Hearing this Ali (A.S) replied AAbu Sufyan, I
swear by Allah the Almighty that you, through this proposal, want to create serious dissension
among the Muslims. You have always tried to harm Islam, I do not need your sympathies or your
help.
A detail account of this event may be found in
1. Tabari, Vol. 2I , pp. 202, 303
2. Tarikh al-Khulafa’, p. 45
3. Kanzul-AUmmal Vol. 2I , p. 140.
Imam Ali (A.S) realized that any serious dissension at this stage would harm the cause of
Islam considerably. He had before him the example of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) and treaty of Hudaybiya and had been foretold by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) of all that would happen. Aallama Ali ibn Muhammed (630 A.H.) in Usd alGhaba fi Thamyiz al-Sahaba (Vol. IV , p. 31) says AThe Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) had said to Imam Ali (A.S) , AYour status is like that of Ka’ba. People (Muslims)
approach the Ka’ba, but this holy house never approaches anybody. Therefore after my death if
people come to you and swear the oath of allegiance you accept it and if they do not come to you
then you do not go to them.
Aallama Sheikh AAbdul Haqq, the traditionist al-Dehlawi, in Madarij al-Nubuwwa (Vol. 2 ,
p. 511) says that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had advised Imam Ali (A.S) .
AAfter me you will have to face the extremes of suffering. Do not get disheartened and do not
lose patience; and when you find people craving for and trying their utmost to secure worldly
power and wealth you mould your life for the hereafter.
Imam Ali (A.S) loved Islam as intensely as the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
had loved it. He could not, therefore, for the sake of worldly kingdom endanger Islam. He knew
that a civil war at that stage would give chances to the Jewish clans of Banu Nazir and Banu
Quraiza on one side and the Christian tribes of Najran and Syria by the Byzantine armies on the
other. The munafiqun (hypocrites) and fresh converts on the third would simply take advantage
of the situation. When they found the Muslims busy killing each other, they would literally cut
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them into pieces, and Islam would totally disappear as a message of peace. He wanted the Arabs
to remain in the fold of Islam even with the desires of making their worldly position good, and
wanted the enemies of Islam to realize that Islam was powerful enough to defend itself even after
the sad demise of the Messenger of the Master. Therefore, he was willing to accept every wrong
for the Islam and to retire to Theseclusion of his house. The advice he gave to his uncle Abbas is
to be found in Nahjul-Balagha wherein he told him not to join the turmoil.
According to the famous Arab philosopher, mathematician and physician Ave Sena (Bu Ali
(A.S) Sena) Imam Ali (A.S) and Holy Qur’an were the two miracles of Muhammed (P.B.U.H.
and His Holy Household), the Messenger of Allah. The life of Imam Ali (A.S) at every stage
was a mirror like thereflection of the life of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
The days of Badr, Uhud, Khayber, and Hunain were not long passed and their hero still had the
same courage, valor, bravery and strength with him. He could have jumped at the proposal of
Abu Sufyan, but had he done so he would not have been Ali ibn Abu Talib, the man Awho loved
Allah and His Messenger and was loved by Allah and His Messenger (Mi’raj al-Nubuwwa).
Death of Fatima (S.A)
Unfortunately, his feelings were not reciprocated. The following books give an account of
very serious events which happened at Imam Ali’s refusal to accede to the decision of saqifa:
1. Tabari, Vol. 2I , p. 198
2. Al-AIqd al-Farid of Ibn Abd Rabbih, Vol. 2 , p. 179, printed in Egypt.
3. History of Abul-Fida’ Vol. I , p. 156 printed in Egypt.
4. Kitab Imama wal Siyasa of Aallama Ibn Qutaybah, Vol. I , p. 20, printed in Egypt (this
book gives a very detailed account)
5. Muruj al-Thahab by al-Mas’udi, p. 159
6. Al-Milal wal-Nihal of al-Shahristani, Vol. I , p. 25 printed in Bombay, India
7. Al-Faruq of al-Shibli al-Nu’mani, printed in India
8. Ibn Abil Hadid in commentary of Nahjul-Balagha.
What one could gather, from various accounts which these books have given, is a sad and
pathetic episode. It appears that though Imam Ali (A.S) decided to retire to Theseclusion of his
house and not to take any part in power politics, his house was burned down on his family and
him. And either the burning door or a hard hit from the hilt of a sword or a heavy push or all
together broke the ribs and hand of Fatima (S.A) (daughter of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) . This caused her such a serious injury that the baby she was carrying was a stillbirth. Aallama Shahristani in Al-Milal wal-Nihal (Vol. I , p. 25) says that there was nobody in the
house but Ali (A.S) , Fatima (S.A) and their children (who were between the ages of 4 to 8).
Apparently the assault was sudden and unexpected, nobody was ready for it. The resulting
confusion could be better imagined than narrated. The lady of the house was seriously hurt, and
had fainted, the house was full of smoke, the children were frightened. As Ali (A.S) was
attending to his wounded wife and suffocating children he was overpowered and dragged from
the house. Later Fatima (S.A) was refused her heritage. The physical injury and the mental shock
laid her low and after a short illness she passed away on the 14th of Jamadiul-Awwal, 11 A.H.
She was buried in the dead of the night. Besides Banu Hashim only the following companions of
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) attended her funeral: Salman, Abu Tharr,
AAmmar and Miqdad. Before the death she had expressed her sufferings in a poem, a verse of
which has come down in the Arabic language as a proverb. She says ASo many sufferings have
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descended upon me that if they had descended upon bright days they would have been turned
into dark nights.
The account of the last day of her life clearly shows what kind of a lady was this daughter of
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . She told the household that she was feeling
better, the pain in her ribs and in her hand was not so severe and that her fever had come down.
Then she started bathing the children. Immediately Ali (A.S) and Fizza came to her assistance.
She got the children bathed, dressed and fed, then sent them away to her cousin. Then she called
Imam Ali (A.S) to her side and said Ali (A.S) , my dear husband, you know very well why I did
all that. Please excuse my fussiness, they have suffered so much with me and during my illness
that I want to see them happy on the last day of my life. Yes, Ali (A.S) , you know also that this
is the last day of my life, I am happy and also I am sad. Happy I am that my troubles will shortly
be over and I shall meet my father and sorry that I am to part with you. Please, Ali (A.S) , make a
note of what I say and do as I wish you to do. After me you may marry anybody you like but you
must marry my cousin Yamama, she loves my children and Husain is very much attached to her.
Let Fizza remain with you even after her marriage, if she so desires, she was more than a mere
servant to me. I loved her like my daughter. Ali (A.S) , bury me in the night and do not let those
who have been so cruel to me attend my burial. Let not my death dishearten you. You have to
serve Islam and humanity for a long time to come. Let not my sufferings embitter your life,
promise me Ali (A.S) . Imam Ali (A.S) said, AYes Fatima (S.A), I promise. Ali (A.S) , she
continued, AI know how you love my children but be very careful of Husain (). He loves me
dearly and will miss me sadly, be a mother unto him. Till my recent illness he used to sleep on
my chest, he is already missing it. Ali (A.S) was caressing the broken hand, his hot and big tears
dropped on her hand. She looked up and said ADo not weep Ali (A.S) , I know with a rough
outward appearance what a tender heart you possess. You have already borne too much and will
have to bear more. Farewell my master, farewell my dear husband, farewell Ali (A.S) . Say
Good-bye Fatima (S.A). Hearing this she said AMay the Merciful Master help you to bear these
sorrows and sufferings patiently. Now let me be alone with my Allah. Saying this she turned
towards her prayers carpet and prostrated before Allah. When after a little time Imam Ali (A.S)
entered the room he found her still in prostration but the soul had departed to join her Holy father
in therealm of His Grace, Mercy and Might. She died very young as Imam Ali (A.S) says AA
flower nipped in the bud, it was from Junnath (the Heaven) and it went to Junnath, but has left its
fragrance in my mind.
From 12th A.H. to 24th A.H.
From that time onward till 35 A.H., Imam Ali (A.S) led a retired life. In the beginning, he
spent his days in compiling the Holy Qur’an in the chronological order of chapters and verses as
they were revealed to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . He presented this to the
Muslims, but when its acceptance was refused, he advised his companions to accept the Holy
Book as compiled officially, saying that his compilation would not be seen by anybody, so that
there might not come into existence more than one version of the Holy Qur’an and might not
create doubts about the authenticity of this august book.
When Abu Sufyan found that Imam Ali (A.S) was not paying attention to him, he tried to get
in the good books of the government and his eldest son Yazid was appointed as the governor of
Syria and on Yazid’s death, his brother Mu’awiyah was appointed on the same post.
During the caliphate of Abu Bakr and more often during the time of the Imam () AOmer,
whenever Ali’s advice was asked for, he, like a true Muslim, offered his sincere advice.
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Although the people of Banu Hashim were never given any place of honor within the
government, Ali (A.S) did not mind this indifference and whenever a serious problem arose and
his counsel was sought, he cooperated whole-heartedly.
The Spirit of Islam says, AFrom the commencement of the Islamic preaching, Imam Ali (A.S)
had extended the utmost consideration and friendship to the conquered. After the battle of
Quadesia, Ali (A.S) used to devote his share of prize money to redemption of captives, and
repeatedly with his counsel and persuasive interference, he induced the Imam () AOmer to
lighten the burden of subjects and captives.
Imam Hakim in Mustadrak and Kamil ibn Athir in his history say that until the year 17 A.H.,
no era was fixed by the Muslims to designate their years. Sometimes Aamul-Feel (year of
Abysinian invasion of Mecca) was considered as the beginning of an era. At other times, the
battle of Fujjar (a pre-Islamic encounter between Arab clans) was chosen. Still, others considered
a time when repairs on the Ka’ba were done as the year to mark the era. When this confusion
was brought to the attention of the Imam () AOmer, he asked the advice of Imam Ali (A.S) ,
who told him to begin the Muslim era from the year of the Hijra (emigration of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) , A.S.) to Medina.
On another occasion, the people went to the Imam () AOmer saying that a lot of jewels and
valuable articles and attachments in the Ka’ba could be converted into currency and be used for
arming the armies, proving to be a very useful asset. When Imam Ali’s advice was sought he
said, AThese articles were there during the times of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) but he did not touch them. Yough Muslims were poorer then than now, and though
they were more in need of arms and mounts then you are in need of, the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) still did not make use of these ornaments for such purposes. It shows that
the Messenger of Allah did not appreciate such appreciation. You also do not do it. Hearing this
the Imam () AOmer said, AO Ali (A.S) ! Had you not been here, we would have suffered a
disgrace. (Rabiul-Abrar of Aallama Zamakhshari)
On the occasion of the invasion of Rome, when the Imam () AOmer sought his counsel as to
the advisability of heading the army as the Commander-in-Chief, he advised him to be at the
helm and to send some experienced general as a commander. This advice is narrated in a sermon
in Nahjul-Balagha. Similarly, at the time of invasion of Iran, he counselled AOmer not to leave
the capital and to send somebody else.
The books Izalatul Khafa’ (subject II , p. 268 and 269), Al-Riaz al-Nazira Vol. 2 , pp. 194 to
197), Musnad Imam Ahmed Vol. 2 , p. 231 (Margin), Mustadrak Imam al-Hakim Vol. I , pp. 438
to 460, Ishtheab’allama Abdul Birr Vol. 2 474) and Ihya’ul-AUlum of Imam Ghazali, cite
several such cases where the Imam’s counsel was asked for and he sincerely gave his advice.
Only one case I want to relate shows in what high esteem Ali (A.S) held the value of the
knowledge acquired, collected and preserved by man in the fields of philosophy, science, history,
geography and ethics.
The following authors give a detailed account of the famous library of Iskunderia
(Alexandria) in Egypt:
1. Judge "Abul-Qasim" Sa’d ibn Ahmed al-Andalusi (462 A.H.) in Tabaqat al-Umam.
2. Haji Khalifa Chulpee in Khashf al-Zunun, Vol. I, Preface, p. 24, printed in Egypt.
3. The famous biographer Ibn Nadim in Al-Fahrist , p. 334, printed in Egypt.
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4. The historian Jamal ud-Din, known as Ibn al-Qifti, in Akhbarul-Ulema’ wa Akhba alHukama’, pp. 232, 233, printed in Egypt and at Liepzieg, Germany.
5. Imam Hafizud-Din Muhammed ibn Muhammed ibn Shahal, known as ibnul-Bazzaz alKurmi (827 A.H.) in Kitab Imam al-A’zam, Vol. I, p. 37, printed at Hyderabad, India.
6. Aallama Ahmed ibn Mustafa, known as Tashul-Kubra Zada (962 A.H.) in Miftahul-Sa’ada
and Misbahul-Siyada, Vol. 1, p. 241, printed in Hyderabad, India.
They are unanimous in saying that there was a fairly large library at Alexandria, Egypt. It
contained between five to seven thousand books on papyri, pal, leaves and parchments, a very
large library indeed when compared with the standard of literacy and education of those days.
It contained books on chemistry, astronomy, irrigation, engineering, physics, philosophy and
various religions etc.
When AAmr ibn al-AAs conquered Egypt, he inquired about what to do with those books.
Orders were issued from the Center that Aif these books are according to the Holy Qur’an (i.e.
They say the same things which this Holy book has said) then we do not need them and if they
say anything contrary to the Holy Qur’an then we do not want them. Therefore, in any case they
ought to be burnt. (Akhbarul-AUlema’ wa Akhbar al-Hukama’ of Ibn al-Qufti, pp. 232 and 233)
printed at Cairo and Leipzieg)
The history of Muhammed ibn Abdo edited by Aallama Rashid Rida, Editor, Al-Manar,
Cairo, Egypt, Vol. 1, p. 535, Tabaqat al-Umam of Judge Sa’id al-Andalusi, as well as Ayath alBiayuth of Muhsinul-Mulk say that when Imam Ali (A.S) heard the news of this, he tried to
persuade them to refrain from issuing such an order. He said, AThose books are treasures of
knowledge and they cannot say anything against the Holy Qur’an. On the contrary, the
knowledge contained therein would act as commentaries of this Holy Book and would assist and
help in further explanations of the knowledge as presented by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) . Knowledge is an asset for human beings and a birthright of a man. It should not
be destroyed. Akhbarul-AUlema’ further states that his suggestion was not accepted and those
books were distributed among one thousand hot water bath houses of Alexandria to be burnt as
fire wood.
From 11 A.H. to 33 A.H.
Upon his death, Abu Bakr nominated AOmer as his successor to the caliphate and, AOmer,
upon his death, appointed a board of six members to select his successor; the board considered
(1) Abdul Rshman ibn e Oaf, (2) Sa’d ibn Abu Waqqas (3), AOthman ibn AAffan (4), Talhah ibn
Abdullah (5), al-Zubair ibn al-Awwam and (6) Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S). The terms of
reference for this council were as follows:
1. If they unanimously selected a person, he would be designated as the caliph.
2. If there was no unanimity, then that person would be caliph for whom Abdul-Rahman ibn
AAwf and his party voted.
3. If any five of them agreed on one man and the sixth disagreed, then the dissenter should
immediately be killed.
4. If any four of them agreed on one man and then two disagreed, then those two should be
killed.
5. If there was a tie, then the casting vote would be that of Abdullah ibn AOmer (his son).
Abdul-Rahman ibn AAwf was a cousin of AOthman and husband of the aunt of Sa’d ibn AbiVaqquas and al-Zubair was son-in-law of Abu Bakr. Abdul Rahman ibn Oaf withdrew his
candidacy to the caliphate.
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(Refer to Kitabul-Imama walSiyasa of Muhammed ibn Qutaybah al-Daynuri (270 A.H.), p.
26, History of Ibn Khaldun, second part , pp. 134 to 136, printed in Egypt).
In the council, the opinions were equally divided in favor of Imam Ali (A.S) and AOthman.
Abdul Rahman ibn Oaf asked Imam Ali (A.S) , AIf you are selected as a caliph, do you promise
that you will act according to the Holy Qur’an and the traditions and orders of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) and according to the rulings and decisions of the previous two
caliphs? Imam Ali (A.S) replied, ASo far as the Holy Qur’an and the orders and traditions of the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) are concerned, I agree to abide by them and follow
them faithfully and sincerely, but so far as the rulings and decisions of the previous two caliphs
are concerned, if these are according to the Holy Book and the traditions of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) who could dare refuse them. If they are against the orders of
Allah or the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , who would dare accept and follow
them? I refuse to bind myself with those rulings and decisions. I shall act according to my
knowledge and my discretion.
Then Abdul Rahman asked the same question of AOthman. He agreed not only to act
according to the Holy Qur’an and the traditions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) but also to implicitly follow the rulings and the decisions of the previous two
caliphs. Then Abdul Rahman declared AOthman as a caliph. (Refer to 1. Tabari, Vol. 5 , pp. 35
to 38, Vol. 16 , p. 590) 2. Ibn Khaldun, p. 134 to 136, 3. Abul-Fida’, p. 34, 4. Rawzatul-Safa,
Vol. 2, p. 98)
Muharrum 1, 24 A.H.
Justice Sayyid Amir Ali, in his book titled A Short History of the Saracens, p. 46, says, AThe
choice of electorate fell upon AOthman, a member of the Ummayad family (Muharram, 1, 24
A.H., November 7, 644 A.D.). In the end, his election proved to be the ruin of Islam. He fell at
once under the influence of his clan. He was guided entirely by his secretary and son-in-law
Marwan, who had once been expelled by the prophet for a breach of trust. With Ali’s usual
patriotism and devotion to the faith, he gave his adhesion to AOthman as soon as he was elected.
AOthman displaced most of the lieutenants employed by AOmer and appointed in their stead
incompetent and worthless members of his own family. The weakness of the center and the
wickedness of the unworthy favorites was creating a great agitation among the people. Loud
complaints of exaction and oppression by the governors began pouring into the capital. Ali (A.S)
pleaded and tried to reason several times with the caliph concerning the manner in which he
allowed the government to fall into the hands of the unworthy favorites, but AOthman, under the
influence of his evil genius Marwan, paid no heed to the Imam’s advice. Twice, Imam Ali (A.S)
was asked to leave Medina and to go to a village near it and twice he was called back to
intervene between the ruler and the ruled. A few sermons in Nahjul-Balagha has related these
facts. To continue the version of the short History of the Saracen, AAt last, a deputation from the
provinces arrived in Medina to demand redress. They were sent back with promises. On their
way home, they intercepted a letter by Marwan, purporting to bear Theseal of the caliph. This
letter contained directions to the local governors to behead the leaders of the deputation upon
arrival of their destinations. Furious at this treachery, therepresentatives returned to Medina and
demanded the surrender of Marwan. This demand was requested even by members of the house
of Ummaiya (Mas’udi in Moravejul-Zahab). The ill-fated AOthman met this demand with a stern
refusal. Enraged at what they believed to be the complicity of the caliph, they besieged him at his
home. (A Short History of the Saracen, pp. 47 and 48)
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Narrating the details of the siege and the murder, Tarikh al-Khamis (Vol. 2 , pp. 61, 262),
Tarikh al-Khulafa’ by al-Sayyuti, p. 108, Muruj al-Thahab of al-Mas’udi and Riaz al-Nazira,
Vol. 2 , p. 125, say that at this hour of peril, the Ummayyad deserted the old chief and some fled
towards Syria. Mu’awiyah, though ordered by the caliph, did not come to his help. On the
contrary, the contingent which he sent to Medina was ordered to stop and stay at a place thirty
miles away from Medina and wait for further orders. These orders never arrived until the caliph
was killed, and the contingent was called back. But Imam Ali (A.S) sent water and food to the
caliph during the siege and later, as per the Imam’s orders, AOthman was bravely defended by
his sons and dependents. The insurgents had great difficulty in making any impression on the
defenders; therefore, on the 18th of Thul-Hijja 34 A.H., some of these besiegers scaled a wall of
a neighbor’s house, entered the house of the caliph and killed him inside his house.
The people who were furious against the caliph were:
1. Talhah: He played an important role in the siege and the stopp. of water. He was
commanding the group of the people who were bent upon killing AOthman. On that account,
Marwan killed him in the Battle of Jamal, Tabari, Vol. 6, p. 154, Kamil ibn al-Athir, Vol. 4, p.
70, Ibn Khaldun, Vol. 2 , p. 397). This very Talhah later came out as the avenger of murder of
the caliph and carried out the propaganda that Imam Ali (A.S) was responsible for AOthman’s
murder. He was one of the chief instigators of the Battle of Jamal. He had instigated the people
to kill AOthman with the hope of succeeding the caliphate. When he was frustrated with it, he
launched a revolt against Imam Ali (A.S) (Refer to sermon 179 of Nahjul-Balagha).
2. Az-Zubair ibn al-AAwwam was considered the number one enemy of the caliph
(Mustadrak of Imam Hakim, Vol. 2I , p. 118, Kitabul-Imama wal-Siyasa, Vol. VI , p. 58, Muruj
al-Thahab of Mas’udi, Vol. 2 , p. 11). Later, al-Zubair, with motives like those of Talhah, staged
a revolt against Ali (A.S) and was the prime initiator for the Battle of Jamal. On the battlefield
of Jamal, Imam Ali (A.S) reminded him of the orders given to him by the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) about Imam Ali (A.S) . Al-Zubair left the battlefield and was
riding to Medina when he was killed by AOmer ibn Jerneoze, who was neither in Imam Ali’s
army nor his own companion. Imam Ali (A.S) felt sad at Zubair’s death, and said, AYough he
later turned into a bitter enemy of mine, in the early days of Islam, he was a good defender of the
cause of religion. (Refer to sermon 12).
3. AAmr ibn al-AAs was the third bitter enemy of AOthman. Tabari gives a detailed account
of the way he insulted the caliph in the mosque, and says, ANobody was more pleased at the
murder of AOthman than AAmr ibn al-AAs. thereason was that he had been deposed from the
governorship of Egypt by the third caliph. Later, this AOmer joined Mu’awiyah as a claimant for
retribution of the murder of AOthman.
When the events from year 11 A.H. to 34 A.H. were unfolding, Imam Ali (A.S) took no part
in the affairs of the state. In the words of the History of Saracen, AHe was endeavoring in
Medina to give an intellectual turn to the newly developed energy of the Saracenic race. In the
public mosque at Medina he delivered weekly lectures on philosophy, logic, history, explanation
of the traditions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and the verses of the Holy
Qur’an, as well as Muslim law and rhetoric. Thus, he formed the nucleus of the intellectual
movement which displayed itself in such great force in the later days. Those lectures and
sermons were compiled within forty years of his death by Zaid ibn Wahab al-Jehny (RijalulKabeer). Many of them were lost, but some of them are preserved in Nahjul-Balagha (Mas’udi).
34 to 40 A.H.
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Five days after the death of Caliph AOthman, by a unanimous election in which
representatives from Basra, Kufa, Egypt and Hijaz took part, Imam Ali (A.S) was elected as a
caliph. This took place on the 24th Thul-Hijja 34 A.H. (July 5, 655 A.D. according to the Julian
calendar).
Eric Schroeder, in Muhammed’s People, printed in England in 1955, says, AFive days after
the murder of Caliph AOthman, the people gathered together and decided: AWe know no fitter
man to be Imam than Ali (A.S) , but will he take the burden of Imamate? Some answered, APress
him at home till he consents. They all gathered at Ali’s house with such eagerness that they were
pushing and crushing each other. They called to Ali (A.S) and said, AIf we go to our homes
again without an Imam and caliph, such a strife will stir as will never again be stilled. You will
have to consent to be our Imam and Caliph of Allah. Ali (A.S) replied, ASmall longings have I
for this authority, yet the believers must have a chief, and gladly will I accept temporal authority
of another of Talhah. ANay, thou hast more right than I, said Talhah. One who stood nearby
forced open Ali’s palm and Talhah swore the oath of allegiance to Ali (A.S) . Al-Zubair did
likewise and from Ali’s house, they brought him to the mosque. Everybody thronged around him
to swear the oath of allegiance to him as their imam and caliph.
The Spirit of Islam says, AIt might have been thought that all would submit themselves before
his glory; so fine and so grand. But it was not to be. Al-Zubair and Talhah, who had hoped that
the choice of people might fall on either of them for caliphate, balked in their ambitious design.
Smarting under therefusal of the new caliph to bestow on them the Governorship of Basra and
Kufa, they were the first to raise the standard of revolt. They were assisted by Ummul Mu’minin
AA’isha, who had taken a decisive part in the former elections. She was the life and soul of the
insurrection and she, herself, accompanied the insurgent troops to the field riding a camel. Ali
(A.S) , with his characteristic aversion to bloodshed, sent his cousin Abdullah ibn Abbas to
adjure the insurgents by every obligation of the faith and abandon the arbitrament of war. It was
to no avail. Al-Zubair and Talhah initiated a battle at a place called Khurayba and were defeated
and killed. The battle is called the Battle of Jamal (camel) from AA’isha’s presence in a litter on
a camel. AA’isha was taken prisoner, treated with courtesy and consideration and escorted with
every marks of respect to Medina. She was sent escorted by her brother Muhammed ibn Abu
Bakr. Refer to Asam al-Kufi, p. 147. Tabari, Vol. 4 , pp. 548-565, Rawzat al-Safa, Vol. 2, Tarikh
al-Thahbi , pp. 1-21. Abul-Fida’ , pp. 518-520.
After the battle, Ummul Mu’minin AA’isha felt that even though she had brought about this
insurgence, she saw that Imam Ali (A.S) was treating her with utmost courtesy and kindness.
She requested that her nephew, Abdullah ibn al-Zubair, who had been commander-in-chief of
therebel forces and was taken prisoner, to be forgiven and freed. Imam Ali (A.S) granted
therequest. Marwan got nervous thinking that as the two worst enemies of Imam Ali (A.S)
(Talhah and al-Zubair) were killed and (Abdullah ibn al-Zubair) was excused and pardoned, the
burden of vengeance might fall upon him. He requested Imam Hasan and Imam Husain to plead
for his cause. They requested his pardon and he was also pardoned. (Years afterward, the very
same Marwan made his archers shoot arrows on the dead body and bier of Imam Hasan and later
he persuaded the governor of Medina, though unsuccessfully, to immediately kill Imam Husain
on his refusal to accept Yazid as the Caliph). Then an order of general amnesty, peace and
forgiveness was issued. Every opponent was forgiven and every prisoner was released (alMas’ud al-Zahbi , p. 28).
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Ali’s officers and commanders in this battle, besides his sons Imam Hasan, Imam Husain and
Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya, were the following companions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) : 1) Abdullah ibn the Imam () Abbas, 2) AAmmar al-Yasir, 3) Abu Ayoob
al-Ansari, 4) Hazima ibn e-Sabith (for whom the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
had said that his sole testimony would be equal to the testimony of two witnesses), 5) Quais ibn
Sa’d ibn AAbadah, 6) Obaydullah ibn Abbas, 7) Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr , 8) Hajr ibn Addi alKundi, 9) Addi ibn Hatim Thaaee.
The victory gave Ali (A.S) time to consolidate his sovereignty in Hijaz, Iraq and Egypt.
According to Mas’udi, with the honesty of purpose which always distinguished him, he
disregarded all advises for temporizing. Several of his advisers counseled him to defer the
dismissal of the corrupt officers previously appointed until he was, himself, sure concerning who
were the enemies, but this hero, without fear and reproach, refused to be guilty of any duplicity
or compromise with injustice and inequity. Therefore, immediately after his accession, he gave
orders for the dismissal of the corrupt and tyrannical governors, for thereturn of fields and states
which had been previously bestowed with public revenues among the favorites of the rulers, and
for the equal distribution of the public revenues among the Arabs and non-Arabs, black and
whites, masters and slaves, rich and poor.
These orders gave great offence to those who had enriched themselves under former
administrations, and his endeavors to remedy the evils which had crept into administrations,
raised a host of enemies against him. No sooner was therebellion of Talhah and al-Zubair
suppressed, Mu’awiyah, an Ummayaide by decedent and who had held the governorship of Syria
from the time of AOmer, raised the standard of revolt.
Abu Sufyan, his son Mu’awiyah and his clan Banu Umayyah had little sympathy and no faith
in Islam. Mas’udi, in Muruj al-Thahab, Vol. VI, says that when Abu Sufyan had grown old and
blind, he was sitting in the mosque and there were Imam Ali (A.S) , Abdullah ibn Abbas and
many other Muslims besides them. The mu’aththin (the caller to prayers) started the athan. He
reached the part, AI testify that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) is the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah. Abu Sufyan said, ALook at my cousin, (meaning the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ), where he has placed his name! Imam Ali (A.S)
became annoyed, saying that it was done by the order of Allah. Tarikh al-Khamis, Vol. 2 , p. 97,
printed in Egypt says that Abu Sufyan advised Banu Umayyah to treat the caliphate like a ball
and to pass it on from one to another of their clan and never let the ball out of their possession,
saying, AI swear that there is neither punishment nor judgment, neither the Heaven nor the Hell,
and neither theresurrection nor the day of Reckoning. His son and his clan accepted his
teachings, followed his faith, adopted his advice and obeyed his orders.
In the very beginning, Mu’awiyah had made fools of Talhah and al-Zubair. According to Ibn
Abil Hadid, when Mu’awiyah learned that people had sworn the oath of allegiance to Imam Ali
(A.S) , he wrote to al-Zubair that he had taken the oath of allegiance for him and for Talhah as
his successor. The whole of Syria was ready to back them, and they should try to overthrow
Imam Ali’s regime and accept the caliphate which was awaiting them in Damascus (Refer to
Sermon 12 of Nahjul-Balagha). Thus, exciting these two old men, Mu’awiyah kept Imam Ali
(A.S) busy with their rebellion and secured time to make his government more powerful in
Syria.
Talhah and al-Zubair, with their rebellion, had done a great service to Mu’awiyah’s cause but
now, they were no longer living to serve his purpose. Therefore, he approached Mughirah ibn
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Shoaba (who had originally tried to converge with Imam Ali (A.S) but was repulsed by him),
Marwan ibn al-Hakam, Walid ibn AUqbah, Abdullah ibn AOmer, Abu Huraya and AAmr ibn alAAs. His best friend was AAmr ibn al-AAs. Yough Mu’awiyah had to pay a heavy price
(governorship of Egypt and more than 10 Laes of dinars) to purchase the fidelity and faith of
AOmer, the later events proved that it was the best investment that Mu’awiyah had made in his
life. He also collected proofs that Ziyad ibn Abih was actually the son of Abu Sufyan (born in
sin) and not the son of a slave AObaid. This change of fatherhood was officially (though
shamelessly) proclaimed and Ziyad Aproudly became the natural brother of Mu’awiyah. Zaid
proved himself to be a man without conscience, without remorse, without faith in Islam and
without any consideration of human rights, but a very useful ally to Mu’awiyah. He was
Mu’awiyah’s second best friend. Histories of Tabari, Rawzatul-Safa, AAsim al-Kufi, Muruj alThahab, Abul-Fida’, the Kamil of Ibn Athir may be referred to for details of the above mentioned
facts. With these henchmen beside him, Mu’awiyah staged a revolt against Imam Ali (A.S) .
After settling Chaldea and Mesopotamia, Imam Ali (A.S) was forced to march towards Syria
to face Mu’awiyah’s forces at a place called Siffin. The previously noted books and Simon D.
Aucklay in the History of the Saracens, give a detailed account of this battle which was an
extensive one.
Tabari, Vol. VI , p. 577, Rawzatul-Safa, Vol. 2 , p. 425, Abul-Fida’ , p. 425 narrate in details
the orders issued by Imam Ali (A.S) to his officers and soldiers before the battle. As these orders
give a clear indication of the principles and methods laid down by Imam Ali (A.S) as to how
jihad (Holy War) should be carried on, I have briefly copied them here:
1. Never begin a war yourself, Allah does not like bloodshed, fight only in defense.
2. Never be the first to attack your enemy, repulse his attacks, but do it boldly, bravely and
courageously.
3.While declaring yourself and your deeds (via the medim of ajaz [martial] poetry, a
custom in hand to hand combatants), never waste your time. Instead of speaking about
yourself, speak about Allah and the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
4. Never follow and kill those who run away from the battle or an encounter as life is dear to
them. Let them live as long as death permits them to live.
5. Never kill wounded persons who cannot defend themselves.
6. Never strip naked a dead man for his coat of arms or dress.
7. Never cut noses or ears of dead men to humiliate them.
8. Never submit to looting and arson.
9. Never molest or outrage the modesty of a woman.
10. Never hurt a woman even if she swears at you or hurts you.
11. Never hurt a child.
12. Never hurt an old or an enfeebled person.
This battle started on the 1st of Safar 38 A.H. and lasted for more than two months. During
this period about 18 encounters took place.
AIn the beginning with his usual humanity, Imam Ali (A.S) endeavored to bring about a
peaceful settlement. But Mu’awiyah was inflated with pride and wanted impossible conditions.
To avoid unnecessary shedding of blood, Imam Ali (A.S) offered to end the quarrel by personal
combat, but Mu’awiyah, realizing who and what Imam Ali (A.S) was, declined the challenge. In
spite of every exasperation, Imam Ali (A.S) commanded the troops to await the enemy’s attack,
to spare the fugitives and to respect the captives. Once, during the encounters, AAmr ibn al-AAs
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and at another time Busr ibn Arath, faced Imam Ali (A.S) in the battlefield. They did not realize
until the encounter started that the warrior facing them was Imam Ali (A.S) . One blow was
sufficient to send them down from their horses. When they found no way of escaping his sword,
each one of them, in his turn, immediately stripped naked and fell down turning their faces
towards the earth and backs towards the sky. Both armies laughed at those life-saving antics and
someone suggested that Imam Ali (A.S) kill them. In the case of AAmr ibn al-AAs he replied, AI
cannot kill timid dogs. He has begged for his life in a shameless and humiliating manner. I
cannot dirty my arms with the blood of such a cowardly and shameless person.
These rebels were defeated in three successive battles. Mu’awiyah was ready to fly from the
field when a trick of his accomplice, AAmr ibn al-AAs, saved them from destruction. He made
his mercenaries tear the Holy Qur’an into many , pp. and to tie those , pp. to their lances and
flags and shout for quarters. Even whe the Holy , pp. were not available, mere rags were tied to
the lances. There were some persons in the army of Imam Ali (A.S) who were bribed by
Mu’awiyah, for instance Ashas ibn Quais. As per orders of AAmr ibn al-AAs, they and their
soldiers desisted from the battle and forced other soldiers to desist also. They gathered around
Imam Ali (A.S) and called upon him to refer the dispute to arbitration. Imam Ali (A.S) saw
through the ploy practiced by therebels and tried to make his soldiers realize it, but the clamor of
the army led him to consent to the course granted. He then wanted Abdullah ibn Abbas to
represent his side in the arbitration. Again, a part of the army, under instigation of al-Ash’ath,
demanded that Aa weak and old man, named Abu Musa al-Ash’ari, who was also secretly hostile
to Imam Ali (A.S) , (History of the Saracens) be nominated as an arbitrator from this side. There
was immediate danger of serious factions arising in his own army, which might have developed
in bloodshed. Therefore, Imam Ali (A.S) acceded to the demand and Abu Musa was appointed
as an arbitrator. Mu’awiyah was represented by the astute and cunning AOmer ibn al-al-AAs.
They both decided against Imam Ali (A.S) , who, deprived of the fruits of victory by a section of
his soldiers and faithless officers, retired in disgust with a part of his army and faithful followers
to Kufa.
In the battle of Siffin, one of the famous companions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) AAmmar ibn Yasir and another great favorite of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) , Owais al-Qurni, fought for Imam Ali (A.S) and were killed in the battle.
The men who had been, with ulterior motives, most clamorous at Siffin for arbitration felt that
their hopes could not be realized. They repudiated the arbitration and denounced it as sinful.
They openly mutinied against Imam Ali (A.S) ; therefore, they were called Kharijites. From
Kufa, they withdrew to a place called Nahrawan, which was on the border of the desert. There,
they assumed a threatening attitude, killing some officers of the government and many
respectable men, women and children. They refused to listen to reasonable advice, to join duty or
to return home. Their conduct at last became so serious that Imam Ali (A.S) was forced to attack
them at Nahrawan. That encounter is called the battle of Nahrawan. The majority fought, but a
few escaped to Bahrain and Ahsa [in today’s Saudi Arabia] where they formed the nucleus of a
fanatical horde which later assumed various names and adopted various guises.
Abu Musa had also retired to Medina where he subsequently received a handsome yearly
pension from the court of Mu’awiyah. (Refer to Tabari, Abul-Fida’, AAsim al-Kufi, Rawzat alSafa, Muruj al-Thahab, the Kamil of Ibn Athir and the Short History of the Saracens).
From the day of ascension as caliph to the last day of his life, Imam Ali (A.S) did not get a
day’s rest and peace. It is a wonder, that facing the heavy odds that he had to encounter, how and
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when he could get time to introduce reforms in the government; to lay out fundamentals of
grammar for Arabic language; to deliver sermons on theology, rhetoric, philosophy of religion,
wonders of creation and nature, and duties of man to Allah and man; to advise people in the most
persuasive style; to suppress the tendencies for innovation and schism, which had crept in the
minds of Muslims or to introduce and bring into effect principles of a benign government.
After dealing with therevolt of the Kharijites, Imam Ali (A.S) had to face the problem of
consolidating his control over Egypt. He had sent Qais ibn Sa’d as a governor there, but had to
call him back and send Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr in his place. Unfortunately, Muhammed,
though brave and sincere, was no match to Mu’awiyah and AAmr ibn al-AAs. He was forced by
Mu’awiyah into a battle. Muhammed wrote to Imam Ali (A.S) who sent Malik ibn Ashter for
help. But Malik could not reach Egypt. He was poisoned on the way by a henchman of
Mu’awiyah and died (Tabari, Vol. IV, p. 521). Muhammed was informed of this fact. That
young man faced AAmr ibn al-AAs alone, was defeated in the encounter,killed and by the orders
of Mu’awiyah, his dead body was burnt and his ashes were strewn (Tabari, Vol. IV , p. 592).
Imam Ali’s words at the news of the death of Muhammed show he loved the young man and
how the youth loved him. After Muhammed, Imam Ali (A.S) had to send some experienced
officer to Egypt. He was busy with that problem when Mu’awiyah organized bands of guerillas
with orders to loot, murder, arson and rape. These bands were to attack in waves against the
provinces of Hijaz, Basra, Rayy, Mosul and Harath. Imam Ali () organized defenses of these
provinces, defeated these bands and freed the country from earlier harassment.
It would have been very easy for Imam Ali (A.S) to divert the minds of masses towards
foreign invasion and thus make them busy in murder and plunder. It had always been done by
rulers and is even today considered as the best form of employing energies of a rising nation as
well as the easiest way to form an empire to propagate religion. But Imam Ali (A.S) hated
bloodshed, did not believe in imperialism and had no faith in propagation of religion with a
sword in one hand and the Holy Qur’an in the other. He believed Islam to be a message of peace
and love and wanted mankind to be ruled on the basis of equity and justice. Therefore, after
strengthening one province after another and fortifying their defenses, he introduced reforms to
create a benign temporal state and never considered expanding his domain.
By the time he got complete control over those problems and could organize an army to
liberate Syria and Egypt from thereign of terror which had held them in its sway, the fateful
month of Ramzan 40 A.H. arrived.
40th A.H.
It was the 19th of Ramadan, the month of fasting of that eventful year. It was the time of
morning prayers. The place was the mosque in Kufa. Imam Ali (A.S) had arrived in the mosque
long before the time of the prayers, had roused those who were sleeping in the mosque. Among
them was Abdul Rahman ibn Muljim al-Muradi. He was lying on his face and had hidden under
his garment a sword, the blade of which had been poisoned. Imam Ali (A.S) roused him and told
him that it was an unhealthy way of sleeping as it hinders free breathing. He also told him that he
had hidden a sword in his garment and an evil intention in his mind. Imam Ali (A.S) then called
the Muslims to morning prayers and led Theservice. It was the first part of the prayers and he
was rising from the kneeling posture when the sword of Abdul Rahman ibn Muljim descended
on his head, giving him a very deep cut. It was the same sword that Imam Ali (A.S) had pointed
out only half an hour earlier. The prayers were disturbed. Abdul Rahman started running and
people went after him. Nobody was attending the prayers. There was confusion everywhere. But
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Imam Ali (A.S) finished his two prostrations and then reeled into the hands of his sons Hasan
and Husain. The wound which was bleeding profusely was attended to. His blood-drenched lips
parted into thanks-giving prayers as he said, AMaster! I thank You for rewarding me with
martyrdom; how kind are You and how Gracious. May Your Mercy further lead me to therealm
of Your Grace and Benevolence. Abdul Rahman was caught by Sasa ibn Sohan and was brought
before Imam Ali (A.S) . The hands of the murderer where tied behind his back. The Imam ()
saw that the ropes were cutting into the flesh of the murderer. He forgot the wound of his head,
the blow which was to end his life and to cut his career in its prime. He forgot that Abdul
Rahman was a murderer. All that he saw was a human being subjected to inhuman torture. He
ordered the Muslims to loosen the ropes on Abdul Rahman’s hands and treat the man humanly.
This kindness touched the murderer and he started weeping. A smile played on those lips and in
faint voice Imam Ali (A.S) said, AIt is too late to repent now, you have done your deed. Was I a
bad Imam or a unkind ruler?
The people carried the Imam to his house and when he saw the bright day he said,
AO day! you can bear testimony to the fact that during the life time of Ali (A.S) you have
never, not even once, dawned and found him sleeping.
He lived two days after this event and in that interval, whenever he found time, he delivered a
few sermons (sermon No. 152 is one of them). In those sermons and with his dying breath, he
expressly ordered that no harshness should be used towards his murderer, who should be
executed if the heirs of Imam Ali (A.S) so desired, with one blow. He should not be tortured
before death, his dead body should not be mutilated, members of his family should not suffer on
account of his crime and his property should not be confiscated. He designated his son Imam
Hasan () as his vicegerent.
Thus, the last chapter closed on the history of a life which from beginning to end was filled
with noble deeds, pious thoughts and sublime words and every filled hour of a glorious life.
AHad Ali (A.S) been allowed to reign in peace, says Oeslner, Ahis virtues, his firmness, and his
ascendancy of character would have perpetuated the basic principles of a good government and
its simple manners. the dagger of an assassin destroyed the hope of Islam. AWith him, says
Osborn, Aperished the truest-hearted and the best Muslim of whom the Mohammedan history has
preserved the remembrance. ASeven centuries before, says Justice Amir Ali, Athis wonderful
man would have been apotheosized, and thirteen centuries later, his genius, talents, virtues and
valor would have exerted the admiration of the civilized world. Chivalrous, humane and
forbearing to the verge of weakness, as a ruler he came before his time. He was almost no match
by his uncompromising love of truth, his gentleness and his merciful nature to cope with
Umayyads’ treachery and falsehood (The Spirit of Islam). Justice Amir Ali further says, ATo
quote the language of the modern French historian, ABut for his assassination, the Muslim world
might have witnessed therealization of the prophet’s teaching, in actual amalgamation of the first
principles of true philosophy into positive action. The same passionate devotion to knowledge
and learning which distinguished Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) breathed in
every word of Ali (A.S) . With a liberality of mind, far beyond the age in which he lived, was
joined a sincere devotion of spirit and earnestness of faith. His sermons, his psalms, his litanies
portray a devout outlook towards the source of all good, and an unbounded faith in humanity.
According to his will, he was buried at Najaf, a place about two miles from Kufa.
About Ali (A.S) , his character, his wisdom, his teaching, his services to Islam, his love of
mankind, his respect to duty, his adherence to piety, truth and justice, more than eight thousands
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books have already been written. They are in Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Urdu, English, Spanish,
Italian, German, French, Gujarati, Hindi, Telugu and Tamil, a sincere homage to the sincerity of
his faith in the greatness and nobility of character inherent in man and in the possibility of human
beings developing these traits by good thoughts and good deeds.
Imam Ali (A.S) as a Ruler and Statesman
Before Imam Ali (A.S) took charge of the state, the condition of the country was in hopeless
turmoil. All of the most important people and the companions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) had lost sympathy with the government and were openly hostile to it. Rank,
favoritism and the short-sighted greed of Marwan and his clan were responsible for this chaos.
People were embolden to rise in arms against the mismanaged and malevolent rule. Their
uprising had succeeded. They had lost all respect for authority, and had no desire to see the
ruling junta back in power again. On the other hand, the members of the overthrown regime had
sinister designs to gain back the control which had benefitted them for so long, while some
influential persons were hoping to gain the caliphate for themselves.
For three days after the murder of the caliph, there was anarchy in the capital and on the fifth
day, Imam Ali (A.S) was unanimously elected. He neither claimed nor contested for the
temporal kingdom. It was forced upon him. But when he accepted it, in his first speech, he
openly declared they had elected him as their temporal ruler and he would remain so as long as
they kept on obeying him. He had grave doubts about the sincerity of their desire as twice, he
had refused to accept their request to act as their ruler. Yet, seeing their hopeless plight and their
repeated solicitations moved him to assent to their entreaties; yet he was under no obligation to
them for their election, on the contrary, he had done them a service by agreeing to rule over
them. He knew well, thereasons of their persistent supplications for his rulership. They had been
badly treated by the malevolent, cruel and oppressive regime and the ruling class had insulted
them and had always refused to listen to their grievances or come to their relief. The masses had
been kept under complete ignorance of the true teaching of Islam and were made to feel that such
ignorance was the best thing for them. They had been made to concentrate on worldly benefits at
the cost of religion and piety, theresult being a rule of brutal force of which they were tired and
wanted the kind of benign government which had been introduced by the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) . That desire had made them look for somebody who could
reintroduce that type of government They realized that Imam Ali (A.S) was the man in whom
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had confided and intrusted more than in
anybody else, and that he had been the trustee to every secret of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) . Therefore, they unanimously elected him as their ruler.
Ironically, they had not realized theresponsibilities and obligations under which they had
brought themselves by making him their Amir (ruler). He knew their weaknesses and also knew
that they would lose their confidence in him when they would find that he attached more
importance to general welfare than to personal good, when he would make them follow the path
laid down by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , when, with the introduction of
equality and equity he would make them accept the principles of brotherhood of man and general
amity towards their fellow beings, and when he would try to lead them toward selfless discharge
of duties as laid down by Allah and the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , thus
making them a model subject of the kingdom of Allah, a model to be adopted by those who
desire peace and prosperity under a benign rule. He was afraid that with the introduction of such
a revolutionary (Islamic) system of government and society, the uninitiated would revolt against
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him, continuing to clamour for unwarranted and unreasonable personal benefits as usual, and
crave vicious pleasures that would no longer be possible in a fairness-to-all and a godly system
of government which he had envisioned in Islam. Those who would revolt did not realize that the
previous, traditionally exploitive secular regimes, by allowing them cheap and simple pleasure,
granting them limited power and keeping them in the darkness of ignorance their rulers, had
actually turned them into automata to work for them as kinds of slaves deprived of vision and
foresight without hope for a good prospect of a future life. On the other hand, Imam Ali (A.S)
would try to make them follow the true part of religion at the behest of their own free will, make
them develop the habit of simple living and high thinking and teach them to give up the desire of
seeking undue favors and unjustifiable pleasures. That was the kind of men that Allah wanted
them to be and the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had tried to model them into.
The task had not been easy then and the lapse of a quarter century had made it even more
difficult, but Imam Ali (A.S) would try to achieve it. (Al-Karrar of mawlana Riaz Ali)
Whatever shadow of hope was lurking in the minds of persons expecting wealth, prosperity
and governorship disappeared with this very first speech of Imam Ali (A.S) . They knew that
they could not expect unholy and ungodly concessions from Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S). Their
unreasonable claims on public wealth, their fiefs and their unjustifiable holdings of public
property would not remain with them. The result was three rebellions against Imam Ali (A.S)
and a restless period of rulership for about four years.
His Reforms
But Ali (A.S) , with the sincerity of purpose, tried to do what he had promised and raise the
mental uplift of the masses. The first thing was the consolidation of the state which he
successfully carried out against very heavy odds. The second thing was to create a central bureau
where he distributed the work of training the crude Arabs into educated and civilized people. To
Abul-Aswad al-DuAli, he dictated basic principles and rules of grammar for the Arabic language
with special instruction to concentrate on the syntax of that language. Abdul Rahman al-Sulmi
was made to look after the art of reading the Holy Qur’an correctly. Kumail ibn Ziyad was made
responsible for mathematics, engineering and astronomy, AOmer ibn Sulma for the Arabic
language and literature (prose), Abadah ibn al-Samit for poetry and logic, Abdullah ibn Abbas
for principles of administration and rhetoric, and he himself, for philosophy of religion, ethics,
commentary of the Holy Qur’an and the traditions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) . Actually, he was hub of the whole activity. Yough every hour of his glorious life
was filled, he still found time to teach his assistants, what to say, when and how to say it, what to
teach, and when and how to teach it. Long after his death, every one of his above pupils proved a
shining star in the sky of Muslim civilization and have been considered as Imams.
Introduction of New System of Government
The next subject which engaged his immediate attention was the improvement of
administration. To make due arrangements for security of the state from external attacks, to
preserve law and order, to control corruption and bribery, to provide equality of opportunities
and equal distribution of public wealth among his subjects, to appoint honest and pious officers,
to chastise and remove from service dishonest ones, to maintain a powerful army, to avoid
enrollment of mere mercenaries in it, to take care of traders and traders and treat non-Muslims
with deserving leniency and respect, were apparently the items of his program which he
successfully carried out.
Division of Public Service Departments: He divided the state services into following sections:
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1. Public finance
2. Army
3. Central administrative bureau
4. Judiciary,
5. Provincial offices
the department of Public Finance was divided into two sections:
a. Collection section and
b. Distribution sections.
The collection section was subdivided into three heads and only three kinds of taxes were
allowed to be collected by Imam Ali (A.S) :
(i) Land Revenue: It was usually collected in coins of silver and gold or in bullion. Officers to
collect this revenue were sometimes appointed by the center, but the Imam () had also
authorized the governors to appoint such officers themselves.
(ii) Zakat (poor rate) and sadaqa (poor fund) : These were usually collected in kind or in livestock. Officers to collect this revenue were always appointed directly by the Imam () and he
took great care to appoint honest and pious persons on these posts and to keep a sharp look out
on their activities and behavior.
(iii) Jizya: This was a tax from non-Muslims in lieu of zakat, etc. and in return for Thesecurity
and amenities provided to them. Collection of no other kind of tax, from non Muslims, was
allowed by him.
Land surveys were carried out by him wherever necessary. Every taxpayer had the right to
appeal and an appellate jurisdiction was brought into force. Officers for this court of appeal were
directly appointed by the Imam ().
He was the first man to introduce a budgetary system for the collection of revenues and
expenditure. Every province had to present its budget direct to him for approval. The incomes
were divided into two heads; provincial and central. Zakat and sadaqa were items of the central
revenues, land revenue and jiziya were provincial incomes.
The schedule of rate for land revenue was fixed by him as follows:
1. 1st Class (most fertile) land1.5 dirham per Jareeb
2. 2nd class fertile land1 dirham per Jareeb
3. 3rd Grade land.5 dirham per Jareeb
4. Vineyards, and orchards10 dirhams per Jareeb
and date palm groves
(Note: 1 Jareeb ‘ 2268 3/4 sq. yd.)
Sadaqa and zakat were the taxes which only Muslims had to pay. It was a tax levied on
personal income, landed property, hoarded bullion and currency and on livestock. Its rate was
that which was fixed by tenets of the Muslim law.
Jizya was an annual, personal tax, collected per head of a person irrespective of his income or
property. But such persons were divided into classes. The division of classes follows:
1st class: very rich persons and landlords48 dirhams per head
2nd class: middle class people42 dirhams per head
3rd class: businessmen42 dirhams per head
4th class: general public12 dirhams per head
There were positive orders that no jizya was to be collected from beggars or persons falling in
following categories:
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1. Those who were above 50 years of age
2. Those who were below 20 years of age
3. All women
4. All paralyzed persons
5. All disabled persons
6. All blind persons
7. All mentally disabled persons
Income from the source of zakat and Sadaqa was reserved for the following heads:
A. Administration of the departments of collection and distribution.
B. Grants, donations and aids to poor, have-nots, orphans, aged widows and disabled persons.
C. Honorarium to volunteers who fought for the state.
D. Pensions to widows and orphans of soldiers and officers of the army.
E. To acquire and set free slaves from the bondage of slavery.
F. Reparation of government loans.
G. To help pilgrims whenever and wherever they were found stranded.
Items C to F were, for the first time, introduced by Imam Ali (A.S) and as far as F was
concerned, no king had ever thought his kingdom to be morally obliged to pay back a loan taken
from somebody.
Imam Ali (A.S) was the first man who declared that a ruler’s share of income from the state
was equal to that of any commoner.
Income from jizya was earmarked for the following items of expenditures:
(i) Maintenance of the army.
(ii) Construction and maintenance of forts
(iii) Construction and maintenance of roads and bridges
(iv) Well sinking
(v) Construction of rest houses
Land revenue was the provincial income to be spent on maintenance of courts, offices, and
other necessary items as per orders of the center. Before I bring an end to the narration of his
system of revenue collection, I must mention a remark passed by him in this respect to one of his
governors. He said, ASo far as collection of land revenue is concerned, you must always keep in
view the welfare of the taxpayer which is primarily of more importance than the taxes
themselves. And, the actual taxable capacity of the people rests on the fertility quotient of the
land. More attention should therefore be paid to land fertility and the prosperity of the taxpayer
than to the collection of revenues.
Distribution of public wealth was a subject on which Imam Ali (A.S) spent much time and
thought and, in return, caused him to lose many adherents and followers.
The first reform that Imam Ali (A.S) introduced was to reorganize the treasury and the
accounts department. Dishonest officers were removed from Theservice. A system of accounting
was introduced. AOthman ibn Hanif was appointed as the chief treasury officer. A principle of
equal distribution of public money was introduced. For the first time, a system of weekly
distribution was adopted. Every Thursday was the distribution day or pay day so that Muslims
could spend their Friday holiday happily. Every Thursday the accounts were closed and every
Saturday started with fresh books of accounts.
Impartiality and equity were the keynotes of Imam Ali’s policy of distribution of wealth. At
the Center (Kufa), he often supervised the distribution himself and after the work was over and
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the accounts cleared, he would say prayers in the treasury and thank his Master that he had
performed his duty faithfully.
Imam Sha’bi says that as a young boy, once he passed the treasury at the time when Imam Ali
(A.S) was supervising the distribution. He saw African slaves standing in line with the Arab
sheikhs and getting equal shares, and within a short time the heaps of silver and gold coins
disappeared, the treasury was cleared, Imam Ali (A.S) said the prayers and left the office emptyhanded. That day he had given his share to an old woman who complained that her share was not
sufficing her (AKitab al-Gharath).
Once one of his most favorite and trustworthy companions, AOthman ibn Hanif told him that
by introduction of the principle of equal distribution of wealth and bringing important persons
down to the level of commoners, by raising the status of Blacks and Persians to that of Arabs, by
allotting shares to slaves equal to their masters, by depriving the rich persons of their worldly
attachments and by stopping special grants apportioned to them according to their status, he had
done more harm to himself and his cause than good. Continuing he said, ALook my Master,
these are thereasons why influential and rich Arabs are deserting you and are gathering around
Mu’awiyah. Of what use are these poor persons, disabled people, aged widows and Black slaves
to you. How can they help and serve you? the Imam () replied, AI cannot allow rich and
influential persons to exploit the society of this Muslim state and to run an inequitable and unjust
system of distribution of wealth and opportunities. I cannot for a moment tolerate this. This is
public wealth, it comes from the masses it must go back to them. The rich and powerful persons
have not created any wealth, they have merely sucked it from the masses and after paying the
taxes, etc., what is left to them is many times more than what they pay to the state and they are
welcome to retain it. Had all this been private property I would have gladly distributed it in the
same manner. As far as their desertion is concerned, I am glad they have deserted me. As far as
the usefulness or services of these disabled persons and have-nots is concerned, remember that I
am not helping them to secure their services, I fully well know they are unable to serve me. I
help them because they cannot help themselves and they are as much human beings as you and I.
May Allah help me to do my duty as He wishes me to do. (Kitab al-Gharath)
The Army
Imam Ali (A.S) was a born soldier and had started his military career at the age of fourteen
when he acted as a bodyguard to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . From that
time onward, he was the only military talent on whom the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) would rely and all arrangements for organization of defenses and maintenance of an
army of volunteers or soldiers were totally entrusted to him by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) . It was his ability and valor which brought such success to Islam in its early
stage against such enormous odds. Even AOmer was taking his advice on military problems (AlSirajul-Mubin, Al-Murtaza and Kitab al-Gharath).
Time had not dimmed his valor or his ability to organize such an important section of the
state. At the age of sixty, in the battlefields of Jamal, Siffin and Nahrawan, he was as brave a
soldier, as good a leader and as keen a marshal as he was in the prime of his life in the
battlefields of Badr, Uhud, Khundaq, Khaiber and Hunain.
During his short period of rulership of about four years, he organized this department very
carefully.
The first liability on the state exchequer was the army department. Every governor of the
province, besides being chief finance officer of the province, was the commander of the army
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placed under him. When officers could not be found to look after the military as well as civil
administration, then the functions were divided.
Imam Ali (A.S) did not tolerate mere mercenaries but did not let services of volunteers go
unpaid. He hated murder and bloodshed and desired his soldiers to be soldiers in Theservice of
Allah and religion. His strict orders to the army were, AAlways keep fear of Allah in your mind,
remember that you cannot afford to do without His Grace. Remember that Islam is a mission of
peace and love. Keep the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) before you as a model of
bravery, valor and piety. Do not kill anybody unless in self-defense. Take care of your mounts
and your arms, they are your best guards. Work hard while you are at it and then devote some
time to rest and relaxation. Rest and relaxation are as necessary for you as hard work. Do not let
one overstep the time limit of the other. Do not pursue those who run away from an encounter
and do not kill fleeing persons. Do not kill those who beg for life and mercy. Do not kill
civilians. Do not outrage the modesty of women. Do not harm old people and children. Do not
accept any gifts from the civil population of any place. Do not lodge your soldiers or officers in
the houses of civilians. Do not forget to say your daily prayers. Fear Allah. Remember that death
will inevitably come to every one of you some time or other, even if you are thousand of miles
away from a battlefield, therefore, be always ready to face death. He did not appreciate heavily
armed and clad soldiers. He liked lighter swords, lighter bows and arrows, lighter coats of arms
and lighter chains of armor. He preferred to have an agile and a noble army. I wish I had space at
my disposal to translate parts from the books Al-Gharath, Al-Siraj al-Mubin, Al-Murtaza and
Kitab al-Siffin (as quoted by ibn Abil Hadid). They have discussed and narrated at some length
his system of reorganizing the army, his principles of strategy and his tactics of war: how he
divided the army into six units, beginning from the vanguard and ending it at therear guards
(Rawdah and Saqqah) ; how he arranged to cover every possibility of a retreat with the help of
these units; how he sub-divided the cavalry into horse and camel units; and infantry into archers,
swordsmen and AMata’een’ (soldiers armed with short lances which they threw with precision,
skill and force) ; how he made the vanguard responsible for scouting, pioneering and performing
duties of army engineers and miners; how he used to arrange the army in a battlefield; how he
never suffered a defeat in his life; how bold he was; how he used to fight without protecting his
body with armor or shield; how he never delivered more than one blow (mostly his one blow was
sufficient to kill his opponent, if not he would give the opponent a chance to get up and run
away) and how nobody ever dared stand before him for his second blow. To him war was a pious
duty to be performed only for the purpose of defence. He often declared, AA Muslim’s life is a
battlefield, where he is seldom required to defend his self or his cause and country at the point of
sword, which is Jehad al-Asghar (holy war on a minor scale), however formidable be the forces
he is to face, while in every day of his life he is to fight against evil desires, vicious cravings and
inordinate wishes, which is al-jhad al-akbar (A holy war on a major scale), take care and do not
suffer a defeat in this battle; remember it is life-long struggle; a success here will be honored
with martyrdom, even if one dies in his bed surrounded by his relatives.
Judicial Procedure
The principle of keeping independent of, and over and above the executive, administrative
and military sections of the state was the main factor of thereforms introduced by Imam Ali
(A.S) . He was very particular about this, so much so that historians narrate that once he
appeared before his Chief Justice (Judge Sharaih) as a complainant and the Chief Justice wanted
to give him a place of honor in the court and to treat him like a king or caliph. He reproached the
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judge for such a behavior, saying that he was there as plaintiff and not as a king or a caliph, and
then he cheerfully accepted the decision of the court against him. The effect of upholding the
prestige of the court of justice, and his adherence to the principles of equality and equity were so
impressive that the person, against whom he had filed the case and had lost it, ran after him,
kissed the hem of his garment and said, AMy Master, teach me Islam, I am a Christian and I want
to convert. AWhy, inquired Imam Ali (A.S) , ADid anyone force you to do that? ANo, my
Master, the Christian said, ABut your behavior of treating even a non-Muslim subject as your
equal, the prestige you have granted to justice and fair play and your abstention from use of
power and authority made me feel that Islam is a great religion. You are a ruler and a caliph, you
could have easily ordered me to be killed and my property looted, and nobody dare ask reasons
of your actions, but you took the case against me to the court and cheerfully accepted the
decision against you; I have never heard of such a ruler before you. What is more, what you
claimed as yours is actually yours and not mine, but I know the persons who could provide proof
of this are out of Kufa, therefore, I boldly said that it was mine and not yours. That was a lie, and
now I am ashamed to feel that I lied against such an honorable person. You have heard me. Will
you not allow me to enter the fold of Islam? the Imam () inquired, AAre you of your free-will
entering our fold? AYes, the Christian replied. Under your regime, I have nothing to lose by
remaining in my religion and no worldly benefit to gain by embracing Islam and by confessing
my guilt and sin.
The code which he laid down for selection and enrollment of judges shows he took care of
even minute requirements of the post and position. It says,
1. Only such persons should be selected who are well versed in Muslim law and know enough
of the Holy Book and traditions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) to decide
according to the principles laid down therein. Besides, they must have knowledge of personal
laws of other religions followed in their provinces.
2. They must be men of some standing and status.
3. They must not lose their tempers or patience and treat litigants harshly and insultingly. The
litigants must feel that their interests are well-guarded and well looked after, and that the doors
of justice are always open to them.
4. If they feel that they have made a mistake, they should not obstinately stick to it, but try to
undo the injustice done by them.
5. They should be able to probe deeply before them and to reach the truth.
6. They must be able to reach decisions quickly and must not unnecessarily prolong a case.
7. They must not accept recommendations and must not be influenced.
8. Their salaries should be fixed so that they are not tempted by bribes and gifts.
9. In audiences and levees of the governors they should be given seats of honor.
10. Greedy and various persons, and those who are open to flattery and cajolery should also
be avoided.
11. The door of appeal to the public should not be closed. The caliph should always hear
appeals against the decisions of the courts and should decide as per orders of Allah and the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
Central and Provincial Secretariat and Subordinate Offices
The Imam () has laid down a code for the officers of the State which covers every aspect of
their duties and obligations. It is embodied in the form of a letter (Letter No. 53, NahjulBalagha) written to one of his governors. Abdul-Masih al-Antaki, the famous Christian jurist,
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poet and philosopher of Beirut who died in the beginning of the 20th century says, AIt is by far a
superior and better code than the ones handed down by Moses and Hammurabi. It explains what
a humane administration should be like and how it is to be carried on and it justifies the claims of
Muslims that Islam wants to introduce a godly administration of the people, by the people and
for the people. It decrees that a ruler should not rule to please himself but to bring happiness to
the ruled. No religion before Islam tried to achieve this end. Ali (A.S) must be congratulated for
having introduced these principles in his government and for having written them down for
posterity.
I quote here just a few points to illustrate what Abdul-Masih meant by saying that it was a
better code than the codes handed down by Moses or Hammurabi.
(1) You must create in your mind kindness and love for your subjects. Do not behave with
them as though you are a voracious and ravenous beast and that your success lies in tearing them
up and devouring them.
(2) Muslims and non-Muslims should be treated alike. Muslims are your brothers and nonMuslims are human beings just like you.
(3) Do not feel ashamed to forgive. Do not hurry over punishments. Do not quickly lose your
temper over mistakes and failures of those over whom you rule. Anger and desire of vengeance
are not going to be much use to you in your administration.
(4) Do not allow the (evil) force of favoritism and nepotism to violate your duties to Allah and
to man, and drive you towards tyranny and oppression.
(5) While selecting officers take care that you do not select such people who have served
tyrannous and oppressive rulers and have been responsible for atrocities and savage cruelties
committed by the state.
(6) Select honest and kind persons and, from among them, prefer those who speak out the
bitter truth to you unreservedly without fear or favor.
(7) Appointments in the first place must be on probation.
(8) Keep your officers well paid so that they may not be tempted to corruption or
misappropriation.
(9) Appoint confidential officers to secretly watch the activities of your officers and staff and
report to you about their behaviors.
(10) Thesecretaries of your civil, judicial or military services should be of personage naturally
richer in character than the average. Choose the best amongt them irrespective of age or period
of service.
(11) All letters or applications should be dealt with by the officers and replies or orders about
them should be drafted by them only, no subordinate must be allowed to work as the eyes and
minds of these officers.
(12) Take your subjects into your confidence and make them feel that you are their wellwisher
and friend.
(13) Never break a promise or go against the terms of a treaty. It is a sin against Allah.
(14) You must take care of your traders but should never allow them to resort to hoarding,
black-marketing and profiteering.
(15) Promote and encourage local arts and crafts, it reduces poverty and raises the standard of
life.
(16) Farm tillers are assets to the state and should be protected as an asset.
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(17) Remember that your sacred duty is to look after the poor, disabled and orphans. Let not
your officers humiliate them, ill-treat them or oppress them. Help them, protect them and let
them approach you whenever they are in need of your help.
(18) Avoid bloodshed. Do not kill anybody unless he deserves to be killed according to the
canons of Islam.
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HAZRATH ALI (A.S) and the Philosophy of Religions
A man enters a garden laid out into beautiful flower beds, artistically and aesthetically
arranged. The flowers have been grown by those persons who know the art and science of it. The
beauty of their colors and the delicacy of their forms and shades are pleasing to the eyes, and
their fragrance enchants the minds. The man knows that he has not the knowledge and capability
to cultivate and grow flowers like that and the public has no time to go through the garden and
enjoy the sights and fragrance of these beds at leisure. He picks up a few flowers from each of
these beds and arranges them in a bouquet as a humble homage to the grandness and beauty of
the garden.
With this view in mind, these chapters were written. I have drawn freely from the following
books AAl-Murtaza, al-Kurrar, Al-Sirajul-Mubin. Thazeedul-Matin, Nufs al-Rasul, the Spirit of
the Islam, Islam Under the Arabs, the preaching of Islam, Khasa’is al-Nisa’i, al-Tabrisi’s Ihtijaj,
Bihar al-Anwar, Al-Manaqib, Sharh of Ibn Maisum, Sharh of Mirza Fathallah, the Sharh of Ibn
Abil-Hadid and Irshad.
I am sure Theselection is not the best, but it is the best that I can do and I am sure it will
provoke minds superior to mine for better efforts.
In this last chapter, I shall try to discuss the teachings of the Imam () in the field of
philosophy of religion.
With Imam Ali (A.S) and the Imams of his descent, religion was a vital and positive force of
life. Their philosophy never sinks to a war of words without life and without earnestness which
is the main feature of the schools under Ptolemies or the vicious circles created by the
philosophers of the West and East. Their ardent love of knowledge, devotion in the evolution of
the human mind, their sincere faith in Allah and His Mercy, Love and Kindness, and their
looking upwards for the literalness of common interpretations of law, show the spirituality and
expansiveness of their philosophy of religion. The Imam Jafar al-Sadiq () defines knowledge by
saying, AEnlightenment of the heart is its essence, Truth is its principal object, Inspiration is its
guide, Reason is its acceptor, Allah is its Inspirer, and the words of man are its utterers. To him,
the evolution of the mind was the essence of life and religion was the essence of the evolution of
the mind.
How correctly Imam Ali (A.S) taught us that a man without a mind is not a man, and a mind
without religion is worse even than the instinctual nature of a beast, more harmful, more
dangerous and more carnivorous. Devotion without understanding will not bring the Blessing of
Allah, it is useless.
He attaches so much value to the mind and its correct ways of grasping the truth that he says
your first leader and guide is your mind. At other places he says that nothing is more useful to
man than his intelligence, there is nothing wealthier than wisdom, there is no greater bounty of
the Master than the intellect granted to you, you can dispense with everything but your mind and
intelligence, there is no better guide towards truth than wisdom, one hour of deep and sober
meditation is better than a life of prayers without understanding, and a wise man thinks first and
speaks or acts afterwards.
Next to intelligence and wisdom, he taught us to attach importance to the sincerity of purpose
in life. Once explaining a certain verse to Abdullah ibn Abbas, he said, AIbn Abbas, if you
sincerely and intelligently go in search of truth or religion and if you wander out of the right
path, even then there is a reward for you. There is a sermon in Nahjul-Balagha in which he says,
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ADo not kill Kharijites after me because to go in search of truth and to lose the true path is better
than to spend the entire span of ones life in pursuit of vicious pleasure and wickedness.
The natural and logical sequence of the above two attributes is to take account of yourself,
your knowledge, your thoughts, your intentions, your desires and your deeds. He therefore
advises us ATo weigh your own souls before the time of weighing of your actions arrives. Take
account of yourself before you are called upon to account for your conduct in this existence.
To obtain favorable results of such weighing and taking account of oneself, one must have
done good deeds. And as far as actions and reactions are concerned, he wants us to understand
that human conduct is not fortuitous, one act is theresult of another; life, destiny and character
means a series of incidents, events and actions which are related to each other, as cause and
effect by an ordained Law. Therefore, apply yourself to good and pure actions, adhere to truth,
follow the true path to salvation, before death makes you leave this abode. If you do not warn
and guide yourself none other can direct you. The Master has pointed out to you the path of
salvation and has warned you of the temptations of this world. Abstain from foulness though it
may be fair to your sight. Avoid evil, however pleasant, for you know not how far it can take you
away from him.
His discourses in Nahjul-Balagha about noble deeds are supreme reading. His warnings
against sinful life are very persuasive teachings. He says, AO Ye servants of the Master! Fulfill
the duties that are imposed on you for in their neglect there is abasement, your good work alone
will render easy the road to death and to the Heaven. Remember each sin increases the debt and
makes the chain heavier. The message of mercy has come, the path of truth (haqq) is clear; obey
the command that has been laid on you; live in purity and work with nobility of purpose and ask
Allah to help you in your endeavors and to forgive your past transgressions. Cultivate humility
and forbearance, comfort yourself with sincere truth.
Next to sincere faith in the Unity of Allah and the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
hood of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , he lays great stress on piety. He wants
us to realize that piety is not a juicy morsel to be swallowed easily nor is it dip in the river to
clean all dirt and filth from the body. Piety means those actions, which at the beginning may be
sour, harsh and painful to perform. Piety means to free oneself from vicious desires and wicked
deeds. This freedom cannot be obtained but by constant effort and endeavor. Such efforts are a
continuous struggle and a long drawn war against the vicious cravings of the mind. Nobody can
be free from vices and sins unless he or she develops the capacity to abhor and hate them. When
once this capacity develops, to adopt a pious and sober life becomes a habit, a second nature.
Few things are forbidden to you and so many things are lawful that no one is barred from normal
relaxation, ease and comfort from sober and harmless pleasures and pursuits.
To him, asceticism was a sin against Theself. History cites many instances where he
admonished the persons who had given up their homes and families, had severed every
connection with society, had taken to a mosque, and had been praying, fasting and reciting the
Holy Book morning, noon and night. He sent them back to their homes and told them that their
duties lie among their fellow beings, and what they had done was not piety but fanatic asceticism
which is not allowed in Islam. He strongly reprobated observance of asceticism and condemned
the abandonment of the affairs of this life in fanatic pursuits of rituals.
He says that he who acts with piety gives rest to his soul; he who takes warning understands
the truth and he who understands it attains the perfect knowledge.
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His teachings do not convey any impression of predestination; on the contrary they portray a
soul animated with a living faith in Allah and yet full of trust in human development founded on
individual exertion springing from human volition. One day, someone asked him the meaning of
Quaza and Quader. He replied, AQaza’ means obedience to the commandments of Allah and
avoidance of sin, and qadar means the ability to live a pious and holy life, to do that which
brings one nearer to Allah and to shun that which throws him away from His Perfection. Say not
that man is compelled, for that attribution is tyranny against Allah, nor say that man has the
absolute discretion to decide what is right and what is wrong, we are furthered by His Help and
Grace in our endeavors, to act righteously and we transgress because of our neglect of His
Commandments.
Explaining the meaning of the verse, AThere is no power nor help but from Allah, he said, AIt
means that I am not afraid of Allah’s Wrath, but I am afraid of His Purity; nor have I power to
observe His Commandments, but my strength is in His assistance. Allah has placed us on earth to
try each of us according to his endowments. Explaining the verse saying, AWe will try you to see
who are strivers (after truth and purity) and who are forbearing and patient, and we will test your
actions and we will help you by degrees to attain what you know not! he says, Athese verses
prove the liberty of human volition. Explaining the verse AAllah directs him whom He chooses,
and leads him astray whom He chooses he says, AThis does not means that He compels men to
evil or good deeds, or that He either gives direction or refuses it according to His caprice, for this
would do away all responsibility for human action; on the contrary it means that Allah points out
the road to truth, and lets men choose as they will.
In a sermon in Nahjul-Balagha Imam Ali (A.S) says, AThe theory of compulsion,
predestination or predetermination of fate is a satanic insinuation and a doctrine of faith among
the enemies of Allah. On the contrary, Allah has ordained man to obey His Commands and has
given him freedom of will and action, he is at full liberty to obey His Commands or to disobey.
There is no compulsion in accepting thereligions preached by His Messengers and no
compulsion to obey His Commands. Even His Commands (like daily prayers, fasting, zakat, etc.)
are not hard, harsh and unbearable and every leniency and case on account of age and health is
granted to man.
The freedom of human will, based on the doctrine that man would be judged by the use he
had made of his reason, was inculcated in the teachings of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) , along with an earnest belief in the Supreme Power ruling the universe. Imam Ali
(A.S) gave this idea a more definite form and it grew into a philosophy. In reply to a question he
says, APerhaps you consider predestination to be necessary and the particular decree to be
irreversible; if it were so then reward and punishment would be in vain, and the promise and the
threat would be of no account; and surely blame would not have come from Allah for the sinner
nor praise for the righteous, nor would the righteous be more worthy of thereward of his good
deeds, nor the wicked be more deserving of the punishment of his sin than the righteous. Allah
hath ordained the giving of choice to man and the putting of them in fear and He hath not laid
duties upon men by force nor sent his prophets as farce. When asked, AWhat is predestination
and the particular decree which drove us? he answered, AThe command of Allah, and therein His
purpose. Then he repeated the verse, AThe Master hath ordained (predestined) that you worship
none but Him and kindness to your parents.
Morality of life is another point which Imam Ali (A.S) wanted men to realize fully, sincerely
and rationally. He wants us to understand that death is a biological incident of all forms of life
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and it is unavoidable, inevitable and sudden. No one knows when and how he or she is going to
cross this barrier. Therefore it is foolish to imagine that it can be avoided, sinful self deception to
forget it, and idiotically timid to be afraid of it. He says, AI am as fond of death as a baby is fond
of his mother’s breast. the natural sequence of the mortality of life is that everything connected
with it and with this world is mundane and has no lasting value. Therefore, why concentrate on
pleasure and take to vicious ways to acquire them, why not try to improve your lot in the
hereafter.
Imam Ali’s teachings are a true gospel of the work ethic. He wants man to work, to work
honestly, sincerely and diligently and to work for thereward reserved in the Heaven. He says,
AWork, work, and do good work while you still have life, health and opportunities. Allah ordains
you to work while there is still time to work. Be thankful for the time and opportunities allotted
to you and work for the good of mankind and for your own good. A life without work is a life
without worth. A mind without sober thoughts and a life without a program of honest work is the
most fertile soil for Theseeds of wickedness and vice. Work, with the nobility of purpose is one
of the forms of prayer. His advice to his son was, AExert yourself to earn an honest living. The
worst form of folly is the wasting of opportunities. Opportunities do not repeat themselves so
make use of each of them when it presents itself, but let piety guide in all of your actions.
Thus Imam Ali (A.S) guides us through the problems of men with respect to ourselves
individually as he leads us towards solving problems encountered with one another. In a letter to
Imam Hasan (). he says, AMy dear son, as far as your behavior with other human beings is
concerned let yourself act as scales to help you judge its goodness or wickedness. Do unto others
as you wish others to do unto you. Whatever you dislike to happen to you, spare others from
such happenings. At another place, he advises, ADo not make yourself a slave of anything. Allah
has created you a free man. Do not sell away this freedom in return for anything. There is no real
value or benefit that you derive by selling your honor, conscience and self respect. Do not run
after him who tries to avoid you. Remember that to oppress a weak or helpless person is the
worst form of tyranny. Do good to your brother when he is bent upon doing harm to you.
Befriend him when he ignores you. Be generous to him if he is miserly to you. Be kind to him if
he is harsh and cruel to you. But be very careful that you do not behave with undeserving, mean
and wicked persons.
Imam Ali (A.S) had a very soft corner in his noble heart for the poor, the disabled, the aged
and the orphans. To Malik he says, AI want to caution you about the poor. Fear Allah about your
attitude towards them. Let it be remembered that their welfare is the first charge to a state and on
the well-to-do-people.
As far as the question of man and Allah is concerned, Imam Ali (A.S) teaches us to believe in
Allah Who has created us, Who loves us, nourishes us, helps us and is our well-wisher. He
should be loved, adored and venerated.
Through many of his prayers Imam Ali (A.S) has implanted in the minds of those who have
faith in Allah the highest devotional spirit. He teaches us to love and adore Him and to think of
Him as AThe Master, the Adorable, the Eternal, the Ever Existing, the Cherisher, the True
Sovereign, Whose Mercy and Grace overshadows the universe. Who is the Master, the Loving and Forgiving, Who bestows power and
might on whom He pleases. None can lower him whom He exalted. Whose beneficence is all
persuading. Whose Forgiveness and Mercy is all embracing. Who is the Helper of the afflicted,
thereliever of all distressed, the Consoler of the broken hearts. Who is present everywhere to
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help His Creatures. Who fulfillls all needs, bestows all blessings. Who is a friend of the poor and
the bereaved. At another place he beseeches the Master thus, AYou art my Fortress; a Castle for
all who seek Your Protection and Help. The Helper of the pure and true, therefugee of the weak.
The Helper of those seeking Your Help. Thanks be to You O Master, Whose Mercy extends to
every sinner, and who provides for even those who deny Him.
This is how he wants us to have faith in Allah, a Creator, a Nourisher, a Helper, a Refuge, a
Protection. One who loves you and One to be loved, adored, venerated and worshipped.
The other aspect of his teaching is that he has clearly and emphatically condemned all
anthropomorphic (to attribute human forms, qualities or personality to Allah) and anthropopathic
(ascription of human passion and affections to Allah) conceptions. He says, AAllah is not like
any object that the human mind can conceive. No attribute can be ascribed to Him which bears
the least resemblance to any qualities which human beings have perceived of from their
knowledge of material objects. The perfection of piety consists in knowing Allah; the perfection
of knowledge is the affirmation of His Verity; and the perfection of verity is the
acknowledgment of His Unity in all sincerity; and the perfection of sincerity is to deny all
attributes to the Deity. He, who refers an attribute to Allah believes the attributes to be Allah, and
he who so believes an attribute to be Allah, regards Allah as two or part of one. He who asks
where Allah is assimilates him with some object. Allah is the Creator, not because He Himself is
created. Allah is Existent not because he was non-existent. He is with every object, not from
resemblance or nearness. He is outside everything not from separation or indifference towards
His creatures. He works and creates not in the meaning of motions or actions. He sees and hears
but not with help of bodily organs or outside agencies. He was seeing when there was nothing
created to see. He has no relation to matter, time and space, Allah is Omniscient because
knowledge is His Essence, Loving because Love is His Essence, Mighty because Power is His
Essence, Forgiving because Forgiveness is His Essence, and not because these are attributes
apart from His Essence.
At another place he says, AO my Master! You art the Creator, I am the created; You art the
Sovereign, I am only Your servant; I am the one who beseeches, You, my Master art therefuge.
You art the Forgiver, I am the sinner, You my Master, art the Merciful, All knowing, All loving;
I am groping in the dark; I seek Your knowledge and Love. Bestow my Master all Your
Knowledge, Love and Mercy and let me approach You, my Master. You live in every heart and
every soul. Your Knowledge is ingrained in every mind.
COMPILER and Some Commentators
The last compiler of the sermons, letters, orders and sayings of Imam Ali (A.S) was Sayyid
al-Razi. His was the compilation which came down to us in its entire form through ten centuries.
He named this compilation Nahjul-Balagha.
Sayyid al-Razi’s name was Abul-Hasan Sayyid Muhammed al-Razi. Al-Razi was his
nicknamed ALaqub. He was born in Baghdad (in 359 A.H.) in a family famous all over the
country for their connections with the state, for their patronage of art and literature, and for their
interest in history, philosophy and religion. It was a time when Baghdad was vying with Cairo
and Cordoba for superiority over arts, science, philosophy and languages.
His father, Abu Ahmed Sayyid Husain, was appointed five times as Anaqueebs or chiefs of
the Family of Imam Ali (A.S) . His family was held in the highest regards by Abbaside caliphs
and Alawide kings.
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Sayyid al-Razi’s father was a descendant of the Imam Moosi al-Kazim () being the great
grandson of the Imam. His mother was the great granddaughter of the Imam Zainul-Abideen ().
She was a woman famous for her piety and her literary talents.
His elder brother, Sayyid Murtaza, was a great theologian and poet. Sayyid Murtaza’s work
(poems) are still being published in Cairo and Beirut and form part of the course of Arabic
literature in the universities of those two cities. Sayyid Murtaza has a great place among the
Shi’a theologians and is nicknamed Aa’lamul-huda (standards of the true path of religion).
His mother took keen interest in educating her two sons, Sayyid Murtaza and Sayyid al-Razi.
She personally took them both to the Shi’a theologian and mujtahid, Abu Abdullah Sheikh
Mufid and requested him to educate these children under his personal supervision and care.
Sayyid al-Razi, under the instructions of Sheikh Mufid, received an early education in Arabic
grammar, literature and lexicology from Hussan ibn Abdullah Sairfee. At the early stage of ten
he was considered a finished product of that institution and a good poet. He joined the
educational institutions of Aby Ishaq-Ahmed ibn Muhammed-Tabari, Ali ibn Eesa Rubace,
AOthman ibn Jinny and Abu Bakr Muhammed ibn Musa Khawrzami, and with them he studied
the Holy Qur’an, the Traditions, theology, history of religions, philosophy and literature. From
early childhood, his keen desire of acquiring knowledge and concentrating on studies was noted
and appreciated by every one of those great scholars under whom he received his training. As a
matter of fact, he was considered as a prodigy by many of them.
At the age of twenty, his merit was recognized and respected by all of them and even Sheikh
Mufid regarded this young man as his equal.
Sayyid al-Razi died young at the age of forty-five or forty-seven years, but during this short
period he had written many books. His commentary of the Holy Qur’an is considered by the
historian ibn Khalakan to be peerless, and his explanation of the traditions of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) is still respected as a great resource of the meaning of the words
used by the Holy Messenger of Allah.
At the age of twenty-one he was elected in place of his father as Naqueeb of the family of
Abu Talib and was appointed by the State as the Amir of Pilgrimage to Mecca.
He was a man of strong character, free will and independent views. During his time the
Abbasites caliphate of Baghdad was at war with the Fatemite caliphate of Egypt, and had
persuaded Sunni and Shi’a men of importance to sign a mahzar (public attestation) depicting
non-Muslims tendencies and activities of the Fatemite caliphs. Even the elder brother of Sayyid
al-Razi and his father were forced to sign it, but Sayyid al-Razi refused to sign such a decree.
This brought him onto a blacklist of the government, but he cheerfully accepted the loss of
political privilege and status. Four times during his life he refused to accept financial aid from
the government.
In his early age he had come across sayings, sermons and letters of Imam Ali (A.S) . He had
found them scattered in various books of philosophy, religion, history, biography, literature and
commentaries of the Holy Qur’an and the traditions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) . He had also found that the collections of Imam Ali’s work as carried on by great
scholars of the first four centuries, because of the unsettled political condition of the centers of
learning in the peninsula, were lost. He therefore decided to re-collect them once again. The
desire became a passion with him. He toured all over the peninsula to collect these sermons,
sayings and letters, gathering all the various books containing them and classified them into
sermons, letters and sayings. The letters also included orders of Imam Ali (A.S) to his officers
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and two of his wills. In fact, the classification was on the basis of what Imam Ali (A.S)
preached, what he wrote and what he said. Some biographers say that for years he devoted
eighteen hours a day for this work. It was a labor of love for him. His health was failing yet he
continued the work without an abatement of intensity.
To him this compilation was a sacred duty and he carried it out with the devotion and
diligence that it deserved. He was particularly and sincerely careful not to add and not to subtract
a word from the texts which he found. If he found a sermon divided into many parts he did not
join them into a continuous whole but let them remain as two, three or four disjointed parts. This
system of compilation annoyed the later commentators of Nahjul-Balagha, like ibn Abil Hadid
and ibn Maisum, and they have complained about it. Sometimes when Sayyid al-Razi found the
middle part of a sermon missing, he left the two remaining parts as two separate sermons.
He collected from a pile of books and manuscripts on various subjects and had come across
those books at various periods of his work. Naturally, there was not any chronological order in
his collection. The sermons which are supposed to be delivered in Medina or in the early period
of Imam Ali’s temporal rulership are found in the later part of the book and sermons on the
events of Siffin and Nahrawan in early part. Similarly, the sermon, which is considered as the
last sermon of Imam Ali (A.S) , preceeds many discourses which, by their test, may rightly be
considered to be delivered in Medina during the periods of the first and second caliphates. At
places, we find that the Sayyid had copied the same sermon in different places as quoted by
different authors. All these discrepancies jar upon the minds of thereaders. But they stand as iron
clad irrefutable proof to the honest and sincere desire of Sayyid al-Razi to present the work as he
found it and not to interfere with it in any way however essential it might be.
Some historians and biographists are of the opinion that Sayyid al-Razi was helped in this
work by his elder brother Sayyid Murtaza. But, had this been a fact, the noble-minded Sayyid
would have willingly mentioned it in his preface, because he has tried to mention all the sources
from which he found these sermons etc.
Sayyid al-Razi died in the month of Muharram 404 A.H. at the age of 45 years. Some
biographists are of the opinion that the year of his death was 406 A.H. and his age at the time of
death was 47 years. His elder brother Sayyid Murtaza and his teacher Sheikh Mufid were so
grievously stricken that they could not lead the funeral service of that great man and Theservice
was led by the Prime Minister Abu Ghalib Fakhrul Mulk.
Sayyid al-Razi has left about 40 books as his memorial, some of them are great works, they
consist of commentaries of the Holy Qur’an on religion and philosophy, yet his masterpiece was
the collection of the sermons, letters and sayings of Imam Ali (A.S) .
As soon as the noble Sayyid compiled this book (Nahjul-Balagha) his contemporaries started
writing commentaries on it. The work of commenting on the text and explanation of meanings of
the words used by Imam Ali (A.S) , and the historical events mentioned therein is still continued
today. I am citing herein the names of some of the famous commentators of Nahjul-Balagha.
Sunni Commentators:
1. Imam Ahmed ibn Muhammed al-Wayri (about 470 A.H.)
2. Abul-Hasan Ali ibn Abul-Qasim al-Bayhaqi (565 A.H.). His commentary is quoted by
Mu’jam al-Udaba’ of Yaqut al-Hamawi, Vol. 13, p. 225, printed in Egypt.
3. Imam Fakhruddin al-Razi (606 A.H.). His commentary is quoted by:
(i) Akhbarul-Hukama’ of ibn al-Qufti, p. 192 printed in Egypt.
(ii) AUyun al-Anbiya’ of Ibn Abu Sabee’a , p. 25, printed in Egypt.
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4. Abdul-Hamid Hibathullah Muhammed ibn Muhammed ibn Abil Hadid, the Mu’tazilite
scholar (known as Ibn Abil Hadid, 655 A.H.). His commentary is a world-famous classic
covering 17 volumes, printed half a dozen times in Cairo, Beirut, Tehran and Isfahan.
5. Sheikh Kamalud-Din Abdul Rehman Shaybani (about 705 A.H.)
6. ‘Allama Sa’dud-Din al-Taftazani (797 A.H.)
7. Judge of Baghdad Sheikh Qa’imud-Din.
8. ‘Aallama Sheikh Muhammed Abdoh (1323 A.H.)
His commentary has been printed very often and forms a part ofthe university course in Cairo
and Beirut.
9. Professor Muhammed Hasan al-Nayer al-Mursafi of Egypt. His commentary is printed in
Darul-Epistle Press Cairo, Egypt.
10. Professor Muhammed Mohiuddin Abdul Hamid, Professor of Lexicology of Alazhur
University.
His book was printed at Istiqamatul-Misr Press, Cairo.
11. Professor Sheikh Abdullah al-Bayruni of Cairo, Egypt.
Shi’a Commentators:
1.’Allama Sayyid Ali ibn Nasir (about 450 A.H.). He was a contemporary of Sayyid al-Razi.
2. The famous Shi’a mujtahid, theologian and philosopher Aallama Qutubud-Din al-Rawandi.
His Commentary is titled Minhajul-Bara’a.
3. Fazil al-Jalil, Aallama Sayyid Ibn Tawus.
4. ‘Allama ibn Maisum al-Bahrani (about 660 A.H.). He was a contemporary of ibn AbilHadid. His commentary is famous and is considered of immense value on problems of the
philosophy of Islam. He has not devoted as much time towards the literary and historical aspects
of Nahjul-Balagha as ibn Abil-Hadid. His book is greatly valued by Shi’a theologians and
philosophers.
5. ‘Allama Qutubud-Din Muhammed ibn Husain al-Iskandari. His commentary is named AlIslah.
6. Sheikh Husain ibn Sheikh Shihabud-Din Hayder Ali al-AAmili al-Karki. He died in
Hyderabad, India, in the year 1076 A.H.
7. Sheikh Nizamud-Din Ali ibn al-Husain ibn Nizamud-Din al-Jilani. He named his
commentary as Anwarul-Fasaha and Asrarul-Balagha.
8. ‘Allama Sayyid Sanad Mirza Allaudin Muhammed ibn Abu Turab, known as Fazil alGulistanah (1110 A.H.). His commentary covers 20 volumes.
9. Agha Sheikh Muhammed Raza. His commentary is called Ba’dra al-Najafia. It has been
printed often and very well received throughout Iran.
10. ‘Allama Sayyid Ma’jid ibn Muhammed Bahrani. He was a contemporary of Sheikh
Bahayee and died in 1028 A.H. His commentary is greatly valued by Shi’a theologians.
11. Mullah Fadlallah Kashani. He died in 997 A.H. He was a lexicographer, grammarian,
mathematician, physicist, engineer and theologian. He had been to the court of Akbar also. He
was a contemporary of the famous historian of Akbar’s court,
12. Mullah AAbdul-Qadir Badayuni. The Mullah speaks very highly of him in his book
Muntakhabul-Tawarikh. He says AAdil Khan, governor of Deccan, Khan al-Khanan and Hakeem
Abul-Fath of the court of Akbar paid great respects to him and Akbar also had great regards for
him. His commentary is printed very often, and so far as the translation of words used by Imam
Ali (A.S) in Persian is concerned, it is the best book ever published.
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PREFACE
By the compiler of Nahjul-Balagha, 'Allama ash-Sharif ar-Radhi
In the Name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate
Praise is due to Allah who has held praise as the price of His bounties, protection against His
retribution, pathway to His paradise and means for multiplication of His good treatment. May
blessings be on His Messenger, the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of mercy, the torch
of the people, the chosen one from the origin of greatness and family of longstanding honors, the
plantation of all-engrossing glory and the branch of sublimity full of fruits and foliage. And, may
blessing be upon the members of his family who are lanterns against darkness, protection of the
people, brilliant minarets of religion and high standards of greatness. May Allah shower upon
them all the blessings befitting their distinction as rewards for their actions and suitable to the
chastity of their lineage so long as the morning dawns and the stars twinkle.
In my early age at the dawn of youth, I commenced writing a book on the characteristics of
the Imams covering the account of their virtues and masterpieces of their utterances. The purpose
of the compilation was stated in the beginning of the book. Therein, I completed the portion
relating to the account of Amir al-Mu’minin Ali (A.S) but I could not complete that part
concerning the other Imams due to impediments of the time and obstacles of the days. I divided
the book into several chapters and sections, in a manner for its last section to compromise
whatever had been related to Ali’s short utterances such as his counsel, maxims and proverbs but
not his long lectures and detailed discourses.
A number of my friends and brothers-in-faith, while wondering at its delicate and blossoming
expressions, admired the contents of this particular section, and desired that I complete a book
which should cover all the forms of the utterances of Amir al-Mu’minin, including diverse
materials such as lectures, letters, counsels, ethics, etc. They were convinced that because Amir
al-Mu’minin was the fountain of eloquence and the source of rhetoric, the entire proceedings
would comprise wonders and surprises of eloquence and rhetoric, brilliant jewels of the Arabic
language and shining expressions about faith that were not collected nor found together in any
other book. Through the Imam, the hidden delicacies of eloquence and rhetoric came to light,
and from him, its principles and rules were learned. Every speaker and orator had to tread on his
footprints and every eloquent preacher availed of his utterances.
Even then, none could equal him and so the credit for being the first and foremost remained
with him, because his utterances are those that carry thereflection of the Divine knowledge and
savor the Prophet’s utterance. Accordingly, I acceded to their requests because I knew that it
meant great reward, handsome reputation and a treasure of recompense.
The object of this compilation is to bring forth Amir al-Mu’minin’s greatness and superiority
in the art of rhetoric, in addition to his countless qualities and innumerable distinctions, and to
show that he had risen to the highest pinnacle of this attainment. He was singular among all those
predecessors whose utterances are quoted here and there, whereas his own utterances are such an
on-rushing stream that its flow cannot be encountered and its treasure of delicacies cannot be
matched. Since I proudly trace my descent from him, I have a pleasure of quoting a couplet of alFarazdaq:
AThese are my forefathers O Jarir.
AWhen we get together, can you claim forth their equals?
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In my view, Amir al-Mu’minin’s utterances were divisible in three categories: firstly sermons
and decrees, secondly letters and communications and thirdly maxims and counsels. Allah
willing, I have decided to compile the sermons first, then the letters, and finally the maxims and
counsels. I then propose a separate chapter for each category, leaving blank pages in-between
each so that if anything has been left out and becomes handy afterwards, it may be inserted
therein. If my utterance which is routine or in reply to some question or has some other aim does
not fit in with any of my divisions, it should be included in the category for which is most
suitable or to which its subject matter is most similar. In this compilation, some sections and
sentences have crept in whose arrangement show disarray and disorderliness. This is because I
am only collecting the most representative brilliant utterances and do not wish to arrange or array
them.
The characteristic of Amir al-Mu’minin in which he is unparalleled and is shared by no one, is
that his utterances on seclusion, piety, remembrance of Allah and admonition are such that when
a person pursues them without bearing in mind that they are the words of a man who enjoys great
and ruling position and who controls destinies of men, he can have no doubt that these are the
utterances of a man who has no interest other than seclusion and no activity save worshipping;
who is confined to the interior of some house or the valley some mountain where he hears
nothing save his own murmur and sees no one except himself. Would one believe that these are
the utterances of one who plunges in battles with his sword drawn, severing heads and
vanquishing the heroes while returning with his sword dripping with blood and the heart’s fluid?
And despite all of this, he is supreme among therecluse and chief among the saints. This
distinction is one of those astonishing characteristics of Amir al-Mu’minin with which he
collected within himself contradictory qualities and patched together diverse greatness. I often
mention this subject to my brethren-in-faith and cause them to ponder over it.
Within this compilation, some repetition of words or subject matter are to be expected, as the
utterances of Amir al-Mu’minin have been known to be related in numerous forms. Sometimes it
happened that a particular utterance was found in a particular form in a tradition and was taken
down in that very form. Thereafter, the same utterance was found in some other tradition either
with acceptable addition or in a more attractive style of expression. In such a case with a view to
further the object of compilation and to preserve the beautiful utterance from being lost it was
decided to repeat it elsewhere. It has also happened that a particular utterance had appeared
earlier but due to remoteness it has been entered again. This is through omission, not by intent.
In spite of all this I do not claim that I have collected Amir al-Mu’minin’s utterances from all
the sources and that no single sentence of any type or construction has been left out. In fact I do
not rule out the possibility that whatever has been left out might be more than what has been
collected, and what has been in any knowledge and use is far less than what has remained
beyond my reach. My task was to strive to the best of my capacity and it was Allah’s part to
make the way easy and guide me to the goal--Allah may will so.
Having completed my work, both in the collection and compilation of this manuscript,
Nahjul-Balagha, the pathway of rhetoric would be the appropriate title of the book, in that it
would open the doors of eloquence for thereader and shorten its approach for him or her, the
scholar and the student would meet their needs from it and the rhetoricians as well as therecluse
would find their objectives in it. In this book will be found a wonderful discussion on Allah’s
Oneness, Justness and His being free from body and form, that will quench every thirst (for
learning), provide a cure for every malady (of unbelief) and remove every doubt. I seek from
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Allah succor, protection against straying, correctness of action and His assistance. I seek His
protection against mistakes of heart before mistakes of tongue and against mistakes of speech
before mistakes of action. He is my Reliance and He is the best Trustee.
NOTES:
1. Al-Farazdaq, whose name was Hammam ibn Ghalib, belonged to the tribe of Banu Darim
and was a notable poet. He was generally at odds with another Arab poet named Jarir ibn
AAtiyyah and they showed their merit only in mutual abuse and boasting over each other. The
quoted couplet of al-Farazdaq is a link from that chain, wherein he addresses Jarir saying, AMy
forefathers were such as you have just heard, now you come forward with what your forefathers
were, and if there were any one like mine, name them before all of us. Reciting this couplet
about his own forefathers Sayyid ar-Razi challenges every one to bring forth their like, if any.
Al-Farazdaq had addressed only Jarir but its quotation here has made it general and universal
when its addressee is no more one single individual, but every person can consider himself to be
its addressee. Despite this generality and universality the challenge to Aname their like remains
unresponsive like the Holy Qur’anic challenge Athen bring forth its Like.
Sayyid al-Razi has pointed at this relationship and distinction at such an appropriate moment
that there can be no better occasion, because the greatness of the personality (namely Amir alMu’minin) through whom he claims pride has already been mentioned and eyes have stood
dazzled at the brilliance of his status while minds have acknowledged the sublimity of his
position. Now hearts can easily be made to bow before the height and greatness of this individual
who bears relationship to him. Thus at the moment when hearts and minds were already inclined,
Sayyid al-Razi’s eloquence-conscious eyes turned the sight towards himself as he was the ray of
the sun whose abundant light dazzled the eye, and a scion of the same lineal tree whose root is in
the earth and whose branch extends up to the sky. Now who is there who would remain
unaffected by this relationship and distinction and refuse to acknowledge his greatness and
sublimity?
2. In the world, such persons are rarely found in whom besides one or two virtuous qualities
other qualities might also attain prominence, much less the convergence of all contradictory
qualities. Because every temperament is not suited for the development of every quality, each
quality has a peculiar tempo and each virtue needs a particular climate, and they are appropriate
only for such qualities or virtues with which they accord. But where there is contradiction instead
of harmony, the natural tendencies act as obstacles and do not allow any other quality to grow.
For example, generosity and bountifulness demand that a person should possess the feeling of
pity and God-fearing so that on seeing anyone in poverty or want, his heart would rend, and his
feelings would be disturbed at other’s tribulations. While the dictates of bravery and fighting
require that instead of pity and compassion there should be the passion of bloodshed and killing,
prompting the person at every moment to enter into scuffle, ready to kill or be killed. These two
qualities differ so widely that it is not possible to fuse the delicacies of generosity into the stiff
manifestations of bravery just as bravery cannot be expected from Hatim nor generosity from
Rustam. But the personality of Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) showed full accord with every greatness
and complete harmony with every accomplishment, and there was no good attribute or
accomplishment which he lacked, nor any robe of greatness or beauty which did not fit his body.
Thus the contradictory qualities of generosity and bravery were found in him side by side. If he
rained like the cloud in generosity, he also fought bravely standing firm as a mountain. Thus, his
generosity and liberty of nature was of a degree that even during days of want and starvation, a
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major portion of whatever he earned as the wage of his day’s toil was distributed among the poor
and the starving. He would never allow a beggar to return disappointed from his door, so much
so that even when in the battlefield the enemy asked him for his sword, he threw it before him
being confident of the prowess of his naked arm.
An Urdu couplet says the following:
The unbeliever depends on his sword but the believer fights even without it.
And his bravery and courage was such that the onslaught of armies could not shake the
firmness of his foot with theresult that he achieved success in every encounter and even the
bravest fighter could not save his life in an encounter with him. Thus, Ibn Qutaybah writes in alMa’arif, AWhomever he encountered was prostrated. the heartless nature of the brave is not
prone to thinking or pondering nor do they have anything to do with foresight or forecasting Ali
(A.S) had the quality of thinking of the highest degree. Thus,al-Shafi’i said as follows:
What can I say about a man in whom three qualities existed with three other qualities that
were never found together in any other man - generosity with want, bravery with sagacity and
knowledge with practical achievements.
It was theresult of this proper thinking and correct judgment that after the death of the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) when some people advised him to fight and promised to enlist
warriors for him he rejected this advice. Although on such occasions, even a slight support is
enough to encourage the heartless brave. Yet, the farsighted mind of Ali (A.S) saw at once that
if a battle was waged at that moment, the voice of Islam would be submerged under the clatter of
swords. Even then, if success was achieved it would be said that the position was gained by the
power of the sword, and there was no right for it. Thus, by withholding his sword on the one
hand he provided protection to Islam and on the other saved his own right from the imputation of
bloodshed.
When the veins are full of daring blood and the bosom full of flames of anger and wrath, it is
extremely difficult to curb the passion of vengeance by adopting the course of forgiveness, and,
despite authority and power, to pardon and overlook. But Ali’s metal used to shine on such
occasions when his forgiving nature would accommodate even his bloodthirsty foes. Thus, at the
end of the Battle of Jamal he made a general proclamation that no one who left the field or
sought out protection would be molested and he let go without any punishment, even such
enemies as Marwan ibn al-Hakam and AAbdullah ibn Zubayr. And the treatment that he meted
out to AA’isha AA’isha was a matchless manifestation of his nobility and high character and, in
spite of her open enmity and rebellion, he sent with her women in men’s garb to escort her to
Medina.
By giving his own personal malice the garb of fundamental differences, man not only
deceives others but also tries to keep himself under deception. In these conditions such a delicate
situation arises that man fails to distinguish and separate his personal malice from a fundamental
difference but easily mixes them together and considers that he has followed the Command of
Allah, and in this way he satisfies his passion for vengeance as well. But Amir al-Mu’minin’s
discerning eyes never got deceived nor did they willingly deceive themselves. Thus, on an
occasion after bringing down his opponent and placing himself on his bosom the vanquished
opponent then spat on his face. As a mortal man, the Imam’s rage should have risen and his hand
should have moved quicker. Instead of being enraged, he got off from the man’s bosom lest his
action would be tarnished by personal feeling, and slew him only after the anger had subsided.
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There is nothing in common between combat and encounter and seclusion and God-fearing
because one shows valor and courage while the other supplication and submission. But Amir alMu’minin was a unique combination of both of these qualities as his hands that were bound in
devotion were equally active in the battlefield, and side by side with relaxing in seclusion for
devotion he was a common visitor of the field of action. The scene of the Night of Harir puts
human wit in astonishment and wonder when closing his eyes to the bloody action around, he
spread his prayer cloth and engaged himself in prayer with full peace of mind and heart while
arrows were darting off sometimes over his head and sometimes from his right or left. But he
remained engaged in Allah’s remembrance without any fear or apprehension. Upon finishing, he
again cast his hand on the sword’s handle and the fierce battle that then followed is unparalleled
in history. The position was that on all sides there was such hue and cry and fleeing activity that
even voices falling on the ears could not be discerned. Of course, after every moment or so his
own call of Allahu Akbar rose in the atmosphere and resounded in the ears, and every such call
meant death of a foe. Those who counted these calls of takbir recorded their number as five
hundred and twenty-three.
The taste for learning and acquiring knowledge of Allah does not combine with material
activity but Amir al-Mu’minin adorned the meetings of learning and scholarship along with warlike pursuits, and he watered the field of Islam with springs of learning and truth along with
shedding streams of blood (in battles).
When there is perfection of learning, then even if there is not a complete absence of action,
there must no doubt exist shortness of action, but Amir al-Mu’minin treaded the field of
knowledge and action equally, as has been already shown inal-Shafi’i’s verse.
Examples of harmony in utterance and action are quite rare but Amir al-Mu’minin’s action
preceded his utterance, as he himself says the following:
AO people I do not exhort you to any action but that I myself first proceed towards it before
you and do not desist you from any matter but that I first desist from it myself.
As soon as we think of a recluse and a pious man we visualize a face full of frowns because
for piety, severity of temper and hardness of face are inseparable so much so that the thought of a
smile on the lips of a pious man is regarded as a sin. But despite extreme piety and self-denial,
Amir al-Mu’minin always had such an appearance that his light temper and brightness of face
was apparent from his looks and his lips always bore a playful smile. He never showed frowns
on his forehead like the dry recluse, so much so that when people could not find any defect in
him, this very lightness of his temper was taken to be his fault, while a hard temper and a bitter
face were held to be a virtues.
If a man possesses a cheerful heart and a joyous temper, he cannot command authority over
others; but Amir al-Mu’minin’s cheerful face was so full of awe and dignity that no eye could
face it. Once Mu’awiyah tauntingly said, AAllah bless Ali. He was a man of cheerful taste. Then
Qays ibn Sa’d retorted, ABy Allah, despite a cheerful disposition and an entertaining
countenance, he was more awe-inspiring than a hungry lion and this awe was due to his piety not
like your awe over the non-descripts of Syria.
Where there is rule and authority there is also a crowd of servants and workers, checks of
grandeur and eminence with equipment of pageantry, but Amir al-Mu’minin’s period of rule was
an example of the highest simplicity. In him, people saw only a tattered turban in place of a royal
crown, patched apparel in place of theregal robes and the floor of earth in place of the ruler’s
throne. He never liked grandeur and , p.antry nor allowed a show of external grandiosity. Once
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he was passing on a horseback when Harb ibn Shurahbil started walking with him and began
talking. Then Amir al-Mu’minin said to him, AGet back because walking on foot with me by one
like you is mischievous for the ruler (me) and an insult to the believer (you).
In short, he was such a versatile personality in whom numerous contradictory qualities had
joined together and all the good attributes were centered in their full brightness as though his self
was a collection of several selves and each self was an astounding portrait of achievement which
showed forth the delineation of distinction in its untainted form, and on whose accomplishment
one wonders with bewilderment.
A Persian couplet says the following:
The figure of my beloved is so beautiful that when I cast my glance on the body from head to
toe,
Every spot thereof calls my attention claiming to be the most enchanting.
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NAHJUL BALAGHA (Selected Sermons, Letters and Sayings) of
Amir al-Mu’minin Ali ibn Abu Talib
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SERMONS
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SERMON 1
In this sermon, he recalls the creation of the earth and sky and the birth of Adam:
Praise is due to Allah whose worth cannot be described by speakers, whose bounties cannot
be counted by calculators and whose claim (to obedience) cannot be satisfied by those who
attempt to do so, whom the height of intellectual courage cannot appreciate, and the depths of
understanding cannot reach; He, for whose description no limit has been laid down, no eulogy
exists, no time is ordained and no duration is fixed. He brought forth creation through His
Omnipotence, dispersed winds through His Compassion, and made firm the shaking earth with
rocks.
the foremost in religion is the acknowledgment of Him. The perfection of acknowledging
Him is to testify Him. The perfection of testifying Him is to believe in His Oneness. The
perfection of believing in His Oneness is to regard Him Pure. The perfection of His purity is to
deny Him attributes, because every attribute is a proof that it is different from that to which it is
attributed and everything to which something is attributed is different from the attribute. Thus,
whoever attaches attributes to Allah recognizes His like. Who recognizes His like regards Him as
two. Who regards Him as two recognizes parts for Him; and who recognizes parts for Him
mistakes Him; and who mistakes Him points at Him; and who points at Him admits limitations
for Him; and who admits limitations for Him numbers Him.
Whoever said in what is He, held that He is contained; and whoever said on what is He held
He is not on something else. He is a Being but not through phenomenon of coming into being.
He Exists but not of non-Existence. He is with everything but not in physical nearness. He is
different from everything but not in physical separation. He acts but without connotation of
movements and instruments. He sees even when there is none to be looked at from among His
creation. He is only One, such that there is none with whom He may keep company or whom He
may miss in his absence.
Creation of the Universe
He initiated creation and commenced it originally, without undergoing reflection, without
making use of any experiment, without innovating any movement, and without experiencing any
mental aspiration. He allotted all things their times, put together their variations, gave them their
properties and determined their features. He knew them before creating them, fully realizing
their limits and confines and appreciated their propensities and intricacies.
When the Almighty created the openings of the atmosphere, expanse of firmament and strata
of winds, He allowed water, whose waves were stormy and whose surges leapt one over the
other, to flow onto it. He loaded dashing winds and breaking typhoons, ordered them to shed it
back (as rain), gave the wind control over the vigor of the rain, and acquainted it with its
limitations. The wind blew under it while water flowed furiously over it.
Then, the Almighty created forth wind and made its movement sterile, perpetuated its
position, intensified its motion and spread it far and wide. Then He ordered the wind to raise
deep waters and to intensify the waves of the oceans. So the wind churned the water like the
churning of curd and pushed it fiercely into the firmament, throwing its front position on therear
while the stationary position flowed till its level was raised and the surface was full of foam.
Then Almighty raised the foam to the open wind and vast firmament and made therefrom
Theseven skies. He made the lower one as a stationary surge and the upper one as protective
ceiling and high edifice without any pole to support it or nail to hold it together. Then He
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decorated them with stars and the light of meteors and hung in it the shining sun and effulgent
moon under therevolving sky, moving the ceiling and rotating firmament.
Creation of the Angels
Then He created the openings between the high skies and filled them with all classes of His
angels. Some of them are in prostration and do not rise. Others are in kneeling positions and do
not stand u, p. Some of them are in array and do not leave their position. Others are extolling
Allah and do not get tired. The sleep of the eye or the slip of wit or languor of the body or effect
of forgetfulness does not effect them.
Among them are those who work as trusted bearers of His message, those who serve,
speaking tongues for His prophets and those who carry His orders and injunctions. Among them
are the protectors of His creatures and guards of the doors of the gardens of Paradise. Among
them are those whose steps are fixed on earth but their necks protrude into the skies. Their limbs
are out on all sides, their shoulders are in accord with the columns of the Divine Throne, their
eyes are cast down before it, they have spread their wings down under it and they have rendered
between themselves and all else curtains of honor and screens of power. They do not think of
their Creator through image, do not impute created attributes to Him, do not confine Him within
abodes and do not point at Him through illustrations.
Creation of Adam
Allah collected clay from hard, soft, sweet and sour earth, which He moistened with water till
it became pure and kneaded it with moisture till it became gluey. From it He carved an image
with curves, joints, limbs and segments. He solidified it till it dried up for a fixed time and a
known duration. Then He blew into it out of His Spirit whereupon it took the pattern of a human
being with a mind that governed him, intelligence which he made use of, limbs that served him,
organs that changed his position, sagacity that differentiated between truth and untruth, tastes
and smells, colors and species. He was a mixture of clays of different colors, cohesive materials,
divergent contradictories and differing properties like heat, cold, softness and hardness.
Then Allah asked the angels to fulfill His promise with them and to accomplish the pledge of
His injunction to them by acknowledging Him through prostration to Him and submission to His
honored position. So Allah said: AProstrate to Adam, so they prostrated except Iblis (Satan).
(Holy Qur’an, 2:34; 7:11; 17:61; 18:50; 20:116). Self-importance withheld him and vice
overcame him. So that he took pride in his own creation with fire and treated the creation of clay
contemptuously. So Allah allowed him time in order to let him fully deserve His wrath, and to
complete (man’s) test and to fulfill the promise (He had made to Satan). Thus, He said: AVerily
you have been allowed time till the known Day(Holy Qur’an, 15:38, 38:81).
Thereafter, Allah placed Adam () in a house where He made his life and his stay safe, and
He cautioned him of Iblis and his enmity. Then his enemy (Iblis) envied Adam’s abiding in
Paradise and his contacts with the virtuous. So he changed his conviction into wavering and
determination into weakness. He thus converted his happiness into fear and his prestige into
shame. Then Allah offered to Adam () the chance to repent, taught him words of His Mercy,
promised him return to His Paradise and sent him down to the place of trial and procreation of
Progeny.
Allah Chooses His Prophets
From Adam’s progeny, Allah chose prophets and took their pledge for His revelation and for
carrying His message as their trust. Throughout the course of time many people perverted
Allah’s trust with them and ignored His position and took associates along with Him. Satan
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turned them away from knowing Allah and kept them aloof from His worship. Then Allah sent
His Messengers and a series of His prophets toward people to get them to fulfill the pledges of
His creation, to recall His bounties to them, to exhort them by preaching, to unveil before them
the hidden virtues of wisdom and to show them the signs of His Omnipotence. Of these signs He
showed the sky which is raised over them, the earth that is placed beneath them, a means of
livelihood to sustain, death that makes them die, ailments that turn them old and incidents that
successively betake them.
Allah never allowed His creation to remain without a Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
deputed by Him, or a book sent down from Him or a binding argument or a standing plea. These
Messengers were such that they did not feel little because of smallness of their number or the
largeness of the number of their falsifiers. Among them was either a predecessor who would
name the one to follow or the follower who had been introduced by the predecessor.
The Prophet) hood of Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household)
In this way, ages passed by and times rolled on. Fathers passed away while sons took their
places till Allah deputed Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) as His Prophet, in
fulfilllment of His promise and in completion of His Prophethood. Muhammed’s pledge had
been taken from the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) s, his traits of character were well
reputed and his birth was honorable. The people of the earth at this time were divided in different
parties, their aims were separate and ways were diverse. They either loved Allah and His
creation or twisted His Names or turned to those other than Him. Through Muhammed (P.B.U.H.
and His Holy Household), Allah guided them out of wrong and with his efforts took them out of
ignorance.
Then Allah chose Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) to meet Him, selected him
for His own nearness, regarded him too dignified to remain in this world and decided to remove
him from this place of trial. So He drew him towards Himself with honor. Allah may shower His
blessing on him and his progeny.
The Holy Qur’an and the Sunna
But the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) left among you the same that other Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) s left among their people, as Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) s do not leave their people intentionally (in the dark) without a clear path and a
standing ensign. He left the Book of your Creator clarifying its permission and prohibitions, its
obligations and discretion, its repealing injunctions and therepealed ones, its permissible matters
and compulsory ones, its particulars and the general ones, its lessons and illustrations, its long
and the short ones, its clear and obscure ones, detailing its abbreviations and clarifying its
obscurities.
In it there are some verses whose knowledge1 is obligatory and others whose ignorance by the
people is permissible. It also contains what appears to be obligatory according to the Book2 but
its repeal is signified by the Prophet’s action (Sunna) or that which appears compulsory
according to the Prophet’s action but the Book allows not following it. Or there are those which
are obligatory in a given time but not so after that time. Its prohibitions also differ. Some are
major ones for which there exists the threat of fire (Hell), and others are minor ones for which
there are prospects of forgiveness. There are also those of which a small portion is also
acceptable (to Allah) but they are capable of being expanded.
In this very sermon, he spoke about Hajj
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Allah has made obligatory upon you the pilgrimage (hajj) to His sacred House which is the
turning point for the people who go to it as beasts or pigeons go towards spring water. Allah the
glorified made it a sign of their supplication before His Greatness and their acknowledgment of
His Dignity. He selected from among His creation those, who on listening to His call, responded
to it and testified to His word. They stood in the position of His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) s and resembled His angels who surround the Divine Throne securing all the
benefits of performing His worship and hastening towards His promised forgiveness. Allah the
glorified made it (His sacred House) an emblem for Islam and an object of respect for those who
turn to it. He made obligatory its pilgrimage and laid down its claim for which He held you
responsible to discharge it. Thus, Allah the glorified said:
.Allah (purely) for Allah, is incumbent upon mankind, the
pilgrimage to the House, for those who can afford to journey thither.
And whoever denieth then verily, Allah is Self-sufficiently independent of the Worlds (Holy
Qur’an, 3:96).
______________________
1. AThe foremost in religion (din) is His knowledge. the literal meaning of din is obedience,
and its popular sense is a code. Whether the literal sense is taken or the popular one, in either
case, if the mind is devoid of any conception of Divinity, there would be no question of
obedience, nor of following any code; because when there is no aim there is no point in
advancing towards it. Where there is no object in view there is no sense in making efforts to
achieve it. Nevertheless, when the nature and guiding faculty of man bring him in contact with a
superior Authority and his taste for obedience and impulse of submission subjugates him before
a Deity, he finds himself bound by certain limitations as against abject freedom of activity. These
very limitations are din (Religion) whose point of commencement is knowledge of Allah and
acknowledgment of His Being.
After pointing out the essentials of the Divine knowledge Amir, al-Mu’minin has described its
important constituents and conditions. He holds those stages of such knowledge which people
generally regard as the point of highest approach to be insufficient. He says that its first stage is
that with the natural sense of search for the unknown and the guidance of conscience or on
hearing from the followers of religions an image of the Unseen Being known as Allah is formed
in the mind. This image, in fact, is the forerunner of the obligation to thinking and reflection and
to seeking His knowledge. But those who love idleness, or are under pressure of environment, do
not undertake this search despite the creation of such an image and the image fails to get
testified. In this case they remain deprived of the Divine knowledge. Since access to the stage of
testifying after the formation of image is by volition, they deserve to be questioned about it. But
one who is moved by the power of this image goes further and considers thinking and reflection
necessary. In this way one reaches the next stage in the attainment of the Divine knowledge,
namely to search for the Creator through diversification of the creation and species of creatures.
This is because every picture is a solid and inflexible guide to the existence of its painter and
every effect to the action of its cause. When he casts his glance around himself he does not find a
single thing which might have come into existence without the act of a maker so much so that he
does not find the sign of a footstep without a walker nor a construction without a builder. How
can he comprehend that this blue sky with the sun and the moon in its expanse and the earth with
the exuberance of its grass and flowers could have come into existence without the action of a
Creator? Therefore, after observing all that exists in the world and theregulated system of the
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entire creation no one can help but conclude that there is a Creator for this world of diversities
because existence cannot come out of non-existence, nor can existence sprout forth from
nothingness.
The Holy Qur’an has pointed to this reasoning thus: A.What?! about Allah is there any doubt,
the Originator of the heavens and the earth?. (14:10)
But this stage would also be insufficient if this testimony in favor of Allah is tarnished by
belief in the divinity of some other deity.
The third stage is that His existence should be acknowledged along with belief in Unity and
Oneness. Without this the testimony to Allah’s existence cannot be complete because if more
gods are believed in, He would not be One. Whereas it is necessary that He should be One. The
reason is that in case of more than one god the question would arise whether one of them created
all this creation or all of them together. If one of them created it there should be some difference
to distinguish him, otherwise, he would be accorded preferential position without reason, which
is unacceptable to the mind. If all have created it collectively then the position has only two
forms; either he cannot perform his functions without the assistance of others or he is above the
need for their assistance. The first case means he is incapable and in need of others while the
other case means that there are several regular performers of a single act and the fallacy of both
has already been shown. If we assume that all the gods performed the act of creation by dividing
it among themselves, all the creation would not bear the same relationship towards the creator.
This is because each creature will bear relationship only to its own creator whereas every
creature should have one and the same relationship to all creators. This is because all the creation
should have one and the same relationship to all the creators as all the created in their capacity to
accept effect and all the creators in their capacity to produce effect should be similar. In short
there is no way but to acknowledge Him as One because to believe in numerous creators allows
no possibility of the existence of any other thing, and destruction proves implicit for the earth,
the sky and everything in creation. Allah the glorified has expressed his argument in the
following words:
Had there been in the heavens and the earth [other]) gods except Allah, they both (the
heavens and the earth would have been) in disorder. (Holy Qur’an, 21:22).
The fourth stage is that Allah should be regarded free of all defects and deficiencies, devoid of
body, form, illustration, similarity, position of place or time, motion, stillness, incapability and
ignorance. This is because there can be no deficiency or defect in the perfect Being nor can
anyone be deemed like Him because all these attributes bring down a being from the high
position of the Creator to the low position of the created. That is why along with Unity, Allah has
held purity from deficiency of equal importance.
Say: He (Allah) is One (alone). Allah, the needless. He begets not, nor is He begotten. And
there is none like unto Him. (Holy Qur’an, 112:1-4).
Vision perceives Him not, and He perceives (all) vision; He is the Subtle, the All-aware.
(Holy Qur’an, 6:104).
So coin ye not any similitudes to Allah; verily Allah knows (everything) and ye know not.
(Holy Qur’an, 16:74).
.Nothing whatsoever (is there) like the like of Him; and He (alone) is the All-Hearing and the
All-Seeing.(Holy Qur’an, 42:11)
The fifth stage of completing His Knowledge is that attributes should not be put on Him from
outside lest there be duality in His Oneness. Deviating from its proper connotation, Unity may
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fall into the labyrinth of one-in-three and three-in-one, because His Being is not a combination of
essence and form so that attributes may cling to Him like the smell of the flowers or brightness in
the stars. Rather, He is the fountainhead of all attributes and needs no medium for manifestation
of His perfect Attributes. If He is named Omniscient it is because the signs of his knowledge are
manifest. If He is called Omnipotent it is because every particle points to His Omnipotence and
Activity. If the power to listen or to see is attributed to him, it is because the cohesion of the
entire creation and its administration cannot be done without hearing or seeing. But the existence
of these attributes in Him cannot be held in the same way as in the creation. He should be
capable to know only after He acquires knowledge or He should be powerful and strong only
after energy runs into His limbs because taking attributes as separate from His Being would
connote duality and where there is duality unity disappears. That is how Amir al-Mu’minin has
rejected the idea of attributes being in addition to His Being, presented Unity in its true
significance, and did not allow Unity to be tainted with stains of multiplicity. This does not mean
that adjectives cannot at all be attributed to Him. This would be giving support to those who are
groping in the dark abyss of negativism, although every nook and corner in the entire Existence
is brimming with His attributes and every particle of creation stands witness that He has
knowledge, He is powerful, He hears and He sees. He nurtures under His care and allows growth
under His mercy. The intention is that for Him, nothing can be suggested to serve as an adjunct
to Him, because His Self includes attributes and His attributes connote His Self. Let us learn this
very theme in the words of Imam Abu AAbdillah Ja’far ibn Muhammed as-Sadiq () comparing
it with the belief in Unity adopted by other religions and then appreciate who is the exponent of
the true concept of Unity.
The Imam says the following:
Our Lord, the Glorified, the Magnificent One, has knowledge of Himself even though there
was nothing to know, sight of Himself even though there is nothing to behold, hearing of
Himself even though there is nothing to hear, and Potency of Himself even though there is
nothing under His Potency. When He created the things and the object of knowledge came into
existence, His knowledge became related to the known, hearing related to the heard, sight related
to Theseen, and potency related to its object. (at-Tawhid by ash-Sheikh as-Saduq, p.139)
This is the belief over which the Imams of the Prophet’s family are unanimous, but the
majority group has adopted a different course by creating the idea of differentiation between His
Self and Attributes. ash-Shahristani says on , p. 42 of his book Kitab al-Milal wal-Nihal:
According to Abul-Hasan al-Ash’ari Allah knows through (the attribute of) knowledge, is
Powerful through activity, speaks through speech, hears through hearing and sees through sight.
If we regard attributes distinct from Self in this manner there would be two alternatives; either
the attributes must have existed in Him or they must have occurred later. In the first case we
have to recognize as many eternal objects as the attributes which all will share with Him in being
eternal, but AAllah is above that which people deem Him to have equals. In The second case, in
addition to subjecting Him to the alternations, it would also mean that before the acquiring of the
attributes He was neither scient, nor powerful, nor hearer nor beholder and this runs counter to
the basic tenet of Islam.
.Allah has decreed trade lawful and has forbidden interest. (Holy Qur’an, 2:275)
And when you have finished the prayer remember Allah standing, and sitting, and reacting,
and when ye are secure (from danger) establish prayer. (Holy Qur’an, 4:103).
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O ye men! Eat of what is in the earth lawful and good and follow not the foot-steps of Satan;
for verily he is an open enemy unto you. (Holy Qur’an, 2:168).
(And) say thou: I am only a man like you, it is revealed unto me that your god is but one
Allah, therefore whosoever desireth to meet his Master, let him do good deeds, and associate
none in the worship of his Master. (Holy Qur’an, 18:110).
What?! Enjoin ye upon the people righteousness and ye forget your own selves? Yet ye read
the scripture? What?! Do ye not understand? (Holy Qur’an, 2:44)
2. About the Holy Qur’an Amir al-Mu’minin says that it contains description of the permitted
and forbidden acts such as AAllah has allowed sale and purchase but prohibited usury.
It clarifies obligatory and optional acts such as Awhen you have finished the prayer,
remember Allah rising, sitting or lying and when you feel safe (from the enemy) then say the
prayers (as usual). (4:104)
Here prayer is obligatory while other forms of remembering (Allah) are optional. It has
repealing and repealed verses such as about the period of seclusion after the husband’s death
Afour months and ten days or therepealed one such as Atill one year without going out which
shows that this period of seclusion should be one year. In particular places it permits the
forbidden such as Awhoever is compelled without being willfully wrongful or a transgressor,
commits no sins.
It has positive injunctions such AOne should not add anyone with Allah in worship. It has
particular and general injunctions. Particular is the one where the word shows generality but
Thesense is limited such as AI have made you superior over worlds. O Banu Isra’il.
Here, the meaning of Aworlds is confined to that particular time, although the word is general
in its literal meaning. The general injunction is one which is extensive in meaning such as
AAllah has knowledge of everything. It has lessons and illustrations such as AAllah caught him
in the punishment of this world and the next and there is a lesson in it.
ASo Allah seized him, with the chastisement in the hereafter, and the life before (it) (Holy
Qur’an. 79:25)
AVerily in this there is a lesson unto him who feareth (Allah). (Holy Qur’an, 79:26)
AA kind word and pardon is better than charity that is followed by injury, and verily Allah is
Self-sufficient, the Most forbearing. (Holy Qur’an, 2:263)
AAnd remember when We made a covenant with you and
raised the ATur’ (the Mountain) above you (saying), AHold ye fastto that which We have
bestowed upon you with the strength (of determination) and remember that which is therein so
that you may guard (yourself) against evil. (Holy Qur’an, 2:63)
ASo we made it a lesson for (those of) their own times and for those (of their posterity) who
came after them and an exhortation unto those who guard (themselves) against evil. (Holy
Qur’an, 2:66)
AHe it is Who fashioneth you in the wombs (of your mothers) as He liketh; There is no god
but He, the All-mighty, the All-wise. (Holy Qur’an, 3:5)
AObedience and a fair word; but when the affair is determined, then if they are true to Allah,
it would certainly be better for them. (Holy Qur’an, 47:21)
AO those who believe! It is not lawful for you to inherit women against their will; and do not
straiten them in order that ye may take a part of what ye have given, unless they are guilty of
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manifest lewdness; but deal kindly with them, and if ye hate them, it may be that ye hate a thing
while Allah has placed in it abundant good. (Holy Qur’an, 4:19)
ASay thou (unto the people of the Book), ADispute ye with us about Allah; whereas He is our
Master and your Master, and for us are our deeds and for you are your deeds; to Him (Alone)
we are (exclusively) loyal? (Holy Qur’an, 2:139)
AThere is a lesson in it for him who fears Allah, and illustrations such as AThe example of
those who spend their wealth in the way of Allah is like a grain which grows seven ears each one
of which bears hundred grains. It has unspecific and specific verses. Unspecific is one which has
no limitation on specification such as ARecall when Moses told his people AAllah commands
you to sacrifice a cow. A
Specific is one where denotation is limited as Allah says that Athe cow should be such that it
has neither been used for ploughing nor for irrigation fields. There is clarity and obscurity in it.
The clarity is that which has no intricacy such as AVerily Allah has sway over everything, while
the obscurity is whose meaning has complication such as Athe Merciful (Allah) occupies the
throne, whose apparent meaning gives the impressions as if Allah is bodily sitting on the Throne
although the intention is to press His authority and control. In it there are brief injunctions such
as Aestablish prayer and those of deep meanings such as the verses about which says the
following:
AThat the sense if not known except to Allah and those immersed in knowledge. Then Amir alMu’minin dilates upon this theme in a different style says that there are some things in it which
are necessary to know, such as ASo know that there is no god but Allah and there are others
which are not necessary to know such as Aaleef laam meem etc. It has also injunctions which
have been repealed by the Prophet’s actions such as AAs for your women who commit adultery
get four male witnesses and if four witnesses do appear shut such women in the house till death
ends their life. This punishment was current in early Islam but was later replaced by stoning in
the case of married women. In it there are some injunctions which repealed the Prophet’s
actions such as ATurn your face towards Masjid al-harm by which the injunction for facing Bayt
al-Maqdis was repealed. It also contains injunctions which are obligatory only at a particular
time was repealed. It also contains injunctions which are obligatory only at a particular time
after which their obligation ends, such as Awhen the call for prayer is made on Friday then
hasten towards remembrance of Allah. It has also indicated grades of prohibitions as the
division of sins into light and serious onesClight such as ATel the believers to lower their eye
and serious ones such as Awhoever kills a believer willfully his award is to remain in Hell for
ever. It also contains injunctions where a little performance is enough but there is scope for
further performance such as ARead the Holy Qur’an as much as you easily can.
Verily your Master, certainly is He the All-mighty, the All-merciful. (Holy Qur’an, 26:9)
Say thou (O Our Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy
Household) ) unto the believer men that they cast down their gaze and guard their private parts;
that is purer for them; verily Allah is All-aware of what (all) ye do. (Holy Qur’an, 24:30)
Not equal are those of the believers who sit (holding back) other than those hurt, and those
who strive in the way of Allah with their wealth and their selves (lives). Allah has raised the
strivers with their wealth and selves (lives), in rank above those sitting (holding back) ; Unto all
(in faith) Allah has promised good: but those who strive, He has distinguished above those who
sit (holding [by]) a great recompense. (Holy Qur’an, 4:95)
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Verily, thy Master knowest that thou standest up (in the Night Prayer) night two-third of the
night, and (sometimes) half of it, and (sometimes) a third of it, and a group of those with thee;
and Allah measureth (well) the night and the day; Knoweth He that never can ye take (correct)
account of it, so turneth He unto you (mercifully), so recite ye whatever be easy (in the prayers)
to be read of the Holy Qur’an; Knoweth He that there may be among you sick, and others
traveling in the earth seeking of the grace of Allah, and others fighting in the way of Allah, so
recite ye as much as it can easily be done of it, and establish ye the (regular) prayers, and pay ye
the (prescribed) poor-rate, and offer ye unto Allah a goodly loan; and whatsoever of good ye
send on before hand for yourselves, ye will (surely) find it with Allah, that is the best and the
greatest recompense; and seek ye the forgiveness of Allah; Verily, Allah if Oft-forgiving, the
Most Merciful. (Holy Qur’an, 73:20)
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SERMON 2
Delivered on return from Siffin before proclamation of Prophethood
I praise Allah seeking completion of His Blessing, submitting to His Glory and expecting
safety from committing His sins. I invoke His help being in need of His Sufficiency (of
protection). He whom He guides does not get astray. He with whom He is hostile gets no
protection. He whom He supports does not remain needy. Praise is most weighty of all that is
weighed and the most valuable of all that is treasured.
I stand witness that there is no god but Allah the One. He has no like. My testimony has been
tested in its frankness and its essence shall store it facing the tribulations that overtake us because
it is the foundation stone of Belief (iman) and the first step toward good actions and the Divine
pleasure. It is the means to keep Satan away.
I also stand witness that Muhammed is the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Allah sent
him with the illustrious religion, effective emblem, written Book,1 effulgent light, sparkling
gleam and decisive in junctions in order to dispel doubts, present clear proofs, administer
warning through signs and to warn of punishments. At that time people had fallen in vices
whereby the rope of religion had been broken, the pillars of belief had been shaken, principles
had been desecrated, system had become topsy turvy, openings were narrow, passage was dark,
guidance was unknown and darkness prevailed.
Allah was being disobeyed, Satan was given support and Belief had been forsaken. As a result
the pillars of religion fell down, its traces could not be discerned, its passages had been destroyed
and its streets had fallen into decay. People obeyed Satan and tread his paths. They sought water
from his watering places. Through them Satan’s emblems flew and his standard was raised in
vices which trampled the people under their hoofs and treaded upon them with their feet. The
vices stood on their toes (in full stature) and the people immersed in them were strayed,
perplexed, ignorant and seduced as though in a good house2 with bad neighbors. Instead of sleep
they had wakefulness and for antinomy they had tears in the eyes. They were a land where the
learned were in bridle (keeping their mouths shut) while the ignorant were honored.
In the same sermon, Amir al-Mu’minin referred to Ahl al-Bayt () (the Household of the
Holy Prophet ()) as follows:
They are the trustees of His secrets, shelter for His affairs, source of knowledge about Him,
center of His wisdom, valleys for His books and mountains of His religion. With them alah
straightened the bend of religion’s back and removed the trembling of its limbs.
In the same sermon, he spoke about the hypocrites thus:
They sowed vices, watered them with deception and harvested destruction. Non in the Islamic
community can be taken at par with the Progeny3 of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
(Ale Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) ). One who was under their obligation
cannot be matched with them. They are the foundation of religion and the pillar of belief. The
forward runner has to turn back to them while the follower has to overtake them. They possess
the chief characteristics for vicegerency. In their favor exists the will and succession (of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ). This is the time when right has returned to its owner
and diverted to its center of return.
_________________________
1. The Preserved Record.
2. Good House means AMecca’ while the bad neighbors mean the Aunbelievers of Quraish.
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3. About the Progeny of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) Amir al-Mu’minin has
said htat no person in the world can be brought at par with them, nor can anyone be deemed their
equal in sublimity, because the world is over laden with their obligations and has been able to
secure eternal blessings only through their guidance. They are the corner stone and foundation of
religion and the sustenance for its life and survival. They are such strong pillars of knowledge
and belief that they can turn away the stormy flow of doubt and suspicion. They are such middle
course among the paths of excess and backwardness that if some one goes far toward excess and
exaggeration or falls behind then unless he comes back or steps forward to that middle course, he
cannot be on the path of Islam. They possess all the characteristics which give the superiority in
the right for vicegerency and leadership. Consequently, no one else in the umma enjoys the right
of patronage and guardianship. That is why the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) declared
them his vicegerents and successors. About will and succession the commentator ibn AbulHadid, the Mu’tazilite scholar, writes that there can be no doubt about the vicegerency of Amir
al-Mu’minin but succession cannot imply succession in position although the Shi’ite sect has so
interpreted it. It rather implies succession of learning. Now, if according to him succession is
taken to imply succession in learning even he does no seem to succeed in achieving his object,
because even by this interpretation the right of succeeding the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) does not devolve on any other person. When ist is agreed that learning is the most
essential requirement of khalifah (caliphate) because the most important of functions of the
Prophet’s Caliph consist of dispensation of justice, solving problems of religious laws, clarifying
intricacies and administration of religious penalties. If these functions are taken away from the
prophet’s deputy, his position will come down to that of a worldly ruler. He cannot be regarded
as the pivot of religious authority. Therefore, either we should keep governmental authority
separate from Prophet’s vicegerency or accept the successor of the Prophet’s knowledge to suit
that position.
The interpretation of ibn Abul-Hadid could be acceptable if Amir al-Mu’minin had uttered
this sentence alone, but observing that it was uttered soon after Ali’s () recognition as Caliph
and just after it the sentence ARight has returned to its owner exists, this interpretation of his
seems baseless. Rather, the Prophet’s will cannot imply any other will except that for
vicegerency and caliphate and succession would imply not succession in property nor in
knowledge because this was not an occasion to mention it here. But, it must mean the succession
in the right leadership which stood proved as from Allah not only on the ground of kinship, but
on the ground of qualities of perfection.
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SERMON 3
Known as the ash-Shaqshaqiyya1 sermon
Beware! By Allah, the son of Abu Quhafah (Abu Bakr) 2 dressed himself with it (the
caliphate) and he certainly knew that my position in relation to it was the same as the position of
the axis in relation to the hand-mill. The flood water flows down from me and the bird cannot fly
up to me. I put a curtain against he caliphate and kept myself detached from it.
Then I began to think whether I should assault or endure calmly the blinding darkness of
tribulations wherein the grown up are feeble and the young grow old and the true believer acts
under strain till he meets Allah (on this death). I found that endurance thereon was wiser. So I
adopted patience although there was pricking in the eye and suffocation (of mortification) in the
throats. I watched the plundering of my inheritance till the first one went his way but handed
over the Caliphate to ibn al-Khattab after himself.
(Then he quoted a verse by al-A’sha). My days are now passed on the camel’s back (in difficulty) while there were days (of ease) when I enjoyed the company of Ja bir’s
brother Hayyan.3
It is strange that during his lifetime he wished to be released from the caliphate but he
confirmed it for the other one after his death. No doubt these two shared its udders strictly among
themselves. This one put the caliphate in a tough enclosure where the utterance was haughty and
the touch was rough. Mistakes were in plenty and also the excuses therefore. One in contact with
it was like the rider of an unruly camel. If he pulled up its rein the very nostril would be slit, but
if he let it loose he w9ould be thrown. Consequently, by Allah, people got involved in
recklessness, wickedness, unsteadiness and deviation.
Nevertheless, I remained patient despite a length of period and stiffness of trial, until when he
went his way (of death) he put the matter (of Caliphate) in a group4 and regarded me to be one of
them. But good Heavens! What had I to do with his Aconsultation? Where was any doubt about
me with regard to the first of them that I was now considered akin to these ones? But I remained
low when they were low and flew high when they flew high. One of them turned against me
because of his hatred and the other got inclined the other way due to his in-law relationship and
this thing and that thing, till the third man of these people stood up with heaving breasts between
his dung and fodder. With him his children of the grand-father (Umayyah) also stood up,
swallowing up Allah’s wealth5 like a camel devouring the foliage of spring, till his rope broke
down, his actions finished him and his gluttony brought him down prostrate.
At that moment, nothing took me by surprise, but the crowd of people rushing to me. It
advanced toward me form every side like the mane of the hyena so much so that Hasan and
Husain were getting crushed and both the ends of my shoulder garment were torn. They collected
around me like the herd of sheep and goats. When I took up thereins of government, one party
broke away and another turned disobedient while therest began acting wrongfully as if they had
not heard the word of Allah saying:
That abode in the hereafter, We assign if for those who intend not to exult themselves in the
earth, nor (to make) mischief (therein) ; and the end is (best) fo the pious ones. (Holy Qur’an
28:83)
Yes, by Allah, they had heard it and understood it but the world appeared glittering in their
eyes and its embellishments seduced them. Behold, by Him who split the grain (to grow) and
created living beings, if people had not come to me and supporters had not exhausted the
argument and if there had been no pledge of Allah with the learned to the effect that they should
no acquiesce in the gluttony of the oppressor and the hunger of the oppressed, I would have cast
the rope of Caliphate on its own shoulders and would have given the lst one the same treatment
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as to the first one. Then you would have seen that in my view this world of yours is not better
than the sneezing of a goat.
(It is said that when Amir al-Mu’minin reached here in his sermon, a man of Iraq stood up and
handed him a writing. Amir al-Mu’minin began looking at it, where ibn AAbbas said, AO Amir
al-Mu’minin, I wish you resumed your sermon from where you broke it. Thereupon he replied,
AO ibn AAbbas, it was like the foam of a camel which gushed out but subsided. ibn AAbbas says
that he never grieved over any utterance as he did over this one because Amir al-Mu’minin could
not finish it as he wished to.)
Ash-Sharif ar-Radhi says the following: the words in this sermon Alike the rider of a camel
mean to convey that when a camel rider is stiff in drawing up therein then in this scuffle the
nostril gets bruised, but if he lets it loose in spite of the camel’s unruliness, it would thrown him
somewhere and would get out of control. AAshnaqshaqah is used when the rider hold up therein
and raises the camel’s head upwards. In the same sense the word Ashanaqa an-naqah is use. Ibn
as-Sikkit has mentioned this in Islah al-Mantiq. Amir al-Mu’minin has said Aashnaqa laha
instead of Aaslasa laha and harmony could be retained only by using both in the same form.
Thus, Amir al-Mu’minin has used Aashanaq laha as though in place of Ain rafa’a laha ra saha,
that is, Aif he stops it by holding up thereins.
1. This sermon is known as Thesermon as ash-Shaqshaqiyya and is counted among the most
famous sermons of Amir’ al-Mu’minin. It was delivered at ar-Rahbah. Although some people
have denied it to be Amir al-Mu’minin’s utterance, and, by attributing it to Sayyid ar-Radhi (or
ash-Sharif ar-Radhi), have laid blame on the integrity of his acknowledge, yet truth-loving
scholars have denied its veracity. Nor can there be any ground for this denial because Ali’s ()
difference of view in the matter of Caliphate is not a secret matter, so that such hints should be
regarded as something alien. And, the events which have been alluded to in this sermon are
preserved in the annals of history which testify to them word by word and sentence by sentence.
If the same events, which are related by history, are recounted by Amir al-Mu’minin, then what
is the ground for denying them? If the memory of discouraging circumstance faced by him soon
after the death of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) appeared unpalatable to him, it
should not be surprising. No doubt, this sermon hits at the prestige of certain personalities and
gives a set back to the faith and belief in them, but this cannot be sustained by denying
Thesermon to be Amir al-Mu’minin’s utterance, unless the true events are analyzed and truth
unveiled. Otherwise, just denying it to be Amir al-Mu’minin’s utterance because it contains
disparagement of certain individuals carries no weight, when other historians have related similar
criticism as well. Thus (Abu Othman) AAmr ibn Bahr al-Jahiz has recorded the following words
of a sermon of Amir al-Mu’minin and thy are not less weighty than the criticism in the ASermon
of ash-Shaqshaqiyya.
Those two passed away and the third one rose like the crow whose courage is confined to the
belly. It would have been better if both his wings had been cut and his head severed.
Consequently, the idea that it is the production of Sayyid ar-Radhi is far from the truth and a
result of partisanship and partiality. Or else if it is theresult of some research, it should be bought
out. Otherwise, remaining in such wishful illusion does not alter the truth, nor can the force of
decisive arguments be curbed down by mere disagreement and displeasure.
Now, we set forth the evidence of those scholars and traditionists who have clearly held it to
be Amir al-Mu’minin’s production, so that its historical importance should become known.
Among these scholars, some are those before Sayyid ar-Radhi’s period, some are his
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contemporaries and some are those who came after him but they all related it through their own
chain of authority.
1) Ibn Abil-Hadid al-Mu’tazili writes that his master, Abul-Khayr Masaddiq ibn Shabib alSasiti (d. 605 A.H) states that he heard this wermon from ash-Sheikh Abu Muhammed
AAbdullah ibn Amad al-Baghdadi (d. 567 A.H.), known as Ibn al-Khashshab, and when he
reached where Ibn AAbbas expressed sorrow for this sermon having remained incomplete, Ibn
al-Khashshab said to him that if he had heard the expression of sorrow from ibn AAbbas, he
would have certainly asked him if there had remained with his cousin any further unsatisfied
desire because excepting the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , he had already spared
neither the predecessors nor followers and had uttered all that he wished to utter. Therefore, why
should there by any sorrow that he could not say what he wished? Musaddiq says that ibn alKhashshab was a man of folly heart and decent taste. I inquired form him whether he also
regarded Thesermon to be a fabrication when he replied, ABy Allah, I believe it to be Amir alMu’minin’s word as I believe you to Musaddiq ibn Shabib. I said that some people regard it to
be Sayyid ar-Radhi’s production when he replied, AWho can ar-Radhi have such guts or such
style of writing. I have seen Sayyid ar-Radhi’s writings and know his style of composition.
Nowhere does his writing match with this one and I have already seen it in books written two
hundred years before the birth of Sayyid ar-Radhi, and I have seen it in familiar writings about
which I know by which scholars or men of letters they were compiled. At that time not only arRadhi, but even his father Abu Ahmed an-Naqib had not been born.
2) Thereafter ibn Abil-Hadid writes that he saw this sermon in the compilations of his master
abu-l-Qasim (AAbdullah ibn Ahmed) al-Balkhi (d. 317 A.H). He was the Imam of the
Mu’tazilites in thereign of al-Muqtadir-Billah while al-Muqtadir’s period was far earlier than the
birth of Sayyid ar-Radhi.
3) He further writes that he saw this sermon in Abu Ja’fer (Muhammed ibn Aabd ar-Rahman),
Ibn Qibah’s book Al-Insaf. He was the pupil of Abul-Qasim al-Balkhi and a theologian of the
Imamiyya (Shi’ite) sect. Sharh of Ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 1, pp. 205-206.
4) Ibn Maytham al-Bahrani (d. 679 A.H.) writes in his commentary that he had seen one such
copy of this sermon which bore the writing of al-Muqtadir Billah’s minister Abul BHasan Ali ibn
Muhammed ibn al-Furat (d. 312 A.H.). Sharh al-Balagha, Vol. 1l, pp. 252-253
5) Al-Aallama Muhammed Baqir al-Majlisi has related the following chain of authority about
this sermon from Sheikh Qutbud-Din ar-Rawandi’s compilation of Minhaj al-Bard’ah fi Sharh
Nahjul-Balagha:
6) In the context, Aallama al-Majlisi has written that his sermon is also co ntined in the
compilations of Abu Ali (Muhammed ibn AAbdul-Wahhab) al-Juba’i (d. 303 A.H.)
7) In connection with this very authenticity Aallama al-Majlisi writes:
Al-Qadi (Judge) AAbdul-Jabbar ibn Ahmed al-Asad-Abadi (d. 415 A.H.) who was a strict
Mu’tazilite explains some expressions of this sermon in his book Al-Mughni and tries to prove
that it does not strike against any preceding caliph but does not deny it to be Amir al-Mu’minin’s
composition. (ibid., p. 161)
8) Abu Ja’fer Muhammed ibn Ali, Ibn Babawayh (d. 381 A.H.) writes:
Muhammed ibn Ibrahim ibn Ishaq at-Talaqani told us that AAbdul-AAziz ibn Yahya al-Jalludi
(d. 332 A.H.) told him that Abu AAbdillah Ahmed ibn AAmmar ibn Khalid told him that Yahya
ibn AAbdul-Hamid al-Himmani (d. 228 A.H) told him that AIsa ibn Rashid related this sermon
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from Ali (A.S) ibn Huthayfah and he from AIkrimah and he from Ibn AAbbas. (AIlal ashShara’i’, Vol. 1, pp. 122, p. 144: Ma’ani al-Akhbr, cha, p. 22, pp.360-361)
9) Then Ibn Babawayh records the following chain of authorities:
Muhammed ibn Ali Majilawayh related this sermon to us and he took it from his uncle
Muhammed ibn Abul-Qasim and he form Ahmed ibn Abu AAbdillah (Muhammed ibn Khalid)
al-Barqi and he from his father and he from (Muhammed) ibn Abu AUmayr and he from Aban
ibn AOthman and he from Aban ibn Taghlib and he from AIkrimah and he from Ibn AAbbas.
(AIlal al-Shara’i’, Vol. 1, cha, p. 122, p. 146; Ma’ani al-Akhbar, pp. 22, 361).
10) Abu Ahmed al-Hasan ibn AAbdillah ibnSa’id al-AAskari (d; 382 A.H.) who counts
among great scholars of the Sunnis has written commentary and explanation of this sermon that
has been recorded by ibn Babawayh in AIlal ash-shara’i’ and Ma’ani al-akhbar.
11) As-Sayyid Ni’matullah al-Jaza’iri writes:
The author of Kitab al-Gharz, namely AAbu Ishaq Ibrahim ibn Muhammed al-Thaqafi al-Kufi
(d. 283 A.H.), has related this sermon through his own chain of authorities. The date of
completion of writing this book is Tuesday the 13th Shawwal 255 A.H. and in the same year,
Murtada al-Musawi was born. He was older in age than his brother Sayyid ar-Radhi (Al-Anwar
an-Nu’maniyya, p.37).
12) Sayyid Radi ad-Din AAbul-Qasim Ali ibn Musa, Ibn Tawus al-Husaini al-Hilli (d. 664
A.H.) has related this sermon from Kitab al-Gharz with the following chain of authorities:
This sermon was related to us by Muhammed ibn Yusuf who related it from al-Hasan ibn Ali
ibn AAbdul-Karim az-Za’far Sa’id, and he form Muhammed ibn Zakariyyah al-Ghallabi and he
from Ya’qub ibn Ja’fer ibn Sulayman, and he from his father and he from his grandfather and he
from ibn AAbbas. (Translation of Al-Tara’if, p. 202)
13) Sheikh al-Ta’ifa, Muhammed ibn al-Hasan at-Tusi (d. 460 A.H.) writes:
(Abul-Fath Hilal ibn Muhammed ibn Ja’fer) al-Haffar related this sermon to us. He related it
from Abul-Qasim (Isma’il ibn Ali ibn Ali (Du’bul and he from his father and he from his brother
Du’bul (ibn Ali al-Khuza’i) and he from Muhammed ibn Salamah al-Shami and he from Zurarh
ibn A’yan and he from AAbu Ja’fer Muhammed ibn Ali (Sheikh al-Saduq) and he from Ibn
AAbbas (Al-Amali, p. 237).
14) Sheikh al-Mufid (Muhammed ibn Muhammed ibn an-Nu’man, (d. 413 A.H.) who was the
teacher of Sayyid ar-Radhi writes about he chain of authorities of this sermon;
A number of relaters of traditions have related this sermon form ibn AAbbas through
numerous chains. (al-Irshad, p. 135)
15) AAlam al-Huda (flag-posts of guidance) Sayyid al-Murtada, who was the elder brother of
Sayyid ar-Radhi, has recorded it on pp. 203-204 of his book Al-Shafi.
16) Abu Mansur at-Tibrisi writes the following:
A number of relaters have given an account of this wermon from ibn AAbbas through various
chains. Ibn AAbbas said that he was in the audience of Amir al-Mu’minin at ar-Rahba (a place in
Kufa) when conversation turned to caliphate and those who had preceded him as Caliphs when
Amir al-Mu’minin berated a sign and delivered this sermon. (Al-Ihtijaj, p. 101)
17) Abul-Muzaffar Yusuf ibn AAbdillah and Sibt ibn al-Jawzi al-Hanafi (d. 654 A.H.) write
the following:
Our Sheikh Abul Qasim an-Nafis al-Anbari related this sermon to us through his chain of
authorities that ends with ibn AAbbas, who said that after allegiance had been paid to Amir al201
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Mu’minin as caliph, he was sitting on the pulpit when a man from the audience inquired why he
had remained quiet still then, whereupon Amir al-Mu’minin delivered this sermon ex-tempore.
(Tathkirat Khawass al-Umma, p. 73)
18) Judge Ahmed ibn Muhammed, ash-Shihab al-Khafaji (d. 1069 A.H.) writes the following
with regard to its authenticity:
It is stated in the utterances of Amir al-Mu’minin Ali (A.S) that AIt is strange during his
lifetime he (Abu Bakr) wanted to give up the Caliphate, but he strengthened its foundation fo the
other one after his death. ) (Sharh Durrat al-Ghawwas, p. 17)
19) Sheikh AAla ad-Dawla as-Simnani writes:
The Commander of the Faithful and the Master of people of knowledge Ali (A.S) has stated
in one of his brilliant sermons AThis is the Shaqshaqah that burst forth. (Al-AUrway li ahl alkhalwa wal-jalwa, p. 3, manuscript at the Nasiriyya Library, Lucknow, India)
20) Abul-Fadl Ahmed ibn Muhammed al-Maydani (d. 518 A.H.) has written in connection
with the word AShaqshaqah:
One sermon of Amir al-Mu’minin Ali is known as Khutbat ash-Shaqshaqiyya (Thesermon of
the camel’s foam). (Majma’ al-Amthal, Vol. 1, p 369)
21) In fifteen places in Al-Nihaya, while explaining the words of this sermon, AAbus-Sa’ada,
namely Mubarak ibn Muahmmed ibn al-Athir al-Jazri (d. 606 A.H) has acknowledged it to be
Amir al-Mu’minin’s utterance.
22) Sheikh Muhammed Tahir Patni, while explaining the same words in Majma’ Bihar alAnwar, testifies that this sermon belongs to Amir al-Mu’minin, saying, AAli (A.S) says so.
23) Abul-Fadl ibn Manzur (d. 711 A.H.) has acknowledged it as Amir al-Mu’minin’s
utterance in his lexicon titled Lisan al-AArab, Vol. 12, p. 54 by saying, AIn the sayings of Ali in
his sermon AIt is the camel’s foam that burst forth then subsided.
24) Mujaddid al-Din, namely al-Firuz AAbadi (d. 816/817) A.H.) has recorded under the
words AShaqshaqah in his lexicon (Al-Qamus, Vol. 3, p. 251)
The Shaqshaqiyya sermon is by Ali (A.S) ; it is named so because when Ibn AAbbas asked
him to resume it where he had left it, he said, AOIbn AAbbas! It was the foam of a camel that
burst forth then subsided.
25) the compiler of Muntaha al-Adab writes the following:
The Shaqshaqiyya of Ali is attributed to Ali (Allah may honor his face).
26) ash-Sheikh Muhammed AAbdoh, the mufti of Egypt, recognizing it as Amir alMu’minin’s utterance, has written its explanations.
27) Muhammed Muhyi’d-Din AAbdul-Hamid, professor of Arabic at Al-Azhar University,
has written annotations on Nahjul-Balagha, adding a Foreword in the beginning wherein he
recognizes all such sermons which contain disparaging remarks to be the utterances of Amir alMu’minin.
In the face of these evidences and undeniable proofs is there any scope to hold that it is not
Amir-al-Mu’minin’s production and that Sayyid ar-Radhi prepared it himself?
2. Amir al-Mu’minin has referred to Abu Bakr’s accession to the caliphate metaphorically as
having dressed himself with it. This was a common metaphor. Thus, when AOthman was called
to give up the Caliphate, he replied, AI shall not put off this shirt which Allah has put on me. No
doubt Amir al-Mu’minin has not attributed this dressing of Caliphate to Allah, but to Abu Bakr
himself with the Caliphate. He knew that this dress had been stitched for this own body and his
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position with relation to the Caliphate was that of the axis in the hand-mill which cannot retain
its central position without it nor be of any use. Similarly, he held AI was the central pivot of the
Caliphate, were I not there, its entire system would have gone astray from the pivot. It was I who
acted as a guard for its organization and order and guided it through all difficulties. Currents of
learning flowed form my bosom and watered it on all sides. My position was high beyond
imagination but lust of world seekers for governance became a tumbling stone for me and I had
to confine myself to seclusion. Blinding darkness prevailed all around and there was intense
gloom everywhere. The young grew old and the old departed for the graves but this patiencebreaking period would not end. I kept watching with my eyes the plundering of my own
inheritance and saw the passing of Caliphate from one hand to the other but remained patient as I
could not stop their high-handedness for lack of means.
Need for the Prophet’s Caliph and the Mode of his Appointment
After the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Islam the presence of such a personality
was inevitable who could stop the community form disintegration and guard thereligious law
against change, alteration and interference by those who wanted to twist it to suit their own
desires. If this very need is denied then there is no sense in attaching so much importance to the
succession of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) that the assemblage in saqifa of
BanuSa’idah should have been considered more important than the burial of the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) . If the need is recognized, the question is whether or not the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , too, realized it. If it is held he could not attend to it and
appreciate its need or absence of need it would be the biggest proof for regarding the Prophet’s
mind to be blank for thinking of means to stop the evils of innovations and apostasy in spite of
having given warning about them. If it is said that he did realize it but had to leave it unresolved
on account of some advantage, then instead of keeping it hidden, the advantage should be clearly
indicated; otherwise, silence without purpose would constitute delinquency in the discharge of
the obligations of Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) hood. If there was some impediment,
it should be disclosed; otherwise we should agree that just as the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) did not leave any item of religion incomplete, he did not leave this matter either and
did propose such a course of action for it, that if it was acted upon religion would have remained
safe against the interference of others.
the question now is that was that course of action. If it is taken to be the consensus of opinion
of the community, then it cannot truly take place as in such consensus acquiescence of every
individual is necessary; but taking into account the difference in human temperaments, it seems
impossible that they would agree on any single point. Nor is there any example where on such
matters there has been no single voice of dissent. How then can such a fundamental need be
made dependent on the occurrence of such an impossible even B need on which converges the
future of Islam and the good of the Muslims. Therefore, the mind is not prepared to accept this
criterion. Nor is tradition in harmony with it, as judge AAdud ad-Din al-AIji has written in Sharh
al-Mawaqif:
You should know that Caliphate cannot depend upon unanimity of election because no logical
or traditional argument can be advanced for it.
In fact, when the advocates of unanimous election found that unanimity of all votes is
difficult they adopted the agreement of the majority as a substitute for unanimity, ignoring the
difference of the minority. Also, in such a case, it often happens that the force of fair and foul
would correct and incorrect ways turns the flow of the majority opinion in the direction where
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there is neither individual distinction nor personal merit as a result of which competent persons
remain hidden while incompetent individuals stand forwards. When capabilities remain so cubed
and personal ends stand in the way as hurdles, how can there be expectation for the election of
the correct person. Even if it is assumed that all voters have independent, unbiased views, that no
one has his own objective and that none has any other consideration, it is not necessary that
every verdict of the majority should be correct and that it cannot go astray. Experience shows
that after experiment, the majority has held its own verdict to be wrong. If every verdict of the
majority is correct then its first verdict should be wrong because the verdict, which holds it
wrong, is also that of the majority. In this circumstance, if the election of the Caliph goes wrong,
who would be responsible for the mistake and who should face the blame for the ruination of the
Islamic polity. Similarly on whom would be the liability for the bloodshed and slaughter
following the turmoil and activity of the elections? When it has been seen that even those who
sat in the audi3ence of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) could not be free of
mutual quarrel and strife, how can other avoid it?
If, with a view to avoid mischief, it is left to the people of authority to choose anyone they
like, then here too, the same friction and conflict would prevail because here again, convergence
of human temperaments on one point is not necessary nor can they be assumed to rise above
personal ends. In fact, here the chances of conflict and collision could be stronger because if not
all, at least most of them would themselves, be candidates for that position and would not spare
any effort to defeat their opponent, creating impediments I his way as best as possible. Its
inevitable consequence would be mutual struggle and mischief-mongering. Thus, it would not be
possible to ward off the mischief for which this device was adopted and instead of finding a
proper individual, the community would just become an instrument for the achievement of
personal benefits of the others. Again, what would be the criterion for these people in authority?
the same as has usually been, namely whoever collects a few supporters and is able to create
commotion in any meeting by use of forceful words would count among the people of authority.
Or would capabilities also be judged? If the mode of judging the capabilities is again this very
common vote, then the same complications and conflicts would arise here too, to avoid in which
this way was adopted. If there is some other standard, then instead of judging the capabilities of
the voter by it, why not judge the person who is considered suitable for the position in view.
Further, how many persons in authority would be enough to give a verdict? Apparently a verdict
once accepted would be precedent for good and the number that would give this verdict would
become the criterion for the future. Al-Qadi AAdud ad-Din al-AIji writes:
Rather the nomination of one or two individuals by the people in authority is enough because
we know that the companions who were strict in religion deemed it enough as the nomination of
Abu Bakr by AOmer and of AOthman by AAbd ar-Rahman. (Sharh al-Mawaqif, p. 351)
This is the account of the Aunanimous election in the Hall of Banu Sa’idah and the activity of
the consultative assembly; that is, one man’s action has been given the name of unanimous
election and individual’s deed given the name of consultative assembly. Abu Bakr had well
understood this reality that election means the vote of the person or two only which is to be
attributed to common simple people. That is why he ignored therequirements of unanimous
election, majority vote or method of choosing through electoral assembly and appointed AOmer
by nomination. AA’isha also considered that leaving the question of caliphate to the vote of a
few particular individuals means inviting mischief and trouble. She sent a word to AOmer on his
death saying:
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Do not leave the Islamic community without a chief. Nominate a Caliph for it and leave it not
without an authority as otherwise I apprehend mischief and trouble.
When the election by those in authority proved futile is was given up and only Amight is right
became the criteria Bnamely whoever subdues others and binds them under his sway and control
is accepted as the Caliph of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and his true successor.
These are those self-adopted principles in the face of which all the Prophet’s saying uttered in the
AFeast of therelatives, on the night of hijra, at the battle Tabuk, on the occasion of conveying the
Holy Qur’anic chapter ABara’a (Tawaba, Ch. 9) and at Ghadir (the swamp of) Khumm. The
strange thing is that when each of the first three caliphates is based on one individual’s choice,
how can this very right to choose be denied to the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
himself, particularly when this was the only way to end all the dissensions, namely that the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) should have himself settled it and saved the community
from future disturbances and spared it from leaving this decision I the hands of people who were
themselves involved in personal aims and objects. This is the correct procedure which stands to
reason and which also has the support of the Prophet’s definite sayings.
3. Hayyan ibn as-Samin al-Hanafi of Yamama was the chief of the tribe Banu Hanifah and the
master of fort and army. Jabir is the name of his younger brother while al-Asha whose real name
was Maymun ibn Qays ibn Jandal enjoyed the position of being his bosom friend and led a
decent, happy life through his bounty. In this verse, he has compared his current life with the
previous one that is the days when he raomed about in search of livelihood and those when he
led a happy life in Hayyan’s company. Generally, Amir al-Mu’minin’s quoting of this verse has
been taken to compare this troubled period with the peaceful days passed under the care and
protection of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) when he was free from all sorts of
troubles and enjoyed mental peace. But taking into account he occasion for making this
comparison and the subject matter of the verse, it would not be far-fetched if it is taken to
indicate the difference between the unimportant position of those in power during the Prophet’s
life time and the authority and power enjoyed by them after him. That is, at one time in the days
of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) no heed was paid to them because of Ali’s
personality but now the time had so changed that the same people were masters of the affairs of
the Muslim world.
4. When AOmer was wounded by Abu Lu’lu’ah and he saw that it was difficult for him to
survive because of the deep wound, he formed a consultative committee and nominated Ali (A.S)
ibn Abu Talib, AOthman ibn AAffan, AAbd ar-Rahman ibn AAwf, az-Zubayr ibn al-AAwwam,
Sa’d ibn Abu Waqqas and Talhah ibn AUbaydillah. The n, he bound them that after three days of
his death, they should select one of themselves as the Caliph while for those three days Suhayb
should act as Caliph. On receipt of these instructions, some members of the committee requested
him to indicate what ideas he had about each of them to enable them to proceed further in their
light. Omer therefore disclosed his own view about each individual. He said that ASa’d as harshtempered and hot-headed; AAd ar-Rahman was the Pharaoh of the community; as-Zubayr was, if
pleased, a true believer, but if displeased, an un-believer; Talhah was the embodiment of pride
and haughtiness and if he was made caliph, he would put the ring of the caliphate on his wife’s
finger while AOthman did not see beyond his kinsmen. As regards Ali (A.S) , he is enamored of
the Caliphate although I know that he alone can run it on the right lines. Nevertheless, despite
this admission, he thought it necessary to constitute the consultative committee and in selecting
its members and laying down the working procedure, he made sure that the Caliphate would take
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the direction in which he wished to turn it. Thus, a man of ordinary prudence can draw the
conclusion that all the factors for AOthman’s success were present therein. If we look at its
members, we see that one of the them, namely AAbd ar-Raman ibn AAwf is the husband of
AOthman’s sister, next Sa’d ibn Abu Waqqas besides bearing malice towards Ali (A.S) is a
relative and kinsman of AAbd ar-Rahman. Neither of them can be taken to go against AUtham.
The third, Talhah ibn AUbaydullah about who Professor Muhammed AAbdo writes in this
annotation on Nahjul-Balagha:
Talhah was inclined towards AOthman and thereason for it was no less than that he was
against Ali, because he himself was an Aat-Taymi’ and Abu Bakr’s accession to the caliphate
had created bad blood between Banu Taym and Banu Hashim.
As regards az-Zubayr, even if he had voted for Ali what could his single vote achieve.
According to al-Tabari’s statement, Talhah was not present in Medina at that time, but his
absence did not stand in the way of AOthman’s success. Rather, even if he were present, was
reached at the meeting (of the Committee), and he was taken to be Ali’s supporter, still there
could be no doubt in AOthman’s success because AOmer’s sagacious mind had set the working
procedure that:
If two agree about one and the other two about another then AAbdullah bin AOmer should act
as the arbitrator. The group whom he orders should choose the Caliph from among themselves. If
they do not accept AAbdullah ibn AOmer’s verdict, support should be given to the group which
includes AAbd ar-Rahman ibn AAwf, but if the others do not agree they should be beheaded for
opposing this verdict. (al-Tabari, Vol. 1 pp. 2779-2780; Ibn al-Athir, Vol. 3, p. 67).
Here, the disagreement with the verdict of AAbdullah ibn AOmer has no meaning since he
was directed to support the group which included AAbd ar-Rahman ibn AAwf. He had ordered
his son AAbdullah and Suhayb that:
If the people differ, you should side with the majority, but if three of them are on one side and
the other three on the other, you should side with the group including AAbd ar-Rahman ibn
AAwf. (al-Tabari, Vol. 1, pp. 2725, 2789; Ibn al-Athir, Vol. 3, pp. 51, 67.)
In this instruction, the agreement with the majority also means support of AAbd ar-Rahman
because the majority could not be on any other side since fifty blood-thirsty swords had been put
on the heads of the opposition group with orders to fall on their heads on AAbd ar-Rahman’s
behest. Amir al-Mu’minin’s eye had foreseen it at that very moment that the caliphate was going
to AOthman as appears from his following words which he spoke to AAbbas ibn AAbdulMuttalib:
AThe Caliphate has been turned away from us. Al-AAbbas asked how could he know it. Then
he replied, AOthman has also been coupled with me and it has been laid down that the majority
should be supported; but if two agree on one and two on the other, then support should be given
to the group which includes AAbd ar-Rahman ibn AAwf. Now Sa’d will support his cousin AAbd
ar-Rahman who is of course, the husband of AOthman’s sister (Ibid.).
However, after AOmer’s death, this meeting took place in the room of AA’isha and on its door
stood Abu Talhah al-Ansari with fifty men having drawn swords in their hands. Talhad started
the proceedings and inviting all others to be witness said hat he gave his right of vote to
AOthman. This touched az-Zubayr’s sense of honor as his mother, Safiyya daughter of AAbdulMuttalib, was the sister of the Prophet’s father. So, he gave his right of vote to Ali. Thereafter,
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Sa’d ibn Abu Waqqas made his right of vote to AAbd ar-Rahman. This left three members of the
consultative committee out of whom AAbd ar-Rahman said that he was willing to give up his
own right of vote if Ali (A.S) and AOthman gave him the right to choose one of them or one of
these two should acquire this right by withdrawing. This was a trap in which Ali had been
entangled from all sides, namely that either he should abandon his own right or else allow AAbd
ar-Rahman to do as he wished. The first case was not possible for him; that is, to give up his own
right and elect AOthman or AAbd ar-Rahman. So, he clung to his right, while AAbd ar-Rahman,
separating himself from it, assumed this power and said to Amir al-Mu’minin, AI pay you
allegiance on your following the Book of Allah, the Sunna (teachings) of the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) and the conduct of the two Sheikhs (Abu Bakr and AOmer). Ali (A.S)
replied, ARather on following the book of Allah, the Sunna of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) and my own findings. When AAbd ar-Rahman got the same reply even after
repeating the question thrice, he turned to AOthman saying, ADo you accept these conditions?
AOthman had no reason to refuse and so he agreed to the conditions and allegiance was paid to
him. When Amir al-Mu’minin saw his rights being trampled, he said:
This is not the first day when you behaved against us. I have only to keep good patience.
Allah is the Helper against whatever you say. By Allah, you have not made AOthman caliph but
in hope that he would give back the caliphate to you.
After recording the events of the shura (consultative committee), Ibn Abul-Hadid has written
that when allegiance had been paid to AOthman, Ali (A.S) addressed AOthman and AAbd arRahman saying, AMay Allah sow Theseed of dissension among you, and so it happened that
each turned a bitter enemy of the other and AAbd ar-Rahman did not ever after speak to
AOthman till death. Even on his deathbed, he turned his face on him.
On seeing these events, the question arises whether shura (consultative committee) means
confining the matter to six persons, thereafter to three and finally to one only. Also, whether the
condition of following the conduct of the two Sheikhs [Abu Bakr and AOmer] for caliphate was
put by AOmer or it was just a hurdle put by AAbd ar-Rahman between Ali (A.S) and the
caliphate, although the first caliph did not put forth this condition at the time of nominating The
second caliph, namely that he should follow the former’s footsteps. What then, was the occasion
for this condition here?
However, Amir al-Mu’minin had agreed to participate in it in order to avoid mischief and to
put an end to arguing so that others should be silenced and should not be able to claim that they
would have voted in his favor and that he, himself, evaded the consultative committee and did
not give them an opportunity of selecting him.
5. About thereign of the third caliph [AOthman ibn AAffan], Amir al-Mu’minin says that soon
on AOthman’s coming to power Banu Umayyah got ground and began plundering the bayt almal ) (public fund), and just as cattle on seeing green grass after a drought trampled it away, they
recklessly feel upon Allah’s money and devoured it. At last, this self-indulgence and nepotism
brought him to the stage when people besieged his house, put him to the sword and made him
vomit all that he had swallowed.
The mal-administration that took place in this period was such that no Muslim can remain
unmoved to see that companions of high position were lying uncared for, they were striken with
proverty and surrounded by bankruptcy while control over bayt al-mal (public fund) was that of
Banu Umayyah, government positions were occupied by their young and inexperienced persons,
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special Muslim properties were owned by them, meadows provided grazing but to their cattle,
houses were built but by them and orchards were but for them. If any compassionate person
spoke about these excesses, his ribs were broken and if someone agitated this capitalism, he was
expelled from the city. The uses to which zakat (poor-rate) and charities which were meant for
the poor and the wretched and the public fund which was the common property of the Muslims
were put may be observed from the following few illustrations:
1) Al-Hakam ibn Abul-AAs who had been exiled form Medina by the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) , was allowed back in the city, not only against the Prophet’s Sunna (teachings)
but also against the conduct of the first two Caliphs. He was paid three hundred thousand
dirhams form the public fund. (Ansab al-Ashraf, Vol. 5, pp. 27, 28, 125)
2) Al-Walid ibn AUqbah, who has been naed hypocrite in the Holy Qur’an, was piad one
hundred thousand Dirhams from the Muslims’ public fund. (al-Aqd al-farid, Vol. 3, p. 94)
3) the caliph married his own daughter, Umm Aban, to Marwan ibn al-Hakam and paid him
one hundred thousand dirhams for the public fund. (Sharh of Iban Abul-Hadid, Vol. 1, pp. 198199).
4) He married his daughter AA’isha to Harith ibn al-Hakam and granted him one hundred
thousand dirhams for the public fund (Ibid.).
5) AAbdullah ibn Khalid was paid four hundred dirhams. (Al-Ma’arif of Ibn Qutaybah, p. 84)
6) He allowed the khums (one-fifth religious tax) from Africa (amounting) to five hundred
thousand dinars to Marwan ibn al-Hakam. (Ibid.).
7) Fadak, which was withheld from the angelic daughter of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) on the ground of being general charity, was given as a royal favor to Marwan ibn alHakam. (ibid).
8) Mahzur, a place in the commercial area of Medina which had been declared a public trust
by the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , was gifted to Harith ibn al-Hakam. (Ibid.).
9) In the meadows around Medina, no camel except those of Banu Umayyah were allowed to
graze. (Sharh of Ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 1, p. 199)
10) After his Othman’s death, one hundred and fifty thousand dinars (gold coins) and one
million Dirhams (silver coins) were found in his house. There was no limit to tax-free lands and
the total value of the land estate he owned in Wadi al-Qura and Hunain was one hundred
thousand dinars. There were countless camels and horses. (Muruj al-Thahab, Vol. 1, p.435)
11) the Caliph’s relatives ruled all the principal cities. Thus, at Kufa, al-Walid ibn AUqbah
was the governor, but when in the state of intoxication of wine, he led the morning prayer in four
instead of two rak’ah. People were agitated and demanded his removal, but the Caliph put in his
place a hypocrite like Sa’id ibn al-As. In Egypt, AAbdullah ibn Sa’d ibn Abu Sarh, in Syria
Mu’awiyah ibn Abu Sufyan and in Basra, AAbdullah ibn AAmir were the governors appointed
by him (ibid).
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SERMON 4
Amir Al-mu’minin’s Far-Sightedness and Staunch Conviction
Through us you got guidance in the darkness and secured a high position. And through us you
got out of the gloomy night. The ears which do not listen to the cries may become deaf. How can
one who remained deaf to the loud cries (of the Holy Qur’an and the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) ) listen to (my) feeble voice. The heart that has ever palpitated (with fear of Allah)
may get peace.
I always apprehended from you consequences of treachery and I had seen you through in the
garb of the deceitful. The curtain of thereligion had kept me hidden from you but the truth of my
intentions disclosed you to me. I stood for you on the path of truth among misleading tracks were
you met each other, but there was no leader and you dug but got no water.
Today, I am making these dumb things peak to you (i.e. my suggestive ideas and deep
musing, etc.) which are full of descriptive power. The opinion of the person who abandons me
may get astray. I have never doubted in the truth seince it was been shown to me. Musa (Moses)
1 did not entertain fear for his own self. Rather he apprehended mastery of the ignorant and away
of deviation. Today we stand on the cross-roads of truth and falsehood. The one who is sure of
getting water feels no thirst.
1. The reference refers to Moses when sorcerers were sent for to confront him and they
whowed their sorcery by throwing ropes and sticks on the ground and Moses felt afraid. Thus,
the Holy Qur’an records:
YIt seemed to him (Moses), by their sorcery as if they were running. Then Moses felt in
himself a fear. We said: Fear not! Verily, thou art the uppermost. (20:66-68)
Amir al-Mu’imin says that the ground for Moses’ fear was not that since he saw ropes and
sticks moving he might have entertained fear for his life, but the cause of his fear was lest people
be impressed with this sorcery and get astray and untruth might prevail on account of this craft.
That is why Moses was not consoled by saying that his life was safe but by saying that he would
prove superior and his claim would be upheld. Since his fear was for the defeat of the truth and
victory of the untruty, not for his own life, the consideration was given to him for the victory of
truth and not for the protection of his life.
Amir al-Mu’minin also means that he too, had the same fear meaning that the people should
not be caught in the trap of these (Talhah, az-Zubayr, etc.) and fall into misguidance by getting
astray from the true faith. Otherwise, he himself never feared for his own life.
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SERMON 5
Delivered when the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) died and AAbbas ibn
AAbdul-Muttalib and Abu Sufyan ibn Harb offered to swear allegiance to Amir al-Mu’minin as
the Caliph
O People! 1 Steer clear through the waves of mischief by boats of deliverance, turn away from
the path of dissension and put off the gowns of pride. Prosperous is one who rises with wings
(i.e. when he has power) or else he remains peaceful and others enjoy ease. It (i.e. the aspiration
for Caliphate) is like turbid water or like a morsel that would suffocate the person who swallows
it. One who plucks fruits before ripening is like one who cultivated in another’s field.
If I speak out they would call me greedy towards power, but if I keep quiet they would say I
was afraid of death. It is a pity that after all the ups and downs (I have been through). By Allah,
the son of Abu Talib 2 is more familiar with death than an infant with the breast of its mother. I
have hidden knowledge; if I disclose it you will start trembling like ropes in deep wells.
1. When the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) died, Abu Sufyan was not in
Medina. He was coming back when on his way he got the news of this tragedy. At once, he
enquired who had become the leader the chief. He was told that people had paid allegiance to
Abu Bakr. On hearing this, the acknowledged mischief-monger of Arabia went into deep thought
and eventually went to AAbbas ibn AAbdul-Muttalib with a proposal. He said to him, ALook,
these people have by contrivance made over the Caliphate to the Taym and deprived Banu
Hashim of it for good. And, after himself, this man would place over our heads a haughty man of
Banu AAdi. Let us go to Ali bin Abu Talib (A.S) and ask him to get out of his house and take
arms to secure his right. So, taking AAbbas with him, he came to Ali and said: AGive me your
hand. I pay allegiance to you and if anyone rises in opposition, I will fill the streets of Medina
with men of cavalry and infantry. This was the most delicate moment for Amir al-Mu’minin. He
regarded himself as the tru head and successor of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
while a man with the backing of his tribe and part like Abu Sufyan was ready to support him.
Just a signal was enough to ignite the flames of war. But, Amir al-Mu’minin’s foresight and right
judgment saved the Muslims from civil war as his piercing eyes perceived that this man wanted
to start a civil war by rousing the passions of tribal partisanship and distinction of birth so that
Islam would be struck with a convulsion that would shake it to its roots. Amir al-Mu’minin
therefore rejected his counsel and admonished him several and spoke forth the words, whereby
he had stopped people form mischief mongering and undue conceit. He declared his stand to be,
for him, there were only two coursesCeither to take up arms or to sit quietly at home. If he rose
for war, there were no supporters so that he could suppress these rising insurgences. The only
course left was to quietly wait for the opportunity until circumstances were favorable.
Amir al-Mu’minin’s quietness at this stage was indicative of his high policy and farsightedness, because if in those circumstances Medina had become the center of war, its fire
would have engulfed the whole of Arabia in its flames. The discord and scuffle that had already
begun among the muhajirun and the ansar would have increased to maximum, the wire-pulling
of the hypocrites would have had full play and Islam’s ship would have been caught in such a
whirlpool that its balancing would have been difficult. Amir al-Mu’minin suffered trouble and
tribulations, but did not raise his hands. History is witness that during his life at Mecca, the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) suffered all sorts of troubles but he was not prepared to
clash or struggle by abandoning patience and endurance because he realized that if war took
place at that stage the way for Islam’s growth and fruition would be closed. Of course, when he
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had collected supporters and helpers enough to suppress the flood of unbelief and curb the
disturbances, he rose to face the enemy. Similarly, Amir al-Mu’minin, treating the life of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) as a torch for his guidance, refrained from exhibiting the
power of his arm because he was realizing that rising against the enemy without helpers and
supporter would become a source of revolt and defeat instead of success and victory. Therefore,
on this occasion, Amir al-Mu’minin has likened the desire for Caliphate to turbid water or a
morsel suffocating the throat. Thus, even where people had forcibly snatched this morsel and
wanted to swallow it by forcible thrusting, it got stuck in their throat. They could neither swallow
it nor vomit it out. That is, they could neither manage it as is apparent from the blunders they
committed in connection with Islamic injunctions, nor were they ready to cast off the knot from
their neck.
He reiterated the same ideas in different words thus; AIf had I attempted to pluck the unripe
fruit of Caliphate then by this the orchard would have been desolated and I too would have
achieved nothing, like these people who cultivate on other’s land but can neither guard it, nor
water it at the proper time, nor reap any crop from it. The position of these people is that if I ask
them to vacate it so that the owner should cultivate it himself and protect it, they say how greedy
I am, while if I keep quiet they think I am afraid of death. They should tell me on what occasion
did I ever feel afraid, or flew from a battlefield for my life, whereas every small or big encounter
is proof of my bravery and a witness to may daring and courage. He who plays with swords and
strikes against hillocks is not afraid of death. I am so familiar with death that even an infant is
not so familiar with the breast of its mother. Hark! The reason for my silence is the knowledge
that the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) has put in my bosom. If I divulge it you would
get perplexed and bewildered. Let some days pass and you would know thereason of my inaction
and perceive with your own eyes what sort of people would appear on this scene under the name
of Islam and what destruction they would bring about. My silence is because this would happen,
otherwise, it is not silence without reason.
A Persian axiom says the following: ASilence has meaning which cannot be couched in
words.
2. About the death, Amir al-Mu’minin says that it is so dear to him that even an infant does
not so love to leap towards the source of its nourishment while in its mother’s la, p. An infant’s
attachment with the breast of its mother is under the effect of a natural impulse, but the dictates
of natural impulses change with the advance of age. When the limited period of infancy ends and
the infant’s temperament changes, he does not like to even look at what was so familiar to him
but rather turns his face from it in disgust. But, the love of prophets and saints for union with
Allah is mental and spiritual and mental and spiritual feelings do not change, nor does weakness
or decay occur in them. Since death is the means and first rung toward this goal, their love for
death increases to such an extent that its rigors become the cause of pleasure for them and its
bitterness proves to be the source of delight for their taste. Their love for it is the same as that of
the thirsty for the well or that of a lost passenger for his goal. Thus, when Amir al-Mu’minin was
wounded by AAbd ar-Rahman ibn Muljim’s fatal attack, he said, AI was but like the walker who
has reached (the goal) or like Theseeker who has found (his object) and whatever is with Allah is
good for the pious. the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) also said that there is no pleasure
for a believer other than union with Allah.
SERMON 6
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Delivered on being advised not to chase Talhah ibn AUbaydillah and az-Zubayr ibn alAAwwam for fighting. 1
By Allah, I shall not be like the badger, which feigns sleep on the continuous (sound of)
stone-throwing till he who is in search of it find it or he who is on the look out for it overpowers
it. Rather, I shall ever strike the deviators from truth with the help of those who advance toward
it, and the sinner and doubters with the help of those who listen to me and obey, till my day (of
death) comes. By Allah, I have been continually deprived of my right from the day the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) died until today.
1. When Amir al-Mu’minin showed intention to chase Talhah and az-Zubayr, he was advised
to leave them on their own lest he received some harm from them. Amir al-Mu’minin uttered
these words in reply, the sum total whereof is: AHow long can I be mere spectator to my right
being snatched and keep quiet. Now, so long as I have the breath of life, I shall fight them and
make them suffer the consequences of their conduct. They should not think that I can be easy
over-powered like the badger.
Its nickname is Umm AAmir and Umm Tarrayq. It is also called Athe glutton, because it
swallows everything and eats up whatever it gets as if several bellies were contained in one and
it does not have its fill. It is also called Na’thal. It is a very simply and silly animal. Its slyness is
apparent from the way it is easily caught. It is said that the hunter surrounds its den and strikes it
with his foot or a stick and calls out softly, ABow your head Umm Turrayq, conceal yourself
Umm AAmir. On repeating this sentence and patting the ground, ti conceals itself in a corner of
the den. The n, the hunter says, AUmm AAmir is not in its den, it is sleeping. On hearing this, it
stretches its limbs and feigns sleep. The hunter then puts the knot in its feet and drags it out and
it falls like a coward into his hand without resistance.
SERMON 7
About the hypocrites
They 1 have made Stan the master of their affairs and he has taken them as partners. He has
laid eggs and hatched them in their bosoms. He creeps and crawls in their laps. He sees through
their eyes and speaks with their tongues. In this way, he has led them to sinfulness and adorned
for them foul things like the action of one whom Satan has made partner in his domain and
speaks untruth through his tongue.
1. Amir al-Mu’minin says about the hypocrites (i.e. those who opposed him before the during
his Caliphate) that they are partners in action of Satan and his helpers and supporters. He too, has
befriended them so much that he has made his abode with them, resides on their bosoms, lays
eggs and hatches young one from them there, while these young ones jump and play in their laps
without demur. He means that Satanic evil ideas take birth in their bosoms and grow and thrive
there. There is no restrain on them, nor restriction of any kind. He has permeated their blood and
mingled their spirit so that both have become completely unified. Now, the eyes are theirs but the
sight is his, the tongue is theirs but he words are his and the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) has said, AVerily, Stan permeates the progeny of Adam like blood. That is, just as
the circulation of blood does not stop, the same way , the quick succession of Satan’s evil ideas
knows no break and he draws man toward evil in sleep in wakefulness and in every posture,
rising or sitting. He so paints them with his dye that their word and action reflect an exact
portrait of his word and action. Those whose bosoms shine with the effulgence of faith prevent
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such evil ideas but some are already ready to welcome those evils and these are the persons who,
under the garb of Islam, are after the advancement of heresy.
SERMON 8
About az-Zybayr at a time for which it was appropriate
He asserts that he swore allegiance to me with his hand, but did not swear with his heart.1 So
he does admit allegiance. In regards to his claiming it with his heart he should come forward
with a clear argument for it. Otherwise, he should return to wherefrom he has gone out.2
1. After swearing allegiance on the hand of Amir al-Mu’minin, az-Zubayr ibn al-AAwwam
broke the allegiance. Then sometimes he put forth the excuse that he was forced to swear
allegiance and that forced allegiance is no allegiance and sometimes, he said that allegiance was
only for show. His heart did not go in accord to it. As though he himself admitted with his
tongue the duplicity of his outer appearance and inner self. But this excuse is like that of the one
who reverts to apostasy after adopting Islam and to avoid penalty may say that he had accepted
Islam only by the tongue, not in the heart. Obviously, such an excuse cannot be heard nor can
avoid punishment. If az-Zubayr suspected that AOthman was slain at Amir al-mu’min’s
insistence, this suspicion should have existed when he was taking the oath for obedience and
stretching his hand for allegiance, not now that his expectations were getting frustrated and
hopes had started dawning from somewhere else.
2. Amir al-Mu’minin has rejected his claim in short form. Thus, when he admits that his
hands had paid allegiance then until there is justification for breaking of the allegiance he should
stick to it. But, if, according to him his heart was not in accord with it, he should produce other
proof for it. Since proof about the state of heart cannot be adduced how can he bring such proof
and an assertion without proof is unacceptable to his mind.
SERMON 9
Cowardice of the people of the Battle of the Jamal (Camel)
They1 thunder like clouds and shone like lightening but despite both these things they
exhibited cowardice while we do not thunder till we pounce upon the foe nor do we show flow
(of words) until we have virtually rained.
1. About the people of Jamal (i.e. The enemy in the Battle of Jamal) Amir al-Mu’minin says
that they rose thundering, shouting and stampeding but when encounter took place they were
seen flying like straw. At one time, they made loud claims that they would do this and that and
now they showed such cowardice as to flee from the battlefield. About himself, Amir alMu’minin says, AWe do not threaten the enemy before battle, nor utter boasts, nor terrorize the
enemy by raising unnecessary cries because it is not the way of the brave to use the tongue
instead of the hand. That is why on this occasion, he said to his comrades, ABeware of excessive
talk as it is cowardice.
SERMON 10
About Talhah and az-Zubayr
Beware! Satan has collected his group and assembled his horsemen and foot soldiers. Surely,
with me is my sagacity. I have neither deceived myself nor ever been deceived. By Allah, I shall
fill to the brim for them a cistern from which I alone would draw water. They can neither turn
away from it nor return to it.
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1. When Talhah and az-Zubayr broke away by violating the oath of allegiance and set for
Basra in the company of AA’isha, Amir al-Mu’minin spoke in these words which are part of the
long speech.
Ibn Abul-Hadid has written that in this sermon Satan denotes thereal Satan as well as
Mu’awiyah because Mu’awiyah was secretly conspiring the Talhah and az-Zubayr and
instigating them to fight against Amir al-Mu’minin; but the reference to thereal Satan is more
appropriate, obvious and in accord with the situation and circumstances.
SERMON 11
Delivered during the Battle of Jamal when Amir al-Mu’minin gave the standard to his son
Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya1
Mountains 2 may move from their position, but you should not move from yours. Grit your
teeth. Lend to Allah your head (in fighting for Allah, give yourself to Allah). Plant your feet
firmly on the ground. Have your eye on theremotest foe and close your eyes (to their numberical
majority). And be sure that succor is but from Allah, the Glorified.
1. Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya was Amir al-Mu’minin’s son but called Ibn Hanafiyya after
his mother. His mother’s name was Khawla daughter of Ja’fer. She was known as Hanafiyya
after her tribe Banu Hanifah. When people of Yamama were declared apostates for refusing to
pay zakat (religious tax) and were killed and the women were brought to Medina as slave girls,
this lady also came to Medina with them. When her tribesmen came to know it they approached
Amir al-Mu’minin and requested him to save her from the blemish of slavery and protect her
family honor and prestige. Consequently, Amir al-Mu’minin purchased her, set her free and
married her where after, Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) was born.
Most historians have written his surname as Abul-Qasim. Thus, the author of al-Isti’ab (Vol.
3. pp. 1366-1368, 1370-1372) has narrated the opinion of Abu Rashid ibn Hafs az-Zuhri that
from among the sons of the companions (of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) he
came across four individuals everyone of whom was named Muhammed and surnamed AbulQasim, namely (1) Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya, (2) Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr (3) Muhammed
ibn Talhah and (4) Muhammed ibn Sa’d. After this he writes that Muhammed ibn Talhah’s name
and surname were given by the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Al-Waqidi writes that
the name of surname of Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr was suggested by AA’isha. Apparently the
Holy Prophet’s giving the name of Muhammed ibn Talhah seems incorrect since from some
traditions it appears that the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had reserved it for a son of
Amir al-Mu’minin and he was Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya.
As regards his surname it is said that the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had
particularized it and that he had told Ali that a son would be born to you after me and I have
given him my name and surname and after that it is not permissible for anyone in my people to
have this name and surname together.
With this opinion before us, how can it be correct that the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) had given this very name and surname to anyone else since particularization means
that no one else would share it. Moreover, some people have recorded the surname of ibn Talhah
as Abu Sulayman instead of Abul-Qasim and this further confirms our viewpoint. Similarly, if
the surname of Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr was on the ground that his son’s name was Qasim,
who was among the theologians of Medians, then what is Thesense in AA’isha having suggested
it. If she had suggested it along with the name, how could Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr tolerate it
later on since having been brought up under the care of Amir al-Mu’minin the Prophet’s saying
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could not remain concealed form him. Moreover, most people have recorded his surname as Abu
AAbd ar-Rahman, which weakens the view of Abu Rashid.
Let alone these people’s surname being Abul-Qasim, even for ibn al-Hanafiyya this surname
is not proved. Although ibn Khallikan (in Wafiyyat al-A’yan, Vol. 4, p. 170) has taken that some
of Amir al-Mu’minin for whom the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had particularized
this surname to be Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya, yet’allama al-Mamaqani (in Tanqih al-Maqal,
Vol. 3, Part 1, p. 112) writes:
In applying this tradition to Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya, Ibn Khallikan has got into
confusion, because the son of Amir al-Mu’minin whom the Prophet’s name and surname
together have been gifted by the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , and which is not
permissible to be given to any one else, is to the awaited last Imam (may our lives be his
ransom), and not to Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya, nor is the surname Abul-Qasim established
for him, rather some of the Sunnis being ignorant of thereal intention of the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) , have taken to mean Ibn al-Hanafiyya.
However, Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya was prominent in righteousness and piety, sublime in
renunciation and worship, lofty in knowledge and achievements and heir of his father in bravery.
His performance in the Battle of Jamal and Siffin had created such impression among the Arabs
that even warriors of consequence trembled at this name. Amir al-Mu’minin too was proud of his
courage and valor and always placed him forward in encounters. Sheikh al-Baha’i has written in
al-Kashkul that Ali ibn Abu Talib kept him abreast in the battles and did not allow Hasan and
Husain to go ahead and used to say, AHe is my son while these two are sons of the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah. When a Kharijite said to ibn al-Hanafiyya that Ali
thrust him into the flames of war but saved away Hasan and Husain (), he replied that he
himself was like the right hand and Hasan and Husain () like Ali’s two eyes and that Ali
protected his eyes with his right hand. But Aallama al-Mamaqani has written in Tanqih al-Maqal
that his was not thereply of Ibn al-Hanafiyya, but of Amir al-Mu’minin himself. When during the
battle of Siffin Muhammed mentioned this matter to Amir al-Mu’minin in a complaining tone,
he replied, AYou are my right hand whereas they are my eyes and the hand should protect the
eyes.
Apparently it seems that first Amir al-Mu’minin must have given this reply and thereafter
someone might have mentioned it to Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya and he must have repeated the
same reply as there could not be a more eloquent reply than this one and its eloquence confirms
the view that it was originally the outcome of the eloquent tongue of Amir al-Mu’minin and was
later appropriated by Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) al-Hanafiyya.
Consequently, both these views can be held to be correct and there is no incongruity between
them. However, he was bo5rn in thereign of The second Caliph and died in thereign of AAbdulMalik ibn Marwan at the age of sixty-five years. Some writers have recorded the year of his
death as 80 A.H. and others as 81 A.H. There is a difference about the place of his death as well.
Some have put it as Medina, some Aylah and some Ta’if.
2. When in the Battle of Jamal Amir al-Mu’minin sent Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya to the
battle field, he told him that he should fix himself before the enemy like the mountain of
determination and resolution so that the onslaught of the army should not be able to displace him
and he should charge the enemy with closed teeth because by pressing the teeth over the teeth,
tension occurs in the nerves of the skull. As a result of which the stroke of the sword goes amiss
as he said at another place, APress together your teeth. It sends amiss the edge of the sword.
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Then he says, AMy child, lend your head to Allah in order that you may be able to achieve
eternal life in place of this one, because for a lent article there is the right to get it back.
Therefore, you should fight being heedless of your life, otherwise also if your mind clings to life,
you will hesitate to advance toward deathly encounters and that would fall upon your reputation
of bravery. Look, don’t let your steps falter because the enemy is emboldened at the faltering of
steps and faltering steps fastens the feet of the enemy. Keep the last lines of the enemy as your
aim so that the enemy may be overawed with loftiness of your intentions and you may feel ease
in tearing through their lives and their movement should also not remain concealed form you.
Look, do not pay heed to their superiority in numbers, otherwise, your valor and courage would
suffer. This sentence can also mean that one should open the eyes wide to be dazzled by the
shining of weapons and the enemy may make at attack by taking advantage of the situation.
Also, always bear in mind that victory is from Allah. AIf Allah helps you no one can overpower
you. Therefore, instead of relying on material means, seek His support and succor.
ARemember O ye Believers!) If Allah helps you, none shall overcome youY. (Holy Qur’an,
3:159)
SERMON 12
When1 Allah gave him (Amir al-Mu’minin) victory over the enemy at the Battle of Jamal one
of his comrades aid on that occasion, AI wish my brother so and so had been present and he too
would have seen what success and victory Allah had given you, A
whereupon Amir al-Mu’minin said:
ADid you brother hold me as a friend? The comrade said, AYes. Then, Amir al-Mu’minin
said:
"In that case he was with us. Rather in this army of ours, even those persons were also present
who are still in the loins of men and wombs of women. Shortly, time will bring them out and
faith will get strength through them."
1. If a person falls short in his actions despite means and equipment, this would be indicative
of the weakness of his will. But if there is an impediment in the way of action or his life comes to
an end as a result of which his action remains incomplete, then in that case Allah would not
deprive him of thereward on the basis that actions are judged by intention. Since his intention in
any case was to perform the action, therefore, he should deserve reward to some extent.
In the case of action, there may be absence of reward because action can involve show or
pretence but intention is hidden in the depth of the heart. It can have not a jot of show or
affectation. The intention would remain at the same level of frankness, truth, perfection and
correctness where it is, even though there may be no action due to some impediment. Even if
there is no occasion for forming intention but there is passion and zeal in the heart, a man would
deserve reward on the basis of his heart’s feelings. This is to what Amir al-Mu’minin has alluded
to in this sermon, namely that AIf you brother loved me he would share thereward with those
who secured martyrdom for our support.
1
SERMON 13
Condemning the people of Basra
You were the army of a woman and in the command of a quadruped. When it grumbled you
responded and when it was wounded (hamstrung) you fled away. Your character is low and your
pledge is broken. Your faith is hypocrisy. Your water is brackish. He who stays with you is laden
with sins and he who forsakes you secures Allah’s mercy. As though I see your mosque
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prominent, resembling the surface of a boat, while Allah has sent chastisement from above and
from below it and everyone who is on it is drowned.2
Another version:
By Allah, your city would certainly be drowned so much so that as though I see its mosque
like the upper part of a boat or a sitting ostrich.
Another version:
Like the bosom of a bird in the deep sea.
Another version:
Your city is the most stinking of all the cities as regards its clay, the nearest to water and
remotest from the sky. It contains nine tenths of evil. He who enters it is surrounded with his sins
and he who is out of it enjoys Allah’s forgiveness. It seems as though I look at this habitation of
yours that water has so engulfed it that nothing can be seen of it except the highest part of the
mosque appearing like the bosom of a bird in the deep sea.
1. Ibn Maytham writes that when the Battle of Jamal ended then on the third day after it, Amir
al-Mu’minin said the morning prayer in the central mosque of Basra. After finished it he stood
on the right side of the prayer place reclining against the wall and delivered this sermon wherein
he described the lowness of character of the people of Basra and they slyness, namely that they
got inflamed at others’ instigation without anyone of their own and making over their command
to a woman clung to a camel. They broke away after swearing allegiance and exhibited their low
character and evil nature by being double-faced. In this sermon, the woman implies AA’isha and
the quadruped implies the camel (Jamal) after which this battle has been named the ABattle of
the Jamal. This battle originated in this way. During the lifetime of Othman, AA’isha used to
oppose him and had left for Mecca leaving him in siege and as such, she had a share in his
assassination details of which would be stated at some suitable place but when on her return from
Mecca toward Medina, she heard from Abdullah ibn Salamah that AOthman’s allegiance had
been paid to Ali (as Caliph) she suddenly exclaimed, AIf allegiance has been paid to Ali, I wish
the sky had burst on the earth. Let me go back to Mecca. Consequently she decided to return to
Mecca and began saying, ABy Allah, AOthman has been helplessly killed. I shall certainly
avenge his blood. On seeing this wide change in the state of affairs, Abu Salamah said, AWhat
are you saying as you yourself used to say AKill this Na’thal; he had turned unbeliever.
Thereupon, she replied, ANot only I but everyone used to say so; but leave these things and listen
to what I am now saying, that is better and deserves more attention. It is so strange that first he
was called upon to repent but before giving him an opportunity to do so, he has been killed. On
this Abu Salamah recited the following verses addressing her:
You started it and now you are changing and raising storms of wind and rain. You ordered
for his killing and told us that he had turned unbeliever. We admit that he has been killed but
under your orders and thereal killer is the one who ordered it. Nevertheless, neither the sky fell
over us not did the sun and moon fall into eclipse. Certainly people have paid allegiance to one
who can ward off the enemy with power and grandeur, does not allow swords to come near him
and loosens the twist of the rope, that is, subdues his enemy. He is always fully armed for combat
and the faithful is never like the traitor.
However, when she reached Mecca with a passion for vengeance she began rousing the
people to avenge AOthman’s blood by circulating stories of his having been victimized. The first
to respond to this call was AAbdullah ibn AAmir al-Hadrami, who had been the governor of
Mecca in AOthman’s reign and with him Marwan ibn al-Hakam, Sa’id ibn al-AAs and other
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Umayyads rose to support her. On the other side, Talhah ibn AUbaydillah and az-Zubayr ibn alAAwwam also reached Mecca from Medina. From Yemen Ya’la ibn Munabbih who had been
governor there during AOthman’s caliphate and the former governor of Basra, AAbdullah ibn
AAmir ibn Kurayz also reached there and joining together began preparing their plans. The battle
had been decided upon but the discussion was about he venue of confrontation. AA’isha’s
opinion was to make Medina the venue of the battle but some people opposed and held that it
was difficult to deal with Medinites and that some other place should be chose as the venue. At
last after much discussion it was decided to march towards Basra as there was no dearth of men
to support the cause. Consequently on the strength of AAbdullah ibn AAmir’s countless wealth
and the offer of six hundred thousand Dirhams and six hundred camels by Ya’la ibn Munabbih
they prepared any army of three thousand and set off to Basra. There was a small incident on the
way of account of which AA’isha refused to advance further. What happened was that at a place
she heard the barking of dogs and enquired from the camel driver the name of the place. He said
it was Haw’ab. On hearing this name, she recalled the Prophet’s admonition when he ha said to
his wives, AI wish I could know at which of you the dogs of Haw’ab would bark. So when she
realized that she herself was the one, she got the camel seated by patting and expressed her
intention to abandon the march. But the device of her companions saved the deteriorating
situation. AAbdullah ibn az-Zubayr swore to assure her that it was not Haw’ab, Talhah seconded
him and for her further assurance, also sent for fifty persons to stand witness to it. When all of
the people were on one side, what could a single woman do by opposing. Eventually they were
successful and AA’isha resumed her forward march with the same enthusiasm.
When this army reached Basra, people were first amazed to see the riding animal of AA’isha.
Jariyah ibn Qudamah came forward and said, AO, Mother of the faithful, the assassination of
AOthman was one tragedy but the greater tragedy is that you have come out on this cursed camel
and ruined your honor and esteem. It is better that you should get back. But since neither the
incident at Haw’ab could deter her nor could the Holy Qur’anic injunction: AKeep sitting in your
houses (33:33) stop her, what effect could these voices produce. Consequently, she disregarded
all of this.
When the army tried to enter the city, the governor of Basra AOthman ibn Hunayf came
forward to stop them and when the two parties came face to face, they drew their swords out of
the sheaths and pounced upon each other. When a good number had been killed from either side,
AA’isha intervened on the basis of her influence and the two groups agreed that until the arrival
of Amir al-Mu’minin, the existing administration should continue and AOthman ibn Hunayf
should continue on his post. But only two days had elapsed when they made a nightly attack on
AOthman ibn Hunayf, killed forty innocent persons, beat AOthman ibn Hunayf, plucked every
hair of his bread, took him in their custody and shut him u, p. Then they attacked the public
treasury and while ransacking it, killed twenty persons on the spot and beheaded fifty more after
arresting them. Then they attacked the grain store whereupon an elderly noble of Basra, Hukaym
ibn Jabalah, could not control himself and reaching there with his men said to AAbdullah ibn azZubayr, ASpare some of this grain for the city’s populace. After all there should be a limit to
oppression. You have spread killing and destruction all around and put AOthman ibn Hunayf in
confinement. For Allah’s sake, keep off these ruining activities and release AOthman ibn
Hunayf. Is there no fear of Allah in your hearts? ibn az-Zubayr said, AThis is vengeance of
AOthman’s life. Hukaym ibn Jabalah retorted, AWere those who have been killed assassins of
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AOthman? By Allah, if I had supporters and comrades I should have certainly avenged the blood
of these Muslims whom you have killed without reason. ibn az-Zubayr replied, AWe shall not
give anything out of this grain, nor will AOthman ibn Hunayf be released. At last, the battle
raged between these two parties but how could a few individuals deal with such a big force?
theresult was the Hukaym ibn Jabalah, his son al-Ashraf ibn Hukaym ibn Jabalah, his brother arRi’l ibn Jabalah and seventy persons of his tribe were killed. In short, killing and looting
prevailed all around. Neither anyone’s life was secure nor was there any way to save one’ honor
or property.
When Amir al-Mu’minin was informed of the march to Basra, he set out to stop it with a force
which consisted of seventy of those who had taken part in the battle of Badr and four hundred
out of those companions who had the honor of being present at the Allegiance of Ridwan (The
Divine Pleasure). When he stopped at the stage of Khaqar, he sent his son Hasan () and
A‘Ammar ibn Yasir to Kufa to invite its people to fighting. Consequently, despite interference of
Abu Musa al-Ash’ari seven thousand combatants from there joined Amir al-Mu’minin’s army.
He left that place after placing the army under various commanders. Eye witnesses state that
when his force reached near Basra first of all a contingent of Ansar appeared foremost. Its
standard was held by Abu Ayyub al-Ansari. After it appeared, another contingent of 1000 whose
commander was Khuzaymah ibn Thabit al-Ansari. Then another contingent came in sight. Its
standard was borne by Abu Qatadah ibn ar-Rabi’. Then a crowd of a thousand old and young
persons was seen. They had signs of prostration on their foreheads and veils of fear of Allah on
their face. It seemed as if they were standing before the Divine Glory of the Day of Judgment.
Their commander rode a dark horse, was dressed in white, had a black turban on his head and
was reciting the Holy Qur’an loudly. This was AAmmar ibn Yasir. Then another contingent
appeared. Its standard was in the hand of Qays ibn Sa’d ibn AAbadah. Then an army came to
sight. Its leader wore white dress and hade a black turban on this head. He was so handsome that
all eyes centered around him. This was AAbdullah ibn AAbbas. Then followed a contingent of
the companions of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Their standard bearer was
Othman ibn AAbbas. Then after the passing of a few contingents, a big crowd was seen wherein
there was such a large number of spears that they were overlapping and flags of numerous colors
were flying. Among them, a big and lofty standard was seen with a distinctive position. Behind it
was seen a rider guarded by sublimity and greatness. His sinews were well-developed and his
eyes were cast downwards. His awe and dignity was such that no one could look at him. This
was the ever victorious Lion of Allah namely Ali, Ibn Abu Talib (A.S). On his right and left
were Hasan and Husain (peace be upon them). In front of him Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya
walked in slow steps carrying the banner of victory and glory and on the back were young men
of Banu Hashim, the people of Badr and AAbdullah ibn Ja’fer ibn Abu Talib. When this army
reached the place az-Zawiyah, Amir al-Mu’minin alighted from the horse. After performing a
four rak’at prayer, he put his cheeks on the ground. When he lifted his head, the ground was
drenched with tears and his tongue was uttering these words:
O Sustainer of earth, heaven and the high firmament, this is Basra. Fill our lap with its good
and protect us from its evil.
Then proceeding forward he got down in the battlefield of Jamal where the enemy was
already camping. First of all, Amir al-Mu’minin announced in his army that no one should attack
another nor take the initiative. Saying this he came in front of the opposite army and said to
Talhah and az-Zubayr, AYou ask AA’isha by swearing in the name of Allah and His Prophet
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(P.B.U.H. and His Household) whether I am not free from the blame of AOthman’s blood and
whether I used the same words for him which you used to say and whether I pressed you for
allegiance or you swore it of your own free will. Talhah got exasperated at these words but azZubayr relented. Amir al-Mu’minin turned back after it and giving the Holy Qur’an to Muslim (a
young man from the tribe of AAbd Qays sent him toward them to pronounce to them the verdict
of the Holy Qur’an. But people took both of them within aim and covered this godly man with
their arrows. Then A‘Ammar ibn Yasir went to canvass and convince them and caution them
with the consequences of war but his words were also replied by arrows. Until now, Amir alMu’minin had not allowed an attack as a result of which the enemy continued feeling
encouraged and went on raining arrows constantly. At last, with the dying of a few valiant
combatants consternation was created among Amir al-Mu’minin’s ranks and some people came
with a few bodies before him and said, AO Commander of the Faithful! You are not allowing us
to fight while they are covering us with arrows. How long can we let them make our bosoms the
victim of their arrows and remain hand folded at their excesses? At this, Amir al-Mu’minin did
show anger but acting with restraint and endurance came to the enemy in that very form without
wearing armor or any arm and shouted, AWhere is az-Zubayr? At first az-Zubayr hesitated to
come forward but he noticed that Amir al-Mu’minin had no arms so he came out. Amir alMu’minin said to him AO az-Zubayr, you must remember that one day the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) told you that you would fight with me and wrong and excess would be on
your side. Az-Zubayr replied that he had said so. Then Amir al-Mu’minin enquired AWhy have
you come then? He replied that his memory had missed it and if he had recollected it earlier he
would not have come that way. Amir al-Mu’minin said, AWell now you have recollected it and
he replied, AYes. Saying this he went straight to AA’isha and told her that he was leaving. She
asked him thereason and he replied, AAli has reminded me a forgotten matter. I had gone astray,
but now I have come on the right path and would not fight Ali ibn Abu Talib at any cost.
AA’isha said AYou have caught the fear of the swords of the sons of AAbdul-Muttalib. He said,
ANo and saying this he turned thereins of his horse. However, it is gratifying that some
consideration was accorded to the Prophet’s saying, for at Haw’ab even after recollection of the
Prophet’s words no more than a transient effect was taken of it. On returning after this
conversation, Amir al-Mu’minin observed that they had attacked the right and left flanks of his
army. Noticing this, Amir al-Mu’minin said, ANow the plea has been exhausted. Call my son
Muhammed. When he came Amir al-Mu’minin said, AMy son, attack them now. Muhammed
bowed his head and taking the standard proceeded to the battlefield. But arrows were falling in
such exuberance that he had to sto, p. When Amir al-Mu’minin saw this, he called out at him,
Muhammed, why don’t you advance? He said, AFather, in this shower of arrows there is not way
to proceed. Wait till the violence of arrows subsides. He said, ANo, thrust yourself in the arrows
and spears and attack. Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya advanced a little but the archers so
surrounded him that he had to hold his steps. On seeing this a frown appeared on Amir alMu’minin’s forehead and said, AThis is the affect of your mother’s veins. Saying this he took the
standard from his hands and folded up his sleeves and made such an attack that a tumult was
created in the enemy’ ranks from one end to the other. To which ever row he turned, it became
clear and to whatever side he directed himself, bodies were seen falling and heads rolling in the
hoofs of horses. When after convulsing the rows, he returned to his position and said to
Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya, ALook, my son, battle is fought like this. Saying this, he gave the
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standard to him and ordered him to proceed. Muhammed advanced toward the enemy with a
contingent of Ansar. The enemy also came out moving and balancing their spears. But the brave
son of the valiant father convulsed rows over rows while the other warriors made the battlefield
glory and left heaps of dead bodies.
From the other side, there was a full demonstration of the spirit of sacrifice. Dead bodies were
falling one over the other, but they continued sacrificing their lives devotedly around the camel.
Particularly, the condition of Banu Dabbah was that although their hands were being severed
from the elbows for holding thereins of the camel and bosoms were being pierced yet they had
the following battle song on their tongues:
To us, death is sweeter than honey. We are Banu Dabbah, camel rearers. We are sons of
death when death comes. We announce the death of AOthman with the edges of spears. Give us
back our chief and there is an end to it.
The low character and ignorance from faith of these Banu Dabbah can be well understood by
that one incident which al-Mada’ini has narrated. He writes that in Basra there was a man with a
mutilated ear. He asked him its reason when he said, AI was watching the sight of dead bodies in
the battlefield of Jamal when I saw a wounded man who sometimes raised his head and
sometimes dashed it back on the ground. I approached near. The n, the following two verses
were on his lips:
Our mother pushed us into the deep waters of death and did not get back till we had
thoroughly drunk.
By misfortune, we obeyed. Banu Taym are none but slave men and slave girls.
AI told him it was not the time to recite verses; he should rather recall Allah and recite the
kalima (shahada) (verse of testimony). On my saying this he gave me an angry look and uttering
a sever abuse said, AYou are asking me to recite the kalima, get frightened at the last moment
and show impatience? I was astonished to hear this and decided to return without saying
anything further. When he saw me returned he said, AWait, for your sake I am prepared to recite,
but teach me. I drew close to teach him the kalima when he asked me to get closer. When I got
closer, he caught my ear with his teeth and did not leave it till he tore it from the root. I did not
think it proper to molest a dying man and was about to get back abusing and cursing him when
he asked me to listen to one more thing. I agreed to listen lest he had an unsatisfied wish. He said
that when I should get to my mother and she enquired who had bitten my ear, I should say that it
was done by AUmayr ibn al-Ahlab ad-Dabbi who had been deceived by a woman aspiring to
become the commander of the faithful (head of state).
However, when the dazzling lightning of swords finished the lives of thousand of persons and
hundreds of Banu Azd and Banu Dabbah were killed for holding therein of the camel. Amir alMu’minin ordered, AKill the camel for it is Satan. Saying this he made such a severe attack that
the cries of APeace’ and AProtection’ rose from all around. When he reached near the camel he
ordered Bujayr ibn Buljah to kill the camel at once. Consequently, Bujayr hit him with such
might that the camel fell in agony on the side of its bosom. No sooner than the camel fell, the
opposite army took to heels and the carrier holding AA’isha was left lonely and unguarded. The
companions of Amir la-Mu’minin took control of the carrier and under orders of Amir alMu’minin, Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr escorted AA’isha to the house of Safiyya daughter of alHarith.
This encounter commenced on the 10th of Jumada ath-thaniyah, 36 A.H. in the afternoon and
came to and end the same evening. In it from Amir al-Mu’minin’s army of twenty two thousand,
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one thousand and seventy or according to another version, five hundred persons were killed as
martyrs while from AA’isha’s army of thirty thousand, seventeen thousand persons were killed
and the Prophet’s saying, AThat people who assigned their affairs (of state) to a woman would
never prosper was fully corroborated. (Al-Imama wal-Siyasa; Muruj al-Thahab; al-AIqd alFarid; al-Tabari’s Tarikh).
2. Ibn Abul-Hadid has written that as prophesied by Amir al-Mu’minin, Basra got under the
floods twiceConce in the days of al-Qadir Billah and once in thereign of al-Qa’im bi Amri’l-lah
and the state of flooding was such that the whole city was under water but the top ends of the
mosque were seen about in the surface of the water and looked like a bird witting on the side of
its bosom.
SERMON 14
This also is in condemnation of the people of Basra
Your earth is close to Thesea and away from the sky. Your wits have become light and your
minds are full of folly. You are the aim of the archer, a morsel for the eater and an easy prey for
the hunter.
SERMON 15
After resuming the land grants made my AOthman ibn AAffan, he said:
By Allah, even if I had found that by such money women have been married or slave-maids
have been purchased I would have resumed it because there is a wide scope in dispensation of
justice and he who find it hard to act justly should find it harder to deal with injustice.
SERMON 16
Delivered when allegiance was sworn to him at Medina
Theresponsibility for what I say is guaranteed and I am answerable for it. He to whom
experiences have clearly shown the past exemplary punishments (given by Allah to people) is
prevented by piety from falling into doubts. You should know that the same troubles have
returned to you which existed when the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was first sent.
By Allah Who sent the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) with faith and truth, you will
be severely subverted, bitterly shaken s in sieving and fully mixed as by spooning in a cooking
pot till your low persons become high and high ones become low, those who were behind would
attain forward positions and those who were forward would become backward. By Allah, I have
not concealed a single word or spoken any lie and I had been informed of this event and of this
time.
Beware that sins are like unruly horses on whom their riders have been placed and their reins
have been let loose so that they would jump with them in Hell. Beware that piety is like trained
horses on whom the riders have been placed with thereins in the hands so that they would take
the riders to Heaven. There is right and wrong and there are followers for each. If wrong
dominates, it has (always) in the past been so and if truth goes down that too has often occurred.
It seldom happens that a thing that lags behind comes forward.
Ash-Sharif ar-Radhi says the following: In the small speech there is more beauty than can be
appreciated and the quantity of amazement aroused by it is more than the appreciate accorded to
it. Despite what we have stated, it has so many aspects of eloquence that cannot be expressed not
can anyone reach its depth. And, no one can understand what I am saying unless one has attained
this art and known its details.
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Y.No one appreciates it except those who know (Holy Qur’an, 29:43)
From the same Sermon:
He who has heaven and hell in his view has no other aim. He who attempts and acts quickly
succeeds, while Theseeker who is slow may also entertain hope. And he who falls short of
actions faces destruction in Hell. On the right and left there are misleading paths, only the middle
way if the (right) path which is the Everlasting book and the traditions of the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) . From it, the Sunna has spread out and toward it is the eventual return. He
who claims (otherwise) is ruined and he who concocts falsehood is disappointed. He who
opposes1 the right with his face gets destruction. It is enough ignorance for a man not to know
himself. He who is strong rooted2 in piety does not get destruction and the plantation of the
people based on piety never remains without water. Hide yourselves in your houses and reform
yourselves. Repentance is at your back. One should praise only Allah and condemn only his own
self.
1. In some versions after the words Aman abda safhatahu lilhaqqi halaka the words Ainda
jahalatu’n-nas also occur. In tat case, the meaning of this sentence would be that he who stands
in the face of right dies in the estimation of the ignorant.
2. Piety is the name of heart and mind being affected and impressed by the Divine Greatness
and Gory, as an effect of which the spirit of man becomes full of the fear of Allah and its
inevitable result is that engrossment in worship and prayers increases. It is impossible that the
heart may be full of the Divine fear and there be no manifestation of it in actions and deeds. And
since worship and submission reform the heart and nurture the spirit, purity of heart increases
with the increase of worship. That is why in the Holy Qur’an, Ataqwa (piety) has been applied
sometimes to fear, in the verse, Aittaqu’l-laha haqqa tuqatihi (worship Allah as he ought to be
worshipped (3:102). Taqwa implies worship and devotion and in the verse Awa yakhsha’l-laha
wa yattaqhi faullaika humu’l faizun (24:52) taqwa implies purity of spirit and cleanliness of
heart.
In the traditions, taqwa has been assigned three degrees. The first degree is that a man should
follow the injunctions and keep aloof from prohibitions. The second degree is that recommended
matters should also be followed and disliked things should be avoided. The third degree is that
for fear of falling into doubts, one may abstain from the permissible as well. The first degree is
for the common men, The second for the nobles and the third for the high dignitaries. Allah has
referred to these three degrees in the following verse:
On those who believe and do good, is not blame for what they ate (before) when they did
guard themselves and did believe and did good, still (furthermore) they guard themselves and do
good; and Allah loves the doers of good. (Holy Qur’an, 5:93)
Amir al-Mu’minin says that only action based on piety is lasting and only that action will
blossom and bear fruit which is watered by piety because worship is only that wherein the
feeling of submissiveness exists. Thus, Allah says the following:
Is he therefore better who has laid his foundation on fear of Allah and (His) goodwill or he
who layeth his foundation on the brink of a crumbling bank so it broke down with him into the
fire of hellY(Holy Qur’an 9:109)
Consequently, every such belief as is not based on knowledge and conviction is like the
edifice, erected without foundation, wherein there is no stability or firmness while every action
that is without piety is like the plantation which withers for lack of watering.
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SERMON 17
About those who sit for dispensation of justice among people but are not fit for it
Among1 all the people, the most detested before Allah are two persons. One is he who is
devoted to his self. So he is deviated from the true path and loves speaking about (foul)
innovations and inviting toward the wrong path. He is therefore a nuisance for those who are
enamored of him, is himself misled from the guidance of those enamored of him, is himself
misled from the guidance of those preceding him, misleads those who follow him in his life or
after his death, carries the weight of others’ sins and is entangled in his own misdeeds.
The other man is he who has picked up ignorance. He moves among the ignorant, is senseless
in the thick of mischief and is blind to the advantages of peace. Those resembling like men have
named him scholar but he is not so. He goes out early morning to collect things whose deficiency
is better than plenty, till when he has quenched his thirst form polluted water and acquired
meaningless things.
He sits among the people as a judge responsible for solving whatever is confusing to the
others. If an ambiguous problem is presented before him he manages a shabby argument about it
of his own accord and passes judgment on its basis. In this way, he is entangled in the confusion
of doubts as in the spider’s web, not knowing whether he was right or wrong. If he is right, he
fears lest he erres, while if he is wrong, he hopes he is right. He is ignorant, wandering astray in
ignorance and riding on carriages aimlessly moving in darkness. He does not try to find
thereality of knowledge. He scatters the traditions as the wind scatters the dry leaves.
By Allah, he is not capable of solving the problems that come to him nor is he fit of the
position assigned to him. Whatever he does not know he doses not regard it worth knowing. He
does not realize that what is beyond his reach is within thereach of others. If anything is not clear
to him, he keeps quiet over it because he knows his own ignorance. Lost lives are crying against
his unjust verdicts and properties (that have been wrongly disposed of) are grumbling against
him.
I complain to Allah about persons who live ignorant and die misguided. For them nothing is
more worthless than Holy Qur’an if it is recited as it should be recited, nor anything more
valuable than the Holy Qur’an if is verses are removed from their places, nor anything more
vicious than virtue nor more virtuous than vice.
Amir al-Mu’minin has held two categories of persons as the most detestable by Allah and the
worst among people. Firstly, those who are misguided even in basic tenets and are busy in the
spreading of evil. Secondly, those who abandon the Holy Qur’an and Sunna and pronounce
injunctions through their imagination. They create a circle of their devotees and popularize
thereligious code of law concocted by themselves. The misguidance and wrongfulness of such
persons does not remain confined to their own selves but Theseed of misguidance sown by them
bears fruit and, growing into the form of a big tree, provides an asylum to the misguided. This
misguidance goes on multiplying. And since these very people are thereal originators, the weight
of other’s sins is also on their shoulders as the Holy Qur’an says the following:
And certainly, they shall bear their own burdens and (others’) burdens with their own
burdensY.(29:13)
SERMON 18
Amir al-Mu’minin said in disparagement of the differences of views among the theologians.
When1 a problem is put before anyone of them he passes judgment on it from his imagination.
When exactly the same problem is placed before another of them he passes an opposite verdict.
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Then these judges go to the chief who had appointed them and he confirms all the verdicts,
although their Allah is One (and the same), their Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) is one
(and the same), their Book (the Holy Qur’an), is one (and the same).
Is it that Allah ordered them to differ and they obeyed Him? Or He prohibited them from it
but hey disobeyed Him? Or (is it that) Allah sent an incomplete Faith and sought their help to
complete it? Or they are His partners in the affairs so that it is their share of duty to pronounce
and He as to agree? Or is it that Allah the Glorified sent a perfect faith but the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) fell short of conveying it and handing it over (to the people) ? the fact is
that Allah the Glorified says the following:
YWe have not neglected anything in the Book (Holy Qur’an) Y.Holy Qur’an, 6:38)
Allah says that one part of the Holy Qur’an verifies another part and that there is no
divergence in it as He says the following:
Y.And if it had been from any other than Allah, they would surely have found in it much
discrepancy. (Holy Qur’an, 4:82)
Certainly, the outside of the Holy Qur’an is wonderful and its inside is deep (in meaning). Its
wonders will never disappear, its amazing things will never pass away and its intricacies cannot
be cleared except through itself.
1. It is a disputed problem that where there is no clear argument about a matter in thereligious
law, whether there does in reality exist an order about it or not. The view adopted by Abul-Hasan
al-Ash’ari and his master Abu Ali al-Jubba’i is that in such a case Allah has not ordained any
particular course of action but He assigned the task of finding it out and passing a verdict to the
jurists so that whatever they hold as prohibited would be deemed prohibited and whatever they
regard permissible would be deemed permissible. And if one has one view and the other another,
then as many verdicts will exist as there are views and each of them would represent the final
order. For example, if one scholar holds that barley malt is prohibited and another jurist’s view is
that it is permissible, then it would really be both prohibited and permissible. That is, for one
who holds is prohibited, its use would be prohibited while for the other its use would be
permissible. About this (theory of) correctness, Muhammed ibn Abdi’l-Karim al-Shahristani
writes:
A group of theorists hold that in matters where ijtihad (research) is applied there is no settled
view about permissibility or otherwise and and lawfulness and prohibition thereof, but whatever
the mujtahid (theresearcher scholar) hold is the order of Allah, because the ascertainment of the
view of Allah depends upon the verdict of the mujtahid. If it is not so, there will be no verdict at
all. And according to this view, every mujtahid would be correct in his opinion. (Al-Milal wal
Nihal, p. 98)
In this case, the mujtahid is taken to be above mistake because a mistake can be deemed to
occur where a step is taken against reality, but where there is not reality of verdict, mistake has
no sense. Besides this, the mujtahid can be considered to be above mistake if it is held that Allah,
being aware of all the views that were likely to be adopted has ordained as many final orders as a
result of which every view corresponds to some such order, or that Allah has assured that the
views adopted by the mujtahids should not go beyond what He has ordained, or that by chance,
the view of every one of them would, after all, correspond to some ordained order or other.
The Imamiyyah sect, however, has a different theory, namely that Allah has neither assigned
to anyone the right to legislate nor subjected any matter to the view of the mujtahid, nor in case
of a difference of views has He ordained numerous real orders. Of course, if the mujtahid cannot
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arrive at a real order than whatever view he takes after research and probing is enough for him
and his followers to act by. Such an order is the apparent order which is a substitute for thereal
order. In this case, he is excused for missing thereal order because he did his best for diving in
the deep ocean and to explore its bottom. But, it is a pity that instead of pearls he go only
Theseashell. He dos not say that observers should except it as a pearl or it should see as such. It
is a different matter that Allah, who watches the endeavors, may price it at half so that the
endeavor does not go to waste nor his passion discouraged.
If the theory of correctness is adopted then every verdict on law and every opinion shall have
to be accepted as correct as Maybudhi has written in fatwa:
In this matter the view adopted by al-Ash’ari is right. It follows that differing opinions should
all be right. Beware, do not bear a bad idea about jurists and do not open your tongue to abuse
them.
When contrary theories and divergent views are accepted as correct, it is strange why the
action of some conspicuous individuals are explained as mistakes of decision since mistakes of
decision by the mujtahid cannot be imagined at all. If the theory of correctness is right, the action
of Mu’awiyah and AA’isha should be deemed right; but if their actions can be deemed to be
wrong then we should agree that ijtihad can also go wrong and that the theory of correctness is
wrong. It will then remain to be decided in its own context whether feminism did not impede the
decision of AA’isha or whether it was a (wrong) finding of Mu’awiyah or something else.
However, this theory of correctness was propounded in order to cover mistakes and to give them
the garb of Allah’s orders so that there should be no impediment in achieving objectives nor
should anyone be able to speak against any misdeeds.
In this sermon, Amir al-Mu’minin has referred to those people who deviate from the path of
Allah and closing their eyes to light, grope in the darkness of imagination, make faith the victim
of their views and opinions, pronounce new findings, pass orders by their own imagination and
produce divergent results. Then on the basis of the theory of correctness, they regard all these
divergent and contrary orders as from Allah as though each of their orders represent the Divine
revelation so that no order of theirs can be wrong nor can they stumble on any occasion. Thus,
Amir al-Mu’minin says in disproving this view that:
1) When Allah is One, the Book (Holy Qur’an) is one and the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) is one, then thereligion (that is followed) should also be one. And when thereligion
is one, how can there be divergent orders about any matter because there can be divergence in an
order only in case he who passed the order has forgotten it or is oblivious or senselessness
overtakes him or he willfully desires entanglement in these labyrinths while Allah and the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) are above these things. These divergences cannot
therefore be attributed to them. These divergences are rather the outcome of the thinking and
opinions of people who are bent on twisting the delineations of religion by their own imaginative
performances.
2) Allah must have either forbidden these divergences or ordered creating them. If He has
ordered in their favor, where is that order and at what place? As for forbidding, the Holy Qur’an
says the following:
Y.Say thou! AHath Allah permitted you or ye forge a lie against Allah? (Holy Qur’an 10:59)
That is, everything that is not in accordance with the Divine orders is a concoction and
concoction is forbidden and prohibited. For concocters, in the next world, there is neither success
or achievement nor prosperity and good. Thus Allah says the following:
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And utter ye not whatever lie describes your tongues (saying) : This is lawful and this is
forbidden, to forge a lie against Allah; verily, those who forge a lie against Allah do not succeed.
(Holy Qur’an, 16:116)
3) If Allah has left religion incomplete and thereason for leaving it halfway was that He
desired that the people should assist Him in completely thereligious code and share with Him in
the task of legislating, then this belief is obviously polytheism. If He sent down thereligion in
complete form, the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) must have failed in conveying it so
that room was left for others to apply imagination and opinion. This, Allah forbid, would mean a
weakness of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and a bad slur of Theselection of Allah.
4) Allah has said in the Holy Qur’an that He has not left out anything in the Book and has
clarified each and every matter. Now, if an order is carved out in conflict with the Holy Qur’an it
would be outside thereligious code and its basis would not be on knowledge and perception, or
the Holy Qur’an and Sunna, but it would be a personal opinion and one’s personal judgment
which cannot be deemed to have accord with religion and faith.
5) Holy Qur’an is the basis and source of religion and the fountain head of the laws of Shari’a.
If the laws of Shari’a were divergent, there should have been divergence in it also. And, if there
were divergences in it, it could not be regarded as the Divine word. When it is the Divine word
the laws of Shari’a cannot be divergent so as to accept all divergent and contrary views as correct
and imaginative verdicts taken as Holy Qur’anic dictates.
SERMON 19
Amir al-Mu’minin delivering a lecture from the pulpit of (the mosque of) Kufa when alAsh’ath ibn Qays1 objected and said, AO Amir al-Mu’minin, this thing is not in your favor but
against you.2 Amir al-Mu’minin looked at him with anger and said:
How do you know what is for me and what is against me? Curse of Allah and other be on you.
You are a weaver and son of a weaver. You are the son of an unbeliever and yourself a
hypocrite. You were arrested once by the unbelievers and once by the Muslims, but you wealth
and birth could not save you from either. The man who contrives for his own people to be put to
sword and invites death and destruction for them does deserve that the near ones should hate him
and theremote ones should not trust him.
As-Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: This man was arrested once when an unbeliever and
once in the days of Islam. AS for Amir al-Mu’minin’s words that the man contrived for his own
people to be put to the sword, the reference herein is to the incident which occurred to al-Ash’ath
ibn Qays in confrontation with Khalid ibn al-Walid at Yamama, where he deceived his people
and contrived a trick until Khalid attacked them. After this incident his people nicknamed him A
Urfan-Nar which in the parlance, stood for traitor.
AL-ASH’ATH ibn QAYS AL-KINDI
1. His original name was Ma’di Karb and surname Abu Muhammed, but because of his
disheveled hair, he is better known as al-Ash’ath (one having disheveled hair). When after the
proclamation (of Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) hood), he came to Mecca along with
his tribe, the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) invited him and his tribe to accept Islam.
When after the hijra (immigration of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) Islam
became established and in full swing and deputations began to come to Medina in large numbers,
he also came to the Prophet’s audience with Banu Kindah and accepted Islam. The author of AlAIsti’ab writes that after the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , this man again turned
unbeliever but when the Caliphate of Abu Bakr, he was brought to Medina as a prisoner, he
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again accepted Islam, though this time too, his Islam was a show. Thus, Sheikh Muhammed
AAbdo writes in his annotations on Nahj al-Balagha:
Just as AAbdullah ibn Ubayy ibn Sallul was a companion of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) , al-Ash’ath was a companion of Ali and both were high-ranking hypocrites.
He lost of his eyes in the battle of Yarmuk. Ibn Qutaybah has included him in the list of the
one-eyed. Abu Bakr’s sister, Umm Farwah ibn Abu Quhafah, who was once the wife of an alAzdi and then of Tamim ad-Darimi, was on the third occasion married to this al-Ash’ath. Three
sons were born of her viz. Muhammed, Isma’il and Ishaq. Books on biography show that she
was blind. Ibn Abul-Hadid has quoted the following statement of Abul-Faraj wherefrom it
appears that this man was equally involved in the assassination of Ali (A.S) :
On the night of the assassination, Ibn Muljim came to al-Ash’ath ibn Qays and both retired to
a corner of the mosque and sat there when Hijr ibn AAdi passed by that side and he heard alAsh’ath saying to ibn Muljim, ABe quick now of else dawn’s light would disgrace you. On
hearing this, Hijr said to al-al-Ash’ath, AO one-eyed man! You are getting ready to kill Ali and
hastened toward Ali ibn Abu Talib. But, Ibn Muljim had preceded him and struck Ali with a
sword. When Hijr turned back, people were crying, Ali (A.S) has been killed.
It was his daughter who killed Imam Hasan () by poisoning him. Mas’udi has written that:
His (Hasan’s) wife Ja’dah daughter of al-Ash’ath poisoned him while Mu’awiyah had
conspired with her that if she could contrive to poison Hasan (), he would pay her one hundred
thousand dirhams and marry her to Yazid. (Muraj al-Thahab, Vol. 2, p. 650)
His son Muhammed ibn al-Ash’ath was active in playing fraud with Hadrath Muslim bin
AAqil in Kufa and in shedding Imam Husain’s blood in Kerbala’. But despite all these points, he
is among those from whom al-Bukhari, Muslim, Abu Dawud, al-Tirmithi, al-Nisa’i and ibn
Majah have related traditions.
2. After the battle of Nahrawan, Amir al-Mu’minin was delivering a sermon in the mosque of
Kufa about the ill effects of AArbitration when a man stood up and said, AO Amir al0-mu’min,
first you desisted us from this arbitration but thereafter you allowed it. We cannot understand
which of these two was more correct and proper. On hearing this Amir al-Mu’minin clapped his
one hand over the other and said, AThis is thereward of one who gives up a firm view that is, this
is the outcome of your own actions as you had abandoned firmness and caution and insisted on
Aarbitration, but al-Ash’ath mistook it to mean as though Amir al-Mu’minin implied that Amy
worry was due to having accepted arbitration, so he spoke out, AO Amir al-Mu’minin, this bring
blame on your own self whereupon Amir al-Mu’minin said harshly:
What do you know what I am saying and what do you understand what is for me or against
me. You are a weaver and the son of a weaver brought up by unbelievers and a hypocrite. Curse
of Allah and all the world be upon you.
Commentators have written several reasons for Amir al-Mu’minin calling al-Ash’ath a
weaver. The first reason is because he and his father, like most of the people of his native place,
pursued the industry of weaving cloth. So, in order to refer to the lowliness of his occupation, he
as been called a Aweaver. Yemanese had other occupations also but mostly this profession was
followed among them. Describing their occupations, Khalid ibn Safwan has mentioned this one
first of all.
What can I say about a people among whom them are only weavers, leather dyers, monkey
keepers and donkey riders. The hoopoe found them out, the mouse flooded them and a woman
ruled over them. (al-Bayan wa’t-tabyin, Vol. 1, p. 130)
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The second reason is that Ahiyakah means walking by bending on either side and since out of
pride and conceit this man used to walk shrugging his shoulders and making bends in this body,
he has been called Ahayik.
The third reason isCand it is more conspicuous and clearCthat he has been called a weaver to
denote his foolishness and lowliness because every low person is proverbially knows as a
weaver. Their wisdom and sagacity can be well-gauged by the fact that their follies had become
proverbial while nothing attains proverbial status without peculiar characteristics. Now that Amir
al-Mu’minin has also confirmed it, no further argument or reasoning is needed.
The fourth reason is that by this it is meant the person who conspired against Allah and the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and prepared webs of which is the peculiarity of
hypocrites. Thus, in Wasa’il ash- Shi’a (Vol. 12, p. 101) it is stated:
It was mentioned before Imam Ja’fer as-Sadiq () that the weaver is accursed when he
explained that the weaver implies the person who concocts against Allah and the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
After the word weaver, Amir al-Mu’minin has used the word hypocrite and there is no
conjunction in between them in order to emphasize the nearness of meaning thereof. The n, on
the basis of this hypocrisy and concealment of truth, he declared him deserving of the curse of
Allah and all others, as Allah the Glorified says the following:
Verily, those that conceal what we have sent of (Our) manifest evidences and guidance, after
what we have (so) clearly shown for mankind in the Book, are those that Allah curses and are
(also) cursed by all those who curse (Holy Qur’an, 2:159).
After this, Amir al-Mu’minin said AYou could not avoid the degradation of being prisoner
when you were unbeliever, not did these ignominies spare you after acceptance of Islam and you
were taken prisoner. When an unbeliever, the event of his being taken prisoner occurred in this
way that when the tribe of Banu Murad killed his father Qays, he (al-Ash’ath) collected the
warriors of Banu Kindah and divided them into three groups. He himself took the command over
one group and on the others, he placed Kab ibn Hani’ and al-Qash’am ibn Yazid al-Arqam as
chiefs. They set off to deal with Banu Murad. But as misfortune would have it instead of Banu
Murad, he attacked Banu al-Harith ibn Ka’b. The result was that Kab ibn Hani’ and al-Qash’am
ibn Yazid al-Arqam were killed and this man was taken prisoner alive. Eventually, he got a
release by paying three thousand camels a ransom. In Amir al-Mu’minin’s words, AYour wealth
or birth could not save you from either, the reference is not to real Afidyah’ (release money)
because he was actually released on payment of release money but the intention is that neither
plenty of wealth nor his high position and prestige in his tribe could save him from this
ignominy, and he could not protect himself from being a prisoner.
The event of his second imprisonment is that when the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) of Islam passed away from this world a rebellion occurred in theregion of
Hadramawt for repelling which Caliph Abu Bakr wrote to the governor of the place Ziyad ibn
Labid al-Bayadi al-Ansari that he should secure allegiance and collect zakat and charities from
those people. When Ziyad ibn Labid went to the tribe of Banu AAmr ibn Mu’awiyah for
collection of zakat he took a keen fancy for a she-camel of Shaytan ibn Hijr which was very
handsome had a huge body. He jumped over it and took possession of it. Shaytan ibn Hijr did not
agree to spare it and said to him to take over some other she-camel in its place but Ziyad would
not agree. Shaytan sent for his brother al-AAdda’ ibn Hijr for his support. On coming he too had
a talk but Ziyad insisted on this point and did not, by any means, consent to keep off his hand
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from that she-camel. At last, both these brothers appealed to Masruq ibn Ma’di Karib for help.
Consequently, Masruq also used his influence so that Ziyad might leave the she-camel but he
refused categorically, whereupon Masruq became enthusiastic and untying the she-camel handed
it over to Satan. On this, Ziyad was infuriated and collecting his men became ready to fight. On
the other side, Banu Wali’ah also assembled to face the but could not defeat Ziyad and were
badly beaten at his hands. Their women were taken away and property was looted. Eventually
those who had survived were obliged to take refuge under the protection of al-Ash’ath. AlAsh’ath promised assistance on the condition that he should be acknowledged ruler of the area.
Those people agreed to this condition and his coronation was also formally solemnized. After
having his authority acknowledged he arranged an army and set out to fight Ziyad. On the other
side Abu Bakr had written to the chief of Yemen, al-Muhajir ibn Abu Umayyah to go for the
help of Ziyad with a contingent. Al-Muhajir was coming with his contingent when they came
face to face. Seeing each other, they drew swords and commenced fighting at az-Zurqan. In the
end al-Ash’ath fled from the battle-field and taking his remaining men closed himself in the fort
of an-Najjar. The enemy was such as to let them alone. They laid siege around the fort. AlAsh’ath thought how long could he remain shut up I the fort with the lack of equipment and men
and that he should think out some way of escape. So one night he stealthily came out of the fort
and met Ziyad and al-Muhajir and conspired with them that if they gave asylum to nine members
of his family, he would get the fort gate opened. They accepted this term and asked him to write
for them, the names of those nine persons. He wrote down the nine names, but acting on his
traditional wisdom forgot to write his own name in that list. After settling this, he told his people
that he had secured protection for them and the gate of the fort should be opened. When the gate
was opened Ziyad As forces pounced upon them. They said they had been promised protection
whereupon Ziyad’s army said that this was wrong and that al-Ash’ath had asked protection only
for nine members of his house, whose names were preserved with them. In short, eight hundred
persons were put to sword and the hands of several women were hopped off, while according to
Thesettlement, nine men were left, but the case of al-Ash’ath became complicated. Eventually, it
was decided that he should be sent to Abu Bakr and he should decide about him. At last, he was
sent to Medina in chains along with a thousand women prisoners. On the way, relations and
others, men and women, all hurled curses at him and the women were calling him traitor and the
one who got his own people put to sword. Who else can be a great traitor? However, when he
reached Medina, Abu Bakr released him and on that occasion, he was married to Umm Farwah.
SERMON 20
Death and taking lessons from it
If you could see what has been seen by those of you who have died, you would be puzzled
and troubled. Then you would have listened and obeyed; but what they have seen is yet curtained
off from you. Shortly, the curtain would be thrown off. You have been shown, provided you see
and you have been made to listen provided you listen and you have been guided if you accept
guidance. I spoke unto you with truth. You have been called aloud by (instructive) examples and
warned through items full of warnings. After the heavenly messengers (angels), only man can
convey the message from Allah. (So what I am conveying is from Allah).
SERMON 21
Advice to keep light in this world
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Your aim (reward or punishment) is before you. Behind your back is the hour (of
resurrection) which is driving you on. Keep (yourself) light and overtake (the forward ones).
Your last ones are being awaited by the first ones (who have preceded).
As-Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: If this utterance of Ali (A.S) is weighed with any
other utterance except the words of Allah or of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ,
it would prove heavier and superior in every respect. For example, Ali’s saying Akeep light and
overtake is the shortest expression every heard with the greatest sense conveyed by it. How wide
is its meaning and how clear is its spring of wisdom! We have pointed out the greatness and
meaningfulness of this phrase in our book Al-Khasa’is.
SERMON 22
About those who accused him of AOthman’s killing
Beware! Satan has certainly started instigating his forces and has collected his army in order
that oppression may reach its extreme ends and wrong may come back to its position. By Allah,
they have not put a correct blame on me, nor have they done justice between me and themselves.
They are demanding of me a right which they have abandoned and a blood that they have
themselves shed.1 If I were a partner with them in it then they too have their share of it. But if
they did it without me they alone have to face the consequences. Their biggest argument 9against
me) is 9really) against themselves. They are suckling form a mother who is already dry and
bringing into life innovation that is already dead. How disappointing is this challenger 9to battle)
? Who is this challenger and for what is he being responded to? I am happy that thereasoning of
Allah has been exhausted before them and He knows (all) about them. If they refuse (to obey) I
will offer them the edge of the sword which is enough of a cure of wrong and supporter of right.
It is strange that they send me word to proceed to them for spear-fighting and to keep ready
for fighting with swords. May the mourning women mourn over them. I have ever been so that I
as never frightened by fighting nor threatened by clashing. I enjoy full certainty of belief from
my Allah and have no doubt in my faith.
1. When Amir al-Mu’minin was accused of AOthman’s assassination, he delivered this
sermon to refute that allegation, wherein he says about those who blamed him that: AThese
seekers of vengeance cannot say that I alone am the assassin and that no one else took part in it.
Nor can they falsify witnessed events by saying that they were unconcerned with it. Why then
have they put me foremost for this avenging? With me they should include themselves also. If I
am free of this blame they cannot establish their freedom from it. How can they detach
themselves from this punishment? the truth of the matter is that by accusing me of this charge,
their aim is that I should behave with them in the same manner to which they are accustomed.
But they should behave with them in the same manner to which they are accustomed. But they
should not expect from me that I would revive the innovations of the previous regimes. AS for
fighting, neither was I ever afraid of it nor am I so now. Allah knows my intention and He also
knows that those standing on the excuse of taking revenge are themselves his assassins. Thus,
history corroborates that the people who managed his (AOthman’s) assassination by agitation
and had even prevented his burial in Muslims’ graveyard by hurling stones at his coffin were the
same who rose for avenging his blood. In this connection, the names of Talhah ibn Ubaydillah,
az-Zubayr ibn al-AAwwam and AA’isha are at the top of the list since on both occasions their
efforts come to sigh with conspicuity. Thus ibn Abul-Hadid writes that:
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Those who have written the account f the assassination of AOthman state that one ht day of
his killing Talhah’s condition was that in order to obscure himself form the eyes of the people he
had a veil on his face and was shooting arrows at AOthman’s house.
And, in this connection about az-Zubayr ideas he writes:
Historians have also stated that az-Zubayr used to say AKill AOthman. He has altered your
faith. People said, AYour son is standing at his door and guarding him and he replied, AEven my
son my be lost, but AOthman must be killed. AOthman will be lying like a carcass on Sirat
tomorrow. (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 9, pp. 35-36)
About AA’isha, Ibn AAbd Rabbih writes:
Mughirah ibn Shu’bah came to AA’isha when she said, AO Abu AAbdullah, I wish you have
been with me on the day of Jamal; how arrows were piercing through my hawdaj (camel litter)
till some of them stuck my body. Al-Mughirah said, AI wish one of them should have killed you.
She said, AAllah may have pity on you; why so? He replied, ASo that it would have been some
atonement for what you had done against AOthman. (Al-AIqd al-Farid, Vol. 4, p. 294)
SERMON 23
About keeping aloof from envy and good behavior toward kith and kin
Now then, verily the Divine orders descend form heaven to earth like drops of rain bringing to
every one what is destined for him whether plenty or paucity. So if any one of you observes for
his brother plenty of progeny or of wealth or of self, it should not be a worry for him. So long as
a Muslim does not commit such an act that if it is disclosed, he has to bend his eyes (in shame)
and by which low people are emboldened he is like the gambler who expects that the first draw
of his arrow would secure him gain and also cover up the previous loss.
Similarly, the Muslim who is free from dishonesty expects one of the two good things; either
a cal from Allah and in that case whatever is with Allah is the best for him or the livelihood of
Allah. He has already children and property while his faith and respect are with him. Certainly,
wealth and children are the plantations of this world while virtuous deeds are the plantation of
the next world. Sometimes, Allah joins all these in some groups.
Beware of Allah against what He has cautioned you and keep afraid of Him to the extend that
no excuse be needed for it. Act without show or intention of being heard for if a man acts for
some one else then Allah makes him over to that one. We ask Allah to grant us) the positions of
the martyrs, company of the virtuous and friendship of the prophets.
O people! Surely no one (even though he may be rich) can do without his kinsmen and their
support by hands or tongues. They alone are his support from therear and can ward off from him
his troubles and they are the most kind to him when tribulations befall him. The good memory of
a man that Allah retains among people is better than the property which others inherit from him.
In the same sermon:
Behold! If any one of you finds your near ones in want or starvation, he should not desist
from helping them with that which will not increase if this help is not extended nor decrease by
thus spending it. Whoever holds up his hand from (helping) his kinsmen, he holds only one hand,
but at the same time of his need, many hands remain held up form helping him. One who is
sweet-tempered can retain the love of his people for good.
As-Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: In this sermon Aal-ghafirah means plenty or
abundance and this is derived from the Arab saying, Aal-jamma al-ghafir or Aal-jamma’ al-ghafir
meaning thick crowd. In some versions for AAl-Ghafirah Aafwatan appears. Aafwah means the
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good and selected part of anything. It is said Aakaltu Aafwata’t-ta’am, to mean AI ate a select
meal. About Awa man yaqbid yadahu Aan’ashiratihi appearing towards the end he points out
how beautiful the meaning of this sentence is, Amir al-Mu’minin implies that he who does not
help his own kinsmen withholds only his hand but when he is in need of their assistance and
would be looking for their sympathy and support, then he would remain deprived of the
sympathies and succor of so many of their extending hands and marching feet.
SERMON 25
When Amir al-Mu’minin received successive news that Mu’awiyah’s men were occupying
cities,1 and his own officers in Yemen namely AUbaydullah ibn AAbbas andSa’id ibn Nimran
came to him retreating after being overpowered by Busr ibn Abu Artat, he was much disturbed
by the slackness of his own men in jihad and their difference with his opinion. Proceeding on the
pulpit, he said:
Nothing (is left to me) but Kufa which I can hold and extend (which is in my hand to play
with). (O Kufa) if this is your condition that whirlwinds continue blowing through you then
Allah may destroy you.
Then he illustrated with the verse of a poet:
O AAmr! By your good father’s life. I have received only a small bit of fat from this pot 9fat
that remains sticking to it after it has been emptied).
Then he continued:
I have been informed that Busr has overpowered Yemen. By Allah, I have begun thinking
about these people that they would shortly snatch away the whole country through their unity on
their wrong and your disunity (from your own right), and separation, your disobedience of your
Imam in matters of right and their obedience to their leader in matters of wrong, their fulfilllment
of the trust in favor of their master and your betrayal, their god work in their cities and your
mischief. Even if I give you charge of a wooden bowl I fear you would run away with its handle.
O my Allah they are disgusted of me and I am disgusted of them. They are weary of me and I
am weary of them. Change them for me with better ones and change me for them with a worse
one. O my Allah melt their hearts as salt melts in water. By Allah I wish I had only a thousand
horsemen of Banu Firas ibn Ghanm (as the poet says) :
If you call them the horsemen would come to you like the summer cloud.
(Thereafter Amir al-Mu’minin alighted from the pulpit): Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following:
In this verse the word Aarmiyah is plural of Aramiyy which means cloud and Ahamin here means
summer. The poet has particularized the cloud of summer because it moves swiftly. This is
because it is devoid of water while a cloud moves slowly when it is laden with rain. Such clouds
generally appear (in Arabia) in winter. By this verse, the poet intends to convey that when they
are called and referred to for help they approach with rapidity and this is borne by the first line
Aif you call them, they will reach you.
1. When after arbitration Mu’awiyah’s position was stabilized, he began thinking of taking
possession of Amir al-Mu’minin’s cities to extend his domain. He sent his armies to different
areas in order that they might secure allegiance for Mu’awiyah by force. In this connection he
sent Busr ibn Abu Artat to Hijaz and he shed blood of thousands of innocent persons from Hijaz
up to Yemen, burned alive tribe after tribe in fire and killed even children so much so that he
butchered two young boys of AUbaydullah ibn AAbbas, the governor of Yemen before their
mother Juwayriyya daughter of Khalid ibn Qarz al-Kinaniyya.
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When Amir al-Mu’minin came to know of his slaughtering and blood shed he thought of
sending a contingent to crush him but due to the continuous fighting, people had become weary
and showed heartlessness instead of zeal. When Amir al-Mu’minin observed their shirking from
war he delivered this sermon wherein he roused them to enthusiasm and self respect and
prompted them to jihad by describing the enemy’s wrongfulness and their own short-comings. At
last Jariyah ibn Qudamah as-Sa`di responded to his call and taking an army of two thousand, set
off in pursuit of Busr and chased him out of Amir al-Mu’minin’s domain.
SERMON 26
Arabia Before the Proclamation of Prophethood
Allah sent Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) as a warner (against vice) for all
the worlds and a trustee of His revelation, while you people of Arabia were following the worst
religion and you resided among rough stones and venomous serpents. You drank dirty water and
ate filthy food. You shed the blood of each other and cared not for relationships. Idols were fixed
among you and sins were clinging to you.
Part of the same sermon on the attentiveness of the people after the death of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household)
I looked and found that there was no supporter for me except my family, so I refrained from
thrusting them unto death. I kept my eyes closed despite motes in them. I drank despite a
choking of the throat. I exercised patience despite trouble in breathing and despite having to take
sour colocynth as food.
Part of the same sermon on Thesettlement between Mu’awiyah and AAmr ibn al-AAs
He did not swear allegiance till he got him to agree that he would pay him its price. The hand
of this purchaser (of allegiance) may not be successful and the contract of Theseller may face
disgrace. Now you should take up arms for war and arrange equipment for it. Its flames have
grown high and its brightness has increased. Clothe yourself with patience for it is the best to
victory.1
1. Amir al-Mu’minin had delivered a sermon before setting off for Nahrawan. These are three
parts from it. In the first part he has described the condition of Arabia before the Proclamation
(of Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) hood) ; in The second he has referred to
circumstances which forced him to keep quiet and in the third he has described the conversation
and settlement between Mu’awiyah and AAmr ibn al-AAs. The position of this mutual settlement
was that when Amir al-Mu’minin sent Jarir ibn AAbdillah al-Bajali to Mu’awiyah to secure his
allegiance, he detained Jarir under the excuse of giving a reply. In the meantime he began
exploring how far the people of Syria would support him. When he succeeded in making them
his supporters by rousing them to avenge AOthman’s blood, he consulted with his brother
AUtbah ibn Abu Sufyan. He suggested, AIf in this matter AAmr ibn AAs was associated he
would solve most of the difficulties through his sagacity, but he would not be easily prepared to
stabilize your authority unless he got the price he desired for it. If you are ready for this he would
prove the best counsellor and helper. Mu’awiyah liked this suggestion, sent for AAmr ibn AAs
and discussed with him, and eventually it was settled that he would avenge AOthman’s blood by
holding Amir al-Mu’minin liable for it in exchange for the governorship of Egypt, and by
whatever means possible would not let Mu’awiyah’s authority in Syria suffer. Consequently,
both of them fulfillled the agreement and kept their words.
SERMON 27
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Exhorting people for Jihad
Now then, surely Jihad is one of the doors to Paradise, which Allah has opened for His chief
friends. It is the dress of piety and the protective armor of Allah and His trustworthy shield.
Whoever abandons it Allah covers him with the dress of disgrace and the clothes of distress. He
is kicked with contempt and scorn, and his heart is veiled with screens (of neglect). Truth is
taken away from him because of missing jihad. He has to suffer ignominy and justice is denied to
him.
Beware! I called you (insistently) to fight these people night and day, secretly and openly and
exhorted you to attack them before they attacked you, because by Allah, no people have been
attacked in the hearts of their houses but they suffered disgrace. But you put it off for others and
forsook it till destruction befell you and your cities were occupied. The horsemen of Banu
Ghamid 1 have reached al-Anbar and killed Hasan ibn Hasan al-Bakri. They have removed your
horsemen from the garrison.
I have come to know that every one of them entered upon Muslim women and other women
under the protection of Islam and took away their ornaments from their legs, arms, necks and
ears. No woman could resist it except by pronouncing the verse, AWe are from Allah and to Him
we shall return. (Holy Qur’an, 2:156) Then they returned, laden with wealth, without any wound
or loss of life. If any Muslim dies of grief after all this he is not to be blamed but rather there is
justification for him before me.
How strange! How strange! By Allah my heart sinks to see the unity of these people in their
wrong-doings and your dispersion from the right. May woe and grief befall you. You have
become the target at which arrows are shot. You are being killed and you do not kill. You are
being attacked but you do not attack. Allah is being disobeyed and you remain agreeable to it.
When I ask you to move against them in the summer you say it is hot weather, spare us until the
heat subsides from us. When I order you to march in winter you say it is severely cold; give us
time until the cold clears from us. These are just excuses of evading heat or cold because if you
run away from heat and cold, you would be, by Allah, running away (in a greater degree) from
the sword (war).
O you semblance of men, not men, your intelligence is that of children and your wit is that of
the occupants of the curtained canopies (women kept in seclusion from the outside world). I wish
I had not seen you nor known you. By Allah, this acquaintance has brought about shame and
resulted in repentance. May Allah fight you! You have filled my heart with puss and loaded my
bosom with rage. You made me drink mouthful after mouthful of grief. You shattered my
counsel by disobeying and leaving me so much so that Quraish started saying that the son of Abu
Talib is brave but does not know (tactics of) war. Allah bless them! Is any one of them more
fierce in war and more older in it than I am? I rose for it although yet within my twenties, and
here I am, have crossed over sixty, but one who is not obeyed can have no opinion.
1. After the battle of Siffin, Mu’awiyah had spread killing and bloodshed all around and
started encroachments on cities within Amir al-Mu’minin’s domain. In this connection he duped
Sufyan ibn AAwf al-Ghamidi with a force of six thousand to attack Hit, al-Anbar and alMada’in. First he reached al-Mada’in but finding it deserted proceeded to al-Anbar. Here a
contingent of five hundred soldiers was posted as guard from Amir al-Mu’minin’s side, but it
could not resist the fierce army of Mu’awiyah. Only a hundred men stuck to their position and
they faced them as stoutly as they could. But, collecting together, the enemy’s force made such a
severe attack that they too could no more resist and the chief of the contingent, Hasan ibn Hasan
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al-Bakri was killed along with thirty others. When the battlefield was clear the enemy ransacked
al-Anbar with total freedom and left the city completely destroyed.
When Amir al-Mu’minin got the news of this attack, he ascended the pulpit and exhorted the
people for crushing the enemy and called them to jihad. Yet, from no quarter was there any voice
or response. He alighted from the pulpit utterly disgusted and worried and in the same condition
set off for the enemy on foot. When people observed this their sense of self-respect and shame
was also awakened and they too followed him. Amir al-Mu’minin stopped at an-Nukhayla.
People then surrounded him and insisted that he return as they had enough to face the enemy.
When their insistence increased beyond reckoning, Amir al-Mu’minin consented to return and
Sa’id ibn Qays al-Hamdani proceeded forward with a force of eight thousand. But Sufyan ibn
AAwf al-Ghamidi had gone, so Sa’id came back without any encounter. When Sa’id reached
Kufa then - according to the version of ibn Abu’ Hadid - Amir al-Mu’minin was so deeply
grieved and indisposed during those days to an extent of not wishing to enter the mosque. He
instead sat in the corridor of his residence (that connects the entrance of the mosque) and wrote
this sermon for the people but gave it to his slave Sa’d to read for them. But al-Mubarrad (AlKamil, Vol. 1, pp. 104-107) has related from AUbaydullah ibn Hafs al-Taymi, Ibn AA’isha, that
Amir al-Mu’minin delivered this sermon on a high place in an-Nukhayla. Ibn Maytham has held
this as a preferable view.
SERMON 28
About the transient nature of this world and the importance of the next world
So now, surely this world has turned its back and announced its departure while the next
world has appeared forward and proclaimed its approach. Today is the day of preparation while
tomorrow is the day of race. The place to proceed to is Paradise while the place of doom is Hell.
Is there no one to offer repentance over his faults before his death? Or is there no one to perform
virtuous acts before the day of trial?
Beware, surely you are in the days of hopes behind which stands death. Whoever acts during
the days of his hope before the approach of his death, his action would benefit him and his death
would not harm him. But he who fails to act during the period of hope before the approach of
death, his action is a loss and his death will harm him. Beware, and act during a period of
attraction just as you act during a period of dread. Beware, surely I have not seen one who covets
Paradise asleep nor dreads Hell to be aslee, p. Beware, he whom right does not benefit must
suffer the harm of the wrong, and he whom guidance does not keep firm will be led away by
misguidance towards destruction.
Beware, you have been ordered insistently to march and have been guided as how to provide
for the journey. Surely the most frightening thing which I am afraid of about you is to follow
desires and to widen the hopes. Provide for yourself from this world what would save you
tomorrow (on the Day of Judgment).
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: If there could be an utterance which would drag the neck
towards renunciation in this world and force action for the next world, it is this sermon. It is
enough to cut one off from the entanglements of hopes and to ignite the flames of preaching (for
virtue) and warning (against vice). His most wonderful words in this sermon are AToday is the
day of preparation while tomorrow is the day of race. The place to proceed to is Paradise while
the place of doom is Hell. Besides the sublimity of these words, the greatness of their meaning,
the true similes and factual illustrations, there are wonderful secrets and delicate implications
therein.
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It is his saying that his place to proceed to is Paradise while the place of doom is Hell. Here he
has used two different words to convey two different meanings. For Paradise he has used the
word Athe place to proceed to but for Hell this word has not been used. One proceeds to a place
which he likes and desires, and this can be true for Paradise only. Hell does not have the
attractiveness that it may be liked or proceeded to. We seek Allah’s protection from it. Since for
Hell it was not proper to say Ato be proceeded to Amir al-Mu’minin employed the word Adoom
implying the last place of stay where one reaches even though it may mean grief and worry or
happiness and pleasure.
This word is capable of conveying both senses. However, it should be taken in Thesense of
Aal-masir or Aal-ma’al, that is, the last resort. Holy Qur’anic verse is Asay thou AEnjoy ye (your
pleasures yet a while) for your last resorts unto the (hell) fire (14:30). Here to say Asabqatakum
that is, Athe place for you to proceed tO in place of the word Amasirakum’ that is, your doom or
last resort would not be proper in any way. Think and ponder over it and see how wondrous is its
inner implication and how far its depth goes with beauty. Amir al-Mu’minin’s utterance is
generally on these lines. In some versions the word Asabqah is shown as Asubqah which is
applied to a reward fixed for the winner in a race. However, both the meanings are near to each
other, because a reward is not for an undesirable action but for a good and commendable
performance.
SERMON 29
About those who found pretexts at the time of jihad
O people, your bodies are together but your desires are divergent. Your talk softens the hard
stones and your action attracts your enemy towards you. You claim in your sittings that you
would do this and that, but when fighting approaches, you say (to war), Aturn thou away’ (i.e.
flee away). If one calls you (for help) the call receives no heed. And he who deals harshly with
you his heart has no solace. The excuses are amiss like that of a debtor unwilling to pay. The
ignoble cannot ward off oppression. Right cannot be achieved without effort. Which is the house
besides this one to protect? And with which leader (Imam) would you go for fighting after me?
By Allah! deceived is one whom you have deceived while, by Allah, he who is successful
with you receives only useless arrows! You are like broken arrows thrown over the enemy. By
Allah! I am now in the position that I neither confirm your views nor hope for your support, nor
challenge the enemy through you. What is the matter with you? What is your ailment? What is
your cure? the other party is also men of your shape (but they are so different in character). Will
there be talk without action, carelessness without piety and greed in things not right? 1
1. After the battle of Nahrawan, Mu’awiyah sent ad-Dahhak ibn Qays al-Fihri with a force of
four thousand towards Kufa with the purpose that he should create disorder in the area, killing
whomever he found and keeping them busy with bloodshed and destruction so that Amir alMu’minin should find no rest or peace of mind. He set off for the achievement of this aim, and
shedding innocent blood and spreading destruction all around reached the way up to the place of
ath-Tha’labiyya. He attacked a caravan of pilgrims (to Mecca) and looted all their wealth and
belongings. Then at al-Qutqutana, he killed the nephew of AAbdullah ibn Mas’ud, the Holy
Prophet’s companion, namely AAmr ibn AUways ibn Mas’ud together with his followers. In this
manner he created havoc and bloodshed all around. When Amir al-Mu’minin came to know of
this wreck and ruin he called his men to battle in order to put a stop to this vandalism, but people
seemed to avoid war. Being disgusted with their lethargy and lack of enthusiasm he ascended the
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pulpit and delivered this sermon. He roused the men to feel shame and not to try and avoid war
but to rise for the protection of their country like brave men without employing wrong and lame
excuses. At last Hijr ibn AAdi al-Kindi rose with a force of four thousand for crushing the enemy
and overtook them at Tadmur. Only a small encounter has taken place between the parties when
night came on and they fled with only nineteen killed on their side. In Amir al-Mu’minin’s army,
two persons fell as martyrs.
SERMON 30
Disclosing real facts about the assassination of AOthman ibn AAffan 1 Amir al-Mu’minin
said:
If I had ordered his assassination I should have been his killer, but if I had refrained others
from killing him I would have been his helper. The position was that he who helped him cannot
now say that he is better than the one who deserted him while he who deserted him cannot say
that he is better than the one who helped him. I am putting before you his case. He appropriated
(wealth) and did it badly. You protested against it and committed excess therein. With Allah lies
thereal verdict between the appropriator and the protester.
1. AOthman is the first Umayyad Caliph of Islam who ascended the Caliphate on the 1st of
Muharram, 24 A.H. at the age of seventy. After having wielded full control and authority over
the affairs of the Muslims for twelve years, he was killed at their hands on the 18th Dhi’l-hijjah,
35 A.H. and buried at Hashsh Kawkab.
This fact cannot be denied that AOthman’s killing was theresult of his weaknesses and the
black deeds of his officers. Otherwise, there is no reason that Muslims should have unanimously
agreed on killing him while no one except a few persons of his house stood up to support and
defend him. Muslims would have certainly given consideration to his age, seniority, prestige and
distinction of companionship of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) but his ways and
deeds had so marred the atmosphere that no one seemed prepared to sympathize and side with
him. The oppression and excesses perpetrated on the high-ranking companions of the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) had roused a wave of grief and anger among the Arab tribes.
Everyone was infuriated and looked at his haughtiness and wrong doings with disdainful eyes.
Thus, due to Abu Tharr’s disgrace, dishonor and the externment of Banu Ghifar and their
associate tribes, due to AAbdullah ibn Mas’ud’s merciless beating of Banu Hudhayl and their
associates, due to the breaking of the ribs of AAmmar ibn Yasir Banu Makhzum and their
associates Banu Zuhrah, and due to the plot for the killing of Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr, Banu
Taym all had a storm of rage in their hearts. The Muslims of other cities were also brimful of
complaints at the hands of his officers, who under the intoxication of wealth and the effects of
luxury did whatever they wished and crushed whomever they wanted. They had no fear of
punishment from the center nor apprehension of any enquiry. People were fluttering to get out of
their talons of oppression but no one was ready to listen to their cries of pain and restlessness.
Feelings of hatred were rising but no care was taken to put them down. The companions of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) were also sick of him as they saw that peace was
destroyed, the administration was topsy-turvy and Islam’s features were being metamorphosed.
The poor and the starving were craving for dried crusts while Banu Umayyah were rolling in
wealth. The Caliphate had become a handle for belly-filling and a means of amassing wealth.
Consequently, they too did not lag behind in preparing the ground for killing him. Rather, it was
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at their letters and messages that people from Kufa, Basra and Egypt had collected in Medina.
Observing this behavior of the people of Medina, AOthman wrote to Mu’awiyah:
So now, certainly the people of Medina have turned heretics, have turned faith against
obedience and broken the (oath of) allegiance. So you send to me the warriors of Syria on brisk
and sturdy horses.
The policy of action adopted by Mu’awiyah on receipt of this letter also throws light on the
condition of the companions. Historian al-Tabari writes after this:
When the letter reached Mu’awiyah he pondered over it and considered it bad to openly
oppose the companions of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) since he was aware of
their unanimity.
In view of these circumstances to regard the killing of AOthman as a consequence of timely
enthusiasm and temporary feelings and to hurl it at some insurgents is to veil the fact, since all
the factors of his opposition existed within Medina itself, while those coming from without had
collected for seeking redress of their grievances at their call. Their aim was only improvement of
the position, not killing or bloodshed. If their complaints had been heard then an occasion for this
bloodshed would not have arisen. What happened was that when, having been disgusted with the
oppression and excesses of AAbdullah ibn Sa’d ibn Abu Sahr who was foster brother of
AOthman, the people of Egypt proceeded towards Medina and camped in the valley of
Dhakhushub near the city. They sent a man with a letter to AOthman and demanded that
oppression should stop, the existing ways should be changed and repentance should be offered
for the future. But instead of giving a reply, AOthman turned these men out of the house and did
not consider their demands worthy of any attention.
The people entered the city to raise their voice against this pride and haughtiness, and
complained to the people of this behavior besides other excesses. On the other side many people
from Kufa and Basra had also arrived with their complaints. After joining with these, together
they proceeded forward with the additional backing of the people of Medina and confined
AOthman within his house, although there was no restriction on his going and coming to the
mosque. But in his sermon on the very first Friday he severely rebuked these people and even
held them accursed, whereupon people got infuriated and threw pebbles at him. As a result, he
lost control and fell from the pulpit. After a few days, his coming and going to the Mosque was
also banned.
When AOthman saw matters deteriorating to this extent he implored Amir al-Mu’minin very
submissively to find some way for his rescue and to disperse the people in whatever way he
could. Amir al-Mu’minin said, AOn what terms can I ask them to leave when their demands are
justified? AOthman said, AI authorize you in this matter. Whatever terms you would settle with
them I would be bound by them. So Amir al-Mu’minin went and met the Egyptians and talked to
them. They consented to return on the condition that all the tyrannies should be wiped out and
Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr made governor by removing ibn Abu Sahr. Amir al-Mu’minin came
back and put their demand before AOthman who accepted it without any hesitation and said that
to get over these excesses, time was required. Amir al-Mu’minin pointed out that for matters
concerning Medina delay had no sense. However, for other places so much time could be
allowed that the Caliph’s message could reach them. AOthman insisted that three days were also
needed for Medina. After discussion with the Egyptians, Amir al-Mu’minin agreed to it also and
took all theresponsibility thereof upon himself. Then they dispersed at his suggestion. Some of
them went to Egypt with Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr while some went to the valley of
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Dhakhushub and stayed there until this whole matter ended. On The second day of this event,
Marwan ibn al-Hakam said to AOthman, AIt is good, these people have gone, but to stop people
coming from other cities you should issue a statement so that they should not come this way, but
sit quiet at their places. That statement should be that Asome people collected in Medina after
hearing some irresponsible talk but when they came to know that whatever they heard was
wrong they were satisfied and have gone back. Othman did not want to speak such a clear lie but
Marwan canvassed him so that he agreed, and speaking in the Holy Prophet’s Mosque, he said:
AThese Egyptians had received some news about their Caliph and when satisfied that they
were all baseless and wrong they went back to their cities.
No sooner had he said this when there was great hue and cry in the Mosque, and people began
to shout to AOthman, AOffer repentance, fear Allah; what is this lie you are uttering? AOthman
was confused in this commotion and had to offer repentance. Consequently, he turned to the
Ka’ba, moaned in the audience of Allah and returned to his house.
Probably after this very event Amir al-Mu’minin advised’Othman saying, AYou should
openly offer repentance about your past misdeeds so that these uprisings should subside for
good. Otherwise, if tomorrow people of some other place come, you will again cling to my neck
to rid you of them. Consequently, Othman delivered a speech in the Prophet’s Mosque wherein
admitting his mistakes he offered repentance and swore to remain careful in future. He told the
people that when he alighted from the pulpit their representatives should meet him, and he would
remove their grievances and meet their demands. On this people acclaimed this action of his and
washed away their ill-feelings with tears to a great extent. When he reached his house after
finishing from there, Marwan sought permission to say something but AOthman’s wife Na’ila
daughter of Qarafisah intervened. Turning to Marwan, she said, AFor Allah’s sake, you keep
quiet. You would say only such a thing as would bring but death to him. Marwan took offense
and retorted, AYou have no right to interfere in these matters. You are the daughter of that very
person who did not know till his death how to perform ablution. Na’ila replied with fury, AYou
are wrong, and are laying a false blame. Before uttering anything about my father you should
have cast a glance on the features of your father. But for the consideration of that old man I
would have spoken things at which people would have shuddered but would have confirmed
every such word. When AOthman saw the conversation getting prolonged he stopped them and
asked Marwan to tell him what he wished. Marwan said, AWhat is it you have said in the
Mosque, and what repentance have you offered? In my view sticking to the sin was a thousand
times better than this repentance because however much the sins may multiply there is always
scope for repentance, but repentance by force is no repentance. You have said what you have but
now see the consequences of this open announcement, that crowds of people are at your door.
Now go forward and fulfill their demands. AOthman then said, AWell, I have said what I have
said, now you deal with these people. It is not in my power to deal with them. Consequently,
finding out his implied consent Marwan came out and addressing the people spoke out, AWhy
have you assembled here? Do you intend to attack or to ransack? Remember, you cannot easily
snatch away power from our hands, take that idea out from your hearts that you would subdue
us. We are not to be subdued by anyone. Take away your black faces from here. Allah may
disgrace and dishonor you.
When people noticed this changed countenance and altered picture, they rose from there full
of anger and rage and went straight to Amir al-Mu’minin and related to him the whole story. On
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hearing it Amir al-Mu’minin was infuriated and immediately went to AOthman and said to him.
AGood Heavens. How badly you have behaved with the Muslims. You have forsaken faith for
the sake of a faithless and characterless man and have lost all wit. At least you should have
regard and consideration for your own promise. What is this that at Marwan’s betokening you
have set off with folded eyes? Remember he will throw you in such a dark well that you will
never be able to come out of it. You have become the carrier animal of Marwan so that he can
ride on you howsoever he desires and put you on whatever wrong way he wishes. In the future I
shall never intervene in your affairs nor tell people anything. Now you should manage your own
affairs.
Saying all this Amir al-Mu’minin got back and when Na’ila got the chance, she said to
AOthman, ADid I not tell you to get rid of Marwan otherwise he would put such a stain on you
that it would not be removed despite all effort. Well, what is the good in following the words of
one who is without any respect among the people and low before their eyes. Make Ali agree
otherwise remember that restoring the disturbed state of affairs is neither within your power nor
in that of Marwan. AOthman was impressed by this and sent a man after Amir al-Mu’minin but
he refused to meet with him. There was no siege around AOthman but shame deterred him. With
what face could he come out of the house? But there was no way without coming out.
Consequently, he came out quietly in the gloom of night and reaching Amir al-Mu’minin’s place,
he moaned his helplessness and loneliness, offered excuses, and also assured him of keeping
promises but Amir al-Mu’minin said, AYou make a promise in the Prophet’s Mosque standing
before all the people but it is fulfillled in this way that when people go to you they are rebuked
and even abuses are hurled at them. When this is the state of your undertakings which the world
has seen, then how and on what grounds can I trust any word of yours in the future. Do not have
any expectation from me now. I am not prepared to accept any responsibility on your behalf. The
tracks are open before you. Adopt whichever way you like and tread whatever track you choose.
After this talk AOthman came back and began blaming Amir al-Mu’minin in retort to the effect
that all the disturbances were rising at his instance and that he was not doing anything despite
being able to do everything.
On this side theresult of repentance was as it was. Now let us see the other side. When after
crossing the border of Hijaz, Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr reached the place Aylah on the coast of
thered Sea people caught sight of a camel rider who was making his camel run so fast as though
the enemy was chasing him. These people had some misgivings about him and therefore called
him and inquired as to who he was. He said he was the slave of AOthman. They inquired as to
where he was bound. He said Egypt. They inquired to whom he was going. He replied to the
Governor of Egypt. People said that the Governor of Egypt was with them. To whom was he
going then? He said he was to go to ibn Abu Sahr. People asked him if any letter was with him.
He denied. They asked for what purpose he was going. He said he did not know that. One of
these people thought that his clothes should be searched. So Thesearch was made, but nothing
was found on him. Kinanah ibn Bishr ar-Tujibi said, ASee his water-skin. People said, ALeave
him, how can there be a letter in water! Kinanah said, AYou do not know what cunning these
people play. Consequently, the water-skin was opened and seen. There was a lead pipe in it
wherein was a letter. When it was opened and read the Caliph’s order in it was that AWhen
Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr and his party reaches you then from among them kill so and so, arrest
so and so, and put so and so in jail, but you remain on your post. On reading this all were stunned
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and thus began to look at one another in astonishment. As a Persian axiom says, AMind was just
burst in astonishment as to what wonder it was!
Those proceeding forward were riding into the mouth of death, consequently they returned to
Medina taking the slave with them. Reaching there they placed that letter before all the
companions of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Whoever heard this incident
remained stunned with astonishment, and there was no one who was not abusing AOthman.
Afterwards a few companions went to AOthman along with these people, and asked whose seal
was there on this letter. He replied that it was his own. They enquired whose writing it was. He
said it was his secretary’s. They enquired whose slave was that man. He replied that it was his.
They enquired whose riding beast it was. He replied that it was that of the Government. They
enquired who had sent it. He said he had no knowledge of it. People then said, AGood Heavens.
Everything is yours but you do not know who had sent it. If you are so helpless, you leave this
Caliphate and get away from it so that such a man can come who can administer the affairs of the
Muslims. He replied, AIt is not possible that I should put off the dress of Caliphate which Allah
has put on me. Of course, I would offer repentance. the people said, AWhy should you speak of
repentance which has already been flouted on the day when Marwan was representing you on
your door, and whatever was wanting has been made up by this letter. Now we are not going to
be duped into these bluffs. Leave the Caliphate and if our brethren stand in our way we will hold
them up; but if they prepare for fighting we too will fight. Neither our hands are stiff nor our
swords blunt. If you regard all Muslims equally and uphold justice hand over Marwan and enable
us to inquire from him on whose strength and support he wanted to play with the precious lives
of Muslims by writing this letter. But Othman rejected this demand and refused to hand over
Marwan to them, whereupon people said that the letter had been written at his behest.
However, improving conditions again deteriorated and they ought to have deteriorated
because despite lapse of therequired time everything was just as it had been and not a jot of
difference had occurred. Consequently, the people who had stayed behind in the valley of
Dhakhushub to watch theresult of repentance again advanced like a flood and spread over the
streets of Medina, and closing the borders from every side, surrounded his house.
During these days of siege a companion of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , Niyar
ibn AIyad, desired to talk to AOthman, went to his house and called him. When he peeped out
from the above he said, AO AOthman, for Allah’s sake give up this Caliphate and save the
Muslims from this bloodshed. While he was just conversing, one of AOthman’s men aimed at
him with an arrow and killed him, whereupon people were infuriated and shouted that Niyar’s
killer should be handed over to them. AOthman said it was not possible that he would hand over
his own support to them. This stubbornness worked like a fan on fire and in the height of fury
people set fire to his door and began advancing. When Marwan ibn al-Hakam, Sa’id ibn al-AAs
and Mughirah ibn al-Akhnas together with their contingents pounced upon the besiegers, killing
and bloodshed started at his door. People wanted to enter the house but they were being pushed
back. In the meanwhile, AAmr ibn Hazm al-Ansari whose house was adjacent to that of
AOthman opened his door and shouted for advancing from that side. Thus through this house the
besiegers climbed on the roof of AOthman’s house and descended down from there, drawing
their swords. Only a few scuffles had taken place when all except the people of AOthman’s
house, his well-wishers and Banu Umayyah ran away in the streets of Medina and a few hid
themselves in the house of Umm Habiba daughter of Abu Sufyan, sister of Mu’awiyah. The rest
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were killed with AOthman as the latter kept defending himself to the last. (Al-Tabaqat, Ibn Sa’d,
Vol. 3, Part 1, pp. 50-58; Tabari, Vol. 1, pp. 2998-3025; Al-Kamil, Ibn al-Athir, Vol. 3, pp. 167180; ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 2, pp. 144-161).
At his killing several poets wrote elegies. A couplet from the elegy by Abu Hurayra is
presented:
Today people have only one grief but I have two griefs
the loss of my money bag and the killing of AOthman.
After observing these events, the position of Amir al-Mu’minin becomes clear. Namely that
he was neither supporting the group that was instigating Othman’s killing nor can be included in
those who stood for his support and defense. Rather, when he saw that what was said was not
acted upon he kept aloof.
When both the parties are looked at among the people who had raised their hands from
AOthman’s support, AA’isha is seen. And according to the popular versions (which are not
right), the then living persons out of the ten pre-informed ones (who had been pre-informed in
this world by the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) for their being admitted to Paradise),
out of those who took part in the consultative committee (formed for AOthman’s selection for
caliphate) Ansar, original Muhajirun, people who took part in the battle of Badr and other
conspicuous and dignified individuals, while on the side (of AOthman) are seen only a few slaves
of the Caliph and a few individuals from Banu Umayyah. If people like Marwan and Sa’id ibn
al-AAs cannot be given precedence over the original Muhajirun their actions too cannot be given
precedence over the actions of the latter. Again, if ijma’ (consensus of opinion) is not meant for
particular occasions only then it would be difficult to question this overwhelming unanimity of
the companions.
SERMON 31
Before the commencement of the Battle of Jamal
Amir al-Mu’minin sent AAbdullah ibn AAbbas to az-Zubayr ibn al-AAwwam with the
purpose that he should advise him to obey, he said to him on that occasion:
Do not meet Talhah (ibn AUbaydillah). If you meet him you will find him like an unruly bull
whose horns are turned towards its ears. He rides a ferocious riding beast and says it has been
tamed. Instead, meet with az-Zubayr because he is soft-tempered. Tell him that your maternal
cousin says that, A(It looks as if) in the Hijaz you knew me (accepted me), but (on coming here
to) Iraq you do not know me (do not accept me). So, what has dissuaded (you) from what was
shown (by you previously)?
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: the last sentence of this sermon AFama Aada minna bada
has been heard only from Amir al-Mu’minin.
SERMON 32
About the disparagement of the world and categories of its people
O people! We have been born in such a wrongful and thankless period wherein the virtuous is
deemed vicious and the oppressor goes on advancing in his excess. We do not make use of what
we know and do not discover what we do not know. We do not fear calamity till it befalls.
People are of four categories. Among them is one who is prevented from mischief only by his
low position, lack of means and paucity of wealth.
Then there is he who has drawn his sword, openly commits mischief, has collected his
horsemen and foot-man and has devoted himself to securing wealth, leading troops, rising on the
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pulpit and has allowed his faith to perish. How bad is the transaction that you allow, (enjoyment
of) this world to be a price for yourself as an alternative for what there is with Allah for you.
And among them is he who seeks (benefits of) this world through actions meant for the next
world, but does not seek (good of) the next world through actions of this world. He keeps his
body calm (in dignity), raises small steps, holds up his clothes, embellishes his body for
appearance of trust-worthiness and uses the position of Allah’s connivance as a means of
committing sins.
Then there is one whose weakness and lack of means have held him back from conquest of
lands. This keeps down his position and he has named it contentment and he clothes himself with
the robe of renunciation although he has never had any connection with these qualities.
Then there remain a few people in whose case the remembrance of their return (to Allah on
the Last Day) keeps their eyes bent, and the fear of resurrection moves their tears. Some of them
are scared away (from the world) and dispersed. Some are frightened and subdued; some are
quiet as if muzzled; some are praying sincerely. Some are grief-stricken and pain-ridden whom
fear has confined to namelessness and disgrace has shrouded them, so they are in (Thesea of)
bitter water. Their mouths are closed and their hearts are bruised. They preached till they were
tired, they were oppressed till they were disgraced and they were killed till they remained few in
number.
The world in your eyes should be smaller than the bark of the acacia and the clippings of
wool. Seek instruction from those who preceded you before those who follow you take
instruction from you, and keep aloof from it realizing its evil because it cuts off even from those
who were more attached to it than you.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Some ignorant persons attributed this sermon to
Mu’awiyah but it is the speech of Amir al-Mu’minin. There should be no doubt about it. What
comparison is there between gold and clay or sweet and bitter water. This has been pointed out
by the skillful guide and the expert critic AAmr ibn Bahr al-Jahiz as he has mentioned this
sermon in his book, Al-Bayan wal-Tbyin (Vol. 2, pp. 59-61). He has also mentioned who
attributed it to Mu’awiyah and then states that it is most akin to be the speech of Ali and most in
accord with his way of categorizing people and information about their oppression, disgrace,
apprehension and fear. (On the other hand) we never found Mu’awiyah speaking on the lives of
those who renounce this world or worshippers.
SERMON 33
Abdullah ibn AAbbas says when Amir al-Mu’minin set out for war with the people of Basra
he came to his audience at Thi-Qar and saw that Abdullah was stitching his shoe. AThen Amir
al-Mu’minin said to me, AWhat is the price of this shoe? I said: AIt has no value now. He then
said, ABy Allah, it should have been more dear to me than ruling over you but for the fact that I
have established right and warded off wrong. Then he came out and spoke:
Verily, Allah sent Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) when none among the
Arabs read a book or claimed prophethood. He guided the people till he took them to their
(correct) position and their salvation, and their spears (ie. officers) became straight and their
conditions settled down.
By Allah, surely I was in their lead till it took shape with its walls. I did not show weakness or
cowardice. My existing march is also like that. I shall certainly pierce the wrong till right comes
out of its side.
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What (cause of conflict) is there between the Quraish and me? By Allah, I have fought them
when they were unbelievers and I shall fight them when they have been misled. I shall be the
same for them today as I was for them yesterday.
By Allah, the Quraish only take revenge against us because Allah has given us (i.e. The Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and his progeny) preference over them. So, we have
allowed them into our domain, whereupon they have become as the former poet says the
following:
By my life, you continued drinking fresh milk every morning,
And (continued) eating fine stoned dates with butter;
We have given you the nobility which you did not possess before;
And surrounded (protected) you with thoroughbred horses and tawny colored spears (strong
spears) 1.
1. In fact, the aim of the poet here is to say that the condition of the addressee’s life, from the
moral and material point of view, had been worse in the past, and that the poet and his tribe had
given him the best means of leading their lives. But as theresult of this improved condition the
addressee has completely lost himself and forgotten his past condition and thinks that he had had
this kind of life previously.
Now, Amir al-Mu’minin wants to convey the same idea here to the Quraish as Fatima (S.A)
the holy daughter of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said in her speech on
Fadak:
(O People). You were on the brink of the pit of Hill Fire (Holy Qur’an, 3:103). You were as
worthless as the mouthful of water. You were of a minority like the handful of greedy and a
spark of the hasty. You were as down-trodden as the dust under your feet. You drank dirty water.
You ate untanned skin. You were abased and condemned. But Allah has rescued you through my
father Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household).
SERMON 34
To prepare the people for fighting with the people of Syria (ash-Sham), Amir al-Mu’minin
said:
Woe unto you! I am tired of rebuking you. Do you accept this worldly life in place of the next
life? Or disgrace in place of dignity? When I invite you to fight your enemy your eyes revolve as
though you are in the clutches of death, and in Thesenselessness of last moments. My pleadings
are not understood by you and you remain stunned. It is as though your hearts are affected with
madness so that you do not understand. You have lost my confidence for good. Neither are you a
support for me to lean upon nor a means to honor and victory. Your example is that of the camels
whose protector has disappeared, so that if they are collected from one side they disperse away
from the other side.
By Allah, how bad are you for igniting flames of war. You are intrigued against but do not
intrigue (against the enemy). Your boundaries are decreasing but you do not get enraged over it.
Those against you do not sleep but you are unmindful. By Allah, those who leave matters one for
the other are subdued. By Allah, I believed about you that if battle rages and death hovers around
you, you will cut away from son of Abu Talib like Thesevering of head from the trunk.1
By Allah, he who makes it possible for his adversary to so overpower him as to remove the
flesh (from his bones), crush his bones and cut his skin into pieces, then it means that his
helplessness is great and that his heart surrounded within the sides of his chest is weak. You may
become like this if you wish. But for me, before I allow it I shall use my sharp-edged swords of
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al-Mushrafiyyah which would cut under the bones of the head and cause arms and feet to fly.
Thereafter, Allah will do whatever He wills.
O people! I have a right over you and you have a right over me. As for your right over me,
that is to counsel you, to pay your dues fully, to teach you that you may not remain ignorant and
instruct you in acceptable behavior that you may act upon. As for my right over you, it is
fulfilllment of (the obligation of) allegiance, well-wishing in presence or in absence, response
when I call you and obedience when I order you.
___________________________________
1. The word Aash-Sham was a name used for a vast geographical area occupied by Muslim
countries in those days. This area included present-day Syria, Lebanon and Palestine. Its capital
was Damascus. Wherever the word Syria is mentioned (in this book) it should be understood in
its larger meaning.
2. This sentence is employed for such severance after which there is no occasion or possibility
of joining. The author of Al-Durra al-Najafiyya has quoted several views in its explanation:
i. Ibn Durayd’s view is that it means that, AJust as when the head is severed its joining again
is impossible. In the same way as you will not join me after once deserting me.
ii. Al-Mufaddal says ar-ra’s (head) was the name of a man, and a village of Syria, Bayt arra’s is named after him. This man left his home and went away somewhere and never again
returned to his village after which the proverb sprang up Ayou went as ar-ra’s had gone.
iii. One meaning of it is that AJust as if the joints of the bones of the head are opened they
cannot be restored, in the same way as you will not join me after cutting away from me.
iv. It has also been said that this sentence is in Thesense of separating completely. After
copying this meaning from the Sharh of Sheikh Qutbud-Din ar-Rawandi, the commentator Ibn
Abul-Hadid has written that this meaning is not correct because when the word Aar-ra’s is used
in this sense of whole it is not preceded by Aalif and Alam.
v. It is also taken to mean that AYou will so run away from me as one (fleeing for life) to save
his head. Besides this, one or two other meanings have also been stated but being remote they are
disregarded.
First of all it was used by the philosopher of Arabia Aktham ibn Sayfi while teaching unity
and concord to his children. He says the following:
O my children do not cut away (from each other) at the time of calamities like the cutting of
the head, because after that you will never get together.
SERMON 35
Amir al-Mu’minin said after Arbitration1
All praise is due to Allah even though time has brought (to us) crushing calamity and great
occurrence. And I stand witness that there is no god but Allah the One, there is no partner for
Him nor is there with Him any god other than Himself, and that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His
Holy Household) is His slave and Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) (May Allah’s blessing
and greeting be upon him and his progeny).
So now, certainly the disobedience of a sympathetic counselor who has knowledge as well as
experience brings about disappointment and that results in repentance. I had given you my orders
about this arbitration and put before you my hidden view that if Qasir’s2 orders were fulfillled
but you rejected it (my orders) like rough opponents and disobedient insurgents till the
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counsellor himself fell in doubt about his counsel and the flint (of his wit) ceased to give flame.
Consequently, my position and yours became as the poet of Hawazin says the following:
I gave you my orders at Mun’arajil-Liwa’ but you did not see the good of my counsel till the
noon of next day (when it was too late).3
1. When the Syrians’ spirit was broken by the bloody swords of Theiraqis, and the incessant
attacks of the night of al-Harir lowered their morale and ended their aspirations, AAmr ibn alAAs suggested to Mu’awiyah the trick that the Holy Qur’an should be raised on spears and
shouts urged forth to treat it as the arbitrator. Its effect would be that some people would try to
stop the war and others would like to continue it. We would thus divide them and be able to get
the war postponed for another occasion. Consequently, copies of the Holy Qur’an were raised on
spears. The result was that some brainless persons raised hue and cry and created division and
disturbance in the army and the efforts of simple Muslims turned slow after having been near
victory. Without understanding anything they began to shout that they should prefer the verdict
of the Holy Qur’an over war.
When Amir al-Mu’minin saw the Holy Qur’an being the instrument of their activities, he said:
AO’ people do not fall in this trap of deceit and trickery. They are putting up this device only
to escape the ignominy of defeat. I know the character of each one of them. They are neither
adherents of the Holy Qur’an nor have they any connection with the faith or religion. The very
purpose of our fighting has been that they should follow the Holy Qur’an and act on its
injunctions. For Allah’s sake do not fall in their deceitful device. Go ahead with determination
and courage and stop only after vanquishing the dying foe. Nevertheless, the deceitful instrument
of wrong had worked. The people took to disobedience and rebellion. Mis’ar ibn Fadaki atTamimi and Zayd ibn Husain at-Ta’i each with twenty thousand men came forward and said to
Amir al-Mu’minin AO Ali, if you do not respond to the call of the Holy Qur’an we will deal with
you in the same manner as we did with AOthman. You end the battle at once and bow before the
verdict of the Holy Qur’an. Amir al-Mu’minin tried his best to make them understand but Satan
was standing before them in the garb of the Holy Qur’an. He did not allow them to do so, and
they compelled Amir al-Mu’minin that he should send someone to call Malik ibn al-Harith alAshtar from the battlefield. Being obliged, Amir al-Mu’minin sent Yazid ibn Hani to call Malik
back. When Malik heard this order he was bewildered and said, APlease tell him this is not the
occasion to leave the position. He may wait a bit then I will come to his audience with the tidings
of victory. Hani conveyed this message on return but people shouted that Amir al-Mu’minin
must have sent word to him secretly to continue. Amir al-Mu’minin said he never got any
occasion to send any secret message to him. Whatever he said was said before them. People said
he should be sent again and that if Malik delayed his return Amir al-Mu’minin should forsake his
life. Amir al-Mu’minin again sent Yazid ibn Hani and sent word that rebellion had occurred, he
should return in whatever condition he was. So Hani went and told Malik AYou hold victory
dear or the life of Amir al-Mu’minin. If his life is dear you should raise your hands from the
battle and go to him. Leaving the chances of victory Malik stood up and came to the audience of
Amir al-Mu’minin with grief and disappointment. Chaos raged there. He rebuked the people
very much but matters had taken such a turn that they could not be corrected.
It was then settled that either party should nominate an arbitrator so that they should settle the
Caliphate matter according to the Holy Qur’an. From Mu’awiyah’s side AAmr ibn al-AAs was
decided upon and from Amir al-Mu’minin’s side people proposed the name of Abu Musa alAsh’ari. Seeing this wrong selection Amir al-Mu’minin said, ASince you have not accepted my
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order about arbitration at least now agree that do not make Abu Musa the arbitrator. He is not a
man of trust. Here is AAbdullah ibn AAbbas and here is Malik al-Ashtar. Select one of them. But
they did not listen to him and stuck to his name (Abu Musa). Amir al-Mu’minin said, AAll right,
do whatever you want. The day is not far when you will cut your own hands through your
misdeeds.
After the nomination of arbitrators when the deed of agreement was being written, the name
of Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was also written. AAmr ibn al-AAs said, AThis should be rubbed off.
If we regard Amir al-Mu’minin, why should this battle have been fought? At first Amir alMu’minin refused to rub it off but when they did not in any way agree, he rubbed it off and said,
AThis incident is just similar to the one at al-Hudaybiya when the unbelievers stuck on the point
that the words AProphet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah’ with the name of the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) should be removed and the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) did remove it. On this AAmr ibn al-AAs got angry and said, ADo you treat us as
unbelievers. Amir al-Mu’minin asked, AOn what day have you had anything to do with believers
and when have you been their supporters? However, after this settlement, the people dispersed,
and after mutual consultation these two arbitrators decided that by removing both Ali and
Mu’awiyah from the Caliphate the people should be accorded the power to choose whomever
they desired. When time came to its announcement there was a meeting at Dawmatul-Jandal, a
place between Iraq and Syria, and then the two arbitrators also reached there to announce the
judgment on the fate of the Muslims. Acting cunningly AAmr ibn al-AAs said to Abu Musa, AI
regard it ill manner to precede you. You are older in years and age so first you make the
announcement. Abu Musa succumbed to his flattery and came out proudly and stood before the
gathering. Addressing them he said, O Muslims we have jointly settled that Ali ibn Abu Talib
and Mu’awiyah should be removed and the right to choose a Caliph be accorded to the Muslims.
They should choose whomever they like. Saying this he sat down. Now the turn was for AAmr
ibn al-AAs and he said, AO Muslims you have heard that Abu Musa has removed AAmr ibn Abu
Talib; I also agree with it. As for Mu’awiyah, there is no question of removing him. Therefore I
place him in his position. No sooner than he said this there were cries all around. Abu Musa cried
hoarse that it was a trick, a deceit and told AAmr ibn al-AAs, AYou have played a trick, and your
example is that of a dog on which if you load something he would gasp, or leave him he would
gas, p. AAmr ibn al-AAs said, AYour example is like the ass on whom books are loaded.
However, AAmr ibn al-AAs trick was effective and Mu’awiyah’s shaking feet were again
stabilized.
This was the short sketch of the Arbitration whose basis was laid in the Holy Qur’an and
Sunna. But was it a verdict of the Holy Qur’an or theresult of those deceitful contrivances which
people of this world always employ to retain their authority? Could these pages of history be
made a torch-guide for the future and the Holy Qur’an and Sunna not be used as a means of
securing authority or as an instrument of worldly benefits?
When Amir al-Mu’minin got the news of this lamentable result of arbitration, he climbed on
the pulpit and delivered this sermon every word of which savors his grief and sorrow and at the
same time it throws light on soundness of his thinking, correctness of his opinion and foresighted
sagacity.
2. This is a proverb which is used on an occasion where the advice of a counselor is rejected
and afterwards it is repented. The fact is the ruler of Hira namely Jazimah al-Abrash killed the
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ruler of Jazira named AAmr ibn Zarib whereafter his daughter Zabba was made the ruler of
Jazira. Soon after accession to the throne she thought out a plan to avenge her father’s blood.
Then she sent a message to Jazimah that she could not alone carry on the affairs of the state and
that if he could become her patron by accepting her as his wife she would be grateful. Jazimah
was more than puffed up at this proposal, and prepared himself to set off for Jazira with a
thousand horsemen. His slave Qasir advised him much that this was just a deceit and trick and
that he should not place himself in this danger; but his wit had been so blinded that he could not
think over why Zabba should select the murderer of her father for her life companion. He then
set off and reached the border of Jazira. Although Zabba’s army was present for his reception.
she neither gave any special reception nor offered him a warm welcome. Seeing this state Qasir
was again suspicious and he advised Jazimah to get back, but nearness to the goal had further
fanned his passion. He paid no heed and stepping further entered the city. Soon after his arrival
there he was killed. When Qasir saw this he said, AHad the advice of Qasir been followed. From
that time this proverb gained currency.
3. The poet of Hawazin implies Durayd ibn as-Simmah. He wrote this couplet after the death
of his brother AAbdullah ibn as-Simmah. Its facts are that AAbdullah, along with his brother, led
an attack of two groups of Banu Jusham and Banu Nasr who were both from Hawazin, and drove
away many camels. On return when they intended to rest at Mun Aarajil-Liwa, Durayd said it
was not advisable to stay there lest the enemy attacks from behind, but AAbdullah did not agree
and stayed there. The result was that as soon as dawn appeared the enemy attacked and killed
AAbdullah on the spot. Durayd also received wounds but he slipped away alive, and after this he
wrote a few couplets out of which one couplet is this wherein he has referred to the destruction
resulting from his advice having been rejected.
1
SERMON 36
Warning the people of Nahrawan of their fate
I am warning you that you will be killed on the bend of this canal and on the levee of this low
area while you will have no clear excuse before Allah nor any open authority with you. You have
come out of your houses and then the Divine decree entangled you. I had advised you against
this arbitration but you rejected my advice like adversaries and opponents till I turned my ideas
in the direction of your wishes. You are a group whose heads are devoid of wit and intelligence.
May you have no father! (Allah’s woe be to you!) I have not put you in any calamity nor wished
you harm.
1. The cause of the battle of Nahrawan started after arbitration when Amir al-Mu’minin was
returning to Kufa. The people who were foremost in pleading acceptance of arbitration began to
say that appointment of anyone other than Allah as arbitrator is heresy, and that, Allah forbid, by
accepting the arbitration Amir al-Mu’minin had become a heretic. Consequently, by distorting
the meaning of AThere is no authority save with Allah they made simple Muslims share their
view and separated from Amir al-Mu’minin encamped at Hanira’ near Kufa. When Amir alMu’minin learned of this plot, he sent Sa’sa’ah ibn Suhan al-AAbdi and Ziyad ibn an-Nadr alHarithi in the company of ibn AAbbas toward them and afterwards he went to the place of their
stay and dispersed them after discussion.
When these people reached Kufa they began to spread the news that Amir al-Mu’minin had
broken the agreement of arbitration and that he was again ready to fight against the Syrians.
When Amir al-Mu’minin learned this, he contradicted it whereupon these people stood up in
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rebellion and encamped twelve miles from Baghdad in the lowlands area of the canal called
Nahrawan.
On the other side, after hearing the verdict of arbitration Amir al-Mu’minin prepared to fight
the army of Syria. He wrote to the Kharijites that the verdict passed by the two arbitrators in
pursuance of their heart’s wishes instead of the Holy Qur’an and Sunna was not acceptable to
him and he therefore decided to fight with them and they should support him in crushing the
enemy. But the Kharijites gave him this reply, AWhen you had agreed to arbitration in our view
you had turned heretic. Now if you admit your heresy and offer repentance we will think over
this matter and decide what we should do. Amir al-Mu’minin understood from their reply that
their disobedience and misguidance had become very serious. To entertain any kind of hope
from them now was futile. Consequently, ignoring them, he encamped in the valley of anNukhaylah with a view to marching towards Syria. When the army had been arrayed he came to
know that the men desired to deal with the people of Nahrawan first, and to move towards Syria
afterwards. Amir al-Mu’minin, however, said that they should be left as they were, that they
themselves should first move towards Syria while the people of Nahrawan could be dealt with
afterwards. People said that they were prepared to obey every order of his with all their might
whether he moved this way or that way. The army had not moved when news about therebellion
of Kharijites began to reach them. Then it was learned that they had butchered the governor of
Nahrawan,’Abdullah ibn Khabbab ibn al-Aratt and his slave maid with the child in her womb,
and had killed three women of Banu Tay and Umm Sinan al-Saydawi. Amir al-Mu’minin sent alHarith ibn Murrah al-AAbdi to investigate but he too was killed by them. When their rebellion
reached this stage it was necessary to deal with them. Consequently, the army turned towards
Nahrawan. On reaching there Amir al-Mu’minin sent them word that those who had killed
AAbdullah ibn Khabbab ibn al-Aratt and innocent women should be handed over to him for
avenging blood. Those people replied that they had killed these persons jointly and that they
considered it lawful to shed the blood of all the people on his side. Even at this Amir alMu’minin did not take the initiative for the battle, but sent Abu Ayyub al-Ansari with a message
of peace. So he spoke to them aloud, AWhoever comes under this banner or separates from that
party and goes to Kufa or al-Mada’in would get amnesty and he would not be questioned. As a
result of this, Farwah ibn Nawfal al-Ashja’i said that he did not know why they were at war with
Amir al-Mu’minin. Saying this, he separated along with five hundred men. Similarly group after
group began to separate and some of them joined Amir al-Mu’minin. Those who remained
numbered four thousand, and according to al-Tabari’s account they numbered two thousand
eight hundred. Yet, these people were not in any way prepared to listen to the voice of truth, and
were ready to kill or be killed. Amir al-Mu’minin had stopped his men from taking the initiative
but the Kharijites put arrows in their bows and broke and threw away the sheathes of their
swords. Even at this juncture Amir al-Mu’minin warned them of the dire consequences of war
and this sermon is about that warning and admonition. But they were brimming with enthusiasm
so much that they leapt on Amir al-Mu’minin’s force all of a sudden. This onslaught was so
severe that the footmen lost ground but they soon fixed themselves so firmly that the attack of
arrows and spears could not dislodge them from their position. They soon cleared away the
Kharijites that except for nine persons who fled to save their lives, not a single person was left
alive. From Amir al-Mu’minin’s army only eight persons fell as martyrs. The battle took place
on the 9th Safar, 38 A.H.
SERMON 37
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Amir al-Mu’minin’s utterance which runs like a Sermon about his own steadfastness in
religion and
precedence in (acceptance of) belief
I discharged duties when others lost courage (to do so), and I came forward when others hid
themselves. I spoke when others remained mum. I struck with the Divine light when others
remained standing. I was the quietest of them in voice but the highest in going forward. I cleaved
to its rein and applied myself solely to its pledge, like the mountain which neither sweeping wind
could move nor storm could shake. No one could find fault with me nor could any speaker speak
ill of me.
The low is in my view worthy of honor till I secure (his) right for him while the strong is in
my view weak till I take their (assumed) right from them. We are happy with the destiny
ordained by Allah and have submitted to the command of Allah. Do you think I would speak lies
about the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah? By Allah, I am surely the first to
testify of him, so I will not be the first to falsify him. I looked at my affairs and found that my
obedience should have precedence over my allegiance while my pledge to him is a burden on my
neck.
SERMON 38
About the naming of doubt as such and disparagement of those in doubt
Doubt is named doubt because it resembles truth. As for lovers of Allah, their conviction
serves them as light and the direction of the right path (itself) serves as their guide; while the
enemies of Allah, in time of doubt call to misguidance in the darkness of doubt and their guide is
blindness (of intelligence). One who fears death cannot escape it nor one who fears for eternal
life secure it.
SERMON 39
In disparagement of those who shrink from fighting
I am faced with men who do not obey when I order and do not respond when I call them. May
you have no father1 (Woe to you!) What are you waiting for to rise in the cause of Allah? Does
not faith join you together, or sense of shame rouse you? I stand among you shouting and I am
calling you for help, but you do not listen to my word, and do not obey my orders, till
circumstances show their bad consequences. No blood can be avenged through you and no
purpose can be achieved with you. I called you to help your brethren but (instead) you made
noises like the camel having pain in the stomach, and became loose like the camel with a thin
back. Then a wavering weak contingent came to me from among you: Aas if they are being led to
death and they are only watching.1 (Holy Qur’an, 8:6)
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Amir al-Mu’minin’s word Amutadha’ib means
Amudtarib (i.e. moved or troubled), as they say Atadha’ abat ar-rih (i.e. The winds blow in
troubled manner). Similarly the wolf is called Adhi’b because of its troubled movement.
1. Mu’awiyah sent a contingent of two thousand soldiers under an-Nu’man ibn Bashir to
assault AAynu’t-Tamr. This place was a defence base of Amir al-Mu’minin near Kufa in which
Malik ibn Ka’b al-Arhabi was in charge. Although there were a thousand combatants under him,
at that moment, only a hundred men were present. When Malik noticed the offensive force
advancing, he wrote to Amir al-Mu’minin for help. When Amir al-Mu’minin received the
message he asked the people for his help but only three hundred men got ready. As a result Amir
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al-Mu’minin was much disgusted and delivered this sermon in their admonition. When Amir alMu’minin reached his house after delivering Thesermon, AAdi ibn Hatim at-Ta’i came and said,
AO Amir a-Mu’minin a thousand men of Banu Tayyi’ are under me. If you say I shall send them
off. Amir al-Mu’minin said, AIt does not look good that people of only one tribe should meet the
enemy. You prepare your force in the Valley of an-Nukhayla. Accordingly, he went there and
called people to jihad, where, besides Banu Tay, one thousand other combatants also assembled.
They were still preparing to set off when word reached from Malik ibn Ka’b that there was no
need for help as he had repulsed the enemy.
Thereason for this was that Malik had hastily sent AAbdullah ibn Hawalah al-Azdi off to
Qarazah ibn Ka’b al-Ansari and Mikhnaf ibn Sulaym al-Azdi, so that if there was delay in the
arrival of support from Kufa he could get help from here in time. AAbdullah went to both, but
got no help from Qarazah. However, Mikhnaf ibn Sulaym had gotten fifty persons ready under
AAbd ar-Rahman ibn Mikhnaf and they arrived near evening. Until that time, the two thousand
men (of the enemy) had not been able to subdue the hundred men of Malik. When an-Nu’man
saw these fifty men he thought that their forces had started coming in so he fled from the
battlefield. Even in their retreat, Malik attacked them from rear and killed three of their men.
SERMON 40
When Amir al-Mu’minin heard the cry of Kharijites
that AVerdict is only that of Allah he said:
Thesentence is right but what (they think) it means, is wrong. It is true that verdict lies but
with Allah, but these people say that (the function of) governance is only for Allah. The fact is
that there is no escape for men from rulers--good or bad. The faithful persons perform (good)
acts in his rule while the unfaithful enjoys (worldly) benefits in it. During the rule, Allah would
carry everything to end. Through the ruler tax is collected, the enemy is fought, roadways are
protected and the right of the weak is taken from the strong till the virtuous enjoy peace and
allowed protection from (the oppression of) the wicked.
Another version:
When Amir al-Mu’minin heard the cry of the Kharijites on the aforementioned verdict he
said:
I am expecting the verdict (destiny) of Allah on you.
Then he continued:
As for good government the pious man performs good acts in it, while in a bad government
the wicked person enjoys till his time is over and death overtakes him.
SERMON 41
In condemnation of treason
O people! Surely the fulfilllment of a pledge is the twin of truth. I do not know a better shield
(against the assaults of sin) than it. One who realizes thereality of return (to the next world)
refuses (submission to the dynamic of) betrayal. We are in a period when most of the people
regard betrayal as wisdom. In these days the ignorant call it excellence of cunning. What is the
matter with them? Allah may destroy them. One who has been through the thick and thin of life
finds the excuses to be preventing him from acquiescing to the orders and prohibitions of Allah.
Yet he disregards them despite the capability (to succumb to them and follows the commands of
Allah), while one who has no restraints of religion seizes the opportunity (and accepts the
excuses for not following the commands of Allah).
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SERMON 42
About heart’s desires and extended hopes
O people what I fear most about you are two things - acting according to desires and the
extending of hopes. Acting according to (personal) desires prevents (the experiential admission
of) truth; regarding extensive hope, it makes one forget the next world. You should know this
world is moving rapidly and nothing has remained out of it except the last particles like the dregs
of a vessel which has been emptied by some one. Beware, the next world is advancing, and either
of them has sons i.e. followers. You should become sons of the next world and not become sons
of this world because on the Day of Judgment every son would cling to his mother. Today is the
Day of action and there is no reckoning while tomorrow is the Day of reckoning wherein there
would be no (opportunity for) action.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Aal-hadhadha’ means rapid but some people have read it
Ajadhdha’. According to this version the meaning would be that the cycle of worldly enjoyments
would end soon.
SERMON 43
After Amir al-Mu’minin had sent Jarir ibn AAbdillah al-Bajali to Mu’awiyah (for securing his
allegiance), some of his companions suggested preparation to fight with him. Then he said:
My preparation for war with the people of Syria while Jarir ibn AAbdillah al-Bajali is still
there would be closing the door on Syria and thereby preventing its people from a good action
(i.e. allegiance) if that indeed was their intention. However, I have fixed a time limit of Jarir after
which he would not stay without either deception or in disobedience. My opinion is in favor of
patience, so wait a while. (In the meantime) I do not dislike your preparation.
I have observed this matter thoroughly from all sides but I do not find any way except war or
heresy. Certainly, there was a ruler over the people (before me) who brought about new (unIslamic) things and compelled the people to speak out. So they did speak, then rose and changed
the whole system.
SERMON
44
Masqalah1 ibn Hubayrah ash-Shaybani fled to Mu’awiyah because he had purchased some
prisoners of Banu Najiyah from an executive of Amir al-Mu’minin, but when he demanded the
price, the latter avoided and ran to Syria. Amir al-Mu’minin said:
Allah may be bad to Masqalah. He acted like the noble but fled like a slave. Before his
admirer could speak (about him) he silenced him and before his eulogist could testify to his good
deeds he closed his mouth. If he had stayed behind we would have taken from him what he could
easily pay and waited for the balance till his money increased.
1. When after Arbitration the Kharijites rose, a man of Banu Najiyah from among them
named al-Khirrit ibn Rashid an-Naji began instigating people and set off towards al-Mada’in
with a group killing and marauding. Amir al-Mu’minin sent Ziyad ibn Khasafah with three
hundred men to check him. When the two forces met at al-Mada’in they attacked each other with
swords. Only one encounter or so had taken place when the gloom of evening prevailed and the
battle had to be stopped. When morning appeared Ziyad’s men noticed that five dead bodies of
the Kharijites were lying and they themselves had cleared off the battlefield. Seeing this Ziyad
set off for Basra along with his men. There he came to know that the Kharijites had gone to
Ahwaz. Ziyad did not move onwards for paucity of force and informed Amir al-Mu’minin of it.
Amir al-Mu’minin called back Ziyad and sent Ma’qil ibn Qays ar-Riyahi with two thousand
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experienced combatants towards Ahwaz and wrote to the governor of Basra AAbdullah ibn
AAbbas to send two thousand swordsmen of Basra for the help of Ma’qil. Consequently, the
contingent from Basra also joined them at Ahwaz and after proper organization, they got ready to
attack the enemy. But al-Khirrit marched on along with his men to the hills of Ramhurmuz.
These people also followed him and overtook him near these hills. Both arrayed their forces and
started attacking each other. The result of this encounter was that three hundred and seventy
Kharijites were killed in the battlefield while therest ran away. Ma’qil informed Amir alMu’minin of his performance and of the enemy’s defeat when Amir al-Mu’minin directed him to
chase them and to disintegrate their power so that they should not be able to raise heads again.
On receipt of this order, Ma’qil moved on and overtook him on the coast of the Persian Gulf,
where al-Khirrit had by persuasion secured the cooperation of the people, and enlisting men from
here and there, had collected a considerable force. When Ma’qil reached there, he raised the flag
of peace and announced that those who had collected from here and there should flee. They
would not be molested. The effect of this announcement was that save for al-Khirrit’s own
community all others deserted him. He organized those very men and commenced the battle but
valorous combatants of Basra and Kufa displayed such excellent use of swords that in a short
time one hundred and seventy men of the insurgents were killed while an-Nu’man ibn suhban arRasibi encountered al-Khirrit (ibn Rashid an-Naji) and eventually attacked and killed him. Soon
after his fall the enemy lost ground and they fled from the battlefield. Thereafter, Ma’qil
collected all the men, women and children from their camps at one place. From among them
those who were Muslims were released after swearing allegiance. Those who had turned heretics
were called upon to re-embrace their Submission to the Will of Allah (Islam). Consequently all
except one old Christian secured their release by accepting Islam but the old man was killed. The
n, Ma’qil took with him those Christians of Banu Najiyah who had taken part in this revolt
together with their families. When Ma’qil reached Ardashir Khurrah (a city of Iran) these
prisoners wailed and cried before its governor Masqalah ibn Hubayrah ash-Shaybani and
beseeched in all humility to do something for their release. Masqalah sent word to Ma’qil
through Dhuhl ibn al-Harith to sell these prisoners to him. Ma’qil agreed and sold those prisoners
to him for five hundred thousand Dirhams and told him to dispatch the price immediately to
Amir al-Mu’minin. He said that he was sending the first installment at once and theremaining
installments would also be sent soon. When Ma’qil met Amir al-Mu’minin he related the whole
event before him. Amir al-Mu’minin ratified this action and waited for the price for some time,
but Masqalah observed such deep silence as if nothing was due from him. At last Amir alMu’minin sent a messenger to him with word to either send the price or to come himself. On
Amir al-Mu’minin’s order he came to Kufa and on demand of the price paid two hundred
thousand Dirhams. But, to evade the balance he went to Mu’awiyah, who made him the governor
of Tabarastan. When Amir al-Mu’minin came to know all this he spoke these words (as in this
sermon). Its sum total is that, AIf he had stayed, we would have been considerate to him in
demanding the price and would have waited for an improvement of his financial condition. But
he fled like slaves after displaying a showy act. Talk about his high perseverance had just started
when people began to discuss his baseless and lowliness.
SERMON 45
About Allah’s greatness and the lowliness of this world
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Praise is due to Allah from Whose mercy no one loses hope, from Whose bounty no one is
deprived, from Whose forgiveness no one is disappointed and for Whose worship no one is too
high. His mercy never ceases and His bounty is never missed.
This world is a place for which destruction is ordained and departure, for its inhabitants, is
destined. It is sweet and green. It hastens towards its seeker and attaches to the heart of the
viewer. So depart from here with the best of provision available with you and do not ask herein
more than what is enough and do not demand from it more than subsistence.
SERMON 46
When Amir al-Mu’minin decided to march towards Syria, he spoke thus:
My Allah, I seek Your protection from the hardships of the journey, from the grief of
returning and from the scene of devastation of property and men. O Allah, You art the
companion in journey and You art one who is left behind for (protection of the) family. None
except You can join these two because one who is left behind cannot be a companion on a
journey nor one who is in company on a journey at the same time can be left behind.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: the earlier part of his sermon is related from the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) but Amir al-Mu’minin has completed it very aptly by adding
most eloquent sentences at the end. This addition is from ANone except You can join up to the
end.
SERMON 47
About calamities befalling Kufa
O Kufa, it is as thoughI I see you being drawn like the tanned leather of AUkazi1 in the
market. You are being scraped by calamities and being ridden by severe troubles. I certainly2
know that if any tyrant intends evil for you Allah will afflict him with worry and fling him with a
killer (set someone on him to kill him).
1. During pre-Islamic days, a market used to be organized every year near Mecca. Its name
was AUkaz where mostly hides were traded and as a result, leather was attributed to it. Besides
the sales and purchases, literary meetings were also arranged and Arabs used to attract
admiration by reciting their works. After Islam, because of the better congregation in the form of
Hajj, this market diminished.
2. This prophecy of Amir al-Mu’minin was fulfillled word for word and the world saw how
the people who had committed tyranny and oppression on the strength of their masterly power
had to face the tragic end. The ways of their own destruction were engendered by their bloodshedding and homicidal activities. Consequently, the end of Ziyad ibn Abih (son of an unknown
father) was that when he intended to deliver a speech for vilification of Amir al-Mu’minin
suddenly paralysis overtook him and he could not get out of his bed. The end of the bloodshed
perpetrated by AUbaydullah ibn Ziyad was when he fell prey to leprosy and eventually blood
thirsty swords put him to death. The ferocity of al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf ath-Thaqafi drove him to the
fate that snakes cropped up in his stomach as a result of which he died after severe pain. AOmer
ibn Hubayrah al-Fizari died of leucoderma. Khalid ibn AAbdillah al-Qasri suffered the hardships
of prison and was killed in a very bad way. Mis’ab ibn az-Zubayr and Yazid ibn al-Muhallab ibn
Abu Sufrah were also killed by swords.
SERMON 48
Delivered at the time of marching towards Syria
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Praise is due to Allah when night spreads and darkens, and praise be to Allah whenever the
star shines and sets. And praise be to Allah whose bounty never misses and whose favors cannot
be repaid.
Well, I have sent forward my vanguard1 and have ordered them to remain in the camp on this
bank of the river till my order reaches them. My intention is that I should cross this water over to
the small habitation of people residing on the sides of the Tigris and rouse them to march with
you towards the enemy and keep them as an auxiliary force for you.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Here by Amitat Amir al-Mu’minin has meant the
direction wherein he had ordered the men to camp and that was the bank of the Euphrates.
AMitat is used for the bank of a river although its literal meaning is a level ground whereas by
Anutfa he means the water of the Euphrates, and these are amazing expressions.
1. Amir al-Mu’minin delivered this sermon when he camped at the Valley of an-Nukhaylah
on Wednesday the 5th Shawwal 37 A.H. on his way to Siffin. The vanguard mentioned here
means the twelve thousand persons whom he had sent towards Siffin under the command of
Ziyad ibn an-Nadr and Shurayh ibn Hani. The small force of al-Mada’in mentioned by him was a
contingent of twelve hundred men who had come up in response to Amir al-Mu’minin’s call.
SERMON 49
About Allah’s greatness and sublimity
Praise to Allah Who lies inside all hidden things, and towards Whom all open things are
guided. He cannot be seen by the eye of an onlooker, but the eye which does not see Him cannot
deny Him while the mind that proves His existence cannot perceive Him. He is so high in
sublimity that nothing can be more sublime than He, while in nearness, He is so near that no one
can be nearer than He. But his sublimity does not put Him at a distance from anything of His
creation, nor does His nearness bring them on equal level to Him. He has not informed (human)
wit about the limits of His qualities. Nevertheless, He has not prevented it from securing any
essential knowledge of Him. He is such that all signs of existence stand witness for Him till the
denying mind also believes in Him. Allah is sublime beyond what is described by those who
liken Him to things or those who deny Him.
SERMON 50
Admixture of right and wrong
The basis of the occurrence of evils are those desires which are acted upon and the orders that
are innovated. They are against the Book of Allah. People cooperate with each other about them
even though it is against thereligion of Allah. If wrong had been pure and unmixed it would not
be hidden from those who are in search of it. And if right had been pure without admixture of
wrong those who bear hatred towards it would have been silenced. However, what is done is that
something is taken from here and something from there and the two are mixed! At this stage
Satan overpowers his friends and they alone escape for whom virtue has been apportioned by
Allah from before.
SERMON 51
When in Siffin the men of Mu’awiyah overpowered the men of Amir al-Mu’minin and
occupied the bank of the River Euphrates and prevented them from taking its water, Amir alMu’minin said:
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They1 are asking you for morsels of battle. So either you remain in ignominy and the lowest
position or drench your swords with blood and quench your thirst with water. Real death is in the
life of subjugation while real life is in dying as subjugators. Beware, Mu’awiyah is leading a
small group of insurgents and has kept them in the dark about the true facts with theresult that
they have made their bosoms the targets of death.
1. Amir al-Mu’minin had not reached Siffin when Mu’awiyah posted forty thousand men on
the bank of the river to close the way to the watering place, so that none except the Syrians could
take the water. When Amir al-Mu’minin’s force alighted there, they found that there was no
watering place except for one possibility. If it existed, it was difficult to reach due to crossing
high hillocks. Amir al-Mu’minin sent Sa’sa’ah ibn Suhan al-AAbdi to Mu’awiyah with
therequest to release control over the water. Mu’awiyah refused. On this side Amir alMu’minin’s army was troubled by thirst. When Amir al-Mu’minin noticed this position he said,
AGet up and secure water by dint of the sword. Consequently, these thirsty persons drew their
swords out of sheaths, put arrows in their bows and dispersing Mu’awiyah’s men, went down
toward the river, forcing his guards away. They then took control of the watering place
themselves.
Now, Amir al-Mu’minin’s men also desired that just as Mu’awiyah had put restrictions on the
water by occupation, the same treatment should be accorded to him and his men and no Syrian
should be allowed water and everyone of them should be made to die of thirst. But Amir alMu’minin said, ADo you want to take the same brutal step which these Syrians had taken? Never
prevent anyone from water. Whoever wants to drink, may drink and whoever wants to take away
may take away. Consequently, despite occupation of the River by Amir al-Mu’minin’s army, no
one was prevented from the water and everyone was given full liberty to use it.
SERMON 52
(This sermon has already appeared earlier but due to the difference between the two versions
we have quoted it again here). Its subject is the downfall of the world and reward and
punishment in the next world.
Beware, the world is wrapping itself up and has announced its departure. Its known things
have become strangers and it is speedily moving backward. It is advancing its inhabitants
towards destruction and driving its neighbors towards death. Its sweet things (enjoyments) have
become sour, and its clear things have become polluted. Consequently, what has remained of it is
just like theremaining water in a vessel or a mouthful of water in the measure. If a thirsty person
drinks it his thirst shall not be quenched.
O creatures of Allah get ready to go out of this world for whose inhabitants decay is ordained.
(Beware) heart’s wishes should overpower you, nor should you take your stay (in life) to be long.
By Allah, if you cry like the she-camel that has lost its young one or call out like the cooing of
pigeons or make noise like devoted recluses and turn to Allah, leaving your wealth and children
as a means to secure His nearness and high position with Him or the forgiveness of sins which
have been covered by His books and recorded by His angels, it would be less than His reward
that I expect for you or His retribution that I fear about you.
By Allah, if your hearts thoroughly melt and your eyes shed tears of blood either in hopes for
Him or for fear of Him and, if you are also allowed to live in this world all the time that it lasts,
even then, your actions cannot pay for His great bounties over you and His having guided you
towards faith.
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A portion of the same sermon: on the description of the Day of Sacrifice (AId al-Adha) and
the qualities of the animal for sacrifice.
For an animal to be fully fit for sacrifice it is necessary that both its ears be raised upwards
and its eyes should be healthy. If the ears and the eyes are sound the animal of sacrifice is sound
and perfect, even though its horn be broken or it drags its feet to the place of sacrifice.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Here place of sacrifice means place of slaughter.
SERMON 53
On the swear of allegiance
They leapt upon me as the camels leap upon each other on their arrival for drinking water,
having been let loose after unfastening of their four legs till I thought they would either kill me
or kill one another in front of me. I thought over this matter in and out to the extent that it
prevented me from sleeping. But I found no way except to fight them or else to reject whatever
has been brought by Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household). I found that to face war
was easier for me than to face theretribution, and the hardships of this world were easier than the
hardships of the next world.
SERMON 54
When Amir al-Mu’minin’s showed impatience on his delay in giving them permission to fight
in Siffin he said:
As for your idea whether this (delay) is due to my unwillingness for death, then by Allah I do
not care whether I proceed towards death or death advances towards me. As for your impression
that it may be due to my misgivings about the people of Syria, by Allah, I did not put off war
even for a day except in the hope that some group may join me, find guidance through me and
see my light with their weak eyes. This is dearer to me than to kill them in the state of this
misguidance although they would be bearing their own sins.
SERMON 55
About steadiness in the battle field
In the company of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah we used to fight our
parents, sons, brothers and uncles. This continued us in our faith, in submission, in our following
the right path, in endurance over the pangs of pain and in our fight against the enemy. A man
from our side and one from the enemy would pounce upon each other like energetic men
contesting as to who would kill the other; sometimes our man gets over his adversary and
sometimes the enemy’s man gets over ours.
When Allah had observed our truth He sent ignominy to our foe and sent His succor to us till
Islam was established (like the camel) with its neck on the ground and resting in its place. By my
life, if we had also behaved like you, no pillar of (our) religion could have been raised, nor the
tree of faith could have borne leaves. By Allah, certainly you will now milk our blood (instead of
milk) and eventually you will face shame.1
1. After Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr had been killed, Mu’awiyah sent AAbdullah ibn AAmir alHadrami to Basra to exhort the people of Basra to avenge AOthman’s blood because the natural
inclination of most of the inhabitants of Basra and particularly Banu Tamim was towards
AOthman. Consequently, he stayed with Banu Tamim. This was the time when AAbdullah ibn
AAbbas, the governor of Basra had gone to Kufa for condolence about Muhammed ibn Abu
Bakr, leaving Ziyad ibn AUbayd (Abih) as his substitute. When the atmosphere in Basra began to
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deteriorate, Ziyad informed Amir al-Mu’minin of all the facts. Amir al-Mu’minin tried to get
Banu Tamim of Kufa ready but they kept complete silence and gave no reply. When Amir alMu’minin saw this weakness and shamelessness on their part he said, ADuring the days of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) we did not see whether those killed at our hands were
our kith and kin, but whoever collided with Right, we were prepared to collide with him. If we
too had acted carelessly or been guilty of inaction like you then neither religion could have taken
root nor could Islam prosper. The result of this shaking was that A’yan ibn Dabi’ah al-Mujashi’i
prepared himself but on reaching Basra he was killed by the swords of the enemy. Thereafter,
Amir al-Mu’minin sent off Jariyah ibn Qudamah as-Sa`di with fifty men of Banu Tamim. First
he tried his best to canvass his own tribe but instead of following the right path they stooped to
abusing and fighting. Then Jariyah called Ziyad and the tribe of Azd for his help. Soon upon
their arrival (AAbdullah) ibn al-Hadrami also came out with his men. Swords were used from
both sides for some time but eventually ibn al-Hadrami fled with seventy persons and took
refuge in the house of Sabil as-Sa`di. When Jariyah saw no other way he set the house on fire.
When the flames arose, they came out in search of safety but could not succeed in running away.
Some of them were crushed to death under the wall while others were killed.
SERMON 56
Amir al-Mu’minin said to his companions about Mu’awiyah
Soon after me a man will be placed over you with a broad mouth and a big belly. He will
swallow whatever he gets and crave what he doesn’t get. You should kill him but (I know) you
will not. He will command you to abuse me and to renounce me. As for abusing me, you will
because that would mean purification for me and salvation for you. As regards renunciation, you
should not renounce me because I have been born on the natural religion (Islam) and was
foremost in (accepting) it as well as in Hijra (migrating from Mecca to Medina).1
1. About the person to whom Amir al-Mu’minin has alluded in this sermon some people hold
that he is Ziyad ibn Abih; some hold that he is Mughirah ibn Shu’bah. But most of the
commentators have held him to mean Mu’awiyah and that is correct because the qualities that
Amir al-Mu’minin has described prove true on him alone. Thus, Ibn Abul-Hadid has written
about the gluttonous quality of Mu’awiyah that once the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
sent for him and he was informed that Mu’awiyah was busy eating. Then The second and the
third time a man was sent to call him but he brought the same news. Thereupon the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) said, AMay Allah never satisfy his belly. the effect of this curse
was that when he felt tired of eating he would say ATake the food away, for, by Allah I am not
satiated but I am tired and disgusted. Similarly, his abusing Amir al-Mu’minin and ordering his
officers for it are accepted facts of history which cannot be denied. In this connection such words
were used on the pulpit that even Allah and the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) were hit
by them. Thus, Umm al-Mu’minin Umm Salamah wrote to Mu’awiyah, ACertainly you people
abuse Allah and the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) as you hurl abuses on Ali and those
who love him, while I do stand witness that Allah and Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
did love him. (Al-AIqd al-Farid, Vol. 3, p. 131)
Thanks to AOmer ibn AAbdi’l-Aziz who put a stop to it and introduced the following verse in
place of the abuse in the sermons:
Verily Allah enjoins justice and benevolence (to others) by giving to the kindred, and forbids
lewdness, evil and rebellion; He exhorts you that ye may take heed. (Holy Qur’an, 16:90)
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In this sermon Amir al-Mu’minin has ordered his killing on the basis of the Prophet’s order
that AWhen you (O Muslims) see Mu’awiyah on my pulpit, kill him. (Kitab Siffin, pp.243, 248;
Sharh of ibn Abul Hadid, Vol. 1, p.348; Tarikh Baghdad, Vol. 12, p.181; Mizan al-I’tidal, Vol.
2, p. 128; Tahthib al-Tahthib, Vol. 2, p. 428; Vol. 5, p. 110; Vol. 7, p.324)
SERMON 57
Addressing the Kharijites Amir al-Mu’minin said:
A storm may overtake you while there may be none to awaken you (for reforms). Shall I be a
witness to my becoming heretic after the acceptance of faith and fighting in the company of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ?! AIn that case I shall be misguided and I shall not be
on the right path. (Holy Qur’an, 6:56). So you should return to your evil places, and get back on
the traces of your heels. Beware! Certainly, after me, you will meet overwhelming disgrace,
sharp swords and traditions that will be adopted by the oppressors as a norm towards you.1
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: In the words Awala baqiyah minkum abirun used by
Amir al-Mu’minin the Aabir has been related with Aba’ and ARa’ and it has been taken from the
Arab saying Arajulun abirun which means the man who prunes the date-palm trees improves
them. In one version the word is Aathir and its meaning is Arelater of news. In my view this is
more appropriate, as though Amir al-Mu’minin intends to say that there should remain none to
carry news. In one version the word appears as Aabiz with Aza’ which means one who leaps. One
who dies is also called Aabiz.
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1. History corroborates that after Amir al-Mu’minin, the Kharijites had to face all kinds of
ignominy and disgrace and wherever they raised their heads to create trouble they were met with
swords and spears. Thus Ziyad ibn Abih, AUbaydullah ibn Ziyad, al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf, Mis’ab
ibn az-Zubayr and al-Muhallab ibn Abu Sufrah left no stone unturned in annihilating them from
the surface of the globe. In particular, al-Muhallab had chased them and routed them thoroughly
for nineteen years, resting only after completing their destruction.
At-Tabari writes that when ten thousand Kharijites collected in Silla wa sillibra (the name of a
mountain in Ahwaz) then al-Muhallab faced them so steadfastly that he killed seven thousand
Kharijites, while theremaining three thousand fled for their lives towards Kirman. But when the
Governor of Iran noticed their rebellious activities he surrounded them in Sabur and killed a
good number of them. Those who remained fled to Isfahan and Kirman. From there they again
formed a contingent and advanced towards Kufa via Basra. Al-Harith ibn Abu Rabi’ah alMakhzumi and AAbd ar-Rahman ibn Mikhnaf al-Azdi stood up with six thousand combatants to
stop their advance, and turned them out of Iraq’s boundaries. In this way successive encounters
completely trampled their military power and turning them out of cities compelled them to roam
about in the deserts. Afterwards also, when they rose in the form of groups they were crushed.
(Tarikh, Vol. 2, pp. 580-591; ibn al-Athir, Vol. 4, pp. 196-206).
SERMON 58
When Amir al-Mu’minin showed his intention to fight the
Kharijites he was told they had crossed the bridge of Nahrawan and gone over to the other
side. Amir al-Mu’minin said:
Their falling place is on this side of the river. By Allah, not even ten of them will survive
while from your side not even ten will be killed.1
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Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: In this sermon Anutfa implies the River Euphrates, and
for water this is the nicest expression even though water may be much.
1. This prophecy cannot be attributed to wit and far- sightedness. Far-sighted eyes may
forecast victory or defeat and preconceive the outcome of war but to tell about the actual figures
of the killed on either side is beyond their capacity. This can be done only by one who can unveil
the unknown future and see the coming scene with his eyes and who sees the sketches yet to
appear on the , p. of the future with the help of the light of knowledge possessed by him as
Imam. Consequently, events occurred according to what this inheritor of Prophet’s knowledge
had said, and from among the Kharijites all except nine persons were killed. Two of them fled to
AUman, two to Sajistan, two to Kirman and two to Jazira while one escaped to Tall Mawzan. Of
Amir al-Mu’minin’s party only eight men fell as martyrs.
SERMON 59
When Amir al-Mu’minin was told that the Kharijites had all been killed, he said:
"By Allah, no, not yet. They still exist in the loins of men and wombs of women. Whenever a
chief would appear from among them he would be cut down till the last of them would turn
thieves and robbers."1
1. This prophecy of Amir al-Mu’minin also proved true word for word. Every chief of the
Kharijites who rose was put to the sword. A few of their chiefs who were put to death are
mentioned here:
1) Nafi’ ibn Azraq al-Hanafi: the largest group of the Kharijites namely al-Azariqah is named
after him. He was killed by Salamah al-Bahili during encounter with the army of Muslim ibn
AUbays.
2) Najdah ibn AAmir: the an-Najadat al-AAdhirriyyah sect of Kharijites is named after him.
Abu Fudayk, the Kharijite, killed him.
3) AAbdullah ibn Ibad at-Tamimi: Thesect Ibadite (Ibadiyyah) is named after him. He was
killed during an encounter with AAbdullah ibn Muhammed ibn AAtiyyah.
4) Abu Bayhas Haysam ibn Jabir ad-Duba’i: Thesect of al-Bayhasiyyah is named after him.
AOthman ibn Hayyan al-Murri, governor of Medina, severed his hands and feet then killed him.
5) AUrwah ibn Udayyah at-Tamimi: Ziyad ibn Abih killed him during thereign of
Mu’awiyah.
6) Qatari ibn al-Fuja’h al-Mazini at-Tamimi: When he encountered the army of Sufyan ibn alAbrad al-Kalbi in Tabarastan, then Sawrah, Ibn al-Hurr ad-Darimi killed him.
7) Abu Milal Mirdas ibn Udayyah at-Tamimi: He was killed in an encounter with AAbbas ibn
Akhdar al-Mazini.
8) Shawdhab al-Khariji al-Yashkuri: He was killed during an encounter with Sa’id ibn AAmr
al-Harashi.
9) Hawtharah ibn Wada’ al-Asadi: He was killed at the hands of a man of Banu Tayy.
10) Al-Mustawrid ibn AUllafah at-Taymi: He was killed by Ma’qil ibn Qays ar-Riyahi in
thereign of Mu’awiyah.
11) Shabib ibn Yazid ash-Shaybani: He died by being drowned in the river.
12) AImran ibn al-Harith ar-Rasibi: He was killed in the battle of Dulab.
13, 14) Zahhaf at-Ta’i and Qurayb ibn Murrah al-Azdi: They were killed in an encounter with
Banu Taliyah.
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15) az-Zubayr ibn Ali as-Saliti at-Tamimi: He was killed in an encounter with AAttab ibn
Warqa’ ar-Riyahi.
16) Ali ibn Bashir ibn al-Mahuz al-Yarbu’i: Al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf ath-Thaqafi killed him.
17) AUbaydullah ibn Bashir: He was killed in an encounter with al-Muhallab ibn Abu Sufrah
in the battle of Dulab.
18) Abul-Wazi’ ar-Rasibi: A man in the graveyard of Banu Yashkur pushed a wall on him
and killed him.
19) AAbd Rabbih as-Saghir: He was killed in an encounter with al-Muhallab ibn Abu Sufrah.
20) al-Walid ibn Tarif ash-Shaybani: He was killed in an encounter with Yazid ibn Mazyad
ash-Shabani.
(21-24) AAbdullah ibn Yahya al-Kindi, al-Mukhtar ibn AAwf al-Azdi (Abu Hamzah ashShari), Abrahah ibn as-Sabah and Balj ibn AUqbah al-Asadi: They were killed by’Abdul-Malik
ibn AAtiyyah as-Sa`di in thereign of Marwan ibn Muhammed (the last of Umayyads caliph).
SERMON 60
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) also said:
Do not fight1 the Kharijites after me, because one who seeks right but does not find it, is not
like one who seeks wrong and finds it.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) means Mu’awiyah and his
men.
1. The reason for stopping people from fighting the Kharijites was that Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) was clearly perceiving that after him authority and power would devolve on people
who would be ignorant of the proper occasion of jihad, making use of the sword only to maintain
their sway. And there were those who excelled, even the Kharijites, in holding and calling Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) wrong. So those who are themselves in the wrong have no right to fight
others in the wrong. Again, those who are willfully in the wrong can be allowed to fight those
who are in the wrong by mistake. Thus, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s words make this fact clear
that the misguidance of Kharijites was not willful but under Satan’s influence. They mistook
wrong as right and stuck to it. On the other hand, the position of misguidance of Mu’awiyah and
his party was that they rejected right realizing it as right and appropriated wrong as the code of
their conduct knowing that it was wrong. Their audacity in the matter of religion reached the
stage that it can neither be regarded as a result of misunderstanding nor can it be covered under
the garb of error of judgment. They openly transgressed the limits of religion and paid no heed to
the Prophet’s injunctions in comparison with their own view. Thus, Ibn Abul-Hadid has written
(Vol. 5, p.130) that when the Prophet’s companion Abud-Darda’ saw utensils of gold and silver
being used by Mu’awiyah he said he had heard the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
saying, AOne who drinks in vessels of gold and silver will feel flames of the fire of Hell in his
stomach. Whereupon Mu’awiyah said, AAs for me, I do not find any harm in it. Similarly,
creating Ziyad ibn Abih’s blood relationship with himself by his own opinion in total disregard
of the Prophet’s injunction, abusing the descendants of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) over the pulpit, transgressing the limits of shari’ah, shedding blood of innocent
persons and placing over Muslims (as so-called caliph) a vicious individual and thus opening the
way to disbelief and atheism are events that to attribute them to any misunderstanding is like
willfully closing one’s eyes to historic fact and common sense.
SERMON 61
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When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was warned of being killed by deceit, he said:
Surely, there is a strong shield of Allah over me. When my day would come it would get
away from me and hand me to death. At that time neither an arrow would go amiss nor a wound
would heal u, p.
SERMON 62
About the transience of the world
Beware! surely this world is a place from which protection cannot be sought except while one
is in it. The action which is performed only for this world cannot secure salvation. People are
tested in it through calamities. Those who have taken worldly pleasures here will be taken out
from them (by death) and will be questioned about them. And whatever (good actions) they have
achieved for the other world, they will get them there and stay in them. For the intelligent, this
world is like the shade; one moment it is spread out and extended but soon it shrinks and
contracts.
SERMON 63
About decline and destruction of the world
O creatures of Allah! Fear Allah and anticipate your death by good actions. Purchase
everlasting joy by paying transitory things - pleasures of this world. Get ready for the journey,
for you are being driven, and prepare yourselves for death, since it is hovering over you. Be a
people who wake up when called, and who know that this world is not their abode, and so have
changed it (with the next).
Certainly, Allah has not created you aimlessly nor left you useless. There is nothing between
anyone of you and Paradise or Hell except death that must befall him. The life that is being
shortened every moment and being dismantled every hour must be regarded very short. The
hidden thing, namely death, which is being driven (to you) by two phenomena which are day and
night is certainly quick to approach. The traveler which is approaching with success or failure
(namely death) deserves the best of provision. So acquire such provision from this world while
you are here with which you may shield yourself tomorrow (on the Day of Judgment). So
everyone should fear Allah, admonish himself, send forward his repentance and overpower his
desire, because his death is hidden from him, his desires deceive him and Satan is posted on him.
He beautifies sin for him so that he may commit it and prompts him to delay repentance till his
desires make him the most negligent. Piety is for the negligent person whose life itself would be
a proof against him and his own days (passed in sin) would lead him to punishment.
We ask Allah, the Glorified, that He may make us and you like one whom bounty does not
mislead, whom nothing can stop from obedience of Allah and whom shame and grief do not
befall after death.
SERMON 64
About Allah’s attributes
Praise to Allah for Whom one condition does not proceed another so that He may be the First
before being the Last or He may be Manifest before being Hidden. Everyone called one (alone)
save Him is by virtue of being small (in number) ; and everyone enjoying honor other than Him
is humble. Every powerful person other than Him is weak. Every master (owner) other than Him
is slave (owned).
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Every knower other than Him is a seeker of knowledge. Every controller other than Him is
sometimes imbued with control and sometimes with disability. Every listener other than Him is
deaf to light voices while loud voices make him deaf and distant voices also leave him. Every
on-looker other than Him is blind to hidden colors and delicate bodies. Every manifest thing
other than Him is hidden, but every hidden thing other than Him is incapable of becoming
manifest.
He did not create what He created to fortify His authority nor for fear of the consequences of
time, nor to seek help against the attack of an equal or a boastful partner or a hateful opponent.
On the other hand all the creatures are reared by him and are His humbled slaves. He is not
conditioned in anything so that it be said that He exists therein, nor is He separated from
anything so as to be said that He is away from it. The creation of what He initiated or the
administration of what He controls did not fatigue Him. No disability overtook Him against what
He created. No misgiving ever occurred to Him in what He ordained and resolved it. But His
verdict is certain, His knowledge is definite, His governance is overwhelming. He is wished for
at times of distress and He is feared even in bounty.
SERMON 65
During some of the days of Siffin battle, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said to his followers
about ways of fighting
O crowd of Muslims! Make fear of Allah the routine of your life. Cover yourselves with
peace of mind and clinch your teeth because this makes the sword slip off from the skull.
Complete your armor and shake your swords in their sheathes before showing them out. Have
your eyes on the enemy. Use your spears on both sides and strike (the enemy) with swords. Keep
in mind that you are before Allah and in the company of the Prophet’s cousin. Repeat your
attacks and feel ashamed of running away, because it is a shame for posterity and (the cause of
awarding you) fire on the Day of Judgment. Give your lives (to Allah) willingly and walk
towards death with ease. Beware of this great majority, and the pitched tent and aim at its
entirety as Satan is hiding in its corner. He has extended his hand for assault and has kept back
his foot for running away. Keep on enduring till the light of Truth dawns upon you.
While ye have the upper hand, and Allah is with you, and never will He depreciate your
deeds. (Holy Qur’an, 47:35)
SERMON 66
When after the death of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) news reached Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib (A.S) about the happening in saqifa of Banu Sa’idah,1 he inquired what the Ansar
said. People said that they were asking for one chief from among them and one from the others,
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
Why did you not argue against them (Ansar) that the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
had left his will that whoever is good among the Ansar should be treated well and whoever is bad
should be forgiven.
People said: AWhat is there against them in it?
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
AIf the Government was for them there should have been no will in their favor.
Then he said:
AWhat did the Quraish plead?
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People said: AThey argued that they belong to the lineal tree of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) .
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
AThey argued with the tree but spoiled the fruits.
1. From what happened in the saqifa of Banu Sa’idah, it appears that the greatest argument of
the Muhajirun against the Ansar and the basis of the former’s success was this very point that
since they were the kith and kin of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) no one else could
deserve the Caliphate. On this very ground the big crowd of Ansar became ready to lay down
their weapons before three Muhajirun, and the latter succeeded in winning the Caliphate by
presenting their distinction of descent. Thus in connection with the events of saqifa al-Tabari
writes that when the Ansar assembled in the saqifa (shed) of Banu Sa’idah to swear allegiance on
the hand of Sa’d ibn AAbadah, somehow Abu Bakr, AOmer and Abu AUbaydah ibn al-Jarrah
also got the hint and reached there. AOmer had thought out something for this occasion and he
rose to speak but Abu Bakr stopped him, and he himself stood u, p. After praise of Allah and the
immigration of the Muhajirun and their precedence in Islam he said:
They are those who worshipped Allah first of all and accepted belief in Allah and his
Prophet’s friends and his kith and kin. Therefore, these alone deserve the Caliphate the most.
Whoever clashes with them commits excess.
When Abu Bakr finished his speech al-Hubab ibn Munthir stood up and, turning to the Ansar
said: AO group of Ansar! Do not give your reins in the hand of others. The populace is under
your care. You are men of honor, wealth, tribe and gathering. If the Muhajirun have precedence
over you in some matters, you too have precedence over them in other matters. You gave them
refuge in your houses. You are the fighting arm of Islam. With your help Islam stood on its own
feet. In your cities the prayer of Allah was established with freedom. Save yourselves from
division and dispersion, and stick to your right unitedly. If the Muhajirun do not concede to your
right tell them there should be one chief from us and one from them.
No sooner had al-Hubab sat down after saying this then AOmer rose and spoke thus:
This can’t be that there be two rulers at one time. By Allah, the Arabs will never agree to have
you as the head of the state since the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was not from
among you. Certainly, the Arabs will not have the least objection in that the caliphate is allowed
to one in whose house the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) hood rests so that the ruler
should also be from the same house. For those who dissent, clear arguments can be put forth.
Whoever comes in conflict with us in the matter of the authority and rulership of Muhammed
(P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) he is leaning towards wrong, is a sinner and is falling into
destruction.
After AOmer, al-Hubab again stood up and said to the Ansar, ALook, stick to your point and
do not pay heed to the views of this man or his supporters. They want to trample your rights. If
they do not consent turn him and them out of your cities and appropriate the Caliphate. Who
other than you can deserve it more?
When al-Hubab finished AOmer scolded him. There was a use of bad words from that side
also, and the position began to worsen. On seeing this Abu AUbaydah ibn al-Jarrah spoke with
the intention of cooling down the Ansar and to win them over to his side and said:
AO Ansar! You are the people who supported us and helped us in every manner. Do not now
change your ways and do not give up your behavior. But the Ansar refused to change their mind.
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They were prepared to swear allegiance to Sa’d and people just wanted to approach him when a
man of Sa’d’s tribe Bashir ibn AAmr al-Khazraji stood up and said:
ANo doubt we came forward for jihad, and gave support to thereligion, but our aim in doing
thus was to please Allah and to obey His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . It does not
behoove us to claim superiority and create trouble in the matter of the caliphate. Muhammed
(P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) was from Quraish and they have a greater right for it, and
are more appropriate for it. As soon as Bashir uttered these words division occurred among the
Ansar, and this was his aim, because he could not see a man of his own tribe rising so high. The
Muhajirun took advantage of this division among the Ansar, and AOmer and Abu AUbaydah
decided to swear allegiance to Abu Bakr. They had just come forward when Bashir first of all put
his hand on that of Abu Bakr and after that AOmer and Abu AUbaydah swore the allegiance.
Then the people of Bashir’s tribe came and swore allegiance, and trampled Sa’d ibn AAbadah
under their feet.
During this time Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was occupied in the funeral bath and burial of
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . When afterwards he heard about the assembly at the
saqifa and came to know that the Muhajirun had won the score over the Ansar by pleading
themselves to be from the tribe of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , he uttered the fine
sentence that those who argued on the lineal tree spoiled its fruits. That is, if the Muhajirun’s
claim was acceded for being from the lineal tree of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ,
how can those who are the fruits of this tree be ignored? It is strange that Abu Bakr who
connects with the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) in Theseventh generation above and
AOmer who connects with him in the ninth generation above may be held of the tribe and family
of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and he who was his first cousin is refused the
status of a brother.
SERMON 67
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) appointed Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr1 Governor of
Egypt and he was overpowered and killed, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
I had intended to send Hashim ibn AUtbah to Egypt and had I done so he would have neither
made a way for the opponents nor given them time (to get hold of him). This is without reproach
to Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr as I loved him and had raised him.
1. Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr’s mother was Asma’ daughter of AUmays whom Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) married after Abu Bakr’s death. Consequently, Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His
Holy Household) lived and was brought up under the care of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and
he imbibed his ways and manners. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) loved him and regarded him as
his son, saying AMuhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) is my son from Abu Bakr. He
was born in the journey during the last Hajj (of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) and
died as a martyr in 38 A.H. at the age of twenty eight years.
On accession to the Caliphate Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had selected Qays ibn Sa’d ibn
AAbadah as the Governor of Egypt but circumstances developed so that he had to be removed.
Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr was then sent there as Governor. The policy of Qays there was that he
did not want to take any serious step against the AOthman group but Muhammed’s view was
different. After the lapse of a month he sent them word that in case they did not obey him their
existence there would be impossible. Upon this these people organized a front against him, and
engaged themselves in secret wire pulling, but became conspicuous soon. After arbitration they
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started creating trouble with the slogan of vengeance. This polluted the atmosphere of Egypt.
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) came to know these deteriorated conditions he gave the
governorship of Egypt to Malik ibn al-Harith al-Ashtar and sent him off there in order that he
might suppress insurgent elements and save the administration from getting worse. Yet, he could
not escape the evil designs of the Umayyads and was killed by poison while on his way. Thus,
the governorship of Egypt remained with Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr.
On this side, the performance of AAmr ibn al-AAs in connection with the arbitration made
Mu’awiyah recall his own promise. Consequently, he gave him six thousand combatants and set
him off to attack Egypt. When Muhammed ibn Abu Bakr knew of the advancing force of the
enemy he wrote to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) for help. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) replied
that he would be soon collecting help for him but in the meantime he should mobilize his own
forces. Muhammed mobilized four thousand men under his banner and divided them into two
formations. He kept one part with himself and on the other he placed Kinanah ibn Bishr at-Tujibi
in command and ordered him to go forward to check the enemy’s advance. When they settled
down to camp before the enemy, various parties of the enemy began attacking them. Yet, they
faced them with courage and valour. At last, Mu’awiyah ibn Hudayj as-Sikuni al-Kindi made an
assault with full force. These people did not turn away from the enemy’s swords but faced them
steadfastly and fell as martyrs in action. The effect of this defeat was that Muhammed ibn Abu
Bakr’s men got frightened and deserted him. Finding himself alone, Muhammed fled and sought
refuge in a deserted place. The enemy however got news about him through someone and traced
him out when he was dying with thirst. Muhammed asked for water but these cruel men refused
and butchered him thirsty. Then they put his body in the belly of a dead ass and burnt it.
Malik ibn Ka’b al-Arhabi had already left Kufa with two thousand men, but before he could
reach Egypt it had been occupied by the enemy.
SERMON 68
Admonishing his companions about careless behavior: Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
How long shall I accord you consideration that is accorded to camels with hollow humps, or
to worn clothes which when stitched on one side give way on the other. Whenever a vanguard
force of Syria hovers over you, everyone of you shuts his door and hides himself like the lizard
in its hole or a badger in its den. By Allah, he whom people like you support must suffer disgrace
and he who throws arrows with your support is as if he throws arrows that are broken both at
head and tail. By Allah, within the courtyard you are quite numerous but under the banner you
are only a few. Certainly, I know what can improve you and how your crookedness can be
straightened. But I shall not improve your condition by marring myself. Allah may disgrace your
faces and destroy you. You do not understand the right as you understand the wrong and do not
crush the wrong as you crush the right.
SERMON 69
Spoken on the morning of the day when Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was fatally struck with
sword.
I was sitting when sleep overtook me. I saw the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of
Allah appear before me, and I said, AO Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah! what
crookedness and animosity I had to face from the people. the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) of Allah said: AInvoke (Allah) evil upon them, but I said, AAllah may change them
for me with better ones and change me for them with a worse one.
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Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Aal-awad means crookedness and Aal-ladad means
animosity, and this is the most eloquent expression.
SERMON 70
In condemnation of the people of Iraq
Now then. O people1! You are like the pregnant woman who, on completion of the period of
pregnancy delivers a dead child and her husband is also dead and her period of widowhood is
long while only remote relation inherits her. By Allah, I did not come to you of my own accord. I
came to you by force of circumstances. I have come to know that you say Ali speaks lies. May
Allah fight you! Against whom do I speak lies? Against Allah? But I am the first to have
believed in Him. Against His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ? But I am the first who
testified to him. Certainly not. By Allah it was a way of expression which failed to appreciate,
and you were not capable of it. Woe unto you. I am giving out these measures of nice expression
free of any cost. I wish there were vessels good enough to hold them.
Certainly, you will understand it after some time. (Holy Qur’an, 38:88)
1. When after arbitration Theiraqis displayed lethargy and heartlessness in retaliating against
the continuous attacks of Mu’awiyah, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) delivered this sermon
scorning and admonishing them. Herein he has referred to their being deceived at Siffin and has
likened them to a woman who has five qualities:
i) Firstly, she is pregnant. This implies that these people had full capability to fight, and were
not like a barren woman from whom nothing is expected.
ii) Secondly, she has completed the period of pregnancy. That is they had passed over all
difficult stages and has approached near the final goal of Victory.
iii) Thirdly, she willfully miscarries her child. That is after coming close to victory they came
down to settlement and instead of achieving the coveted goal faced disappointment.
Iv ) Fourthly, her period of widowhood is long. That is they fell in such a state as though they
had no protector or patron and they were roaming about without any ruler.
(v) Fifthly, her successors would be distant persons. That is the people of Syria who had no
relationship with them would occupy their properties.
SERMON 71
Herein Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) tells people how to pronounce Aas-salat (to invoke the
Divine blessing) on the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
My Allah, the Spreader of the surfaces (of earth) and Keeper (intact) of all skies, Creator of
hearts on good and evil nature, send Your choicest blessings and growing favors on Muhammed
(P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) Your servant and Your Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) who is the last of those who preceded (him) and an opener for what is closed,
proclaimer of truth with truth, repulser of the forces of wrong and crusher of the onslaughts of
misguidance. As he was burdened (with responsibility of prophethood) so he bore it standing by
Your commands, advancing towards Your will, without shrinking of steps of weakness of
determination, listening to Your revelation, preserving Your testament, proceeding forward in
the spreading of Your commands till he lit fire for its seeker and lit the path for the groper in the
dark.
Hearts achieved guidance through him after being ridden with troubles. He introduced clear
guiding signs and shining injunctions. He is Your trusted trustee, the treasurer of Your treasured
knowledge, Your witness on the Day of Judgment, Your envoy of truth and Your Messenger
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towards the people. My Allah prepare a large place for him under Your shade and award him
multiplying good by Your bounty.
My Allah, give height to his construction above all other constructions, heighten his position
with You, grant perfection to his effulgence and perfect for him his light. In reward for his
discharging Your prophethood, grant him that his testimony be admitted and his speech be loved
for his speech is just, and his judgments are clear-cut. My Allah put us and him together in the
pleasure of life, continuance of bounty, satisfaction of desires, enjoyment of pleasures, ease of
living, peace of mind and gifts of honor.
SERMON 72
When Marwan ibn al-Hakam was taken on the day of Jamal at Basra, he asked Hasan and
Husain (peace be upon them) to intercede on his behalf before Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S). So
they spoke to Imam Ali ibn e Abu Talib about him and he released him. Then they said, AO
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), Marwan desires to swear his allegiance to you. Whereupon Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
Did he not swear me allegiance after the killing of AOthman? Now I do not need his
allegiance, because his is the hand of a Jew. If he swears me allegiance with his hand he would
violate it after a short while. Well, he is to get power for so long as a dog licks his nose. He is the
father of four rams (who will also rule). The people will face hard days through him and his
sons.1
1. Marwan ibn al-Hakam was the nephew (brother’s son) and son-in-law of AOthman. Due to
a thin body and tall stature he was known with the nickname AKhayt Batil (the thread of the
wrong). When AAbdul-Malik ibn Marwan killed AAmr ibn Sa’id al-Ashdaq, his brother Yahya
ibn Sa’id said:
O sons of Khayt Batil (the thread of wrongdoing) you have played deceit on AAmr and
people like you build their houses (of authority) on deceit and treachery.
Even though his father al-Hakam ibn Abul-AAs had accepted Islam at the time of the fall of
Mecca, his behavior and activities were very painful to the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) . Consequently, the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) cursed him and his
descendants and said, AWoe will befall my people from the progeny of this man. At last in view
of his increasing intrigues, the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) exiled him from Medina
towards the valley of Hajj (in Ta’if) and Marwan also went with him. Thereafter, the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) did not allow them to enter Medina as long as he was alive. Abu
Bakr and AOmer did likewise, but AOthman sent for both of them during his reign, and raised
Marwan to such a height as though thereins of caliphate rested in his hands. Thereafter his
circumstances became so favorable that on the death of Mu’awiyah ibn Yazid he became the
Caliph of the Muslims. He had only ruled nine months and eighteen days before death overtook
him in such a way that his wife sat with the pillow on his face and did not leave until he breathed
his last.
The four sons to whom Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has referred were the four sons of
AAbdul-Malik ibn Marwan namely al-Walid, Sulayman, Yazid and Hisham, who ascended the
Caliphate one after the other and colored the , pp. of history with their stories. Some
commentators have regarded this reference to Marwan’s own sons whose names are AAbdulMalik, AAbdul-AAziz, Bishr and Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household). Out of these
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AAbdul-Malik did become Caliph of Islam but AAbdul-AAziz became governor of Egypt, Bishr
of Iraq and Muhammed of Jazira.
SERMON 73
When the Consultative Committee (or shura) decided to swear allegiance to AOthman, Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
You have certainly known that I am the most rightful of all others for the Caliphate. By Allah,
so long as the affairs of Muslims remain intact and there is no oppression in it save on myself I
shall be keeping aloof from its attractions and allurements for which you aspire.
SERMON 74
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) learned that the Umayyads blamed him for killing
AOthman, he said:
The Umayyads’s knowledge about me did not desist them for accusing me, nor did my
precedence (in accepting Islam) keep these ignorant people from blaming me. Allah’s
admonitions are more eloquent than my tongue. I contest against those who break away from
Faith and oppose those who entertain doubts. Uncertainties should be placed before Holy
Qur’an, the Book of Allah (for clarification). Certainly, people will be recompensed according to
what they have in their hearts.
SERMON 75
About preaching and counseling
Allah may bless him who listens to a point of wisdom and retains it. When he is invited to the
right path he approaches it. He follows a leader (by catching his waistband) and finds salvation,
keeps Allah before his eyes and fears his sins. He performs actions sincerely and acts virtuously,
earns treasure of heavenly rewards, avoids vice, aims at (good) objective and reaps recompense.
He faces his desires and rejects (fake) hopes, makes endurance the means to his salvation and
piety the provision for his death. He rides on the path of honor and sticks to the highway of truth.
He makes good use of his time and hastens towards the end and takes with him the provision of
(good) actions.
SERMON 76
About the Umayyads
Banu Umayyah (Umayyads) are allowing me the inheritance of Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and
His Holy Household) bit by bit. By Allah, if I live I would throw them away as the butcher
removes the dust from the dust-covered piece of flesh.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: In one version for Aal-widhamu’ttaribah (dust covered
piece of flesh) the words Aat-turabu’lwadhimah (the soil sticking on a piece of flesh) have been
shown. That is, for the adjective the qualified noun and for the qualified noun the adjective has
been placed. As for the word Alayufawwiqunani Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) implies that they
allow him bit by bit just as a she-camel may be milked a little and then its young one may be
made to suck milk so that it may be ready to be milked. And Aal-widham is the plural of
Awadhamah which means the piece of stomach or of liver which falls on the ground and then the
dust is removed from it.
SERMON 77
Supplications of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
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O Lord! Forgive what You know about me more than I do. If I return (to the sins) You return
to forgiveness. My Allah forgive me for what I had promised to myself but You did not find its
fulfilllment with me. My Allah forgive me with what I sought nearness to You with my tongue
but my heart opposed and did not perform it. My Allah forgive my winking of the eye, vile
utterances, desires of the heart and errors of speech.
SERMON 78
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) decided to set out for the battle with the Kharijites1
someone said, AIf you set out at this moment then according to astrology I fear you will not be
successful in your aim. Whereupon Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
Do you think you can tell the hour when a man goes out and no evil will befall him or can
warn of the time at which if one goes out harm will accrue? Whoever testifies to this, falsifies the
Holy Qur’an and becomes unmindful of Allah in achieving his desired objective and in warding
off the undesirable. You cherish saying this so that he who acts on what you say should praise
you rather than Allah because according to your misconception you have guided him about the
hour in which he would secure benefit and avoid harm.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) advanced towards the people and said:
O People! Beware of learning the science of stars except that with which guidance is sought
on land or sea, because it leads to divining and an astrologer is a the Diviner, while the Diviner is
like the sorcerer, the sorcerer is like the unbeliever and the unbeliever would be in Hell. Get
forward in the name of Allah.
1. When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) decided to march towards Nahrawan to suppress the
risings of the Kharijites, AAfif ibn Qays al-Kindi said to him, AThis hour is not good. If you set
out at this time, then instead of victory and success you will face defeat and be vanquished. But
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) paid no heed to his view and ordered the army to march that very
moment. As a result, the Kharijites suffered such a clear defeat that out of their nine thousand
combatants only nine individuals saved their lives by running away while therest were killed.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has argued about astrology being wrong or incorrect in three
ways. Firstly, if the view of an astrologer is accepted as correct it would mean falsification of the
Holy Qur’an. An astrologer claims to ascertain hidden things of failure by seeing the stars while
the Holy Qur’an says the following:
Say: ANone (either) in the heavens or in the earth knows the unseen save Allah. (27:65)
Secondly, under his misconception, the astrologer believes that he can know his benefit or
harm through knowing the future. In that case it would be useless to turn to Allah and seek His
help; while this indifference towards Allah and self-reliance is a sort of heresy and atheism,
which puts an end to his hope in Allah. Thirdly, if he succeeds in any objective, he would regard
this success to be theresult of his knowledge of astrology, theresults from which he would praise
himself rather than Allah, and will expect that whomever he guides (in this manner) would
necessarily be grateful to him rather than to Allah. These points do not apply to astrology to the
extent it may be believed that the astrological findings are in the nature of effect of medicines
which are subject to alteration at will of Allah. The competence achieved by most of our
religious scholars in astrology is correct in this very ground that they did not regard its findings
as final.
SERMON 79
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After the Battle of Jamal,1 Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said the following about physical
defects of women
O ye people! Women are deficient in faith, deficient in shares and deficient in intelligence. As
regards the deficiency in their faith, it is their abstention from prayers and fasting during their
menstrual period. As regards deficiency in their intelligence it is because the evidence of two
women is equal to that of one man. As for the deficiency of their shares that is because of their
share in inheritance being half of men. So beware of the evils of women. Be on your guard even
from those of them who are (reportedly) good. Do not obey them even in good things so that
they may not attract you to evils.
1. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) delivered this sermon after the devastation created by the
Battle of Jamal. Since the devastation resulting from this battle was the outcome of blindly
following a woman’s command, in this sermon he has described women’s physical defects and
their causes and effects. Thus their first weakness is that for a few days in every month they have
to abstain from prayer and fasting, and this abstention from worship is a proof of their deficiency
in faith. Although thereal meaning of AIman (belief) is heart-felt testification and inner
conviction yet metaphorically it also applies to action and character. Since actions are
thereflection of belief they are also regarded as part of belief. Thus, it is related from Imam Ali
ibn Musa ar Rida () that:
Iman (belief) is a testimony at heart, an admission by the tongue and action by the limbs.
The second weakness is that their natural propensities do not admit the full performance of
their intelligence. Therefore, nature has given them the power of intelligence only in accordance
with the scope of their activities which can guide them in pregnancy, delivery, child nursing,
child care and household affairs. On the basis of this weakness of mind and intelligence their
evidence has not been accorded the status of man’s evidence, as Allah says the following:
.then call to witnesses two witness from among your men and if there not be two men then
(take) a man for two women, of those ye approve of the witnesses, so that should one of the two
(women) forget the (second) one of the two may remind the other. (Holy Qur’an, 2:282)
The third weakness is that their share in inheritance is half of man’s share in inheritance as the
Holy Qur’an says the following:
Allah enjoins you about your children. The male shall have the equal of the shares of two
females. (4:11)
This shows woman’s weakness because thereason for her share in inheritance being half is
that the liability of her maintenance rests on man. When man’s position is that of a maintainer
and caretaker the status of the weaker sex who is in need of maintenance and care-taking is
evident.
After describing their natural weakness as Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) points out the
mischief of blindly following them and wrongly obeying them. He says that not to say of bad
things but even if they say with regard to some good things it should not be done in a way that
these should feel as if it is being done in pursuance of their wish. Rather it should be done in a
way that they should realize that the good act has been performed because of its being good and
that their pleasure or wish has nothing to do with it. If they have even the doubt that their
pleasures has been kept in view in it they would slowly increase in their demands and would
wish that they should be obeyed in all matters however evil, the inevitable consequence whereof
will be destruction and ruin. ash-Sheikh Muhammed AAbdo writes about this view of Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib (A.S) as under:
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Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has said a thing which is corroborated by experiences of
centuries.
SERMON 80
About the way of preaching and counseling
O people! Abstinence is to shorten desires, to be thankful for bounties and to keep from
prohibitions. If this is possible then (at least) the prohibitions should not overpower your
patience. Allah has exhausted the excuse before you through clear, shining arguments and open,
bright books.
SERMON 81
About the world and its people
How shall I describe this world whose beginning is grief and whose end is destruction?1 the
lawful actions performed here have to be accounted for, while for the forbidden one there is
punishment. Whoever is rich here faces mischief and whoever is poor gets grief. One who
hankers after it does not get it. If one keeps away from it then it advances towards him. If one
sees through it, it would bestow him sight, but if one has his eye on it then it would blind him.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: If a thinker thinks over this phrase of Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) Awaman absara biha bassarat’hu (AIf one sees through it, it would bestow him sight)
he would find therein a very amazing meaning and far-reaching sense whose purpose cannot be
appreciated and whose aim cannot be understood particularly when he joins it with Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib’s phrase Awaman absara ilayha a Amat’hu (AIf one has his eye on it, then it would
blind him) he would find the difference between Aabsara biha and Aabsara laha, clear, bright,
wonderful and shining.
1. AThe beginning of the world is grief and its end is destruction. This sentence contains the
same truth which the Holy Qur’an has presented in the verse saying, AIndeed We have created
man (to dwell) amid hardship. (90:4)
It is true that right from the narrow womb of the mother and unto the vastness of the
firmament the changes of human life do not come to an end. When man first tastes life he finds
himself closed in such a dark prison where he can neither move the limbs nor change the sides.
When he gets rid of this confinement and steps in this world he has to pass through innumerable
troubles. In the beginning he can neither speak with the tongue so as to describe his difficulty or
pain nor does he possess energy in the limbs so as to accomplish his needs himself. Only his
suppressed sobs and flowing tears express his needs and translate his grief and sorrow. When
after the laps of this period he enters the stage of learning and instruction, then on every step
voices of admonition and abuse welcome him. All the time he seems frightened and terrified.
When he is relieved of this period of subjugation he finds himself surrounded by the worries of
family life and livelihood, where sometime, there is clash with comrades in profession,
sometimes collision with enemies, sometimes confrontation with vicissitudes of time, sometimes
attack of ailments and sometimes the shock of children. Then old age approaches him with the
tidings of helplessness and weakness, and eventually he bids farewell to this world with
mortification and grief in the heart.
Thereafter Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) says about this world, that within its lawful actions
there is the question of reckoning and in its forbidden acts there are hardships of punishment, as
a result of which even pleasant joys also produce bitterness in his palate. If there is plenty of
wealth and money in this world then man finds himself in such a whirlpool (of worries) that he
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loses his joy and peace of mind. But if there is want and poverty, he is ever crying for wealth.
For he who hankers after this world there is no limit to his desires. If one wish is fulfillled the
desire for fulfilllment of another wish crops u, p. This world is like thereflection. If you run after
it then it will itself run forward but if you leave it and run away from it then it follows you. In the
same way, if a person does not run after the world, the world runs after him. The implication is
that if a person breaks the clutches of greed and avarice and keeps aloof from undesirable
hankering after the world, he too gets (pleasure of) the world and he does not remain deprived of
it. Therefore, he who surveys this world from above its surface and takes lesson from its changes
and happenings, and through its variation, and alterations gains knowledge about Allah’s Might,
Wisdom and Sagacity, Mercy, Clemency and Sustaining power, his eyes will gain real brightness
and sight. On the other hand the person who is lost only in the colorfulness of the world and its
decorations, loses himself in the darkness of the world. This is why Allah has forbidden to view
the world thus:
And strain not thine eyes unto that which We have provided (different) parties of them, (of)
the splendor of the life of this world, so that We may try them in it; for the provision of thy
Master is better and more abiding. (Holy Qur’an, 20:131)
SERMON 82
This sermon is called the al-Gharra’ and it is one of the most wonderful sermons of Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
Praise to Allah who is High above all else, and is Near (the creation) through His bounty. He
is the Giver of all rewards and distinction, and Dispeller of all calamities and hardships. I praise
Him for His continuous mercy and His copious bounties.
I believe in Him as He is the First of all and He is Manifest. I seek guidance from Him as He
is Near and is the Guide. I seek His succor as He is Mighty and the Subduer. I depend upon Him
as He is the Sufficer and Supporter. And I stand witness that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His
Holy Household) (blessing of Allah be on him and his progeny) is His slave and His Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) . He sent him for enforcement of His commands, for exhausting
His pleas and for presenting warnings (against eternal punishment).
Enjoining people to Piety
O creatures of Allah I advise you to have fear of Allah Who has furnished illustrations and
Who has timed for you your lives. He has given you the covering of dress1 and He has scattered
for you livelihood. He has surrounded you with His knowledge. He has ordained rewards. He has
bestowed upon you vast bounties and extensive gifts. He has warned you through far reaching
arguments, and He has counted you by numbers. He has fixed for you ages (to live) in this place
of test and house of instruction.
Cautioning against this world
You are tested in this world and have to render an accounting. Certainly this world is a dirty
watering place and a muddy source of drinking.
Its appearance is attractive and its inside is destructive. It is a delible deception, a vanishing
reflection and a bent pillar. When its despiser begins to like it and he who is not acquainted with
it feels satisfied with it, then it praises and puts down its feet (in joy). It entraps him in its trap,
makes him the target of its arrows and puts round his neck the rope of death taking him to the
narrow grave and fearful abode in order to show him his place of stay and therecompense of his
acts. This goes on from generation to generation. Neither death stops from cutting them asunder
nor do the survivors keep aloof from committing sins.
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Death and Resurrection
They are emulating each other and proceeding in groups towards the final objective and
therendezvous of death, till when matters come to a close, the world dies and resurrection draws
near. Allah2 will take them out from the corners of the graves, the nests of birds, the dens of
beasts and the centers of death. They will hasten towards His command and run towards the
place fixed for their final return group by group, quiet, standing and arrayed in rows. They will
be within Allah’s sight and He will hear every one whom He calls.
They will be wearing the dress of helplessness and the covering of submission and indignity.
(At this time) contrivances will disappear, desires will be cut, hearts will quietly sink, voices will
be curbed, sweat will choke the throat, fear will increase and ears will resound with the
thundering voice of the announcer calling them towards final judgment, awarding recompense,
striking with punishment and paying rewards.
The Limitation of Life
People have been created as a proof of (His) power. They have been brought up with
authority, they are made to die through pangs, and placed in graves where they turn into crumbs.
Then they will be resurrected one by one, awarded their recompense and will have to account for
their actions, each one separately. They had been allowed time to seek deliverance, had been
shown the right path and had been allowed to live and seek favors. The darkness of doubts had
been removed. They had been let free in this period of life as a training place in order to make
preparation for the race on the Day of Judgment, to search for the objective with thoughtfulness,
to get time necessary to secure benefits and provide for the next place of stay.
No Happiness without Piety
How appropriate are these illustrations and effective admonitions provided they are received
by pure hearts, open ears, firm views and sharp wits. Fear Allah like him who listened (from
good advice) and bowed before it, when he committed sin he admitted it, when he felt fear he
acted virtuously. When he apprehended he hastened (towards good acts), when he believed he
performed virtuous acts, when he was asked to take lesson (from the happenings of this world)
he learned. When he was asked to desist he abstained (from evil), when he responded to the call
(of Allah) he leaned (towards him), when he turned back (to evil) he repented, when he followed
he almost imitated and when he was shown (the right path) he saw it.
Such a man was busy in search of truth and got rid (of the worldly evils) by running away. He
collected provision (of good acts) for himself, purified his inner self, built for the next world and
took provision for the day of his departure, keeping in view his journey, his requirement and the
position of his need. He sent ahead for the abode of his stay (in the next world). O creatures of
Allah, fear Allah keeping in view thereason why He created you and be afraid of Him to the
extent He has advised you to do. Make yourself deserve what He has promised you, by having
confidence in the truth of His promise and entertaining fear for the Day of Judgment.
A portion of the same sermon: Reminding people of Allah’s bounties
He has made for you ears to preserve what is important, eyes to have sight in place of
blindness and limbs which consist of many (smaller) parts, whose curves are in proportion with
the moulding of their shapes and lengths of their ages. He has also given you bodies that sustain
themselves and hearts that are busy in search of their food, besides other big bounties, obliging
bestowings and a fortress of safety. He has fixed for you ages that are not known to you. He has
retained for you remains of the past people for your instruction. Those people enjoyed
themselves fully and were completely unhampered. Death overtook them before (satisfaction of)
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their desires, from which the hands of death separated them. They did not provide for themselves
during the health of their bodies nor take lessons during the stages of youth.
Are these people who are in youth waiting for the backbendings of old age, those enjoying
fresh health waiting for ailments and these living persons looking for the hour of death? When
the hour of departure comes closer, the journey is at hand with pangs of grief and trouble. When
the suffering of sorrows, suffocation of saliva and the time would arrive for calling relations and
friends for help and changing sides on the bed, could then the near ones stop death, or the
mourning women do any good? He would rather be left alone in the graveyard confined to the
narrow corner of his grave.
His skin has been pierced all over by reptiles, and his freshness has been destroyed by these
tribulations. Storms have removed his traces and calamities have obliterated even his signs.
Fresh bodies have turned thin and withered and bones have become rotten. The spirits are
burdened with the weight of sins and have become conscious of the unknown things. But now
neither the good acts can be added to nor evil acts can be atoned for by repentance. Are you not
sons, fathers, brothers and relations of these dead and will you not follow their footsteps and pass
by their paths? But hearts are still unmoved, heedless of guidance and moving on wrong lines, as
though the addressee is someone else and the correct way is to amass worldly gains.
Preparation for the Day of Judgment
And know that you have to pass over the pathway (of Sirat) where steps waver, feet slip and
there are fearful dangers at every ste, p. O creatures of Allah, fear Allah, like the fearing of a
wise man whom the thought (of next world) has turned away from other matters. The fear (of
Allah) has afflicted his body with trouble and pain, his engagement in the night prayer has turned
even his short sleep into awakening, hope (of eternal recompense) keeps him thirsty in the day,
abstention has curbed his desires, and remembrance of Allah is ever moving his tongue. He
entertains fear before dangers. He avoids uneven ways in favor of clear ones. He follows the
shortest route to secure his purpose, wishfulness does not twist his thinking and ambiguities do
not blind his eyes. He enjoys deep sleep and passes his day happily because of the happiness of
good tidings and pleasure of (eternal bounties).
He passes the pathway of this world in a praiseworthy manner. He reaches the next world
with virtues. He hastens (towards virtue) out of fear (for vice). He moves briskly during the short
time (of life in this world). He devotes himself in seeking (eternal good), he runs away from evil.
During today he is mindful of tomorrow, and keeps the future in his view. Certainly Paradise is
the best reward and achievement, which hell is appropriate punishment and suffering. Allah is
the best Avenger and Helper and the Holy Qur’an is the best argument and confronter.
Warning against Satan
I enjoin upon you fear of Allah Who has left no excuse against what He has warned, has
exhausted argument (of guidance) about the (right) path He has shown. He has warned you of the
enemy that steals into hearts and stealthily speaks into ears, and thereby misguides and brings
about destruction, makes (false) promises and keeps under wrong impression. He represents evil
sins in attractive shape, and shows as light even serious crimes. When he has deceived his
comrades and exhausted the pledge he begins to find fault with what he presented as good, and
considers serious what he had shown as light, and threatens from what he had shown as safe.
Part of the same sermon dealing with creation of man
Or look at man whom Allah has created in the dark wombs and layers of curtains an from
what was overflowing semen, then a shapeless clot, then embryo, then a suckling infant, then a
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child and then a fully grown young man. Then He gave him heart with a memory, a tongue to
talk and eyes to see with in order that he may take lesson (from whatever is around him),
understand, follow the admonition and abstain from evil.
When he attained the normal growth and his structure gained its average development, he fell
in self-conceit and became perplexed. He drew buckets of desires, became immersed in
fulfillling his wishes for pleasures of the world and his (sordid) aims. He did not fear any evil nor
became frightened of any apprehension. He died infatuated with his vices. He spent his short life
in rubbish pursuits. He earned no reward nor did he fulfill any obligation. Fatal illness overtook
him while he was still in his enjoyments and perplexed him. He passed the night in the
wakefulness of the hardships of grief and the pricking of pains and ailments. He suffered in the
presence of real brother, loving father, wailing mother and crying sister, while he himself was
under a maddening uneasiness, serious senselessness, fearful cries, suffocating pains, anguish of
suffocating sufferings and the pangs of death.
Thereafter he was clad in the shroud while he remained quiet and thoroughly submissive to
others. Then he was placed on planks in such a state that he had been down-trodden by hardships
and thinned by ailments. The crowd of young men and helping brothers carried him to his house
of loneliness where all connections of visitors are severed. Thereafter those who accompanied
him went away and those who were wailing for him returned. He was made to sit in his grave for
a terrifying questioning and a slippery examination. The great calamity of that place is the hot
water and entry into Hell, flames of eternal Fire and intensity of blazes. There is no resting
period, no gap for ease, no power to intervene, no death to bring about solace and no sleep to
make him forget pain. He rather lies under several kinds of deaths and moment-to-moment
punishment. We seek refuge with Allah.
The lesson to be learned from those who have passed away
O creatures of Allah! where are those who were allowed (long) ages to live and they enjoyed
bounty? They were taught and they learned. They were given time and they passed it in vain.
They were kept healthy and they forgot (their duty). They were allowed a long period (of life),
were handsomely provided, were warned of grievous punishment and were promised big
rewards. You should avoid sins that lead to destruction and vices that attract the wrath (of Allah).
O people who possess eyes and ears and health and wealth! Is there any place of protection,
any shelter of safety, or asylum or haven, or occasion to run away or to come back (to this world)
? If not, Ahow are you then turned away (Holy Qur’an, 6:95; 10:34; 35:3; 40:62) and whither are
you averting? By what things have you been deceived? Certainly, the share of every one of you
from this earth is just a piece of land equal to his owns stature and size where he would lie on his
cheeks covered with dust. The present is an opportune moment for acting.
O creatures of Allah, since the neck is free from the loop, and spirit is also unfettered, now
you have time for seeking guidance. You are in ease of body; you can assemble in crowds,
therest of life is before you; you have opportunity of acting by will; there is opportunity for
repentance and peaceful circumstances. (But you should act) before you are overtaken by narrow
circumstances and distress, or fear and weakness, before the approach of the awaited death and
before seizure by the Almighty, the Powerful.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: It is related that when Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
delivered this sermon people began to tremble, tears flowed from their eyes and their hearts were
frightened. Some people call this sermon the Brilliant Sermon (al-Khutbatu’l-Gharra’)
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1. Allah has furnished every creature with a natural dress, which is the means of protecting it
from cold and heat. Thus, some animals are covered in feathers and some carry apparels of wool
on their bodies. But the high degree of intelligence of man and the quality of shame and modesty
in him demands distinction from other creatures. Consequently, to maintain this distinction, he
has been taught the ways of covering his body. It was this natural impulse when Adam was made
to give up his dress he began to cover his body with leaves. The Holy Qur’an says the following:
So when they tasted (of) the tree their shameful things got displayed unto them and they began
covering themselves with leaves of the Garden.(Holy Qur’an, 7:22)
This was the punishment awarded for his committing what was better for him to omit. When
removal of dress is punishment its putting on would be a favor, and since this is peculiar to man
it has been particularly mentioned.
2. The intention is that Allah would resurrect all the dead, even though they had been eaten by
beasts and been merged in their bodies. Its aim is to refute the view of the philosophers who hold
that theresurrection of the non-existent is impossible and who do not believe in the physical
resurrection. Their argument briefly is that a thing which has lost existence by death cannot
return to life. Consequently, after the destruction of this world thereturn of any of its beings to
life is out of question. But the belief is not correct because dispersal of the parts does not mean
its non-existence, so as to say that putting these parts together again would involve resurrection
of the non-existent. On the other hand separated and dispersed parts continue to exist in some
form or the other. Of course, in this connection this objection has some force that when every
person is to be resurrected in his own form, then in case one person has eaten the other, it would
be impossible to resurrect either of them with his own constituent parts. This would involve
creating a deficiency of parts in he who had eaten the other.
Metaphysicians have replied that in everybody there are some constituents which are essential
and others which are non-essential. The essential constituents remain constant from the
beginning till end of life and suffer no change or alteration, and resurrection with regard to such
constituents would not create any deficiency in the man who ate the other.
SERMON 83
About AAmr ibn al-AAs
I am surprised at the son of an-Nabighah that he says among the people of Syria that I am a
jester and that I am engaged in frolic and fun. He said wrong and spoke sinfully. Beware, the
worst speech is what is untrue. He speaks and lies. He promises and breaks the promise. He begs
and sticks, but when someone begs from him he withholds miserly. He betrays the pledge and
ignores kinship.
When in a battle, he commands and admonishes but only until the swords do not come into
action. When such a moment arrives his great trick is to turn naked1 before his adversary. By
Allah, surely the remembrance of death has kept me away from fun and play while obliviousness
about the next world has prevented him from speaking truth. He has not sworn allegiance to
Mu’awiyah without purpose; but has beforehand got him to agree that he would have to pay its
price, and gave him an award for forsaking religion.
1. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) here refers to the incident when the AConqueror of Egypt
AAmr ibn al-AAs exhibited the feat of his courage by displaying his private parts. What
happened was that when in the battlefield of Siffin he and Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had an
encounter, he rendered himself naked in order to ward off the blow of the sword. At this Imam
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Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) turned his face away and spared him his life. The famous Arab poet alFarazdaq said about it:
There is no good in warding off trouble by ignominy as was done one day by AAmr ibn alAAs by display of his private parts.
Even in this ignoble act AAmr ibn al-AAs had not the credit of doing it himself, but had rather
followed another one who had preceded him, because the man who first adopted this device was
Talhah ibn Abu Talhah who had saved his life in the battle of Uhud by becoming naked before
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), and so he showed this way to the others. Thus, besides AAmr ibn
al-AAs trick was played by Busr ibn Abu Artat also to save himself from the sword of Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib (A.S). When after the performance of this notable deed Busr went to Mu’awiyah
the latter recalled AAmr ibn al-AAs act as precedent in order to remove this man’s shamefulness
and said, AO Busr, no matter. There is nothing to feel shameful about it in view of AAmr ibn alAAs’s precedent before you.
SERMON 84
About the perfection of Allah and counseling
I stand witness that there is no god but Allah, He is One and there is no partner with Him. He
is the First, such that nothing was before Him. He is the Last, such that there is no limit for Him.
Imagination cannot catch any of His qualities. Hearts cannot entertain belief about His nature.
Analysis and division cannot be applied to Him. Eyes and hearts cannot compare Him.
A portion of the same sermon:
O creatures of Allah! Take lesson from useful items of instruction and shining indications. Be
cautioned by effective items of warning. Get benefit from preaching and admonition. It is as
though the claws of death are pressed in you, the connection of hope and desires has been cut
asunder, hard affairs have befallen you and your march is towards the place where everyone has
to go, namely death. Hence, Awith every person there is a driver and a witness (Holy Qur’an,
50:21). The driver drives him towards resurrection while the witness furnishes evidence about
his deeds.
A portion of the same sermon: (about Paradise)
In Paradise there are high classes and different places of stay. Its boundary never ends. He
who stays in it will never depart from it. He who is endowed with everlasting abode in it will not
get old and its resident will not face want.
SERMON 85
About getting ready for the next world and following Allah’s commandments
Allah knows hidden matters and is aware of inner feelings. He encompasses everything. He
has control over everything and power over everything. Everyone of you should do whatever he
has to do during his days of life before the approach of death. In its leisure before his occupation,
and during the breathing of his breath before it is overtaken by suffocation, he should provide for
himself and his journey and should collect provisions from his place of halt for his place of stay.
So remember Allah, O people, about what He has asked you in His Book to take care of, and
about His rights that He has entrusted to you. Verily, Allah has not created you in vain nor left
you unbridled nor let you alone in ignorance and gloom. He has defined what you should leave
behind, taught you your acts, ordained your death and sent down AThe Book (Holy Qur’an)
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explaining everything (Holy Qur’an, 16:89). He has made His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) live among you for a long time till He completed for him and for you a message
sent through the Holy Qur’an--namely thereligion liked and clarified through him His good and
evil acts, His prohibitions and His commands.
He placed before you His arguments and exhausted his excuses upon you. He put forth to you
His promises and warned you of severe retribution. You should therefore make full atonement
during your remaining days and let yourselves practice endurance in these days. These days are
fewer as against the many days during which you have shown obliviousness and heedlessness
towards admonition. Do not allow time to yourselves because it will put you on the path of
wrong-doers and do not be easy-going because this will push you towards sinfulness.
O creatures of Allah! the best advise for himself is he who is the most obedient to Allah, and
the most deceiving for himself is he who is the most disobedient to Allah. Deceived is he who
deceived his own self. Enviable is he whose faith is safe. Fortunate is he who takes lessons from
others, while unfortunate is he who falls victim to his desires. You should know that even the
smallest hypocrisy is like believing in more than one Allah, and keeping company of people who
follow their desires is the key to obliviousness from religion, and is Theseat of Satan.
Be on your guard against falsehood because it is contrary to faith. A truthful person is on the
height of salvation and dignity, while the liar is on the edge of ignominy and degradation. Do not
be jealous because jealousy eats away faith just as fire eats away dried wood. Do not bear malice
because it is a scraper (of virtues). And know that desires make one forgetful and make memory
oblivious. You should falsify desire because it is a deception, and he who has desires is in deceit.
SERMON 86
The Qualities of a faithful believer
O creatures of Allah! the most of Allah is he whom Allah has given power (to act) against his
passions, so that his inner side is (submerged in) grief and the outside is covered with fear. The
lamp of guidance is burning in his heart. He has provided entertainment for the day that is to
befall him. He regards what is distant to be near himself and takes the dark to be light. He looks
at and perceives; he remembers (Allah) and enhances (the tempo of his) actions. He drinks sweet
water to whose source his way has been made easy. So he drinks to satisfaction and takes the
level path. He has taken off the clothes of desires and has rid himself of worries except one
worry peculiar to him. He is safe from misguidance and the company of people who follow their
passions. He has become the key to the doors of guidance’ and the lock for the doors of
destruction.
He has seen his way and is walking on it. He knows his pillar (of guidance) and has crossed
over his deep water. He has caught hold of the most reliable supports and the strongest ropes. He
is on that level of conviction which is like the brightness of the sun. He has set himself for Allah,
the Glorified, for performance of the most sublime acts by facing all that befalls him and takes
every step needed for it. He is the lamp in darkness. He is the dispeller of all blindness, key to
the obscure, remover of complexities, and a guide in vast deserts. When he speaks he (makes
himself understood) whereas when he remains silent then it is safe to do so. He does everything
only for Allah and so Allah also makes him His own. Consequently, he is like the mines of His
faith, and a stump in His earth. He has enjoined upon himself (to follow) justice.
The first step of his justice is therejection of desires from his heart. He describes right and acts
according to it. There is no good which he has not aimed at nor any likely place (of virtue) of the
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Holy Qur’an. Therefore the Holy Qur’an is his guide and leader. He gets down when the Holy
Qur’an puts down his weight and he settles where the Holy Qur’an settles him down.
Characteristics of an unfaithful believer
While the other (kind of) man is he who calls himself learned but he is not so. He has gleaned
ignorance from the ignorant and misguidance from the misguided. He has set for the people a
trap (made) of the ropes of deceit and untrue speech. He takes the Holy Qur’an according to his
own views and right after his passions. He makes people feel safe from big sins and takes light
Theserious crimes. He says that he is waiting for (clarification) of doubts but he remains plunged
therein, and that he keeps aloof from innovations but actually he is immersed in them. His shape
is that of a man, but his heart is that of a beast. He does not know the door of guidance to follow
nor the door of misguidance to keep aloof therefrom. These are the living-dead bodies.
About the Descendants (Aitra) of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
ASo wither are you going to (Holy Qur’an, 81:26) and Ahow are you then turned away? (Holy
Qur’an, 6:95; 10:34; 35:3; 40:62) Ensigns (of guidance) are standing, indications (of virtue) are
clear, and the minarets (of light) have been fixed. Where are you being taken astray and how are
you groping while you have among you the descendants of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) ? They are thereins of Right, ensigns of Faith and tongues of truth. Accord to them
the same good position as you accord to the Holy Qur’an, and come to them (for quenching the
thirst of guidance) as the thirsty camels approach the water spring.
O people take this saying1 of the last of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) s that he
who dies from among us is not dead, and he who decays (after dying) from among us does not
really decay. Do not say what you do not understand, because most of the Right is in what you
deny. Accept the argument of one against whom you have no argument. It is I. Did I not act
before you on the greater thaqal (ath-thaqal al-akbar, i.e. The Holy Qur’an) and did I not retain
among you smaller thaqal (ath-thaqal al-asghar, i.e. The descendants of the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) ) ?2 I fixed among you the standard of faith and I taught you the limits of
lawful and unlawful. I clothed you with the garments of safety with my justice and spread for
you (the carpet of) virtue by my words and deeds.
I showed you high manners through myself. Do not exercise your imagination about what the
eye cannot see or the mind cannot conceive.
A portion of the same sermon:, about Banu Umayyah.
Till people begin thinking that the world is attached to the Umayyads, would be showering its
benefits to them, and lead them to its clear spring for watering, and that their whip and sword
will not be removed from the people. Whoever thinks which they would suck for a while and
then vomit out the whole of it.
1. This saying of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) is a definite proof of the view
that the life of any one from among Ahlu’l-Bayt (Household of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) ) does not come to an end. It is apparent that death makes no difference in their
sense of living, although the human intelligence is unable to comprehend the conditions and
happenings of that life. There are many truths beyond the world of senses which the human mind
cannot yet understand. Who can say how, in the narrow corner of the grave where it is not
possible even to breath, replies will be given to the questions of the angels Munkar and Nakir?
Similarly, what is the meaning of life of the martyrs in the cause of Allah, who have neither sense
nor motion, can neither see nor hear? Although to us they appear to be dead, yet the Holy
Qur’an testifies to their life.
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And say not of those who are slain in the path of Allah that they are dead; Nay, (they are)
living, but ye perceive not. (2:154)
At another place He (Allah) - or - he (the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) says about
their life:
Reckon not those who are slain in the way of Allah, to be dead; Nay! alive they are with their
Master being sustained. (3:169)
When restriction has been placed on the minds and tongues even in respect of the common
martyrs that they should not be called dead nor considered dead, how would not those
individuals whose necks were reserved for swords and plates of poison be living for all times to
come?
About their bodies, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has said that by the passage of time no
signs of oldness or decay occur in them, but they remain in the same state in which they fell as
martyrs. There should be nothing strange in it because dead bodies preserved through material
means still exit. When it is possible to do so through material means will it be out of the Power
of the Omnipotent Creator to preserve against change and decay the bodies of those upon whom
he has bestowed Thesense of everlasting life? Thus about the martyrs of Badr, the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) said:
Shroud them even with their wounds and flowing blood because when they would rise on the
Day of Judgment blood would be pushing out of their throats.
2. Aathaqal al-akbar implies the Holy Qur’an and Aath-thaqal al-asghar means Ahl al-Bayt ()
(the Household of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) as in the Prophet’s saying:
AVerily, I am leaving among you (the) two precious things (of high estimation and of care), the
reference is to Holy Qur’an and Ahl al-Bayt (). There are several reasons for using this word.
Firstly, Athaqal means the kit of a traveller, and since the kit is much in need, it is protected
carefully. Secondly, it means a precious thing; and since this is of great importance, one is bound
to follow the injunctions of the Holy Qur’an and the actions of Ahl al-Bayt (). So they have
been called Aprecious things’. Since Allah has made arrangements for the protection of the Holy
Qur’an and Ahl al-Bayt () through the Last Day, they have been called Athaqalayn. So the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) before leaving this world for the next, declared them to
be his valuable possessions and ordered people to preserve them. Thirdly, they have been called
Athaqalayn (precious things) in view of their purity and high value. Thus ibn Hajar al-Haytami
writes:
The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) has called the Holy Qur’an and his Descendants
as Athaqalayn (two precious things) because Athaqal means a pure, chaste and preserved thing,
and either of these two were really so, each of them is the treasure of the Divine knowledge and a
source of scholarly secrets and religious commandments. For that reason the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) desired the people to follow them and to stick to them and to secure
knowledge from them. Among them the most deserving of attachment is the Imam and Scholar
of the family of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) namely Ali ibn Abu Talib (may
Allah honor his face) because of his great insight and copiousness of knowledge which we have
already described. Al-Sawa’iq al-Muhriqa, p.90)
Since the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) has, with regard to apparent implication,
attributed the Holy Qur’an to Allah and the descendants to himself, in keeping with the natural
status the Holy Qur’an has been called the bigger weight while the descendants, the smaller
weight. Otherwise from the point of view of being followed both are equal and from the point of
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view of utility in the development of character there can be no question in the status of the
speaking party (Ahl al-Bayt () ) being higher than the silent one (the Holy Qur’an).
SERMON 87
About the division of the community into factions
So now, certainly, Allah did not break the neck of any unruly tyrant in this world except after
allowing him time and opportunity and did not join the broken bone of any people (umma) until
He did not inflict calamity and distress upon them. Even less than what sufferings and
misfortunes have yet to fall upon you or have already befallen you are enough for giving lessons.
Every man with a heart is not intelligent, every ear does not listen and every eye does not see.
I wonder, and there is no reason why I should not wonder, about the faults of these groups
who have introduced alterations in their religious pleas, who do not move on the footsteps of
their Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) nor follow the actions of the vicegerent. They do
not believe in the unknown and do not avoid the evil. They act on the doubts and tread in (the
way of) their passions. For them good is whatever they consider good and evil is whatever they
consider evil. Their reliance for resolving distress is on themselves. Their confidence with regard
to dubious matters is on their own opinions as if every one of them is the Leader (Imam) of
himself. Whatever he has decided himself he considers to have been taken from reliable sources
and strong factors.
SERMON 88
About the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Allah sent the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) when the mission of other Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) s had stopped and the peoples were in slumber a long time. Evils
were raising heads, all matters were under disruption and in flames of wars, while the world was
devoid of brightness, and full of open deceitfulness. Its leaves had turned yellow and there was
absence of hope about its fruits. Water had gone underground. The minarets of guidance had
disappeared and signs of destruction had appeared. It was stern to its people and frowned in the
face of its seeker. Its fruit was vice and its food was carcass. Its inner dress was fear and outer
cover was the sword.
So take lesson O creatures of Allah, and recall that (evil doing) with which your fathers and
brothers are entangled, and for which they have to account. By my life, your time is not much
behind theirs, nor have long periods or centuries lapsed between you and them, nor are you much
distant from when you were in their loins.
By Allah, whatever the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) told them, I am here telling
you the same and whatever you hear today is not different from what they heard yesterday. The
eyes that were opened for them and the hearts that were made for them at that time, just the same
have been given to you at this time. By Allah, you have not been told anything that they did not
know and you have not been deprived of anything which they were deprived of. Certainly you
have been afflicted by a calamity (which is like a she-camel) whose nose-string is moving about
and whose strap is loose. So in whatever condition these deceitful people are should not deceive
you, because it is just a long shadow whose term is fixed.
SERMON 89
Allah’s attributes and some advice
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Praise to Allah who is well-known without being seen, Who creates without pondering, Who
has even been existent when there was no sky with domes, nor curtains with lofty doors, nor
gloomy night, nor peaceful ocean, nor mountains with broad pathways, nor curved mountain
roads, nor earth of spread floors, nor self-reliant creatures. He is the Originator of creation and
their Master. He is the Allah of the creation and its feeder. The sun and the moon are steadily
moving in pursuit of His will. They make every fresh thing old and every distant thing near.
He distributed their sustenance and has counted their deeds and acts, the number of their
breaths, their concealed looks and whatever is hidden in their bosoms. He knows their places of
stay and places of last resort in the loins and wombs till they reach their end.
His punishment on the enemies is harsh despite the extent of His Mercy, and His compassion
toward His friends is vast despite His harsh punishment. He overpowers one who wants to
overcome Him, and destroys one who clashes with Him. He disgraces one who opposes Him and
gains sway over one who bears hostility toward Him. He is sufficient for one who relies on Him.
He gives to one who asks of Him. He repays one who lends to Him. He rewards one who thanks
Him.
O creatures of Allah, weigh yourselves before you are weighed and assess yourselves before
you are assessed. Breathe before suffocation of the throat. Be submissive before you are harshly
driven.
SERMON 90
This sermon is known as Thesermon of Skeletons1 (Khutbatu’l-Ashbah) and it holds one of
the highest positions among the sermons of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S). Mas’adah ibn
Sadaqah has related from Imam Ja’fer ibn Muhammed as-Sadiq () saying: AImam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) delivered this sermon from the pulpit of (the mosque of) Kufa when someone asked
him, AO Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) ! describe Allah for us in such a way that we may
imagine that we see Him with eyes so that our love and knowledge may increase about Him.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) became angry at this (request of the questioner) and ordered the
Muslims to gather in the mosque. So many Muslims gathered in the mosque that the place was
over-crowded. Imam Ali (A.S) ibn Abu Talib ascended the pulpit while he was still in a state of
anger and his color was changed. After he had praised Allah and extolled Him and sought His
blessings on the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) he said:
Description of Allah?!
Praise to Allah whom refusal to give away and stinginess do not reach and Whom
munificence and generosity do not make poor, although everyone who gives away loses (to that
extent) except He, and every miser is blamed for his niggardliness. He obliges through beneficial
bounties and plentiful gifts and grants. The whole creation is His dependents (in sustenance) 2.
He has guaranteed their livelihood and ordained their sustenance. He has prepared the way for
those who turn to Him and those who seek what is with Him. He is as generous about what He is
asked as He is about that for which He is not asked. He is the First for whom there was no
Abefore’ so that there could not be anything before Him. He is the Last for whom there is no
Aafter’ so that there could not be anything after Him. Time does not change over Him, so as to
admit of any change of condition about Him. He is not in any place so as to allow Him
movement (from one place to another).
If He gives away all that the mines of the mountains emit of the gold, silver, pearls and
cuttings of coral which the shells of the ocean vomit out, it would not affect his munificence, nor
diminish the extent of what He has. (In fact) He would still have such treasures of bounty as
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would not decrease by the demands of the creatures, because He is that generous. Being Whom
the begging of beggars cannot make poor nor the pertinacity of those who beseech make miser.
Attributes of Allah as described in the Holy Qur’an
Then look on the questioner, be confined to those of His attributes which the Holy Qur’an had
described and seek light from the effulgence of its guidance. Leave to Allah that knowledge
which Satan has prompted you to seek and which neither the Holy Qur’an enjoins you to seek
nor is there any trace of it in the actions or sayings of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
and other leaders (A’immah) of guidance. This is the extreme limit of Allah’s claim upon you.
Know that firm in knowledge are those who refrain from opening the curtains that lie against the
unknown, and their acknowledgment of ignorance about the details of the hidden unknown
prevents them from further probing. Allah praises them for their admission that they are unable
to get knowledge not allowed to them. They do not go deep into the discussion of what is not
enjoined upon them about knowing Him and they call it firmness. Be content with this and do
not limit the Greatness of Allah after the measure of your own intelligence, or else you would be
among the destroyed ones.
He is Powerful, such that when the imagination shoots its arrows to comprehend the extremity
of His power, the mind, making itself free of the dangers of evil thoughts tries to find Him in the
depth of His realm, the hearts long to grasp realities of His attributes and the openings of
intelligence penetrate beyond description in order to secure knowledge about His Being, crossing
the dark pitfalls of the unknown and concentrating towards him, He would turn them back. They
would return defeated admitting that thereality of His knowledge cannot be comprehended by
such random efforts, nor can an iota of the sublimity of His Honor enter the understanding of
thinkers.
About Allah’s creation
He originated the creation without any example which He could follow and without any
specimen prepared by any known creator that was before Him. He showed us therealm of His
Might, and such wonders which speak of His Wisdom. The confession of the created things that
their existence owes itself to Him made us realize that argument has been furnished about
knowing Him (so that there is no excuse against it). The signs of His creative power and standard
of His wisdom are fixed in the wonderful things He has created. Whatever He has created is an
argument in His favor and a guide towards Him. Even a silent thing is a guide towards Him as
though it speaks, and its guidance towards the Creator is clear.
(O Allah) I stand witness that he who likens You with Theseparateness of the limbs or with
the joining of the extremities of his body did not acquaint his inner self with knowledge about
You, and his heart did not secure conviction to the effect that there is no partner for You. It is as
though he has not heard the (wrongful) followers declaiming their false gods by sayings ABy
Allah, we are certainly in manifest error when we equaled you with the Master of the worlds
(Holy Qur’an, 26:97-98). They are wrong who liken You to their idols, and dress You with
apparel of the creatures by their imagination, attribute to You parts of body by their own thinking
and consider You after the creatures of various types, through the working of their intelligence. I
stand witness that whoever equated You with anything out of Your creation took a match for
You, and whoever takes a match for You is an unbeliever, according to what is stated in thy
unambiguous verses and indicated by the evidence of Your clear arguments. (I also stand witness
that) You art that Allah who cannot be confined in (the fetters of) intelligence so as to admit
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change of condition by entering its imagination nor in the shackles of mind so as to become
limited and an object of alterations.
A portion of the same sermon: About the greatest perfection in Allah’s creation
He has fixed limits for everything He has created and has made the limits firm, and He has
fixed its working and has made the working delicate. He has fixed its direction and it does not
transgress the limits of its position nor fall short of reaching the end of its aim. It did not disobey
when it was commanded to move at His will. How could it do so when all matters are governed
by His will. He is the Producer of a variety of things without exercise of imagination, without the
urge of an impulse hidden in Him, without (the benefit of) any experiment taken from the
vicissitudes of time and without any partner who might have assisted Him in creating wonderful
things.
Thus the creation was completed by His order and it bowed to His obedience and responded
to His call. The laziness of any slug or the inertness of any excuse-finder did not prevent it from
doing so. So He straightened the curves of the things and fixed their limits. With His power He
created coherence in their contradictory parts and joined together the factors of similarity. Then
He separated them in varieties which differ in limits, quantities, properties and shapes. All this is
new creation. He made them firm and shaped them according as He wished and invented them.
A portion of the same sermon:, containing description of the sky
He has arranged the depressions and elevations of the openings of the sky. He has joined the
breadths of its breaches, and has joined them with one another. He has made easy the approach
to its heights for those (angels) who come down with His commands and those (angels) who go
up with the deeds of the creatures. He called it when it was yet (in the form of) vapor. At once
the links of its joints joined u, p. Then Allah opened up its closed door and put Thesentinels of
meteors at its holes, and held them with His hands (i.e. power) from falling into the vastness of
air.
He commanded it to remain stationary in obedience to His commands. He made its sun the
bright indication for its day, and its moon the gloomy indication for its night. He then put them in
motion in their orbits and ordained their (pace of) movement in the stages of their paths in order
to distinguish with their help between night and day, and in order that thereckoning of years and
calculations may be known by their fixed movements. Then He hung in its vastness its sky and
put therein its decoration consisting of small bright pearls and lamp-like stars. He shot at the
over-hearers arrows of bright meteors. He put them in motion on their appointed routine and
made them into fixed stars, moving stars, descending stars, ascending stars, ominous stars and
lucky stars.
A portion of the same sermon:, containing a description of Angels
Then Allah, the Glorified, created for inhabiting of His skies and populating the higher strata
of his realm new (a variety of) creatures namely the angels. With them He filled the openings of
its cavities and populated them with the vastness of its circumference. In between the openings
of these cavities there resounds the voices of angels glorifying Him in the enclosures of
sublimity, (behind) curtains of concealment and in veils of His Greatness. And behind this
resounding which deafens the ears there is the effulgence of light which defies the approach of
sight to it, and consequently the sight stands, disappointed at its limitation.
He created them in different shapes and with diverse characteristics. They have wings. They
glorify the sublimity of His Honor. They do not appropriate to themselves His skill that shows
itself in creation. Nor do they claim they create anything in which He is unparalleled. ABut they
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are rather honored creatures who do not take precedence over Him in uttering anything, and they
act according to His command. (Holy Qur’an, 21:26-27) He has made them the trustees of His
revelation and sent them to Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) s as holders of His
injunctions and prohibitions. He has immunized them against the waviness of doubts.
Consequently no one among them goes astray from the path of His will. He has helped them with
the benefits of succor and has covered their hearts with humility and peace. He has opened for
them doors of Submission to His Glories. He has fixed for them bright minarets as signs of His
Oneness. The weights of sins do not burden them and the rotation of nights and days does not
make them move. Doubts do not attack with arrows the firmness of their faith. Misgivings do not
assault the bases of their beliefs. The spark of malice does not ignite among them. Amazement
does not tarnish what knowledge of Him their hearts possess, or His greatness and awe of His
glory that resides in their bosoms. Evil thoughts do not lean towards them to affect their
imagination with their own rust.
Among them are those who are in the frame of heavy clouds, or in the height of lofty
mountains, or in the gloom of over-powering darkness. And there are those whose feet have
pierced the lowest boundaries of the earth. These feet are like white ensigns which have gone
forth into the vast expanse of wind. Under them blows the light wind which retains them until its
last end.
Occupation in His worship has made them carefree, and realities of Faith have served as a link
between them and His knowledge. Their belief in Him has made them concentrate on Him. They
long for Him not for others. They have tasted the sweetness of His knowledge and have drunk
from the satiating cup of His love. The roots of His fear have been implanted in the depth of their
hearts. Consequently they have bent their straight backs through His worship. The length of the
humility, and extreme nearness has not removed from them the rope of their fear.
They do not entertain pride so as to make much of their acts. Their humility before the glory
of Allah does not allow them to esteem their own virtues. Languor does not affect them despite
their long affliction. Their longings (for Him) do not lessen so that they might turn away from
hope in (Allah) their Sustainer. The tips of their tongues do not get dry by constant prayers (to
Allah). Engagements (in other matters) do not betake them so as to turn their (loud) voices for
Him into faint ones. Their shoulders do not get displaced in the postures of worship. They do not
move their necks (this and that way) for comfort in disobedience of His command. Follies of
negligence do not act against their determination to strive, and the deceptions of desires do not
overcome their courage.
They regard the Master of the Throne (Allah) as the store for the day of their need. Because of
their love (for Him) they turn to Him even when others turn to the creatures. They do not reach
the ending limit of His worship. Their passionate fondness for His worship does not turn them
except to the springs of their own hearts, springs which are never devoid of His hope and His
fear. Fear of (Allah) never leaves them so that they might slacken in their efforts, nor have
temptations entrapped them so that they might prefer this light search over their (serious) effort.
They do not consider their past (virtuous) deeds as big, for if they had considered them big
then fear would have wiped away hopes from their hearts. They did not differ (among
themselves) about their Sustainer as a result of Satan’s control over them. The vice of separation
from one another did not disperse them. Rancor and mutual malice did not overpower them.
Ways of wavering did not divide them. Differences of degree of courage did not render them into
divisions. Thus they are devotees of faith. Neither crookedness (of mind), nor excess, nor
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lethargy nor languor breaks them from its rope. There is not the thinnest point in the skies but
there is an angel over it in prostration (before Allah) or (busy) in quick performance (of His
commands). By long worship of their Sustainer they increase their knowledge and the honor of
their Sustainer increases in their hearts.
A portion of the same sermon describing the earth and its spreading on water
Allah spread the earth on stormy and tumultuous waves and the depths of swollen seas, where
waves clashed with each other and high surges leapt over one another. They emitted foam like
the he-camel at the time of sexual excitement. So the tumult of the stormy water was subdued by
the weight of the earth, when the earth pressed it with its chest its shooting agitation eased, and
when the earth rolled on it with its shoulder bones the water meekly submitted. Thus after tumult
of its surges it became tame and overpowered, and an obedient prisoner of the shackles of
disgrace, while the earth spread itself and became solid in the stormy depth of this water. (In this
way) the earth put an end to the pride, self conceit, high position and superiority of the water,
and muzzled the intrepidity of its flow. Consequently it stopped after its stormy flow and settled
down after its tumult.
When the excitement of water subsided under the earth’s sides and under the weight of the
high and lofty mountains placed on its shoulders, Allah flowed springs of water from its high
tops and distributed them through plains and low places and moderated their movement by fixed
rocks and high mountain tops. Then its trembling came to a standstill because of the penetration
of mountains in (various) parts of its surface and their being fixed in its deep areas, and their
standing on its plains. Then Allah created the vastness between the earth and firmament, and
provided the blowing wind for its inhabitants. Then He directed its inhabitants to spread all over
its convenient places. Thereafter He did not leave the barren tracts of the earth alone where high
portions lacked in water-springs and where rivers could not find their way, but created floating
clouds which enliven the unproductive areas and grow vegetation.
He made a big cloud by collecting together small clouds and when water collected in it and
lightning began to flash on its sides and the flash continued under the white clouds as well as the
heavy ones He sent it heavily raining. The cloud was hanging towards the earth and southerly
winds were squeezing it into shedding its water like a she-camel bending down for milking.
When the cloud prostrated itself on the ground and delivered all the water it carried on itself
Allah grew vegetation on the plain earth and herbage on dry mountains. As a result, the earth felt
pleased at being decorated with its gardens and wondered at her dress of soft vegetation and the
ornaments of its blossoms. Allah made all this the means of sustenance for the people and feed
for the beasts. He has opened up highways in its expanse and has established minarets (of
guidance) for those who tread on its highways.
On the Creation of Man and Thesending of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
When He has spread out the earth and enforced His commands He chose Adam () as the best
in His creation and made him the first of all creation. He made him to reside in Paradise and
arranged for his eating in it, and also indicated from what He had prohibited him. He told him
that proceeding towards it meant His disobedience and endangering his own position. But Adam
did what he had been refrained from, just as Allah already knew beforehand. Consequently,
Allah sent him down after (accepting) his repentance, to populate His earth with his progeny and
to serve as a proof and plea for Him among his creatures.
Even when He made Adam die He did not leave them without one who would serve among
them as proof and plea for His Godhead and serve as the link between them and His knowledge.
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But He provided to them the proofs through His chosen Messengers and bearers of the trust of
His Message, age after age till the process came to end with Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) - Allah may bless him and his
descendants - and His pleas and warnings reached finality.
He ordained livelihoods3 with plenty and with paucity. He distributed them narrowly as well
as profusely. He did it with justice to test whomever He desired, with prosperity or with
destitution, and to test through it the gratefulness or endurance of the rich and the poor. Then He
coupled plenty with the misfortune of destitution, safety with the distresses of calamities and
pleasures of enjoyment with pangs of grief. He created fixed ages and made them long or short
and earlier or later, ending them with death. He had made death capable of pulling up the ropes
of ages and cutting them asunder.
He4 knows Thesecrets of those who conceal them, Thesecret conversation of those who
engage in it, the inner feelings of those who indulge in guesses, the established certainties, the
inklings of the eyes, the inner contents of hearts and the depths of the unknown. He also knows
what can be heard only by bending the holes of the ears, the summer resorts of ants and winter
abodes of the insects, resounding of the cries of wailing women and the sound of steps. He also
knows the spots in the inner sheaths of leaves where fruits grow, the hiding places of beasts
namely caves in mountains and valleys, the hiding holes of mosquitoes on the trunks of trees and
their herbage, the sprouting points of leaves in the branches, the dripping points of semen
passing through passages of loins, small rising clouds and the big giant ones, the drops of rain in
the thick clouds, the particles of dust scattered by whirlwinds through their skirts, the lines
erased by rain floods, the movements of insects on sand-dunes, the nests of winged creatures on
the cliffs of mountains and the singing of chattering birds in the gloom of their brooding places.
And He knows whatever has been treasured by mother-of-pearls, and covered under the
waves of oceans, all that which is concealed under the darkness of night and all that on which the
light of day is shining, as well as all that on which sometimes darkness prevails and sometimes
light shines, the trace of every footstep, the feel of every movement, the echo for every sound,
the motion of every lip, the abode of every living being, the weight of every particle, the sobs of
every sobbing heart, and whatever is on the earth like fruits of trees or falling leaf, or settling
place of semen, or the congealing of blood or clot and the developing of life and embryo.
On all this He suffers no trouble, and no impediment hampers Him in the preservation of what
he created nor any languor or grief hinders Him from the enforcement of commands and
management of the creatures, His knowledge penetrates through them and they are within His
counting. His justice extends to all of them and His bounty encompasses them despite their
falling short of what is due to Him.
O Lord! thou deserves handsome description and the highest esteem. If wish is directed
towards You, You art the best to be wished for. If hope is reposed in You, You art the Most
Honored to be hoped for. O Lord! You hast bestowed on me such power that I do not praise any
one other than You, and I do not eulogize any one save You. I do not direct my praise towards
others who are sources of disappointment and centers of misgivings. You hast kept away my
tongue from the praises of human beings and eulogies of the created and the sustained. O Lord!
every praiser has on whom he praises the right of reward and recompense. Certainly, I have
turned to You with my eye at the treasures of Your Mercy and stores of forgiveness.
O Lord! here stands one who has singled You with Oneness that is Your due and has not
regarded any one deserving of these praises and eulogies except You. My want towards You is
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such that nothing except Your generosity can cure its destitution, nor provide for its need except
Your obligation and Your generosity. So do grant us in this place Your will and make us free
from stretching hands to anyone other than You. ACertainly, You art powerful over everything.
(Holy Qur’an, 66:8)
1. The name of this sermon is Thesermon of Aal-Ashbah. AAshbah is the plural of shabah
which means skeleton, since it contains description of angels and other kinds of beings it has
been named by this name.
The grounds for being angry with the questioner was that his request was unconnected with
the obligations of shari’ah and beyond the limits of human capacity.
2. Allah is the Guarantor of sustenance and Provider of livelihood as He says the following:
No creature is there crawling on the earth, but its provision
rests on Allah. (Holy Qur’an, 11:6)
But His being guarantor means that He has provided ways for everyone to live and earn
livelihood and has allowed every one equal shares in forests, mountains, rivers, mines and in the
vast earth, and has given everyone the right to make use of them. His bounties are not confined
to any single person, nor is the door of His sustenance closed to any one. Thus, Allah says the
following:
All We do aid, these and (also) those out of the bounty of thy Master; and the bounty of thy
Master is not confined. (Holy Qur’an, 17:20)
If some one does not secure these things through languor or ease and sits effortless, it is not
possible that livelihood would reach his door. Allah has laid the table with multifarious feeds but
to get them it is necessary to extend the hand. He has deposited pearls in the bottom of Thesea
but it requires diving to get them out. He has filled the mountains with rubies and precious stones
but they cannot be had without digging the stones. The earth contains treasures of growth but
benefit cannot be drawn from them without sowing of seed. Heaps of edibles lie scattered on all
four sides of the earth but they cannot be collected without the trouble of travelling. Thus, Allah
says the following:
.Traverse ye then its broad sides, and eat ye of His provision.(Holy Qur’an, 67:15)
Allah’s providing livelihood does not mean that no effort is needed in searching livelihood or
no going out of the house is required for it, and that livelihood should itself finds its way to
Theseeker. The meaning of His being the provider of livelihood is that He has given earth the
property of growing. He has sent rain from clouds for germination, created fruits, vegetables and
grains. All this is from Allah but securing them is connected with human effort. Whoever will
strive will reap the benefits of his efforts, and whoever abstains from strife would face the
consequences of his idleness and laziness. Accordingly Allah says the following:
And that man shall have nothing but what he striveth for. (Holy Qur’an, 53:39)
The order of universe hinges on the maxim ASow and rea, p. It is wrong to expect
germination without sowing, to hope for results without effort. Limbs and faculties have been
given solely to be kept active. Thus, Allah addressed Mary and says the following:
And shake towards thee the trunk of the palm-tree, it will drop on thee dates fresh (and) ripe.
Then eat and drink and refresh the eye. (Holy Qur’an, 19:25-26)
Allah provided the means for Mary’s livelihood. He did not however pluck the dates from the
tree and put them in her la, p. This was because so far as production of food goes it is His
concern. So he made the tree green, put fruits on it and ripened the fruits. But when the stage
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arrived for plucking them He did not intervene. He just recalled to Mary her job namely that she
should now move her hand and get her food.
Again, if His providing the livelihood means that whatever is given is given by Him and
whatever is received from Him, then whatever a man would earn and eat, and in whatever
manner he would obtain it would be permissible for him, whether he obtains it by theft, bribery,
oppression or violence. It would mean Allah’s act and the food would be that given by Him,
wherein he would have no free will, and where anything is out of the limits of free action there is
no question of permissible or forbidden for it, nor is there any liability to account for it. But
when it is not actually so and there is the question of permissible and forbidden then it should
give bearing on human actions, so that it could be questioned whether it was secured in lawful or
unlawful actions and manners. Of course, where He has not bestowed the power of seeking the
livelihood, there He has taken upon Himself theresponsibility to provide the livelihood.
Consequently He has managed for the feeding of the embryo in the mother’s womb, and it
reaches him there according to its needs and requirements. But when this very young life enters
the wide world and picks up energy to move its limbs, then it can’t get its food from the source
without moving his lips (for sucking).
3. In the management of the affairs of this world Allah has connected Thesequence with the
cause of human acts as a result of which the power of action in man does not remain idle. In the
same way He had made these actions dependent on His own will, so man should not rely on his
own power of action and forget the Creator. This is the issue of the will between two wills in the
controversy of Afree will or compulsion. Just as in the entire Universe nature’s universal and
sovereign law is in force, in the same way the production and distribution of food also is
provided in a set manner under the dual force of the Divine ordainment of human effort. And this
is somewhere less and somewhere more depending on the proportion of human effort and the
aim of the Divine ordainment. Since He is the Creator of the means of livelihood, and the powers
of seeking food have also been bestowed by Him, the paucity or plenty of livelihood has been
attributed to Him because He has fixed different and separate measures for livelihood keeping in
view the difference in efforts and actions and the good of the creatures. Somewhere there is
poverty and somewhere affluence, somewhere distress and somewhere comfort, and some one is
enjoying pleasure while some one else is suffering the hardships of want.
The Holy Qur’an says the following:
.amplifieth He their sustenance unto whomsoever He willeth
and straiteneth; Verily He knoweth all things. (Holy Qur’an, 42:12)
In sermon 23 Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has referred to this matter and said:
The Divine command descends from the sky towards the earth with whatever is ordained for
every one, whether less or more, just like rain drops.
So there is a fixed process and manner for the benevolence of rain namely that vapors rise
from Thesea with the store of water, spread over in the sky in the shape of dark clouds and then
ooze the water by drops till they form themselves in regular lines. They irrigate plains as well as
high lands thoroughly and proceed onwards to collect in the low areas, so that the thirsty may
drink it, animals may use it and dry lands may be watered from it. In the same way Allah has
provided all the means of livelihood but His bounty follows a particular mode in which there is
never a jot of deviation. Thus, Allah says the following:
And there is not a thing but with Us are its treasures, and
We do not send it down but in a known measure. (Holy Qur’an, 15:21)
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If man’s greed and avarice exceeds its bounds, then just as an excess of rain ruins crops
instead of growing and bringing them up, so the abundance of the articles of livelihood and the
necessities of life would make man obvious of Allah and rouse him to revolt and unruliness.
Consequently, Allah says the following:
And should Allah amplify the sustenance unto his servants, they would certainly rebel in the
earth, but He sendeth it down by measure as he willeth; Verily of His servants, He is All-aware,
All-seeing. (Holy Qur’an, 42:27)
If He lessens the food then just as a stopp. of rain makes the land arid and kills the animals,
the same way, by closure of the means of livelihood, human society would be destroyed and so
there would remain no means of living and livelihood. Allah accordingly says the following:
Or who is that who can provide you with sustenance should He withhold His
sustenance?.(Holy Qur’an, 67:21)
Consequently Allah, the Wise the Omniscient has put the organization for livelihood on
moderate and proportionate lines, and in order to emphasize the importance of livelihood and
sustenance and to keep them correlated with each other has introduced differences in the
distribution of livelihood. Sometimes, this difference and unequal distribution owes itself to the
difference of human effort and sometimes it is the consequence of overall arrangement of the
affairs of the Universe and the Divine acts of wisdom and objectives. This is because, if by
poverty and want He has tested the poor in endurance and patience, in affluence and wealth there
is severe test of the rich by way of thanksgiving and gratifying the rights of others, namely
whether the rich person gratifies the claims of the poor and the distressed, and whether he takes
care of the destitute or not. Again, where there is wealth there would also be dangers of all sorts.
Sometimes there would be danger to the wealth and property and sometimes fear of poverty and
want.
Consequently, there would be many persons who would be more satisfied and happy for lack
of wealth. For them this destitution and want would be far better than the wealth which might
snatch away their comfort and peace. Moreover sometimes this very wealth which one holds
dearer than life becomes the cause of loss of one’s life. Further, it has also been seen that for as
long as wealth was lacking character was above reproach, life was unblemished, but the moment
property and wealth changed into plenty the conduct worsened, character became faulty and
there appeared the vices of Awine, women and song. In such cases the absence of wealth was a
blessing. However being ignorant of Allah’s objectives man cries out and being affected by
transitory distress begins complaining but does not realize from how many vices which could
have accrued owing to wealth he has remained aloof. Therefore, if wealth produces
conveniences, poverty serves as a guard for the character.
4. The eloquence with which Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has thrown on Allah’s attributes
of knowledge and the sublime words in which he has pictured the all-engrossing quality of His
knowledge cannot but impress the mind of the most die-hard opponent. Thus, Ibn Abul-Hadid
has written:
If Aristotle, who believed that Allah is only aware of the universe and not of its particulars,
had heard this speech, his heart too would have inclined, his hair would have stood on end and
his thinking would have undergone a dramatic change. Do you not see the brightness, force,
vehemence, sublimity, glory, seriousness and ripeness of this speech? Besides these qualities,
there is sweetness, colorfulness, delicacy and smoothness in it. I have not found any utterance
similar to it. Of course, if there is any utterance matching it, that can be the word of Allah only.
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And there is no wonder in it, because he is an offshoot of the same tree (of the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) Ibrahim who set up the Unity of Allah), a distributory of the same river and
a reflection of the same light. (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol7, pp. 23-24)
Those who regard Allah to possess only overall knowledge argue that since details undergo
changes, to believe Him to have knowledge of the changing details would necessitate changes in
His knowledge but since knowledge is the same as His Being, His Being would have to be
regarded as the object of change theresult of which would be that He would have to be taken as
having come into existence. In this way He would lose the attribute of being from ever. This is a
very deceptive fallacy because changes in the object of knowledge can lead to changes in the
knower only when it is assumed that the knower does not already possess knowledge of these
changes. But since all the forms of change and alteration are so strikingly obvious before Him
there is no reason that with the changes in the objects of knowledge that He too should be
regarded as changeable, although really this change is confined to the object of knowledge and
does not affect knowing in itself.
SERMON 91
When people decided to swear allegiance1 to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s hand after the murder
of AOthman, he said:
Leave me and seek someone else. We are facing a matter which has (several) faces and
colors, which neither hearts can stand nor intelligence can accept. Clouds are hovering over the
sky, and faces are not discernable. You should know that if I respond to you I would lead you as
I know and would not care about whatever one may say or abuse. If you leave me then I am the
same as you are. It is possible I would listen to and obey whomever you make in charge of your
affairs. I am better for you as a counselor than as chief.
1. With the murder of AOthman, the Caliphate became vacant and Muslims began to look at
AImam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) whose peaceful conduct, adherence to principles, and political
acumen had been witnessed by them to a great extent during this long period. Consequently they
rushed to swear allegiance on his righteousness in much the same way a traveler who had lost his
way, then finding it again rushes towards his destination, as the historian al-Tabari (in Tarikh,
Vol1, pp. 3066, 3067, 3076) records:
People thronged to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and said, AWe want to swear allegiance to
you and as you can see what troubles have befallen Islam and how we are being tried about the
near ones of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
But Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) declined to accede to their request whereupon these people
raised hue and cry and began to shout loudly, AO Abul-Hasan, do you not witness the ruination
of Islam or see the advancing flood of unruliness and mischief? Do you have no fear of Allah?
Even Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) showed no readiness to consent because he was noticing
that the effects of the atmosphere that had come into being after the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) had overcome hearts and minds of the people. Selfishness and lust for power had
become rooted in them, their thinking had become affected by materialism and they had become
habituated to treating government as the means for securing their ends. Now they would like to
materialize the Divine Caliphate too and play with it. In these circumstances it would be
impossible to change the mentalities or turn their direction of temperaments. In addition to these
ideas he had also seen the end in sight, that these people should have further time to think on it
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so that on frustration of their material ends hereafter they should not say that the allegiance had
been sworn by them under a temporary expediency and timely thought and that nature (rational)
thought had not been given to it, just as AOmer’s idea was about the first Caliphate, which
appears from his statement that:
Abu Bakr’s Caliphate came into being without thought but Allah saved us from its mischief.
If anyone repeats such an affair you should kill him. (Sahih al-Bukhari, Vol. 8, pp.210, 211; AlMusnad, Ahmed ibn Hanbal, Vol1, p.55; al-Tabari, Vol1, p.1822; ibn al-Athir, Vol2, p.327; ibn
Hisham, Vol4, pp.308-309; Ibn Kathir, Vol5, p.246)
In short, when their insistence increased beyond limits Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
delivered this sermon wherein he clarified that AIf you want me for your worldly ends, then I am
not ready to serve as your instrument. Leave me and select someone else who may fulfill your
ends. You have seen my past life that I am not prepared to follow anything except the Holy
Qur’an and Sunna and would not give up this principle for securing power. If you select
someone else I would pay regard to the laws of the state and the constitution as a peaceful citizen
should do. I have not at any stage tried to disrupt the collective existence of the Muslims by
inciting revolt. The same will happen now. Rather, just as keeping the common good in view I
have hitherto been giving correct advice, I would not grudge doing the same. If you put me in the
same position it would be better for your worldly ends, because in that case I won’t have power
in my hands so that I could stand in the way of your worldly affairs, and create impediment
against your heart’s wishes. However, if you are determined on swearing allegiance on my hand
bear in mind that if you frown or speak against me I would force you to tread on the path of
right, and in the matter of the right I would not care for anyone. If you want to swear allegiance
even at this, you can satisfy your wish.
The impression Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had formed about these people is fully
corroborated by later events. Consequently, when those who had sworn allegiance with worldly
motives did not succeed in their objectives they broke away and rose against his government
with baseless allegations.
SERMON 92
1
About the annihilation of the Kharijites, the mischief mongering of Umayyads and the
vastness of his knowledge
So now, praise and eulogy be to Allah, O people, I have put out the eye of revolt. No one
except me advanced towards it when its gloom was swelling and its madness was intense. Ask
me before you miss me,2 because, by Allah, who has my life in His hands, if you ask me
anything between now and the Day of Judgment or about the group who would guide a hundred
people and also misguide a hundred people, I would tell you who is announcing its march, who
is driving it in the front and who is driving it at therear, the stages where its riding animals would
stop for rest and the final place of stay, and who among them would be killed and who would die
a natural death.
When I am dead hard circumstances and distressing events would befall you. Many persons in
the position of asking questions would remain silent with eyes cast down while those in the
position of replying would lose courage. This would be at a time when wars would descend upon
you with all hardship and days would be so hard on you that you would feel them prolonged
because of hardship till Allah would give victory to those remaining virtuous among you.
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When mischief comes they confuse (right with wrong) and when they clear away they leave a
warning. They cannot be known at the time of approach but are recognized at the time of return.
They blow like the blowing of winds, striking some cities and missing others.
Beware that the worst mischief for you in my view is the mischief of Banu Umayyah, because
it is blind and also creates darkness. Its sway is general but its ill effects are for particular people.
He who remains clear-sighted in it would be affected by distress, and he who remains blind in it
would avoid the distress. By Allah, after me you will find Banu Ummayyah the very worst for
yourselves, like the old unruly she-camel who bites with its mouth, beats with its fore-legs, kicks
with its hind legs and refuses to be milked. They would remain over you till they would leave
among you only those who benefit them or those who do not harm them. Their calamity would
continue till your seeking help from them would become like Theseeking of help by the slave
from his master or of the follower from the leader.
Their mischief would come to you like evil-eyed fear and pre-Islamic fragments, wherein
there would be no minaret of guidance nor any sign (of salvation) to be seen. We Ahl al-Bayt ()
(the Household of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) are free from this mischief and
we are not among those who would engender it. Thereafter, Allah would dispel it from you like
theremoval of the skin (from flesh) through him who would humble them, drag them by their
necks, make them drink full cups (of hardships), not extend to them anything but sword and not
clothe them except with fear. At that time Quraish would wish at the cost of the world and all its
contents to find me even only once and just for the duration of the slaughter of a camel in order
that I may accept from them (the whole of) that of which at present. I am asking them only a part
but they are not giving me.
1. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) delivered this sermon after the battle of Nahrawan. In it
mischiefs imply the battles fought in Basra, Siffin and Nahrawan because their nature was
different from the battles of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . There the opposite party
was the unbelievers while here the confrontation was with those who had veils of Islam on their
faces. So people were hesitant to fight against Muslims, and said why they should fight with
those who recited the call to the prayers and offered the prayers. Thus, Khuzaymah ibn Thabit alAnsari did not take part in the Battle of Siffin till the falling of AAmmar ibn Yasir as martyr did
not prove the opposite party was rebellious. Similarly the presence of companions like Talhah
and az-Zubayr who were included in the AForetold Ten on the side of AA’isha in Basra, and the
prayer signs on foreheads of the Kharijites in Nahrawan and their prayers and worships were
creating confusion in the minds. In these circumstances only those could have the courage to rise
against them were aware of Thesecrets of their hearts and thereality of their faith. It was the
peculiar perception of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and his spiritual courage that he rose to
oppose them and testified to the saying of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) :
You will fight after me with the breakers of allegiance (people of Jamal), oppressors (people
of Syria) and deviators (the Kharijites). (Al-Mustadrak Aala as-Sahihayn, al-Hakim, Vol3, p.139,
140; Al-Durr al-Manthur, Vol6, p.18; Al-Isti’ab, Vol. 3 , p.1117; Usd al-Ghaba, Vol. 4 pp.32,
33; Tarikh Baghdad, Vol. 8, p.340; Vol. 13, p. 186, 187; Tarikh, Ibn AAsakir, Vol. 5, p.41;
Tarikh, Ibn Kathir, Vol. 7, pp.304,305,306; Majma’ az-Zawa’id, Vol. 7, p.238; Vol. 9, , p.235;
Sharh al-Mawahib, Vol. 3, pp.316-317; Kanz al-AUmmal, Vol. 6, pp.72,82,88,155,319,391,392;
Vol8, p.215)
2. After the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) no one except Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) could utter the challenge AAsk whatever you want to. ibn AAbdul-Barr in
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Jami’Bayan al-Ailm wa fadlihi, Vol. 1 , p.58 and in Al-Isti’ab, Vol. 3, p.1103; ibn al-Athir in Usd
al-Ghaba, Vol. 4, p.22; ibn Abul-Hadid in Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol7, p. 46; as-Sayyuti in
Tarikh al-Khulafa’, p.171 and ibn Hajar al-Haytami in Al-Sawa’iq al-Muhriqa, p.76 have written
that ANone among the companions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ever said
AAsk me whatever you want tO except Ali ibn Abu Talib. However, among other than the
companions a few names do appear in history who did utter such a challenge, such as Ibrahim
ibn Hisham al-Makhzumi, Muqatil ibn Sulayman, Qaradah ibn Di’amah, AAbd ar-Rahman (Ibn
al-Jawzi) and Muhammed ibn Idris ash-Shafi’i etc. but everyone of them faced disgrace and was
forced to take back his challenge. This challenge can be urged only by him who knew therealities
of the universe and is aware of the happenings of the future. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) the
opener of the door of the Prophet’s knowledge as he was, was the only person who was never
seen being unable to answer any question on any occasion. This was so much so that even
AOmer had to say that AI seek Allah’s protection from the difficulty for the solution of whichAli
would not be available. Similarly, the prophesies of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) made about
the future proved true word-for-word and served as an index to his vast knowledge, whether they
be about the devastation of Banu Umayyah, of the risings of the Kharijites, the wars and
destruction by the Tatars, of the attacks of the English, the floods of Basra and the ruination of
Kufa. In short when these events are historical realities there is no reason why this challenge of
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) should be wondered at.
SERMON 93
Allah’s praise and eulogy of the prophets
Exalted is Allah Whom heights of daring cannot approach and fineness of intelligence cannot
find. He is such First that there is no extremity for Him so that He be contained within it, nor is
there an end for Him where He would cease (being Existent).
A portion of the same sermon about the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Allah kept the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) s in deposit in the best place of deposit
and made them stay in the best place of stay. He moved them in succession from distinguished
forefathers to chaste wombs. Whenever a predecessor from among them died the follower stood
up for the cause of thereligion of Allah.
About the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and his Descendants (Aitra)
Until this distinction of Allah, the Glorified, reached Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy
Household) - peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and his descendants. Allah brought him
out from the most distinguished sources of origin and the most honorable places of planting,
namely from the same (lineal) tree from which He brought forth other Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) s and from which He selected His trustees. Muhammed’s descendants are the best
descendants, his kinsmen the best of kin and his lineal tree the best of trees. It grew in esteem
and rose in distinction. It has tall branches and unapproachable fruits.
He is the leader (Imam) of all who exercise fear (of Allah) and light for those who seek
guidance. He is a lamp whose flame is burning, a meteor whose light is shining and a flint whose
spark is bright. His conduct is upright, his behavior is guiding, his speech is decisive and his
decision is just. Allah sent him after an interval from the previous Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) s when people had fallen into errors of action and ignorance. Allah may have mercy
on you.
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May Allah shower His mercy on you! Do act according to the clear signs, because the way is
straight and leads to the house of safety while you are in the place of seeking Allah’s favor, and
have time and opportunity. The books (of your doings) are open and pens (of angels) are busy (to
record your actions) while your bodies are healthy, tongues are free, repentance is accepted and
deeds are accorded recognition.
SERMON 94
About the condition of the people at the time of the Prophet’s proclamation and about his
actions having to do with the dissemination of his message
Allah sent the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) at a time when the people were going
astray in perplexity and were moving here and there in mischief. Desires had deflected them and
self-conceit had swerved them. Extreme ignorance had made them foolish. They were
confounded by the unsteadiness of matters and the evils of ignorance. Then the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) - blessing of Allah be upon him and his descendants - did his best
in giving them sincere advice, himself trod on the right path and called (them) towards wisdom
and good counsel.
SERMON 95
In eulogy of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Praise to Allah who is such First that nothing is before Him and such Last that there is nothing
after Him. He is such Manifest that there is nothing above Him and such Hidden that there is
nothing nearer than He.
A portion of the same sermon: about the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
His place of stay is the best of all places and his origin the noblest of all origins in the minds
of honor and the cradles of safety. Hearts of virtuous persons have been inclined towards him
and thereins of eyes have been turned towards him. Through him Allah buried mutual rancor and
put off the flames of revolt. Through him He gave them affection like brothers and separated
those who were together (through unbelief). His speaking is clear and his silence is (indicative
of) the tongue.
SERMON 96
1
Admonishing his own companions
Although Allah gives time to the oppressor His catch would not spare him. Allah watches him
on the passage of his way and the position of that which suffocates the throats.
By Allah in Whose power my life lies, these people (Mu’awiyah and his men) will overcome
you not because they have a better right than you but because of their hastening towards the
wrong with their leader and your slowness about my right (to be followed). People are afraid of
the oppression of their rulers while I fear the oppression of my subjects.
I called you forward but you did not come. I warned you but you did not listen. I called you
secretly as well as openly, but you did not respond. I gave you sincere counsel, but you did not
accept it. Are you present like the absent, and slaves like masters? I recite before you points of
wisdom but you turn away from them, and I advise you with far reaching advice but you disperse
away from it. I rouse you for jihad against the people of revolt but before I come to the end of
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my speech, I see you disperse like the sons of Saba.2 You return to your places and deceive one
another by your counsel. I straighten you in the morning but you are back to me in the evening as
curved as the back of a bow. The one who straightens has become weary while those to be
straightened have become incorrigible.
O those whose bodies are present but wits are absent, and whose wishes are scattered, and
their rulers are on trial. Your leader obeys Allah but you disobeyed him while the leader of the
people of Syria disobeys Allah but they obey him. By Allah, I wish Mu’awiyah would exchange
with me Dinars for Dirhams, so that he gives from me ten of you and give me one from them.
O people of Kufa, I have experienced in you three things and two others: you are deaf in spite
of having ears, dumb in spite of speaking and blind in spite of having eyes. You are neither true
supporters in combat nor dependable brothers in distress. Your hands may be soiled with earth.
O examples of those camels whose herdsman has disappeared, if they are collected together from
one side they disperse from the other. By Allah, I see you in my imagination that if war becomes
intense and action is in full swing you would run away from the son of Abu Talib like the
woman who becomes naked in the front. I am certainly on clear guidance from my Master
(Allah) and on the path of my Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and I am on the right path
which I adhere to regularly.
About the Household of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Look at the people of the Prophet’s family. Adhere to their direction. Follow their footsteps
because they would never let you out of guidance and never throw you into destruction. If they
sit down, you sit down, and if they rise up you rise u, p. Do not go ahead of them, as you would
thereby go astray and do not lag behind them as you would thereby be ruined.
I have seen the companions of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) but I do not find
anyone resembling them. They began the day with dust on the hair and face (in hardship of life)
and passed the night in prostration and standing in prayers. Sometimes they put down their
foreheads and sometimes their cheeks. With therecollection of their resurrection it seemed as
though they stood on live coals. It seemed that in between their eyes there were signs like knees
of goats, resulting from long prostrations. When Allah was mentioned their eyes flowed freely
till their shirt collars were drenched. They trembled for fear of punishment and hope of reward as
the tree trembles on the day of stormy wind.
1. In the atmosphere that had been created soon after the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) , Ahl al-Bayt () (members of his family) had no course except to remain secluded
resulting in the world’s continued ignorance of their real qualities and being acquainted with
their teachings and attainments. To belittle them and keep them away from authority has been
considered as the greatest service to Islam. If AOthman’s open misdeeds had not given a chance
to the Muslims to wake up and open their eyes there would have been no question of allegiance
to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and temporal authority would have retained the same course as
it had so far followed. But all those who could be named for the purpose had no courage to come
forward because of their own shortcomings while Mu’awiyah was sitting in his capital away
from the center. In these circumstances there was none except Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
who could be looked at. Consequently people’s eyes hovered around him and the same common
people who, following the direction of the wind, had been swearing allegiance to others jumped
at him for swearing allegiance. Nevertheless, this allegiance was not on the count that they
regarded his Caliphate as from Allah and him as an Imam (The Divine Leader) to obey as
obligatory. It was rather under their own principles which were known as democratic or
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consultative. However, there was one group who was swearing allegiance to him as a religious
obligation regarding his Caliphate as determined by Allah. Otherwise, the majority regarded him
a ruler like the other Caliphs, and as regards precedence, on the fourth position, or at the level of
the common men after the three caliphs. Since the people, the army, and the civil servants had
been impressed by the beliefs and actions of the previous rulers and immersed in their ways
whenever they found anything against their liking they fretted and frowned, evaded war and
were ready to rise in disobedience and revolt. Furthermore, just as among those who fought in
jihad with the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , there were some seekers of this world and
others of the next world. Now, in the same way, there was no dearth of worldly men who were,
in appearance, with Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) but actually they had connections with
Mu’awiyah who has promised some of them positions and had extended to others temptation of
wealth. To hold them as Shi’as of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and to blame Shi’ism for this
reason is closing the eyes to facts, because the beliefs of these people would be the same as of
those who regarded Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) fourth in Theseries. Ibn Abul-Hadid throws
light on the beliefs of these persons in clear words:
Whoever observes minutely the events during the period of Caliphate of Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) would know that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had been brought to bay because
those who knew his real position were very few. The swarming majority did not bear that belief
about him which was obligatory to have. They gave precedence to the previous Caliphs over him
and held that the criterion of precedence was Caliphate. In this matter, those coming later
followed theredecessors and argued that if the predecessors had not the knowledge that the
previous Caliphs had precedence over Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) they would not have
preferred them to him. Rather, these people knew and took Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) as a
citizen and subject. Most of those who fought in his company did so on grounds of prestige or
Arab partisanship, not on the ground of religion or belief. (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol7, p. 72)
2. The progeny of Saba’ibn Yashjub ibn Ya’rub ibn Qathan is known as the tribe of Saba’.
When these people began to falsify prophets, to shake them, Allah sent a flood of water by which
their gardens were submerged and they left their houses and property to settle down in different
cities. This proverb arose out of this event and it is now applied wherever people so disperse that
there be no hope of their joining together again.
SERMON 97
Oppression of the Umayyads
By Allah, they would continue like this till there would be left no unlawful act before Allah
but they would make it unlawful and no pledge but they would break it, and till there would
remain no house of bricks or of woolen tent but their oppression would enter it. Their bad
dealings would make them wretched, till two groups of crying complainants would rise. One
would cry for his religion and the other for this world and the help of one of you to one of them
would be like the help of a slave to his master, namely when he is present he obeys him, but
when the master is away he backbites him. The highest among you in distress would be he who
bears best belief about Allah. If Allah grants you safety accept it, and if you are put in trouble
endure it, because surely (good) result is for the God-fearing.
SERMON 98
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About abstinence of the world and vicissitudes of time
We praise Allah for what has happened and seek His succor in our affairs for what is yet to
happen, and we beg Him for safety in the faith just as we beg Him for safety in our bodies.
O creatures of Allah! I advise you to keep away from this world which will (shortly) leave
you even though you do not like its departure, and which would make your bodies old even
though you would like to keep them fresh. Your example and its example is like the travelers
who travel some distance and then as though they traverse it quickly or they aimed at a sign and
reached it at once. How short is the distance to the aim if one heads towards it and reaches it.
And how short is the stage of one who has only a day which he cannot exceed while a swift
driver is driving him in this world till he departs from it.
So do not hanker after worldly honor and its pride, and do not feel happy over its beauties and
bounties nor wail over its damages and misfortune because its honor and pride would end while
its beauty and bounty would perish, and its damages and misfortunes would pass away. Every
period in it has an end and every living being in it is to die. Is there not for you a warning in
therelics of the predecessors and an eye opener and lesson in your forefathers, provided you
understand?
Do you not see that your predecessors do not come back and the surviving followers do not
remain? Do you not observe that the people of the world pass mornings and evenings in different
conditions? Thus, (somewhere) the dead is wept for, someone is being condoled, someone is
prostrate in distress, someone is inquiring about the sick, someone is passing his last breath,
someone is hankering after the world while death is looking for him. Someone is forgetful but he
is not forgotten (by death), and on the footsteps of the predecessors walk the survivors.
Beware! At the time of committing evil deeds remember the destroyer of joys, the spoiler of
pleasures, and the killer of desires (namely death). Seek assistance of Allah for fulfilllment of
His obligatory rights, and for (thanking Him) for His countless bounties and obligations.
SERMON 99
About the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and his Descendants
Praise to Allah Who spreads His bounty throughout the creation, and extends His hand of
generosity among them. We praise Him in all His affairs and seek His assistance for fulfilllment
of His rights. We stand witness that there is no god except He and that Muhammed (P.B.U.H.
and His Holy Household) is His slave and Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . He sent him
to manifest His commands and speak about His remembrance. Consequently, he fulfillled it with
trustworthiness, and he passed away while on the right path.
He left among us the standard of right. Whoever goes further from it goes out of faith,
whoever lags behind it is ruined. Whoever sticks to it would join (the right). Its guide is short of
speech, slow of steps, and quick when he rises. When you have bent your necks before him and
pointed towards him with your fingers his death would occur and would take him away. They
would live after him as long as Allah wills till Allah brings out for you one who would collect
you together and fuse you after diffusion. Do not place expectation in one who does not1 come
forward and do not lose hope in one who is veiled, because it is possible that one of the two feet
of the veiled one may slip while the other may remain sticking, till both return to position and
stick.
Beware! the example of the descendant (A’l) of Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy
Household) - peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and his descendants - is like that of stars
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in the sky. When one star sets another one rises. So you are in a position that Allah’s blessings
on you have been perfected and He has shown you what you once wished for.
1. The implication is that if for the time being your expectations are not being fulfillled, you
should not be disappointed. It is possible matters may improve, the impediments in the way of
improvement may be removed and matters may be settled as you wish.
SERMON 100
About the vicissitudes of time
He (Allah) is the First before every first and the Last after every last. His Firstness
necessitates that there is no (other) first before Him and His Lastness necessitates that there is no
other last after Him. I do stand witness, both openly as well as secretly, with heart as well as with
tongue, that there is no god but Allah.
O people, do not commit the crime of opposing me, do not be seduced into disobeying me and
do not wink at each other with eyes when you hear me. By Allah, Who germinates Theseed and
blows the wind, whatever I convey to you is from the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
Neither the conveyor (of Allah’s message, i.e. The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) lied
nor the hearer misunderstood.
Well, it is as though I see a misguided man1 who is shouting in Syria and has put his banners
in the outskirts of Kufa. When his mouth would be fully opened, his recalcitrance would become
intense and his steps on earth would become heavy (and tyrannical) then the disorder (so created)
would cut the people with its teeth and war would rage with (all) its waves. Days would become
severe and nights full of toil. So when the crops grow and stand on stalks, its foam shoots forth
and its lightning shines, the banners of misguiding rebellion would fire up and shoot forth like
darkening night and surging sea. This and how many other storms would rend Kufa and gales
would sweep over it? Shortly, heads would clash with heads, the standing crop would be
harvested and the harvest would be smashed.
1. Some people have taken this to refer to Mu’awiyah and others to AAbdul-Malik ibn
Marwan.
SERMON 101
On the same subject - Day of Judgment
That day would be such that Allah would collect on it the interiors and the posteriors, to stand
in obedience for exaction of accounts and for award of recompense for deeds. Sweat would flow
to their mouths like rains while the earth would be trembling under them. In the best condition
among them would be he who has found a resting place for both his feet and an open place for
his breath.
A portion of the same sermon: about future troubles (fitan)
The troubles are like a dark night. Horses would not stand for (facing) them nor would their
banners turn back. They would approach in full reins and ready with saddles. Their leader would
be driving them and the rider would be exerting (them). The trouble-mongers are a people whose
attacks are severe. Those who would fight them for the sake of Allah would be a people who are
low in the estimation of the proud, unknown in the earth but well known on the sky. Woe to you
O Basra, when an army of Allah’s infliction would face you without (raising) their dust of cries.
Your inhabitants would then face bloody death and dire hunger.
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SERMON 102
About abstemiousness and fear of Allah
O people! look at the world like those who abstain from it, and turn away from it. By Allah, it
would shortly turn out its inhabitants and cause grief to the happy and the safe. That which turns
and goes away from it never returns and that which is likely to come about is not known or
anticipated. Its joy is mingled with grief. Herein men’s firmness inclines towards weakness and
languidness. The majority of what pleases you here should not mislead you because that which
would help you would be little.
Allah may shower His mercy on him who ponders and takes lesson thereby, and when he
takes lesson he achieves enlightenment. Whatever is present in this world would shortly not
exist, while whatever is (perceived) to Exist in the next world is already in Existence. Every
countable thing would pass away. Every anticipation should be taken to be coming up and
everything that is to come up should be taken as just near.
A portion of the same sermon: on the attributes of a learned person
Learned is he who knows his worth. It is enough for a man to remain ignorant if he knows not
his worth. Certainly, the most hated man with Allah is he whom Allah has left for his own self.
He goes astray from the right path and moves without a guide. If he is called to the plantation of
the next world he is slow. As though what he is active for is obligatory upon him whereas in
whatever he is slow was not required of him.
A portion of the same sermon: concerning future times
There would be a time wherein only a sleeping (inactive) believer would be safe (such that) if
he is present he is not recognized but if he is absent he is not sought after. These are the lamps of
guidance and banners of night journeys. They do not spread calumnies nor divulge secrets, nor
slander. They are those for whom Allah would open the doors of His mercy and keeps off from
them the hardships of His chastisement.
O people! a time will come to you when Islam would be capsized as a pot is capsized with all
its contents. O people, Allah has protected you from that. He might be hard on you but He has
not spared you from being put on trial. Allah the most Sublime of all speakers has said:
Verily in this are signs and We do only try (the people). (Holy Qur’an, 23:30)
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: As regards Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s words Akullu
Mu’minin nuwamah (every sleeping believer), he implies thereby one who is talked of little and
causes no evil. And the word Aal-masayth is the plural of Amisyah. He is one who spreads
trouble among people through evils and calumny. And the word Aal-madhayi is the plural of
Amidhya. He is one who upon hearing of an evil about some one spreads it and shouts about it.
And Aal-budhur is the plural of Abadur. He is one who excels in foolishness and speaks rubbish.
SERMON 103
About the condition of the people before the proclamation of prophethood and the Prophet’s
performance in spreading his message
So now, certainly Allah deputed Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) as the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) while no one among the Arabs read the Book nor
claimed prophethood or revelation. He had to fight those who disobeyed him in the company
with those who followed him, leading them towards their salvation and hastening with them lest
death overtake them. When any weary person sighed or a distressed one stopped, he stood with
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him till he got him his desire, except the worst in whom there was no virtue at all. Eventually he
showed them their goal and carried them to their places (of deliverance). Consequently their
affairs moved on and their handmill began to rotate (i.e. a position gained strength), their spears
got straightened.
By Allah, I was among their rear-guard till they turned back on their sides and were flocked in
their rope. I never showed weakness or lack of courage, nor did I betray or become languid. By
Allah,I shall split the wrong till I extract right from its flanks.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: I have quoted a selected part of this sermon before, but
since I have found in the narration that this part differs from the previous one, more or less, I
deemed it necessary to quote it again here.
SERMON 104
In eulogy of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Then Allah deputed Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) as a witness, giver of
good tidings and warner, the best in the universe as a child and the most chaste as a grown man,
the purest of the purified in conduct, and the most generous of those who are approached for
generosity.
About the Ummayads
This world did not appear sweet to you in its pleasures and you did not secure milk from its
udders except after having met it when its nose rein was trailing and its leather girth was loose.
For certain peoples its unlawful items were like bent branches (laden with fruit) while its
unlawful items were far away, not available. By Allah, you would find liken a long shade until a
fixed time. So the earth is with you without let or hindrance and your hands in it are extended
while the hands of the leaders are held away from you. Your swords are hanging over them while
their swords are held away from you.
Beware that for every blood (that is shed) there is an avenger and for every right there is a
claimant. The avenger for our blood is like the judge for his own claim, and it is Allah who is
such that if one seeks Him, then He does not disappoint him, and one who runs away from Him,
cannot escape Him. I swear by Allah, O Banu Umayyah, shortly you will see it (i.e. your
possession) in the hands of others and in the house of your enemy. Know that the best looking
eye is that whose sight catches virtue and know that the best hearing ear is that which hears good
advice and accepts it.
About the functions of the Imams
O people, secure light from the flame of lamps of the preacher who follows what he preaches
and draw water from the spring which has been cleaned of dirt.
O creatures of Allah, do not rely on your ignorance. Do not be obedient to your desires
because he who stays at this place is like one who stays on the brink of a bank undermined by
water carrying ruin on his back from one portion to the other and following his opinion which he
changes (one after the other). He wants to adhere what cannot adhere and to bring together what
cannot keep together. So fear Allah and do not place your complaints before him who cannot
redress your grievance, nor undo with his opinion what has been made obligatory for you.
Certainly, there is no obligation on the Imam except what has been devolved on him from
Allah, namely to convey warnings, to exert in good advice, to revive the Sunna, to enforce
penalties on those liable to them and to issue shares to the deserving. So hasten toward
knowledge before its vegetation dries up and before you turn yourselves away from seeking
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knowledge from those who have it. Desist others from the unlawful and abstain from it yourself,
because you have been commanded to abstain (yourself) before abstaining (others).
SERMON 105
About Islam
Praise to Allah who established Islam and made it easy for those who approach it and gave
strength to its columns against any one who tries to overpower it. So Allah made it (a source of)
peace for him who clings to it, safety for him who enters it, argument for him who speaks about
it, witness for him who fights with its help, light for him who seeks light from it, understanding
for him who provides it, sagacity for him who exerts, a sign (of guidance) for him who perceives,
sight for him who resolves, lesson for him who seeks advice, salvation for him who testifies,
confidence for him who trusts, pleasure for him who entrusts, and a shield for him who endures.
It is the brightest of all paths and the clearest of all passages. It has dignified minarets, bright
highways, burning lamps, prestigious fields of activity, and high objectives. It has a collection of
race horses. It is approached eagerly. Its riders are honorable. A testimony (to Allah, Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) , etc.) is its way, good deeds are its minarets, death is in
extremity, this world is its race-course. The Day of Judgment is its horses and Paradise is its
point of approach.
A portion of the same sermon: about the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) lit flames for Theseeker and put bright signs for
the impeded. So he is Your trustworthy trustee, Your witness on the Day of Judgment, Your
deputy as a blessing and Your messenger of truth as mercy. May Allah distribute to him a share
from Your Justice and award him multiples of good by Your bounty. May Allah heighten his
construction over the construction of others, honor him when he comes to You, dignify his
position before You, give him honorable position, and award him glory and distinction, and
bring us out (on Day of Judgment) among his party, neither ashamed, nor repentant, nor
deviators, nor pledge-breakers, nor strayers, nor misleaders, nor seduced.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: This sermon had already appeared earlier but we have
repeated it here because of the difference between the two versions.
A portion of the same sermon: addressed to his followers
By the bounty of Allah over you, you have acquired a position where even your slave maids
are honored, your neighbors are treated well. Even he over whom you enjoy no distinction or
obligation honors you. Even those people fear you who had no apprehension of attack from you
or any authority over you. You now see pledges of Allah being broken but do not feel enraged
although you fret and frown on the breaking of traditions of your forefathers. Allah’s matters
have been coming back to you; but you have given your place to wrongdoers and thrown your
responsibilities toward them. You have placed Allah’s affairs in their hands. They act in doubts
and tread in (fulfilllment of) desires. By Allah, even if they disperse you under every star Allah
would surely collect you on the day that would be worst for them.
SERMON 106
Delivered during one of the days of Siffin
I have seen your flight and your dispersal from the lines. You were surrounded by rude and
low people and bedouins of Syria , although you are the chiefs of Arabs and the summit of
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distinction, and you possess dignity as that of the high nose and the big hump of a camel. The
sigh of my bosom can subside only when I eventually see you surrounding them as they
surrounded you, and see you dislodging them from their position as they dislodged you, killing
them with arrows and striking them with spears so that their forward rows might fall on therear
ones just like the thirsty camels who have been turned away from their place of drink and
removed from their water-points.
SERMON 107
It is one of the sermons about the vicissitudes of time
Praise to Allah Who is Manifest before His creation because of themselves. Who is apparent
to their hearts because of clear proof; Who created without meditating, since meditating does not
befit except one who has thinking organs while He has no thinking organ in Himself. His
knowledge has split forth the inside of unknown secrets and covered the bottom of deep beliefs.
A portion of the same sermon about the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Allah chose him from the lineal tree of prophets, from the flame of light, from the forehead of
greatness, from the best part of the valley of al-Bat’ha’, from the lamps for darkness, and from
the sources of wisdom.
A portion of the same sermon:
The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was like a roaming physician who has readied his
ointments and heated his instruments. He uses them wherever the need arises for curing blind
hearts, deaf ears, and dumb tongues. He followed with his medicines the spots of negligence and
places of perplexity.
Remonstrating with the Muslims
They (people) did not take light from the lights of his wisdom nor did they produce flame
from the flint of sparkling knowledge. So in this matter they are like grazing cattle and hard
stones. Nevertheless hidden things have appeared for those who perceive. The face of right has
become clear for the wanderer, the approaching moment has raised the veil from its face and
signs have appeared for those who search for them.
What is the matter with me! I see that you are just bodies without spirits and spirits without
bodies, devotees without good, traders without profits, wakeful but sleeping, present but unseen,
seeing but blind, hearing but deaf and speaking but dumb.
I notice that misguidance has stood on its center and spread (all around) through its offshoots. It weighs you with its weights and confuses you with its measures. Its leader is an outcast from the community. He persists on misguidance. So on that day none from among you
would remain except as Thesediment in a cooking pot or the dust left after dusting a bundle. It
would scrape you as leather is scraped, and trample you as harvest is trampled, and pick out the
believer as a bird picks out a big grain from the thin grain.
Where are these ways taking you, gloom misleading you, and falsehoods deceiving you?
Whence are you brought and where are you driven? For every period there is a written document
and everyone who is absent has to return. So listen to your godly leader and keep your hearts
present. If he speaks to you be wakeful. The forerunner must speak truth to his people, should
keep his wits together and maintain presence of mind. He has clarified to you the matter as the
stitch hole is cleared, and scraped it as the gum is scraped (from the twigs).
Nevertheless, now the wrong has set itself on its places and ignorance has ridden on its riding
beasts. Unruliness has increased while the call for virtue is suppressed. Wrong has pounced in
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time like a devouring carnivore and shouts like a camel after remaining silent. People have
become brothers over ill-doings, have forsaken the essential unity of thereligion but have instead,
united in speaking lies and bear mutual hatreds in the matter of truth.
When such is the case, the son would be a source of anger (instead of coolness of the eye to
parents) and rain the cause of heat, the wicked would abound and the virtuous would diminish.
The people of this time would be wolves, its rulers beasts, the middle class men gluttons and the
poor (almost) dead. Truth would go down, falsehood would overflow, affection would be
claimed with tongues but people would be quarrelsome at heart. Adultery would be the key to
lineage while chastity would be rare and Islam would be worn unturned like (dead) skin.
SERMON 108
About the Might of Allah
Everything submits to Him and everything exists by Him. He is the satisfaction of the poor,
the dignity of the low, the energy for the weak and shelter for the oppressed. Whoever speaks,
He hears his speaking, and whoever keeps quiet, He knows his secret. On Him is the livelihood
of everyone who lives, and whoever dies returns to Him.
(O Allah!) the eyes have not seen You so as to be aware of You, but You were before the
describers of Your creation. You did not create the creation on account of loneliness, nor did
You make them work for gain. He whom You catches cannot go farther than You, and he whom
You holds cannot escape You. He who disobeys You does not decrease Your authority, and he
who obeys You does not add to Your Might. He who disagrees with Your judgment cannot turn
it, and he who turns away from Your command cannot do without You. Every secret before You
is open and for You every absent is present.
You art everlasting, there is no end to You. You art the highest aim, there is no escape from
You, You art the promised (point of return) from which there is no deliverance except towards
You. In Your hand is the forelock of every creature and to You is thereturn of every living being.
Glory to You! How great is Your creation that we see, but how small is this greatness by the side
of Your Might. How awe-striking is Your realm that we notice, but how humble is this against
what is hidden from us out of Your authority. How extensive are Your bounties in this world, but
how small are they against the bounties of the next world.
A portion of the same sermon about the Angels:
You (O Allah) made angels reside in Your skies and placed them high above from Your earth.
They have the most knowledge about You and Your whole creation, the most fearing from You,
and the nearest to You. They never stayed in loins nor were retained in wombs. They were not
created Afrom mean water (semen) (Holy Qur’an, 32:8; 77:20). They were not dispersed by
vicissitudes of time. They are on their places (distinct) from You and in their positions near You.
Their desires are concentrated in You. Their worship for You is much. Their neglect from Your
command is little. If they witness what remains hidden about You they would regard their deeds
as very little, they would criticize themselves and would realize that they did not worship You
according to Your right for being worshipped and did not obey You as You has the right for
being obeyed.
About the bounties and guidance of Allah, and those who are ungrateful
Glorified art You, the Creator, the Worshipped, on account of Your good trials of Your
creatures. You created a house (the Paradise) and provided in it for feasting, drinks, foods,
spouses, servants, places, streams, plantations and fruits. Then You sent a messenger to invite
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towards it. But the people did not respond to the caller, and did not feel persuaded to what You
persuaded them nor showed eagerness towards what You desired them to eagerly feel. They
jumped on the carcass (of this world), earned shame by eating it and became united in loving it.
When one loves a thing it blinds him and sickens his heart. Then he sees but with a diseased
eye, hears but with unhearing ears. Desires have cut asunder his wit, and the world has made his
heart dead, while his mind is all longing for it. Consequently, he is a slave of it and of everyone
who has any share in it. Wherever it turns, he turns towards it and wherever it proceeds, he
proceeds towards it. He is not desisted by any disaster from Allah, nor takes admonition from
any preacher. He sees those who have been caught in neglect whence there is neither rescission
nor reversion (repentance).
About Death
Whatever they were ignoring has befallen them, separation from this world, from which they
took themselves safe, has come to them, and they have reached that in the next world which they
had been promised. Whatever has befallen them cannot be described. Pangs of death and grief
for losing (this world) have surrounded them. Consequently their limbs become languid and their
complexion changes. Then death increases its struggle over them.
In some it stands in between him and his power of speaking although he lies among his
people, looking with eyes, hearing with his ears, with full wits and intelligence. He then thinks
over how he wasted his life and in what (activities) he passed his time. He recalls the wealth he
collected when he had blinded himself in seeking it, and acquired it from fair and foul sources.
Now the consequences of collecting it have overtaken him. He gets ready to leave it. It would
remain for those who are behind him. They would enjoy it and benefit by it.
It would be an easy acquisition for others but a burden on his back, and the man cannot get rid
of it. He would thereupon bite his hands with his teeth out of shame for what was disclosed to
him about his affairs at the time of his death. He would dislike what he coveted during the days
of his life and he would wish that he who envied him on account of it and felt jealous over him
for it should have amassed it instead of he himself.
Death would go on affecting his body till his ears too would behave like his tongue (and lose
functioning). So he would lie among his people, neither speaking with his tongue or hearing with
his ears. He would be rotating his glance over their faces, watching the movements of their
tongues, but not hearing their speaking. Then death would increase its sway over him, and his
sight would be taken by death as the ears had been taken and the spirit would depart from his
body. He would then become a carcass among his own people. They would feel loneliness from
him and get away from him. He would not join a mourner or respond to a caller. Then they
would carry him to a small place in the ground and deliver him in it to (face) his deeds. They
would abandon visiting him.
About the Day of Judgment
Until whatever is written as ordained approaches its and the affairs complete their destined
limits, the posteriors join the anteriors and whatever Allah wills takes place in the shape of
resurrection of His creation. Then He would convulse the sky and split it. He would quake the
earth and shake it. He would root out the mountains and scatter them. They would crush each
other out of awe of His Glory and fear of His Dignity.
He would take out everyone who is in it. He would refresh them after they had been worn out
and collect them after they had been separated. Then He would set them apart for questioning
about the hidden deeds and secret acts. He would then divide them into two groups, rewarding
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one and punishing the other. As regards the obedient people He would reward them with His
nearness and would keep them forever in His house from where those who settle therein do not
move out. Their position would not undergo change, fear would not overtake them, ailments
would not befall them, dangers would not affect them and journey would not force them (from
place to place).
As for people of sins, He would settle them in the worst place, would bind their hands with
the necks, bind the forelocks with feet and would clothe them in shirts of tar and dresses cut out
of flames. They would be in punishment whose heat would be severe, the door would be closed
on the inmates - in fire which is full of shouts and cries and rising flames and fearful voices. Its
inmate does not move out of it, its prisoner cannot be released by ransom and its shackles cannot
be cut. There is no fixed age for this house so that it might perish, nor period for its life that
might pass away.
A portion of the same sermon about the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
He treated this world disdainfully and regarded it low. He held it contemptible and hated it.
He realized that Allah kept it away from him with intention and spread it out for others by way
of contempt. Therefore, he remained away from it by his heart, banished its recollection from his
mind and wished that its attraction should remain hidden from his eye so that he should not
acquire any clothing from it, or hope for staying in it. He conveyed from Allah the pleas (against
committing sins), counseled his people as a warner (against the Divine chastisement) and he
called (people) towards Paradise as a conveyor of good tidings.
About the Descendants of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
We are the tree of prophethood, staying place of (The Divine) Message, descending place of
angels, mines of knowledge and the sources of wisdom. Our supporter and lover awaits mercy
while our enemy and he who hates us awaits wrath.
SERMON 109
About Islam
The best means by which seekers of nearness to Allah, the Glorified, the Exalted, seek
nearness, is the belief in Him and His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , fighting in His
cause, for it is the high pinnacle of Islam, and (to believe) in the kalimatu’l-Aikhlas (the
expression of the Divine purification). It is a just nature and the establishment of prayer for it is
(the basis of) community. The payment of zakat (Islamic tax) for it is a compulsory obligation,
fasting for the month of Ramadan for it is the shield against chastisement. The performance of
hajj to the House of Allah (i.e. Ha’bah) and its Aumrah (other than annual visit) for these two
acts banish poverty and wash away sins. Regard for kinship for it increases wealth and length of
life. Giving alms secretly for it covers shortcomings, giving alms openly for it protects against a
bad death and extending benefits (to people) for it saves from positions of disgrace.
About the Holy Qur’an and Sunna
Go ahead with the remembrance of Allah for it is the best remembrance, and long for that
which He has promised to the pious, for His promise is the most true promise. Tread the course
of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) for it is the most distinguished course. Follow the
Sunna of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) for it is the most right of all behaviors.
Learn the Holy Qur’an for it is the fairest of discourses and understand it thoroughly for it is the
best blossoming of hearts. Seek cure with its light for it is the cure for hearts. Recite it beautifully
for it is the most beautiful narration. Certainly, a scholar who acts not according to his
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knowledge is like the off-headed ignorant who does not find relief from his ignorance; but on the
learned the plea of Allah is greater and grief more incumbent, and he is more blameworthy
before Allah.
SERMON 110
Caution about this world
So now, certainly I frighten you from this world for it is sweet and green, surrounded by lusts,
and liked for its immediate enjoyments. It excites wonder with small things, is ornamented with
(false) hopes and decorated with deception. Its rejoicing does not last and its afflictions cannot be
avoided. It is deceitful, harmful, changing, perishable, exhaustible, liable to destruction, gnawing
and destructive. When it reaches the extremity of desires of those who incline towards it and feel
happy with it, the position is just what Allah the Glorified, says (in the Holy Qur’an) :
.like the water which send We down from heaven, and the
herbage of the earth mingleth with it, then it becometh dry
stubble which the winds scatter; for Allah over all things
has power. (18:45)
No person gets rejoicing from this world but tears come to him after it, and no one gets its
comforts in the front but he has to face hardships in therear. No one receives the light rain of ease
in it but the heavy rain of distress pours upon him. It is worthy of this world that in the morning
it supports a man but in the evening it does not recognize him. If one side of it is sweet and
pleasant the other side is bitter and distressing.
No one secures enjoyment from its freshness but he has to face hardship from its calamities.
No one would pass the evening under the wing of safety but that his morning would be under the
feathers of the wing-tip of fear. It is deceitful, and all that is therein is deception. It is perishable
and all that is on it is to perish. There is no good in its provisions except in piety. Whoever takes
little from it collects much of what would give him safety, while one who takes much from it
takes much of what would ruin him. He would shortly depart from his collection. How many
people relied on it but it distressed them; (how many) felt peaceful with it but it made them
tumble; how many were prestigious but it made them low and how many were proud but it made
them disgraceful.
Its authority is changing. Its life is dirty. Its sweet water is bitter. Its sweetness is like myrrh.
Its food are poisons. Its means are weak. The living in it are exposed to death; the healthy in it
are exposed to disease. Its realm is (liable to be) snatched away. The strong in it are (liable to be)
defeated and the rich are (liable to be) afflicted with misfortune. The neighbor in it is (liable to
be) plundered.
Are you not (residing) in the houses of those before you, who were of longer ages, better
traces, had bigger desires, were more in numbers and had greater armies? How they devoted
themselves to the world and how they showed preference to it! Then they left it without any
provision that could convey them through, or the back (of a beast for riding) to carry them.
Did you get the news that the world was ever generous enough to present ransom for them, or
gave them any support or afforded them good company? It rather inflicted them with troubles,
made them languid with calamities, molested them with catastrophes, threw them down on their
noses, trampled them under hoofs and helped the vicissitudes of time against them. You have
observed its strangeness towards those who went near it, acquired it and appropriated it, till they
departed from it for good. Did it give them any provision other than starvation, or make them
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stay in other than narrow places, or give them light other than gloom, or give them in the end
anything other than repentance? Is this what you ask for so much or remain satisfied with, or
towards which you feel greedy? How bad is this abode for him that he did not suspect it (to be
so) and did not entertain fear from it?
You should know, as you do know, that you have to leave it and depart from it. While in it,
take lesson from those Awho proclaimed Awho is more powerful than we’ (Holy Qur’an, 41:15)
but they were carried to their graves, though not as riders. They were then made to stay in the
graves, but not as guests. Graves were made for them from the surface of the ground. Their
shrouds were made from earth. Old bones were made their neighbor. They are neighbors who do
not answer a caller nor ward off trouble, nor pay heed to a mourner.
If they get rain they do not feel happy, and if they face famine they do not get disappointed.
They are together but each one apart. They are close together but do not see each other. They are
near but do not meet. They are enduring and have no hatred. They are ignorant and their malice
has died away. There is no fear of trouble from them and no hope of their warding off (troubles).
They have exchanged the back (surface) of the earth with its stomach (interior), vastness with
narrowness, family with loneliness, and light with darkness. They have come to it (this world) as
they had left it with bare feet and naked bodies. They departed from it with their acts towards the
continuing life and everlasting house as Allah has said:
.As we caused the first creation, so will We cause its return. (It is) a promise binding Us,
verily We were doing it. (Holy Qur’an, 21:104)
SERMON 111
About the Angel of Death and the spirit taking leave
Do you feel when the Angel of Death enters a house, or do you see him when he calls the life
out from someone? How does he take out the life of an embryo in the womb of his mother? Does
he reach it through any part of her body or does the spirit respond to his call with the permission
of Allah? Or does he stay with him in the mother’s interior? How can he who is unable to
describe a creature like this, describe Allah?
SERMON 112
About the world and its people
I warn you of the world for it is the abode of the unsteady. It is not a house for foraging. It has
decorated itself with deception and deceives with its decoration. It is a house which is low before
Allah. So He has mixed its lawful with its unlawful, its good with its evil, its life with its death,
and its sweetness with its bitterness. Allah has not kept it clear for His lovers, nor has He been
niggardly with it towards His foes. Its good is sparing. Its evil is ready at hand. Its collection
would dwindle away. Its authority would be snatched away. Its habitation would face desolation.
What is the good of a house which falls down like fallen construction or what (Existent) good is
there in an age which expires as the provision exhausts, or of time which passes like walking?
Include whatever Allah has made obligatory on you in your demands. Ask from Him
fulfilllment of what He has asked you to do. Make your ears hear the call of death before you are
called by death. Surely the hearts of the abstemious weep in this world even though they
may(apparently) laugh, and their grief increases even though they appear happy. Their hatred for
themselves is much even though they may be envied for the subsistence they are allowed.
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Remembrance of death has disappeared from your hearts while false hopes are present in you. So
this world has mastered you more than the next world, and the immediate end (of this world) has
removed you away from theremote one (of the next life). You are brethren in thereligion of
Allah. Dirty natures and bad conscience have caused separation (disunity) among you. As a
consequence you do not bear one another’s burdens, nor do you advise each other, nor spend on
each other, nor do you love one another.
What is your condition? You feel satisfied with what little you have secured from this world
while much of the next world of which you have been deprived does not grieve you. The little of
this world which you lose pains you so much so that it becomes apparent in your faces, and in
the lack of your endurance over whatever is taken away from you; as though this world is your
permanent abode, and as though its wealth would stay with you for good. Nothing prevents
anyone among you to disclose to his comrade the shortcomings he is afraid of, except the fear
that the comrade would also disclose to him similar defects. You have been deceived together on
leaving the next world and loving this world. Your religion has become just licking with the
tongue. It is like the work of one who has finished his job and secured satisfaction of his master.
SERMON 113
About abstemiousness, fear of Allah and importance of providing for the next life
Praise be to Him Who makes praise followed by bounty and bounty with gratefulness. We
praise Him for His bounties as for His trails. We seek His help against these hearts which are
slow to obey what they have been commended but quick towards what they have been desisted
from. We seek His forgiveness from that which His knowledge covers and His document
preserves knowledge which does not leave anything and document which does not omit
anything. We believe in Him like the belief of one who has seen the unknown and has attained
the promised rewards - belief, the purity whereof keeps off from belief in partners of Allah, and
whose conviction removes doubt.
We stand witness that there is no god but Allah, the One, Who has no partner for Him, and
that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) is His slave and His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) , Allah may bless him and his descendants. These two testifications heighten the
utterance and raise the act. The scale wherein they would be placed would not be light while the
scale from which they are removed would not become heavy.
Enjoining people to Piety
O creatures of Allah! I advise you to have fear of Allah which is the provision (for next
world) and with it is (your) return. The provision would take you (to your destination) and
thereturn would be successful. The best one, who is able to make people listen has called toward
it and the best listener has listened to it. So the caller has proclaimed and the listener has listened
and preserved.
O creations of Allah! certainly fear of Allah has saved the lovers of Allah from unlawful
items and gave His dread to their hearts till their nights are passed in wakefulness and their days
in thirst. So they achieve comfort through trouble and copious watering through thirst. They
regarded death to be near and therefore hastened towards (good) actions. They rejected their
desires and so they kept death in their sight.
Then, this world is a place of destruction, tribulations, changes and lessons. As for
destruction, the time has its bow pressed (to readiness) and its dart does not go amiss, its wound
does not heal; it afflicts the living with death, the healthy with ailment and the safe with distress.
It is an eater who is not satisfied and a drinker whose thirst is never quenched. As for tribulation,
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a man collects what he does not eat and builds wherein he does not live. Then he goes out to
Allah without carrying the wealth or shifting the building.
As for its changes, you see a pitiable man becoming enviable and an enviable man becoming
pitiable. This is because the wealth has gone and misfortune has come to him. As for its lessons,
a man reaches near (realization of) his desires when (suddenly) the approach of his death cuts
them; then neither the desire is achieved nor the one who desires is spared. Glory to Allah, how
deceitful are its pleasures, how thirst-rousing its quenching and how sunny its shade. That which
approaches (i.e. death) cannot be sent back, he who goes away does not return. Glory to Allah,
how near is the living to the dead because he will meet him soon and how far is the dead from
the living because he has gone away from him.
Certainly nothing is viler than evil except its punishment, and nothing is better than good
except its reward. In this world everything that is heard is better than what is seen, while of
everything of the next world that is seen is better than what is heard. So you should satisfy
yourself by hearing rather than seeing and by the news of the unknown. You should know that
what is little in this world but much in the next is better than what is much in this world but little
in the next. In how many cases little is profitable while much causes loss.
Certainly that which you have been commanded to do is wider than what you have been
refrained from, and what has been made lawful for you is more than what has been prohibited.
Then give up what is less for what is much, and what is limited for what is vast. Allah has
guaranteed your livelihood and has commanded you to act. Therefore, the pursuit of that which
has been guaranteed to you should not get preference over that whose performance has been
enjoined upon you.
But by Allah, most certainly the position is that doubt has overtaken and certainty has been
shattered and it seems as if what has been guaranteed to you is obligatory on you and what was
made obligatory on you has been taken away from you. So, hasten towards (good) actions and
dread the suddenness of death, because thereturn of age cannot be hoped for tomorrow, as
thereturn of livelihood can be hoped. Whatever is missed from livelihood today may be hoped
tomorrow with increase, but whatever is lost from the age yesterday, its return cannot be
expected today. Hope can be only for that which is to come, while about that which is passed
there is only disappointment. So Afear Allah as He ought to be feared and do not die until you
are (true) Muslim. (Holy Qur’an, 3:102)
SERMON 114
Praying for rain
O Lord! surely our mountains have dried up and our earth has become dusty. Our cattle are
thirsty and are bewildered in their enclosures. They are moaning like the moaning of mothers for
their (dead) sons. They are tired of going to their meadows and longing for their watering places.
O Lord! have mercy on the groan of the groaning and yearn of the yearning. O Lord! have mercy
on their bewilderment and their passages and their groaning in their yards.
O Lord! we have come out to You when the years of drought have crowded over us like (a
herd of) thin camels and rain clouds have abandoned us. You art the hope for the afflicted and
succor for Theseeker. We call You when the people have lost hope, when cloud have been
denied and cattle have died; do not seize us for our deeds and do not catch us for our sins. Spread
Your mercy over us through raining clouds, rain fed blossoming, amazing vegetation, and heavy
downpours with which all that was dead regains life and all that was lost returns.
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O Lord! give rain from You which should be life giving, satisfying, thorough, widely
scattered, pure, blissful, plentiful and invigorating. Its vegetation should be exuberant and its
branches full of fruits and its green leaves. With it You invigorates the weak among Your
creatures and brings back to life the dead among Your cities.
O Lord! give rain from You with which our highlands get covered with green herbage,
streams get flowing, our slopes grow green, our fruits thrive, our cattle prosper, our far flung
areas get watered and our dry areas get its benefit, with Your vast blessing and immeasurable
grant on Your distressed universe and Your untamed beasts. And pour upon us rain which is
drenching, continuous and heavy; wherein one cycle of rain clashes with the other and one rain
drop pushes another (into a continuous chain). Its lightning should not be deceptive, its cheek not
rainless, its white clouds not scattered and rain not light, so that the famine-stricken thrive with
its abundant herbage and the drought stricken come to life with its bliss. Certainly, You pours
down rain after the people lose hopes and spreads Your mercy, since You art the Guardian, the
praiseworthy.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: the wonderful expressions of this sermon: Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib’s words Ainsahat jibaluna means the mountains cracked on account of drought. It is
said Ainsaha ththawbu when it is torn. It is also said Ainsaha’n-nabtu or Asaba or Asawwaha
when vegetation withers and dries up.
His phrase Awa hamat dawabbuna means "became thirsty", as Ahuyam means thirst.
His words Ahadabiru’s-sinin: This is plural of Ahidbar. It means the camel whom treading has
made thin. So Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) likened with such or camel the year in which
drought had occurred. The Arab poet Dhu ar-Rumma has said:
These thin camels remain in their places, facing hardships and move only when we take them
to some dry area.
His words Awa la qaza’in rababuha. Here Aal-qaza means small pieces of cloud scattered all
around.
His words Awa la shaffanin dhihabuha. It stands for Awa la dhata shAffanin dhihabuha.
AAsh-shAffan means the cold wind and Aadh-dhihab means light rain. He omitted the world
Adhata from here because of the listener’s knowledge of it.
SERMON 115
About troubles which would arise and the Day of Judgment
Allah deputed him (the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) as a caller towards Truth and
a witness over the creatures. The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) conveyed the messages
of Allah without being lazy and without any short-coming, and he fought His enemies in the
cause of Allah without being languid and without pleading excuses. He is the foremost of all
who practice piety and the power of perception of all those who achieve guidance.
A portion of the same sermon, complaining about his men:
If you know what I know of the unknown that is kept wrapped up from you certainly you
would have gone out into the open weeping over your deeds and beating yourselves in grief. You
would have abandoned your properties without any guard for it or any substitute over it.
Everyone would then have cared for his own self without paying attention to anyone else. But
you have forgotten what was recalled to you and felt safe from what you had been warned.
Consequently, your ideas went astray and your affairs were dispersed.
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I do long that Allah may cause separation between you and me and given me those who have
a better right to be with me than you. By Allah, they are people of blissful ideas, enduring
wisdom and true speech. They keep aloof from revolt. They trod forward on the path (of Allah)
and ran on the high road. Consequently, they achieved the everlasting next life and easeful
honors.
Beware! by Allah, a tall lad of swinging gait from Banu Thaqif would be placed over you. He
would eat away your vegetation and melt your fat. So, O Aba Wadhahah, is that all?
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Aal-Wadhahah means Aal-khunfusa (dung-beetle). In this sentence Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has referred to al-Hajjai ibn Yusuf athThaqafi and he had an incident with Aal-Khunfusa’, which need not be related here.1
The detail of this incident is that one day al-Hajjaj stood up for saying prayers when alkhunfusa’ advanced towards him. Al-Hajjaj held out his hand to stop him but he bit him whereby
his hand got swollen and eventually he died of it.
Ibn Abul-Hadid has written that Aal-Wadhahah means the dung that remains sticking to the
tail of an animal, and this surname is intended to disgrace him.
SERMON 116
Rebuking Misers
You spend no wealth in the cause of Him Who gave it, nor do you risk your lives for the sake
of Him Who created them. You enjoy honor through Allah among His creatures, but you do not
honor Allah among His creatures. You should derive lessons from occupying the places of those
who were before you and from the departure of your nearest brothers.
SERMON 117
In praise of his faithful companions
You are supporters of Truth and brethren in faith. You are the shield on the day of tribulation,
and (my) trustees among therest of the people. With your support I strike the runner away and
hope for the obedience of him who advances forward. Therefore, extend to me support which is
free from deceit and pure from doubt because, by Allah, I am the most preferable of all for the
people.
SERMON 118
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) collected the people and exhorted them1 to jihad but they
observed a hlong silence. Then he said: AWhat is the matter with you. Have you become dumb?
A group of them replied: AO Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) if you go forth we shall be with you.
Whereupon Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
What has happened to you? You may not be guided aright or shown the right path. Should in
these circumstances I go forth? In fact, at this time one of the brave and the valorous among you
whom I select should go out. It does not suit me to leave the army, the city, the public treasury,
the land revenue, the dispensation of justice among Muslims and looking after the demands of
the claimants and to follow one contingent after the other moving here and there like featherless
arrow moving in the quiver.
I am the axis of the mill. It rotates on me while I remain in my position. As soon as I leave,
the center of its rotation would be disturbed and its lower stone would also be disturbed. By
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Allah, this is very bad advice. By Allah, if I had not been hoping for martyrdom by my meeting
with the enemy - and my meeting with them has been ordained, I would have secured my carrier
and went away from you and would not have sought you so long as the North and South differed.
There is no benefit in the majority of your numbers because of a lack of unity of your hearts. I
have put you on the clear path whereon no one will perish except who perishes by himself. He
who sticks to it would achieve Paradise and he who deviates goes to Hell.
1. When after the Battle of Siffin, Mu’awiyah’s forces began to attack various places in Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib’s area, he asked Theiraqis to check them but they declined on the plea that
they would follow him if he himself came forward. Thereupon he delivered this sermon, and
clarified his limitations, that if he himself went out it was impossible to run the affairs of the
state, and that the enemy’s attacks had already started on all sides. In these circumstances it was
against politics to keep the center unguarded. But what could be hoped from those who changed
the victory at Siffin into defeat and opened the door for these attacks.
SERMON 119
About the greatness of Ahl al-Bayt () and the importance of the laws of Islam
By Allah, I have knowledge of the conveyance of messages, fulfilllment of promises and of
entire expressions. We the people of the house (Ahl al-Bayt () ) possess the doors of wisdom
and light of governance. Beware that the paths of religion are one and its highways are straight.
He who follows them achieves (the aim) and secures (the objective). And he who stood away
from it went astray and incurred repentance.
Do act for the day for which provisions are stored, and when the intentions would be tested. If
a person’s own intelligence which is present with him does not help him, the wits (of others)
which are remote from him are more unhelpful and those which are away from him more
useless. Dread the fire whose flame is severe, whose hollow is deep, whose dress is iron and
whose drink is bloody puss. Beware! The1 good name of a man retained by Allah, the Sublime,
among the people is better than wealth inherited by those who would not praise him.
1. If a person gives away something in his life-time then therecipient feels obliged to him. But
if wealth is extracted by force then the extractor does not feel himself under his obligation, nor
does he praise it. The same is the case of one who dies. His successors think that whatever he
had left behind was their right and they should have received it. In this there is no obligation of
his to be acknowledged. But if he had done some good act with this very wealth his name would
have remained behind him and people would have praised him also.
A Persian couplet says the following:
Happy is he who is remembered well after himself, for nothing, save the name, remains after
the man is dead.
SERMON 120
A man from among the companions of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib stood up and said, AO Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), you first stopped us from Arbitration and thereafter gave order for it.
We do not know which of these two was more appropriate. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) struck
one hand over the other and said:
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This is thereward of one who breaks a pledge. By Allah, when I gave you my orders (namely)
to abide by arbitration I had led you to an undesirable thing (namely war) in which Allah had
ordained good. If you had been steadfast I would have guided you, if you had been bent I would
have straightened you and if you had refused I would have rectified you. This was the surest
way. But with whom and through whom? I wanted my treatment from you but you proved to be
my disease, like the one who extracts a thorn with another thorn when he knows that the thorn
bends toward itself.
My Allah, the physicians have despaired of this fatal ailment and water-drawers have become
tired with the rope of this well. Where1 are those who were invited to Islam and they accepted it?
They read the Holy Qur’an and decided according to it. They were exhorted to fight and they
leapt (toward it) as she-camels leap towards their young. They took their swords out of the
sheaths and went out into the world in groups and rows. Some of them perished and some
survived. The good news of survival does not please them nor do they get condoled about the
dead. Their eyes have turned white with weeping. Their bellies are emaciated because of fasting.
Their lips are dry because of (constant) praying. Their color is pale because of wakefulness.
Their faces bear the dust of God-fearing. These are my comrades who have departed. We should
be justified if we feel eager for them and bite our hands in their separation.
Certainly, Satan has made his ways easy for you and wants to unfasten the knots of religion
one by one and to cause division among you in place of unity. Keep away from his evil ideas and
enchantments and accept good advice of one who offers it to you and preserve it in your minds.
1. Although all those who fought under the banner of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) were
called Shi’as of Ali, yet only those who had tears in their eyes, paleness on their faces, the Holy
Qur’anic verses on their tongues, zeal of religion in their hearts, steadfastness in their feet,
determination and courage in their spirits, and patience and endurance in their minds could in
true sense be called Shi’as of Ali. These were the people in whose separation Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib’s feelings were coming out in the shape of sighs through the breath, while the flames of the
fire of separation were consuming his heart and spirit. These were the people who leapt towards
death like mad men and did not feel happy if they survived. Rather, their heart’s slogan was as
the Persian hemistich says the following:
We are ashamed why we have remained alive.
He who has even a slight brilliance of these qualities can alone be called the follower of the
Descendants of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of the Shi’a of Ali, otherwise it
would be a word which has lost its meaning and been bereft of its dignity through misuse. Thus
tradition has it that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) saw a group of men at his door and enquired
from Qanbar who they were and he answered they were hisShi’as. On hearing this Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) had a frown on his forehead and said, AWhy are they called Shi’as? They have
no sign ofShi’as. Thereupon, Qanbar enquired as to what the signs of Shi’as were, and of Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) replied thus:
Their bellies are thin through hunger, their lips dry through thirst and their eyes bleared
through weeping.
SERMON 121
When the Kharijites persisted in their rejecting the Arbitration, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
went to their camp and addressed them thus:
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Were all of you’ with us in Siffin? They replied that some of them were but some of them
were not. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
Then you divide yourself into two groups. Some were in Siffin and others were not, so I may
address each as I see suitable. Then he shouted to the people:
Stop talking and keep quiet to listen to what I say. Turn your hearts to me. Whomever we ask
for evidence, he should give it according to his knowledge about it.
Then he had a long conversation with them during which he said:
When they had raised the Holy Qur’an by way of deceit, craft, artifice and cheat, did you not
say AThey are our brothers and our comrades in accepting Islam. They want us to cease fighting,
and ask for protection through the Book of Allah, the Glorified. Our opinion is to agree with
them and to end their troubles. Then I said to you, AIn this affair the outer side is Faith but the
inner side is enmity. Its beginning is pity and the end is repentance. Consequently you should
stick to your position, and remain steadfast on your path. You should press your teeth (to put all
your might) in jihad and should not pay heed to the shouts of the shouter.2 If he is answered he
would mislead, but if he is left (answered) he would be disgraced.
But when this thing (Arbitration) was done I found that you agreed to it. By Allah, if I had
refused it, it would not have been obligatory on me. Nor would Allah have laid its sin on me.
And by Allah, not that I have accepted it, I alone am the rightful person who should be followed,
for certainly the Holy Qur’an is with me. I have never forsaken it since I adopted its company.
We have been with the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) in battles wherein those killed
were fathers, sons, brothers and relations of one another. Nevertheless, every trouble and
hardship just increased us in our belief, in our treading on the right path, in submission to (the
Divine) command and in endurance of the pain of wounds.
We now had to fight our brethren in Islam because of entry into Islam of misguidance,
crookedness, doubts and (wrong) interpretation. However, if we find any way by which Allah
may collect us together in our disorder and by which we may come near each other in whatever
common remains between us we would accept it and would give up everything else.
1. Ibn Abul-Hadid writes that this sermon comprises three parts which do not fit together,
because Sayyid ar-Radhi selected some parts of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s sermons and did not
record other parts as a result of which the continuity of utterance was not maintained. Thus, one
part ends at Aif he is left unanswered he would be disgraced, the other at Aand endurance at the
pain of wound and the third runs till the end of Thesermon.
2. This reference is to Mu’awiyah or AAmr ibn al-AAs.
SERMON 122
Address of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) to his followers on the battlefield of Siffin
About supporting the weak and the low-spirited during the fighting
Whoever among you feels spiritedness of heart during the action and finds any of his
comrades feeling disheartened should ward off (the enemies) from him just as he would do from
himself, because of the superiority he enjoys over the other, for if Allah had willed He would
have made the former also like him. Certainly death is a quick seeker. Neither does the steadfast
escape it nor can the one who runs away defy it. The best death is to be killed. By Allah in
Whose hand (power) lies the life of the son of Abu Talib, certainly a thousand strikes of the
sword on me are easier to me than a death in bed which is not in obedience to Allah.
A portion of the same sermon:
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It is as if I see you uttering voices like the rustling sound of lizards! You do not seek your
own claims nor do you defend against oppression. You have been let free on the path. He who
rushes (into the battle) achieves salvation, while he who lags behind, hesitating, gets destruction.
1
SERMON 123
To exhort his followers to fight
Put the armored man forward and keep the unarmored one behind. Grit your teeth because
this will make the swords skip off the skull, and dodge on the sides of the spears for it changes
the direction of their blades. Close the eyes because it strengthens the spirit and gives peace to
the heart. Kill the voices because this will keep off spiritlessness.
Do not let your banner bend, nor leave it alone. Do not give it to anyone except the brave and
the defenders of honor among you because they alone endure the befalling of troubles; they
surround the banners and encircle them on both sides, their rear and their front. They do not
separate from them lest they give them (to the enemy). They do not go ahead of them lest they
leave them alone. Everyone should deal with his adversary and also help his comrade by his own
life, and should not leave the adversary to his comrade lest both his own adversary and his
comrade join against him.
By Allah, even if you run away from the sword of today you would not remain safe from the
sword of the next world. You are the foremost among the Arabs and great figures. Certainly in
running away there is the wrath of Allah, unceasing disgrace and lasting shame. And certainly
run who runs does not lengthen his life, nor does anything come to intervene between him and
his day (of death). Who is there to go towards Allah like the thirsty going to the water? Paradise
lies under the edges of spears. Today thereputations (about the valor of warriors) will be tested.
By Allah! I am more eager to meet them (in combat) than they are for (returning to) their
houses. O Lord! If they reject truth, disperse their group, divide their words (opinion) and
destroy them on account of their sins.
They will not budge from their stand till the continuous striking of spears causes piercings (of
wounds) through which wind may pass. And the hitting of swords cuts through the skull, cleaves
bones and breaks forearms and legs, till they are attacked by contingent after contingent and
assaulted by detachments which are followed by reserves for support, till their cities are
continuously assailed by force after force and till the horses trample even the extreme ends of the
lands, the tracks of their beast and their meadows.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Aad-da’q means trampling, e.g., Ataduqqu’l-khuyulu
bihawafiriha ardahum (the horses trample the ground with their hoofs). Anawahini ardihim
means lands opposite each other, it is said, Amanazilu bani fulanin tatanaharu meaning the
Ahouses of so-and-so are opposite each other.
1. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) delivered this sermon on the occasion of the battle of Siffin.
This battle was fought in the year 37 A.H. between Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and the
governor of Syria , Mu’awiyah, for the so-called avenging for the killing of Caliph AOthman.
But in reality it was nothing more than Mu’awiyah who had been the autonomous governor of
Syria from Caliph AOmer’s days. He, not wanting to lose that position by swearing allegiance to
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) but wanting to keep his authority intact by exploiting the killing
of Caliph AOthman, for later events, proved, that after securing the government, he did not take
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any practical step to avenge AOthman’s blood. And he never spoke, not even through omission,
about the killers of AOthman.
Although from the first day Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) realized that was inevitable, it was
still necessary to exhaust all pleas. Therefore Monday the 12th Rajab, 36 A.H. he returned to
Kufa after the Battle of Jamal. He sent Jarir ibn AAbdillah al-Bajali with a letter to Mu’awiyah at
Damascus wherein he wrote that the Muhajirun and the Ansar had sworn allegiance to him and
that he too should first swear him allegiance and thereafter place the case of AOthman’s killing
before him so that he could pass verdict thereon according to the Holy Qur’an and Sunna. But
Mu’awiyah detained Jarir on several pretexts and after consulting AAmr ibn al-AAs, staged a
revolt on the excuse of AOthman’s killing. And with the help of important persons of Syria, he
convinced the ignorant people that the liability for AOthman’s life lay on Ali (A.S) and that he,
with his conduct, had encouraged the besiegers and had given them protection. Meanwhile he
hung the blood-stained shirt of AOthman and the amputated fingers of his wife Na’ila daughter
of al-Farafisah on the pulpit in the Central Mosque of Damascus around which seventy thousand
Syrians cried and swore the pledge to avenge AOthman’s blood. When Mu’awiyah had roused
the feelings of the Syrians to such an extent that they were determined to lay down their lives and
be killed, he secured their allegiance on the cause of avenging AOthman’s blood and busied
himself in equipping for the battle. Thereafter, he showed all this to Jarir and then sent him back
mortified.
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) learned of these matters through Jarir ibn AAbdillah alBajali, he was forced to rise against Mu’awiyah, and ordered Malik ibn Habib al-Yarbu’i to
mobilize the forces in the valley of An-Nukhayla. Consequently, people from the suburbs of
Kufa began arriving there in large numbers, till they exceeded eighty thousand. First of all, Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) sent a vanguard contingent, eight thousand strong, under Ziyad ibn anNadr al-Harithi and another of four thousand strong under Shurayh ibn Hani al-Harithi towards
Syria. After the departure of this vanguard contingent he himself set out for Syria at the head of
theremaining army on Wednesday the 5th of Shawwal. When he was out of the boundary of
Kufa he offered zuhr (noon) prayer and after staying at Dayr Abu Musa, Nahr (river) Nars,
Quba’t Qubbin, Babil, Dayr Ka’b, Kerbala’, Sabat, Bahurasini, al-Anbar and Jazira arrived at arRiqqah. The people of this place were in favor of AOthman, and at this very place Simak ibn
Makhtamah al-Asadi was putting up eight hundred men. These people had left Kufa to join
Mu’awiyah after deserting Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S). When they had seen Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib’s force, they had dismantled the bridge over the River Euphrates so that the Imam’s
army should not cross over to the other side of the river. But at the threatening of Malik ibn alHarith al-Ashtar an-Nakh’i they were frightened. After consultations among themselves they put
the bridge together again and Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) passed over it with his army. When
he alighted on the other side of the river he saw that Ziyad and Shurayh were also camped there
along with their men since both of them had adopted the land route. When, on reaching here,
they found that Mu’awiyah was advancing with his armies towards the Euphrates and thinking
that they would not be able to face him, they stopped there waiting for Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S). When they had given thereason for their stopping there, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
accepted their plea and sent them forward. When they reached Surat ar-Rum they found that
Abul-A’war al-Salami was camping there with his army. Both of them informed Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) of this. Whereupon he despatched Malik ibn al-Harith al-Ashtar an-Nakh’in in
their wake as the Officer in Command and cautioned him not to initiate the fighting but to try to
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counsel them and apprise them of the correct position as far as possible. In this way, on reaching
there Malik al-Ashtar encamped a little distance away. Fighting could have commenced any
moment, but he did not interfere with the other side nor did he take any step by which fighting
could have been commenced. But Abul-A’war suddenly attacked them at night, whereupon they
took their swords out of the sheaths and prepared to repulse them. Clashes between the two sides
went on for sometime but in the end, taking benefit of the darkness of night Abul-A’war fled
away. Since fighting had already commenced, soon after the appearance of dawn an Iraqi
commander, Hashim ibn AUtbah al-Mirqal az-Zuhri, took his position in the battlefield. From the
other side also a contingent came to face him, and the flames of fighting rose. At last Malik alAshtar challenged Abul-AAwar to fight him, but he did not dare to face him, and towards the
evening Malik al-Ashtar went onward with his men. The next day Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
reached there with his force and set off for Siffin with the vanguard contingent and other forces.
Mu’awiyah had already reached there and had set up his bases. He had also placed a guard on the
Euphrates and had occupied it. On reaching there Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) sent him word
to remove the guard from Euphrates, but he refused, whereupon Theiraqis took out their swords
and in a courageous attack captured the Euphrates. When this stage was over Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) sent Bashir ibn AAmr al-Ansari, Sa’id ibn Qays al-Hamdani and Shabath ibn Rib’i
at-Tamimi to Mu’awiyah to apprise him of the consequences of war and to make him agree to
settlement and allegiance. But his relay was that they could not by any means let AOthman’s
blood remain neglected, and that now the sword alone would arbitrate between them.
Consequently in the month of Dhi’l-hijjah 36 A.H. both the parties decided on war and warriors
from each side came out into the field to face their adversary. Those who entered the battlefield
from Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s side were: Hijr ibn AAdi al-Kindi, Shabath ibn Rib’i at-Tamimi,
Khalid ibn al-Mu’ammar, Ziyad ibn an-Nadr al-Harithi, Ziyad ibn Khasafah at-Taymi, Sa’id ibn
Qays al-Hamdani, Qays ibn Sa’d al-Ansari and Malik ibn al-Harith al-Ashtar an-Nakh’i while
from the Syrians there were, AAbd ar-Rahman ibn Khalid ibn al-Walid al-Makhzumi, AbulA’war al-Salami, Habib ibn Maslamah al-Fihri, AAbdullah ibn Dhi’l-Kala’al-Himyari,
AUbaydullah ibn AOmer ibn al-Khattab, Shurahbil ibn Simt al-Kindi, and Hamzah ibn Malik alHamdani. When the month of Thil-Hijja came to end the fighting had to be stopped for
Muharram, but from the 1st of Safar fighting was resumed and both parties arrayed themselves
opposite each other, equipped with swords, spears and other weapons. On Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib’s side Malik al-Ashtar was in command of the horsemen and AAmmar ibn Yasir of the foot
soldiers of Kufa while Sahl ibn Hanayf al-Ansari was in command of the horsemen and Qays ibn
Sa’d of the foot soldiers of Basra. The banner of the army was given to Hashim ibn AUtbah. In
the army of the Syrians on the right hand contingent ibn Dhi’l-Kala’ was in command, while on
the left hand contingent Habib ibn Maslamh, on horsemen AAmr ibn al-AAs and on foot soldiers
ad-Dahhak ibn Qays al-Fihri were in command.
On the first day Malik ibn al-Ashtar entered the battlefield with his men, and from the other
side Habib ibn Maslamah came out with his men to face him and from both sides a fierce battle
ensued. Throughout the day swords clashed with swords and spears with spears.
The next day, Hashim ibn AUtbah came out with Ali’s army and from the other side AbulA’war with his footmen came to face him. When the two armies approached each other,
horsemen fell upon horsemen and footmen upon footmen and continued attacking each other,
and they endured with great patience and steadfastness.
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On the third day, AAmmar ibn Yasir and Ziyad ibn an-Nadr came out with horsemen and foot
soldiers and from the other side AAmr ibn al-AAs came forward with a big force. Ziyad attacked
the horsemen of the opposite side and Malik al-Ashtar attacked the foot soldiers so furiously that
the enemy’s men lost ground and, failing to offer resistance, returned to their camps.
On the fourth day Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya appeared on the battlefield with his men.
From the other side AUbaydullah ibn AOmer came forward with the Syrian army and both the
armies had a serious encounter.
On the fifth day AAbdullah ibn AAbbas came forward and from the other side al-Walid ibn
AUqba ibn Abu Mu’ayt came to face him. AAbdullah ibn AAbbas carried the assaults with great
steadfastness and courage and gave such a brave fight that the enemy left the field in retreat.
On the sixty day Qays ibn Sa’d al-Ansari came forward with the army and to face him ibn
Dhi’l-Kala’ came out with his contingent, and such a severe fighting ensued that at every step
bodies were seen falling and blood flowing like streams. At last the darkness of the night
separated the two armies.
On Theseventh day Malik al-Ashtar came out and to face him, Habib ibn Maslamah came
forward with his men, and fighting raged till zuhr (noon).
On the eighth day Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) himself came out with the army and made
such an assault that the entire battlefield quaked, and piercing through the ranks and warding off
shots of arrows and spears he came and stood between both the lines. Then he challenged
Mu’awiyah, whereupon the latter, along with AAmr ibn al-AAs, came a bit closer. Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) said to him: ACome out and face me. Let whoever kills the other be the ruler.
Whereupon AAmr ibn al-AAs said to Mu’awiyah: Ali (A.S) is right. Gather up a little courage
and face him. Mu’awiyah replied, AI am not prepared to waste my life at your taunting. Saying
this he went back. When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) saw him retreating he smiled and
himself too returned. The daring with which Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) led the attacks in
Siffin can only be called a miraculous feat. Thus, whenever he came out challenging in the
battlefield, the enemy lines were dispersed into utter disarray and confusion, and even
courageous combatants hesitated to appear against him. That is why on a few occasions he came
onto the battlefield in changed dress so that the enemy should not recognize him and someone
should be prepared to engage with him personally. Once AArar ibn Ad’ham came from the other
side to engage in duel al-AAbbas ibn Rabi’ah al-Harith ibn AAbdul-Muttalib. They remained
engaged but neither could defeat the other, until al-AAbbas chanced to see that a link of his
adversary’s amour was loose. With a swift stroke he entangled the point of his sword in it, and
then with a quick jerk he cut through a few more links. Then with true aim he gave such a blow
that his sword went straight into his bosom. Seeing this, people raised the call of takbir.
Mu’awiyah was startled at this noise and on coming to know that AArar ibn Ad’ham had been
slain he was much disturbed and shouted if there was anyone to take revenge for AArar ibn
Adham and kill al-AAbbas. Al-AAbbas came to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) to seek
permission. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) detained him, put on al-AAbbas dress, and riding on
al-AAbbas’s horse entered the battlefield. Taking him to be al-AAbbas, the Lakhams said: ASo
you have got your chief’s permission. In reply Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) recited the
following verse:
Permission (to fight is) given unto those upon whom war is made for they have been
oppressed, and verily, to help them, Allah is Most Potent. (Holy Qur’an, 22:39)
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Now one man came out from the other side shouting like an elephant, ran amok and assaulted
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), but the Imam avoided the blow and then gave such a clean cut
with his sword to the other’s back that he was split into two. People thought the blow had gone
without avail, but when his horse jumped his two separate parts fell on the ground. After him
another man came out but he too was finished in the twinkling of an eye. Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) challenged others but from the strokes of his sword the enemy came to know that it
was Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) in the dress of al-AAbbas and so none dared come to face
him.
On the ninth day, the right wing was under the command of AAbdullah ibn Budayi and the
left wing under that of AAbdullah ibn AAbbas. In the center was Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
himself. On the other side Habib ibn Maslamah commanded the Syrian army. When both the
lines had come face to face with each other, the valiant soldiers drew out their swords and
pounced upon one another like ferocious lions, and fighting raged on all sides. The banner of the
right wing of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s army was revolving in the hands of Banu Hamdan.
Whenever anyone of them fell, martyred, someone else would pick up the banner. First of all
Kurayb ibn Shurayh raised the banner, on his fall Shurahbil ibn Shurayh took it up, then Marthad
ibn Shurayh, then Hubayrah ibn Shurayh then Yarim ibn Shurayh, then Sumayr ibn Shurayh and
after the killing of all these six brothers the banner was taken up by Sufyan, then AAbd, then
Kurayb, the three sons of Zayd, who all fell martyred. After that the banner was lifted by two
brothers (sons) of Bashir namely AUmayr and al-Harithi and when they too fell martyred, Wahab
ibn Kurayb took up the banner. On this day the enemy’s greater attention was on the right wing
and its assaults were so fierce that the men lost ground and began to retreat from the battlefield.
Only three hundred men remained with the Officer in Command AAbdullah ibn Budayl. On
seeing this Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) asked Malik al-Ashtar to call them back and challenge
them as to where they were fleeing. AIf the days of life are over they cannot avoid death by
running away. Now the defeat of the right wing could not be without effect on the left wing, so
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) turned to the left wing and advanced forward, forcing through the
enemy lines, whereupon a slave of Banu Umayyah named Ahmar said to him, AAllah may make
me die if I fail to slay you today. On hearing this Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s slave Kaysan leapt
over him but was killed by him. When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) saw this he caught him by
the skirt of his amour and, picking him up, threw him down so forcefully that all his joints were
smashed, whereupon Imam Hasan () and Muhammed ibn al-Hanafiyya came forward and
dispatched him to Hell. Meanwhile, after having been called to Malik al-Ashtar and his having
made them feel ashamed, those who retreated came back and again assaulted so steadfastly that
pushing back the enemy they reached the place where AAbdullah ibn Budayl was surrounded by
the enemy. When he saw his own men he picked up courage and leapt towards Mu’awiyah’s tent
with drawn sword. Malik al-Ashtar tried to stop him but he couldn’t, and, killing seven Syrians,
he reached the tent of Mu’awiyah. When Mu’awiyah noticed him close by he ordered him to be
stoned, as a result of which he was overpowered and the Syrians crowded over him and killed
him. When Malik al-Ashtar saw this he proceeded forward with the combatants of Banu Hamdan
and Banu Madh’hij for an attack on Mu’awiyah, and began dispersing the contingent on guard
around him. When, out of the five circles of his guards only one remained to be dispersed,
Mu’awiyah put his foot in the stirrup of his horse in order to run away, but on someone’s
encouragement again stopped. On another side of the battlefield a tumult was raging from one
end to the other by the swords of AAmmar ibn Yasir and Hashim ibn AUtbah. From whatever
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side AAmmar passed, the companions (of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) )
flocked around him and then made such a joint assault that destruction spread throughout the
enemy lines. When Mu’awiyah saw them advancing he threw his fresh forces towards them. But
he continued displaying the excellence of his bravery under the storm of swords and spears. At
last Abul-AAdiah al-Juhani hit him with a spear from which he could not balance himself and
then ibn Hawiy (Jawn as-Saksiki) came forward and slew him. AAmmar ibn Yasir’s death
caused tumult in Mu’awiyah’s ranks because about him they had heard the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) having said: AAmmar will be killed at the hands of a rebellious
party. Thus before he fell as martyr Dhu’l-Kala’ had said to AAmr ibn al-Aas, AI see AAmmar on
Ali’s side; are we that rebellious party? AAmr ibn al-AAs had assured him that eventually AAmar
would join them, but when he was killed fighting on Ali’s side therebellious party stood exposed
and no scope was left for any other interpretation. Nevertheless Mu’awiyah started telling the
Syrians, AWe did not kill AAmmar, but Ali did it because he brought him to the battlefield.
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) heard this cunning sentence he remarked, AIn that case the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) killed Hamzah as he had brought him to the
battlefield of Uhud. Hashim ibn AUtbah also fell in this conflict. He was killed by al-Harith ibn
Munthir at-Tanukhi. After him the banner of the contingent was taken over by his son
AAbdullah.
When such fearless warriors were gone Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said to the warriors
from the tribes of Hamdan and Rabi’ah, ATo me you are like amour and spear. Get up and teach
these rebels a lesson. Consequently, twelve thousand combatants of the tribes of Rabi’ah and
Hamdan stood up, swords in hand. The banner was taken up by Hudyan ibn al-Munthir. Entering
the lines of the enemy, they used their swords in such a way that heads began to drop, bodies fell
in huge heaps and on every side streams of blood flowed. And the assaults of those swordsmen
knew no stopping till the day began to end with all its devastation. And the gloom of eve set in,
ushering in that fearful night which is known in history as the night of al-Harir, wherein the
clashing’of weapons, the hoofs of horses and the hue and cry of the Syrians created such notice
that even voices reaching the ears could not be heard. On Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s side, his
wrong-crushing slogans raised waves of courage and valor, and on the enemy’s side they shook
the hearts in their bosoms. The battle was at its zenith. The quivers of the bowmen had become
empty. The stalks of the spears had been broken. Hand to hand fighting went on with swords
only and dead bodies collected in heaps, till by morning the number of killed had exceeded thirty
thousand.
On the tenth day Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s men showed the same morale. On the right wing
Malik al-Ashtar held the command and on the left wing AAbdullah ibn AAbbas. Assaults went
on like the assaults of new soldiers. Signs of defeat appeared on the Syrians, and they were about
to leave the battlefield and run away, when five hundred Holy Qur’ans were raised on spears
changing the entire face of the battle. Moving swords stopped, the weapon of deceit was
successful, and the way was clear for wrong to hold its sway.
In this battle forty-five thousand Syrians were killed while twenty-five thousand Iraqis fell as
martyrs. (Kitab Siffin by Nasr ibn Muzahim al-Minqari [d. 212 A.H.] and Tarikh al-Tabari, Vol.
1, p p.3256-3349).
SERMON 124
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About the Kharijites and their opinion on Arbitration
We did not name people the arbitrators but we named the Holy Qur’an the arbitrator. The
Holy Qur’an is a book, covered, between two flaps, and it does not speak. It should therefore
necessarily have an interpreter. Men alone can be such interpreters. When these people invited us
to name the Holy Qur’an as the arbitrator between us, we could not be the party turning away
from the Book of Allah, since Allah has said:
.And then if ye quarrel about anything refer it to Allah
and the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . (Holy Qur’an, 4:59)
Reference to Allah means that we decide according to the Holy Qur’an while reference to the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) means that we follow his Sunna. Now therefore, if
arbitration were truly done through the Book of Allah (Holy Qur’an), we would be the most
rightful of all people for the Caliphate; or if it were done by the Sunna of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) , we would be the most preferable of them.
Concerning your point why I allowed a time lag between myself and them with regard to the
Arbitration, I did so in order that the ignorant may find out (the truth) and one who already
knows may hold with it firmly. Possibly Allah may, as a result of this peace, improve the
condition of these people, and they will not be caught by the throats and will not, before
indication of the right, fall into rebellion as before. Certainly the best man before Allah is he who
loves most to act according to right, even though it causes him hardship and grief, rather than
according to wrong, even though it gives him benefit and increase.
So, where are you being mislead and from where have you been brought (to this state) ? Be
prepared to march to the people who have deviated from the right and do not see it, have been
entangled in wrong-doing and are not corrected. They are away from the Book and turned from
the (right) path. You are not trustworthy to rely upon, nor are you holders of honor to be adhered
to. You are very bad in kindling the fire of fighting. Woe to you! I had to bear a lot of worries
from you. Some days I call to you (to jihad) and some days, I speak to you in confidence. You
are neither true free men at the time of call, nor trustworthy brothers at the time of speaking in
confidence.
SERMON 125
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was spoken ill of for showing equality in the distribution
(of shares from bayt al-mal or the Muslim Public Treasury) he said:
Do you command me that I should seek support by oppressing those over whom I have been
placed? By Allah, I won’t do so as long as the world goes on, and as long as one star leads
another in the sky. Even if it were my property, I would have distributed it equally among them,
then why not when the property is that of Allah. Beware; certainly that giving of wealth without
any right for it is wastefulness and lavishness. It raises its doer in this world, but lowers him in
the next world. It honors him before people, but disgraces him with Allah. If a man gives his
property to those who have no right for it or do not deserve it, Allah deprives him of their
gratefulness, and their love too would be for others. Then if he falls on bad days and needs their
help, they would prove the worst comrades and ignoble friends.
SERMON 126
About the Kharijites
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If you do not stop believing that I have gone wrong and have been misled, why do you
consider that the common men among the followers of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) have gone astray like me, and
accuse them with my wrong, and hold them unbelievers on account of my sins. You are holding
your swords on your shoulders and using them right and wrong. You are confusing those who
have committed sins with those who have not. You know that the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) stoned the protected (married) adulterers, then he also said his burial prayer and
allowed his successors to inherit from him. He amputated (the hand of) the thief and whipped the
unprotected (unmarried) adulterer, but thereafter allowed their shares from the booty, and they
married Muslim women. Thus the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) took them to ask for
their sins and also abided by Allah’s commands about them, but did not disallow them their
rights created by Islam, nor did he remove their names from its followers.
Certainly you are the most evil of all persons and are those whom Satan has put on his lines
and thrown out into his wayless land. With regard to me, two categories of people will be ruined,
namely he who loves me too much and the hatred which takes him away from rightfulness. The
best man with regard to me is he who is on the middle course. So be with him and be with the
great majority (of Muslims) because Allah’s hand (of protection) is on keeping unity. You
should beware of division because the one isolated from the group is (a prey) to Satan just as the
one isolated from the flock of sheep is (a prey) to the wolf.
Beware, whoever calls to this course, kill him, even though he may be under this headband of
mine. Certainly the two arbitrators were appointed to revive what the Holy Qur’an revives and to
destroy what the Holy Qur’an destroys. Revival means to unite on it (in a matter) and destruction
means to divide on a matter. If the Holy Qur’an drives us to them we should follow them, and if
it drives them to us they should follow u, p. May you have no father! (Woe to you), I did not
cause you any misfortune, nor have I deceived you in any matter, nor created any confusion.
Your own group had unanimously suggested in favor of these two men and we bound them that
they would not exceed the Holy Qur’an but they deviated from it and abandoned the right
although both of them were conversant with it. This wrong-doing was the dictate of their hearts.
So they trod upon it, although we had stipulated that in arbitrating with justice and sticking to
rightfulness they would avoid the evil of their own views and the mischief of their own verdict
(but since this has happened the award is not acceptable to us).
SERMON 127
About important events in Basra
O Ahnaf! It is as though I see him advancing with an army which has neither dust nor noise,
nor rustling of reins, nor neighing of horses. They are trampling the ground with their feet as if
they are the feet of ostriches.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) pointed to the Chief of the
Blackes, (Sahibu’z-Zanj).1 Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said,
Woe to you (the people of Basra’s) inhabited streets and decorated houses which possess
wings like the wings of vultures and trunks like the trunks of elephants. They are the people from
among whom if one is killed he is not mourned and if one is lost he is not searched for. I turn this
world over on its face, value it only according to its (low) value, and look at it with an eye
suitable to it.
A portion of the same sermon:
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Referring to the Turks (Mongols)
I2 can see a people whose faces are like shields covered with roughly-scraped skins. They
dress themselves in silken and woolen clothes and hold dear excellent horses. Their killing and
bloodshed shall take place freely till the wounded shall walk over the dead and the number of
runners-away shall be less than those taken prisoner.
One of his companions said to him, AO Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), you have been given
knowledge of hidden things. Whereupon Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) laughed and said to the
man who belonged to the tribe of Banu Kalb,
AO brother of Kalb! This is not knowledge of hidden things (Ailmul-ghayb),3 these matters
have been acquired from him (namely in Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) who knew
them. As regard knowledge of hidden things, that means knowledge of the Day of Judgment, and
the things covered by Allah in the verse;
Verily, Allah is He with Whom is the knowledge of the Hour. (Holy Qur’an, 31:34)
Therefore, Allah alone knows what is there in the wombs, whether male or female, ugly or
handsome, generous or miserly, mischievous or pious, and who will be the fuel for Hell and who
will be in the company of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) s in Paradise. This is the
knowledge of the hidden things which is not known to anyone save Allah. All else is that whose
knowledge Allah passed on to His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and he passed it on to
me, and prayed for me that my bosom may retain it and my ribs may hold it.
1. Ali ibn Muhammed was born in the village of Warzanin in the suburbs of Ray, and
belonged to the Azariqah sect of the Kharijites. He claimed to be a Sayyid (descendant of the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) by showing himself the son of Muhammed ibn
Ahmed al-Mukhtafi ibn AIsa ibn Zayd ibn Ali ibn al-Husain ibn Ali ibn Abu Talib, but the
experts on genealogy, as well as biographers, have all rejected his claim to being a Sayyid and
have given his father’s name as Muhammed ibn AAbd ar-Rahim instead of Muhammed ibn
Ahmed. The former was from the tribe of AAbdul-Qays and had been born of a Sindi maid-slave.
Ali ibn Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) rose as an insurgent in 255 A.H. in
thereign of al-Muhtadi Billah and associated with him the people from the suburbs of Basra on
promise of money, wealth and freedom. He entered Basra on the 17th Shawwal, 255 A.H. killing
and looting, and in only two days he put to death thirty thousand individuals, men, women and
children, and displayed extreme opposition, bloodshed, savageness and ferocity. He dismantled
houses, burnt mosques, and after continuous killing and devastation for fourteen years, was
killed in the month of Safar, 270 A.H. in thereign of Muwaffaq Billah. Then people got rid of his
devastating deeds.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s prophecy is one of those prophecies which throw light on his
knowledge of the unknown. The details of his army given by Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
namely that there would be neither the neighing of horses nor the rustling of weapons therein is a
historical fact. The historian al-Tabari has written that when this man reached near al-Karkh (a
sector of Baghdah) with the intention of instruction, the people of that place welcomed him, and
a man presented him a horse for which no rein could be found despite a search. At last he rode it
using a rope for therein. Similarly there were at that time only three swords in his force-one with
himself, one with Ali ibn Aban al-Muhallabi, and one with Muhammed ibn Salm but later they
collected some more weapons by marauding.
2. This prophecy of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) is about the attack of the Tartars
(Mongols) who were inhabitants of the Mongolian desert in the north west of Turkey. These
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semi-savage tribes lived by marauding, killing and devastating. They used to fight among
themselves and attack neighboring areas. Each tribe had a separate chief who was deemed
responsible for their protection. Chingiz Khan (Temujin) who was one of the ruling chiefs of
these tribes and was very brave and courageous had risen to organize all their divided tribes into
one, and, despite their opposition he succeeded in overpowering them through his might and
sagacity. Collecting a large number under his banner he rose in 606 A.H. like a torrent and went
on dominating cities and ruining populations till he conquered the area up to North China.
When his authority was established he offered his terms of settlement to AAla’ud-Din
Khwarazm Shah, ruler of the neighboring country of Turkey, and through a deputation
concluded an agreement with him that Tartar traders would be allowed to visit his country for
trade and their life and property would not be subject to any harm. For some time they traded
freely without fear but on one occasion AAla’ud-Din accused them of spying, seized their goods
and had them killed by the Chief of Atrar. When Chingiz Khan learned of the breach of the
agreement and the killing of Tartar merchants his eyes cast forth flames and he began trembling
with rage. He sent word to AAla’ud-Din to return the goods of the Tartar merchants and to hand
over to him the ruler of Atrar. AAla’d-Din, who was mad with power and authority, did not pay
any heed, and acting short-sightedly killed even the plenipotentiary of Jenkiz Khan. Now
Chinzing Khan lost all patience and his eyes filled with blood. He rose with his sword in hand,
and the Tartar warriors leapt towards Bukhara on their speedy stallions. AAla’ud-Din came out
with four hundred thousand combatants to face him but could not resist the incessant assaults of
the Tartars, and having been vanquished only after a few attacks ran away to Nishabur across the
river Jaxartes (Sihun). The Tartars smashed Bukhara and razed it to the ground. They pulled
down schools and mosques, burning the houses to ashes and killing men and women without
distinction. The next year they assaulted Samarqand and devastated it completely. After the fight
of AAla’ud-Din, his son Jalalu’d-Din Khwarazm Shah had assumed thereins of government. The
Tartars chased him also, and for ten years he fled from one place to the other but did not fall in
their hands. At last he crossed over the river out of the boundaries of his realm. During this time
the Tartars did their utmost to ruin populated lands and to annihilate humanity. No city escaped
their ruining and no populace could avoid their trampling. Wherever they went they upset the
kingdom, overthrown governments, and in a short time established their authority over the
northern portion of Asia.
When Chingiz Khan died in 622 A.H. his own son Ogedei Khan succeeded him. He searched
out Jalalu’d-Din in 628 A.H. and killed him. After him Mongka Khan, the son of the other son of
Chingiz Khan, occupied the throne. After Mongka Khan, Qubilai Khan succeeded to a part of the
country and the control of Asia fell to the share of his brother Hulagu Khan. On the division of
the whole realm among the grandsons of Chingiz Khan, Hulagu Khan was thinking of
conquering Muslims area when the Hanafite of Khurasan in enmity with the Shafi’ite invited him
to attack Khurasan. He therefore led an assault on Khurasan, and the Hanafite, thinking
themselves to be safe from the Tartars, opened the city gates for them. But the Tartars did not
make any distinction between Hanafite and Shafi’ite and killed whoever fell to their hands. After
killing most of its population they took it in occupation. These very differences between the
Hanafite and the Shafi’ite opened for him the door of conquest up to Iraq. Consequently, after
conquering Khurasan his courage increased and in 656 A.H. he marched on Baghdad with two
hundred thousand Tartars, al-Musta’sim Billah’s army and the people of Baghdad jointly faced
them, but it was not in their power to stop this torrent of calamity. The result was that the Tartars
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entered Baghdad on the day of AAshura’ carrying with them bloodshed and ruin. They remained
busy in killing for forty days. Rivers of blood flowed in the streets and all the alleys were filled
with dead bodies. Hundred of thousands of people were put to the sword while al-Musta’sim
Billah was trampled to death under foot. Only those people who hid themselves in wells or
underground places and hid from their sight could survive. This was the devastation of Baghdad
which shook of AAbbasid Kingdom to its foundation, so that its flag could never fly thereafter.
Some historians have laid the blame of this ruin on ibn al-AAlqami (Abu Talib, Muhammed
ibn Ahmed al-Baghdadi), the minister of al-Musta’sim Billah, by holding that, moved by the
general masses of the Shi’as and the ruin of al-Karkh sector (of Baghdad), he invited Hulagu
Khan through thelatter’s minister, the great scholar Nasir’d-Din Muhammed ibn Muhammed atTusi, to march on Baghdad. Even if it be so, it is not possible to ignore the historical fact that
before this the AAbbasid Caliph an-Nasir Lidini’llah had initiated the move for the attack on the
Muslim areas. When the Khwarazm Shahs declined to acknowledge the authority of the
Caliphate he had sent word to Chingiz Khan to march on Khwarazm, from which the Tartars had
understood that there was no unity and cooperation among the Muslims. Thereafter the Hanafite
had sent for Hulagu Khan to crush the Shafi’ite as a consequence of which the Tartars secured
control over Khurasan, and prepared the way to march towards Baghdad. In these circumstances
to hold only ibn al-AAlqami responsible for the ruination of Baghdad and to ignore the move of
an-Nasir Lidini’llah and the dispute between the Hanafite and the Shafi’ite would be covering up
the facts, when in fact the cause for the ruin of Baghdad was this very conquest of Khurasan,
whose real movers were the Hanafite inhabitants of the place. It was by this conquest that
Hulagu Khan had the courage to march on the center of Islam. Otherwise it cannot have been
theresult of a single individual’s message that he assaulted an old capital like Baghdad, the awe
of whose power and grandeur was seated in the hearts of a large part of the world.
3. To know hidden things on a personal level is one thing, while to be gifted by Allah with
knowledge of any matter and to convey it to others is different. The knowledge of the future
which the prophets and vicegerents possess is gained by them through Allah’s teaching and
informing. Allah alone has knowledge of events which are to happen in the future. Of course, He
passes this knowledge on to whoever He wills. Thus He says the following:
(He alone is) the AKnower of the unseen, neither doth He reveal His secrets unto any (one
else) save unto that one of the Messengers whom He chooses.(Holy Qur’an, 72:26-27)
In this way Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) also received knowledge of the future through the
instructions of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) or inspiration from Allah, for which
these words of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) stand evidence. Of course, sometimes it is not
proper or expedient to disclose certain matters and they are allowed to remain under a veil.
Then no one can be acquainted with them as Allah says,
Verily, Allah is He with Whom is the knowledge of the Hour and He sendeth down the rain,
and knoweth He what is in the wombs; and knoweth not any soul what he shall earn the morrow,
and knoweth not any soul in what lands he shall die: Verily Allah is All-knowing, All-aware.
(Holy Qur’an, 31:34)
SERMON 128
About measures and weights, the transience of this world and the condition of its people
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O creatures of Allah! You and whatever you desire from this world are like guests with fixed
period of stay, and like debtors called upon to pay. Life is getting short while (therecords of)
actions are being preserved. Many strivers are wasting (their efforts) and many of those who
exert are heading towards harm. You are in a period when steps of virtue are moving backwards,
steps of evil are moving forward and Satan is increasing his eagerness to ruin people. This is the
time that his equipment is strong, his traps have been spread and his prey has become easy (to
catch).
Cast your glance over people wherever you like, you will see either a poor man suffering from
poverty, or a rich man ignoring Allah despite His bounty over him, or a miser increasing his
wealth by trampling on Allah’s obligations, or an unruly person closing his ears to all counsel.
Where are your good people; where are your virtuous people? Where are your high-spirited men
and generous men? Where are those of you who avoid deceit in their business and remain pure
in their behavior? Have they not all departed from this ignoble, transitory and troublesome
world? Have you not been left among people who are just like rubbish and so low that lips avoid
mention of them and do not move even to condemn their low position.
.Verily we are Allah’s and verily unto Him shall we return.
(Holy Qur’an, 2:156)
Mischief has appeared and there is no one to oppose and change it, nor anyone to dissuade
from it or desist from it. Do you, with these qualities, hope to secure abode in the purified
neighborhood of Allah and to be regarded His staunch lovers? Alas! Allah cannot be deceived
about His paradise and His will cannot be secured save by His obedience. Allah may curse those
who advise good but they themselves avoid it, and those who desist others from evil but they
themselves act upon it.
1
SERMON 129
Delivered when Abu Tharr was exiled towards Rabatha
O Abu Tharr! You showed anger in the name of Allah therefore have hope in Him for whom
you became angry. The people were afraid of you in the matter of their (pleasure of this) world
while you feared them for your faith. Then leave to them that for which they are afraid of you
and get away from them taking away what you fear them about. How needy are they for what
you dissuade them from and how heedless are you towards what they are denying you. You will
shortly know who is the gainer tomorrow (on the Day of Judgment) and who is more enviable.
Even if these skies and earth were closed to some individual and he feared Allah, then Allah
would open them for him. Only rightfulness should attract you while wrongfulness should
detract you. If you had accepted their worldly attractions they would have loved you and if you
had shared in it they would have given you asylum.
1. Abu Tharr al-Ghifari’s name was Jundab ibn Junadah. He was an inhabitant of ar-Rabatha
which was a small village on the east side of Medina. When he heard about the proclamation of
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , he came to Mecca and after making inquiries saw
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and accepted Islam whereupon the unbelievers of
Quraish gave him all sorts of troubles and inflicted pain after pain, but he remained steadfast.
Among the acceptors of Islam he is the third, fourth or fifth. Along with this precedence in Islam
his renunciation and piety was so high that the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said,
"Among my people Abu Tharr is the like of AIsa (Jesus) son of Maryam (Mary) in
renunciation and piety."
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In thereign of AOmer, Abu Tharr left for Syria and during AOthman’s reign also remained
there. He spent his days in counseling, preaching, acquainting people with the greatness of the
members of the Prophet’s family and guiding the people to the rightful path. The traces of
Shi’ism now found in Syria and Jabal AAmil (north of Lebanon) are theresult of his preaching
and activity and the fruit of seeds sown by him. The Governor of Syria, Mu’awiyah, did not like
the conduct of Abu Tharr and was much disgusted with his open criticism and mention of the
money-making and other wrongful activities of AOthman. But he could do nothing. At last he
wrote to AOthman that if he remained there any longer he would rouse the people against the
Caliph. They should therefore be some remedy against this. On this, AOthman wrote to him that
Abu Tharr should be seated on an unsaddled camel and dispatched to Medina. The order was
obeyed and Abu Tharr was sent to Medina. On reaching Medina he resumed his preaching of
righteousness and truth. He would recall to the people the days of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) and refrain them from displays of kingly , p.antry, whereupon AOthman
was much perturbed and tried to restrict his speaking. One day he sent for him and said, AI have
come to know that you go about propagating that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) said,
AWhen Banu Umayyah will become thirty in number they will regard the cities of Allah as
their property, His creatures their slaves and His religion the tool of their treachery.
Abu Tharr replied that he had heard the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) say so.
AOthman said that he was speaking a lie and inquired from those beside him if any one had
heard this tradition and all replied in the negative. Abu Tharr then said that enquiry should be
made from Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S). He was sent for and asked about it. He said it was
correct and Abu Tharr was telling the truth. AOthman inquired on what basis he gave evidence
for the correctness of this tradition. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) replied that he had heard the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) say,
There is no speaker under the sky or over the earth more truthful than Abu Tharr.
Now AOthman could do nothing. If he still held him to be liar it would mean falsification of
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . He therefore kept quiet despite much perturbation,
since he could not refute him. On the other side Abu Tharr began speaking against the usurping
of Muslims’ property quite openly and whenever he saw AOthman he would recite this verse:
And those who hoard up gold and silver and spend it not in Allah’s way; announce thou unto
them a painful chastisement. On the Day (of Judgment) when it shall be heated in the fire of hell,
then shall be branded with it their foreheads and their sides and their backs; (saying unto them)
AThis is what ye hoarded up for yourselves, taste ye then what ye did hoard u, p. (Holy Qur’an,
9:34-35)
AOthman promised him money but could not entrap this free man in his golden net, then
resorted to repression but could not stop his truth-speaking tongue. At last he ordered him to
leave and go to ar-Rabatha and deputed Marwan, son of the man (al-Hakam) exiled by the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , to turn him out of Medina. At the same time he issued
the inhumane order that no one should speak to him nor see him off. But Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S), Imam Hasan, Imam Husain (), AAqil ibn Abu Talib, AAbdullah ibn Ja’far and AAmmar
ibn Yasir did not pay any heed to this order and accompanied him to see him off, and Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib (A.S) uttered these sentences (i.e., the above sermon) on that occasion.
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In Rabatha, Abu Tharr had to put up with a very hard life. It was here that his son Tharr and
his wife died and the sheep and goats that he was keeping for his livelihood also died. Of his
children only one daughter remained, who equally shared his starvation and troubles. When the
means of subsistence were fully exhausted and day after day passed without food she said to Abu
Tharr, AFather, how long shall we go on like this? We should go somewhere in search of
livelihood. Abu Tharr took her with him and set off for the wilderness. He could not find even
any foliage. At last he was tired and sat down at a certain place. Then he collected some sand
and, putting his head on it, lay down. Soon he began gasping, his eyes rolled up and pangs of
death gripped him.
When the daughter saw this condition she was perplexed and said, AFather, if you die in this
vast wilderness, how shall I manage for your burial quite alone. He replied, ADo not get upset.
The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) told me that I shall die in helplessness and some
Iraqis would arrange for my burial. After my death you put a sheet over me and then sit by the
roadway and when some caravan passes that way tell them that the Prophet’s companion Abu
Tharr has died. Consequently, after his death she went and sat by the roadside. After some time a
caravan passed that way. It included Malik ibn al-Harith al-Ashtar an-Nakh’i, Hijr ibn AAbdi atTa’i, AAlqamah ibn Qays an-Nakh’i, Sa’sa’ah ibn Suhhan al-AAbdi, al-Aswad ibn Yazid anNakh’i etc. who were all fourteen persons in number. When they heard about the passing away
of Abu Tharr they were shocked at his helpless death. They stopped their riding beasts and
postponed the onward journey for his burial. Malik al-Ashtar gave a sheet of cloth for his shroud.
It was valued at four thousand Dirhams. After his funeral rites and burial they departed. This
happened in the month of Dhi’l-hijjah, 32 A.H.
SERMON 130
Grounds for accepting the Caliphate and the qualities of a ruler and governor
O (people of) differing minds and divided hearts, whose bodies are present but wits are
absent. I am leading you (amicably) towards truthfulness, but you run away from it like goats
and sheep running away from the howling of a lion. How hard it is for me to uncover for you
Thesecrets of justice, or to straighten the curve of truthfulness.
O Lord! You knows that what we did was not to seek power nor to acquire anything from the
vanities of the world. We rather wanted to restore the signs of Your religion and to usher
prosperity into Your cities so that the oppressed among thy creatures might be safe and Your
forsaken commands might be established. O Lord! I am the first who leaned (towards You) and
who heard and responded (to the call of Islam). No one preceded me in prayer (salat) except the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
You certainly know that he who is in charge of honor, life, booty (enforcement of), legal
commandments and the leadership of the Muslims should not be a miser as his greed would aim
at their wealth. Nor should he be ignorant as he would then mislead them with his ignorance, nor
be of rude behavior who would estrange them with his rudeness. Nor should he deal unjustly
with wealth thus preferring one group over another, nor should he accept a bribe while taking
decisions, as he would forfeit (others) rights and hold them up without finality, nor should he
ignore Sunna as he would ruin the people.
SERMON 131
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Warning about death and counseling
We praise Him for whatever He takes or gives or whatever He inflicts on us or tries us with.
He is aware of all that is hidden and He sees all that is concealed. He knows all that breasts
contain or eyes hide. We render evidence that there is no god except He and that Muhammed
(P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) - peace be upon him and his progeny - has been chosen by
Him and deputed by Him - evidence tendered both secretly and openly, by heart and by tongue.
A portion of the same sermon:
By Allah, certainly it is reality not fun, truth not falsehood. It is none else than death. Its caller
is making himself heard and its dragsman is making haste. The majority of the people should not
deceive you. You have seen those who lived before you, amassed wealth, feared poverty and felt
safe from its (evil) consequences, the longevity of desires and the (apparent) distance from death.
How, then, death overtook them, turned them out of their homelands and took them out of their
places of safety. They were borne on coffins, people were busy about them one after another,
carrying them on their shoulders and supporting them with their hands.
Did you not witness those who engaged in long-reaching desires, built strong buildings,
amassed much wealth but their houses turned to graves and their collections turned into ruin.
Their property devolved on the successors and their spouses on those who came after them. They
cannot (now) add to their good acts nor invoke (Allah’s) mercy in respect of evil acts. Therefore,
whoever makes his heart habituated to fear Allah achieves a forward position and his action is
successful. Prepare yourself for it and do all that you can for Paradise. Certainly this world has
not been made a place of permanent stay for you. But it has been created as a pathway in order
that you may take from it the provisions of your (good) actions for the permanent house (in
Paradise). Be ready for departure from here and keep close your riding animals for setting off.
SERMON 132
On the Glory of Allah
This world and the next have submitted to Him their reins, and the skies and earth have flung
their keys towards Him. The thriving trees bow to Him in the morning and evening, and produce
for Him - flaming fire from their branches, and at His command, turn their own feed into ripe
fruits.
A portion of the same sermon: about the Holy Qur’an
The Book of Allah is among you. It speaks and its tongue does not falter. It is a house whose
pillars do not fall down, and a power whose supporters are never routed.
A portion of the same sermon: about the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Allah deputed the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) after a gap from the previous
prophets when there was much talk (among the people). With him Allah exhausted Theseries of
prophets and ended therevelation. He then fought for Him those who were turning away from
Him and were equating others with Him.
A portion of the same sermon: about this world
Certainly this world is the end of the sight of the (mentally) blind who see nothing beyond it.
The sight of a looker (who looks with the eye of his mind) pierces through and realizes that the
(real) house is beyond this world. The looker therefore wants to get out of it while the blind
wants to get into it. The looker collects provisions from it (for the next world) while the blind
collects provisions for this very world.
A portion of the same sermon: - A caution
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You should know that a man gets satiated and wearied with everything except life, because he
does not find for himself any pleasure in death. It is in the position of life for a dead heart, sight
for the blind eye, hearing for the deaf ear, quenching for the thirsty and it contains complete
sufficiency and safety.
The Book of Allah is that though which you see, you speak and you hear. Its one part speaks
for the other part, and one part testifies to the other. It does not create differences about Allah nor
does it mislead its own follower from (the path of) Allah. You are joined together in hatred of
each other and in the growing of herbage on your filth (i.e., for covering inner dirt by good
appearance outside). You are sincere with one another in your love of desires and bear enmity
against each other in earning wealth. The evil spirit (Satan) has perplexed you and deceit has
misled you. I seek the help of Allah for myself and you.
SERMON 133
Delivered when AOmer ibn al-Khattab consulted1Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) about
himself, taking part in the march towards Rome (Byzantine Empire)
Allah has taken upon Himself for the followers of this religion the strengthening of
boundaries and hiding of Thesecret places. Allah helped them when they were few and could not
protect themselves. He is living and will not die. If you will yourself proceed towards the enemy
and clash with them and fall into some trouble, there will be no place of refuge for the Muslims
other than their remote cities, nor any place they would return to. Therefore, you should send
there an experienced man and send with him people of good performance who are wellintentioned. If Allah grants you victory, then this is what you want. If it is otherwise, you would
serve as a support for the people and a returning place for the Muslims.
1. About Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), the strange position is adopted that on the one hand,
it is said that he was ignorant of practical politics and unacquainted with ways of administration
from which it is intended that therevolts created by the Umayyad’s lust for power should be
shown to be the outcome of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s weak administration. On the other hand,
much is made of the various occasion when the then Caliphs consulted Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S) in important affairs of State in the matter of wars with unbelievers. The aim in this is not to
exhibit his correctness of thinking and judgment of deep sagacity but to show that there was
unity and concord between him and the Caliphs so that attention should not be paid to the fact
that in some matters they also differed and that mutual clashes had also occurred. History shows
that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) did have differences of principles with the Caliphs and did
not approve every step of theirs. In Thesermon of ash-Shaqshaqiyya he has expressed in loud
words his difference of opinion and anger about each regime. Nevertheless, this difference does
not mean that correct guidance should be withheld in collective Islamic problems. Again, Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib’s character was so high that no one could imagine that he would ever evade
giving counsel which concerned the common wealth, or would give such counsel which would
damage public interests. That is why, despite differences of principles, he was consulted. This
throws light on the greatness of his character and the correctness of his thinking and judgment.
Similarly, it is a prominent trait of the Holy Prophet’s character that despite rejecting his claim to
prophethood the unbelievers acknowledged him the best trustee and could never doubt his
trustworthiness. Rather, even during clashes of mutual opposition they entrusted to him their
property without fear and never suspected that their property would be misappropriated.
Similarly, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was held to occupy so high a position of trust and
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confidence that friend and foe both trusted in the correctness of his counsel. So, just as the
Prophet’s conduct shows his height of trustworthiness, and just as it cannot be inferred from it
that there was mutual accord between him and the unbelievers, because trust has its own place
while the clash of Islam and unbelief has another, in the same way, despite having differences
with the Caliphs, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was regarded as the protector of national and
community interests and as the guardian of Islam’s well-being and prosperity. Thus when
national interests were involved he was consulted and he tendered his unbiased advice raising
himself above personal ends and keeping in view the Prophet’s tradition to the effect that AHe
who is consulted is a trustee never allowed any dishonesty or duplicity or interfere. When on the
occasion of the battle of Palestine, the AOmer consulted him about his taking part in it himself,
then, irrespective of whether or not his opinion would accord with AOmer’s feelings, he kept in
view Islam’s prestige and existence and counseled him to stay in his place and to send to the
battle-front such a man who should be experienced and well-versed in the art of fighting, because
the going of an inexperienced man would have damaged the established prestige of Islam and the
awe in which the Muslims were held which had existed from the Prophet’s days would have
vanished. In fact, in the AOmer’s going there Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) saw signs of defeat
and vanquishment. He therefore found Islam’s interest to lie in detaining him and indicated his
view in the words that:
If you have to retreat from the battlefield, it would not be your personal defeat only, but the
Muslims would lose heart by it and leave the battlefield and disperse here and there, because
with the officer in command leaving the field the army too would lose ground. Furthermore, with
the center being without the Caliph there would be no hope of any further assistance from behind
which could sustain courage of the combatants.
This is that counsel which is put forth as a proof of mutual accord, although this advice was
tendered in view of Islam’s prestige and life which was dearer to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
than any other interest. No particular individual’s life was dear to him for which he might have
advised against participation in the battle.
SERMON 134
There was some exchange of words between AOthman ibn AAffan and Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) when al-Mughirah ibn al-Akhnas1 said to AOthman that he would deal with Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) on his behalf whereupon Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said to alMughirah:
O son of the accursed and issueless, and of a tree which has neither root nor branch. Will you
deal with me? By Allah, Allah will not grant victory to him whom you support, nor will he be
able to stand up whom you raise. Get away from us. Allah may keep you away from your
purpose. Then do whatever you like. Allah may not have mercy on you if you have pity on me.
1. Al-Mughirah ibn al-Akhnas ath-Thaqafi was among the well-wishers of AOthman ibn
AAffan and the son of his paternal aunt. His brother Abul-Hakam ibn al-Akhnas was killed at the
hands of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) in the battle of Uhud, because of which he bore malice
against Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S). His father was one of those people who accepted Islam at
the time of fall of Mecca but retained heresy and hypocrisy in his heart. That is why Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib (A.S) called him accursed, and he called him issueless because he who has a son
like al-Mughira deserves to be called issueless.
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SERMON 135
About the sincerity of his own intention and support of the oppressed
Your allegiance to me was not without thinking,1 nor is my and your position the same. I seek
you for Allah’s sake but you seek me for your own benefits. O people! support me despite your
heart’s desires. By Allah, I will take revenge for the oppressed from the oppressor and will put a
string in the nose of the oppressor and drag him to the spring of truthfulness even though he may
grudge it.
1. Here Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) points to the view of AOmer bin al-Khattab which he
had on the allegiance of Abu Bakr on the day of saqifa when he said: A.let me clarify this to you
that the allegiance with Abu Bakr was a mistake and without thinking (falta) but Allah saved us
from its evil. Therefore, whoever (intends to) act like this you must kill him. (Sahih al-Bukhari,
Vol. 8, p.211; as-Sira an-Nabawiyyah, Ibn Hisham, Vol. 4, pp. 308-309; Tarikh al-Tabari, Vol.
1, p.1822; Al-Kamil, Ibn Al-Athir, Vol. 2, p.327; Tarikh ibn Kathir, Vol5, pp.245-246; AlMusnad of Imam Ahmed ibn Hanbal, Vol. 1, p. 255; Al-Sira al-Halabiyya, Vol. 3, pp. 388, 392;
Al-Ansab by al-Balathiri, Vol. 5, p. 15; Al-Tamhid by al-Baqillani, p. 196; Sharh ibn Abul-Hadid,
Vol. 2, p. 23)
SERMON 136
About Talhah and az-Zubayr
By Allah, they did not find any disagreeable thing in me, nor did they do justice between me
and themselves. Surely, they are now demanding a right which they have abandoned and blood
which they have themselves shed. If I partook in it with them then they too have a share in it, but
if they committed it without me the demand should be against them. The first step of their justice
should be that they pass verdict against themselves. I have my intelligence with me.
I have never mixed matters nor have they appeared mixed to me. Certainly, this is
therebellious group in which there is the near one (az-Zubayr), the scorpion’s venom (AA’isha)
and doubts which cast a veil (on facts). But the matter is clear, and the wrong has been shaken
from its foundation. Its tongue has stopped uttering mischief. By Allah, I will prepare for them a
cistern from which I alone will draw water. They will not be able to drink from it nor would they
be able to drink from any other place.
A portion of the same sermon:
You advanced towards me shouting Aallegiance, allegiance like she-camels having delivered
newly born young ones leaping towards their young. I held back my hand but you pulled it
towards you. I drew back my hand but you dragged it. O Lord! these two have ignored my rights
and did injustice to me. They both have broken allegiance to me, and roused people against me.
Unfasten You what they have fastened, and do not make strong what they have woven. Show
them the evil in what they aimed at and acted upon. Before fighting I asked them to be steadfast
in allegiance and behaved with them with consideration but they belittled the blessing and
refused (to adopt the course of) safety).
SERMON 137
Referring to events in the future
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He will direct desires towards (the path of) guidance while people will have turned guidance
towards desires, and he will turn their views to the direction of the Holy Qur’an while the people
will have turned the Holy Qur’an to their views.
A portion of the same sermon:
(Before this Enjoiner of Allah,1 matters will deteriorate) till war will rage among you with full
force, showing forth its teeth, with udders full of sweet milk but with a sour tip. Beware, it will
be tomorrow and the morrow will come soon with things which you do not know. The Man in
power, not from this crowd, will take to task all those were formerly appointed for their ill deeds
and the earth will pour forth its internal treasures and fling before him easily her keys. He will
show you the just way of behavior and revive the Holy Qur’an and Sunna which have become
lifeless (among people).
A portion of the same sermon:
As if I see (him), he (the Enjoiner of Evil) 2 is shouting in Syria and is extending his banners
to the outskirts of Kufa. He is bent towards it like the biting of the she-camel. He has covered the
ground with heads. His mouth is wide open and (the trampling of) his footsteps on the ground
have become heavy. His advance is broad and his attacks are severe.
By Allah, he will disperse you throughout the earth till only a few of you remain, like kohl in
the eye. You will continue like this till the Arabs return to their sense. You should therefore stick
to established ways, clear signs and the early period which has the lasting virtues of the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) hood. You should know that Satan makes his ways easy so that
you may follow him on his heels.
1. This prophecy of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) is with regard to the appearance of the
Twelfth Imam, Abul-Qasim Muhammed ibn al-Hasan, al-Mahdi ().
2. This refers to AAbdul-Malik ibn Marwan who came to power in Syria after his father
Marwan ibn al-Hakam and then after the killing of al-Mukhtar ibn Abu AUbayd ath-Thaqafi in
his encounter with Mis’ab ibn az-Zubayr he proceeded towards Iraq. He clashed with Mis’ab’s
force at Maskin near Dayru’l-jathaliq in the outskirts of Kufa. After defeating him he made a
victorious entry into Kufa and took allegiance from its inhabitants. Then he sent al-Hajjaj ibn
Yusuf ath-Thaqafi to Mecca to fight with AAbdullah ibn az-Zubayr. Consequently this man
besieged Mecca and stoned it, and shed the blood of thousands of innocent persons like water.
He killed ibn az-Zubayr and hung his body on the gallows. He perpetrated such atrocities on the
people that one shudders at the thought of them.
SERMON 138
On the occasion of the Consultative Committee (after the death of AOmer ibn al-Khattab)
No one preceded me in inviting people to truthfulness, in giving consideration to kinship and
practicing generosity. So, hear my word and preserve what I say. Maybe you will see soon after
today that over this matter swords will be drawn and pledges will be broken, so much so that
some of you will become leaders of the people of misguidance and followers of people of
ignorance.
SERMON 139
About backbiting and speaking ill of others’1
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Those who do not commit sins and have been gifted with safety (from sins) should take pity
on sinners and other disobedient people. Gratitude should be mostly their indulgence and it
should prevent them from (finding faults with) others. What about the backbiter who blames his
brother and finds fault with him? Does he not remember that Allah has concealed the sins which
he committed while they were bigger than his brother’s sins pointed out by him? How can he
vilify him about his sins when he has himself committed one like it? Even if he has not
committed a similar sin he must have committed bigger ones. By Allah, even if he did not
commit big sins but committed only small sins, his exposing the sins of people is itself a big sin.
O creatures of Allah, do not be quick in exposition anyone’s sin for he may be forgiven for it,
and do not feel yourself safe even for a small sin because you may be punished for it. Therefore,
every one of you who comes to know the faults of others should not expose them in view of what
he knows about his own faults, and he should remain busy in thanks that he has been saved from
what others have been indulging in.
1. The habit of fault finding and backbiting has become so common that even the feeling of its
evilness has disappeared. And at present neither the high avoid it nor the low; neither the high
position of the pulpit prevents it nor the sacredness of the mosque. Whenever a few companions
sit together their topic of conversation and engaging interest is just to discuss the faults of their
opponents with added color, and to listen to them attentively. Although the fault-finder is himself
involved in the faults which he picks up in others, yet he does not like that his own faults should
be exposed. In such a case, he should have consideration for similar feelings in others and should
avoid searching for their faults and hurting their feelings. He should act after the proverb: ADo
not do unto others what you do not want others to do unto you.
Backbiting is defined as the exposure of the fault of a brother-in-faith with the intent to vilify
him in such a way as to irritate him, whether it be by speaking, acting, implication or suggestion.
Some people take backbiting to cover only that which is false or contrary to fact. According to
them to relate what was seen or heard, exactly as it was, is not backbiting, and they say that they
are not backbiting but only relating exactly what they saw or heard. But in fact backbiting is the
name of this very relating of the facts, because if it is not factually correct it would be false
accusation and wrong blame. It is related about the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) that
he said:
ADo you know what backbiting is? People said, AAllah and His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) know better. Then he said, ABackbiting means that you say about your brother a
thing which pains him. Someone said, ABut what if I say what is actually true about him? the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) replied, AIt is backbiting only when it is factually true,
otherwise you would be accusing him falsely.
There are many causes for indulging in backbiting, and because of this a man commits it
sometimes knowingly and sometimes unknowingly. Abu Hamid al-Ghazali has recounted these
causes in detail in his book Ihya’ AUlumud-Din. A few of the important ones are:
1) To make fun of anyone or to make him appear abased.
2) To make people laugh and to display one’s own jolliness and high spirits.
3) Expressing one’s feelings under the influence of rage and anger.
4) To establish one’s feelings under the influence of rage and anger.
5) To disprove one’s connection or involvement in a matter; namely that a particular evil was
not committed by oneself but by someone else.
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6) To associate oneself with some group when in their company in order to avoid strangeness
with them.
7) To belittle a person from whom it is feared that he will expose some fault of one’s.
8) To defeat a competitor in the same calling.
9) To seek position in the audience of someone in power.
10) To express sorrow by saying it is sad and so-and-so has fallen in such and such a sin.
11) To express astonishment, for example, to say it is wonderful that so and so has done this.
12) To name the committer of an act when expressing anger over it. However, in some cases
fault finding or criticizing does not fall under backbiting
1) If the oppressed complains of the oppressor in order to seek redress, it is not backbiting.
Allah says about it:
Loveth not Allah open utterance of evil in speech except by one who has been wronged.(Holy
Qur’an, 4:148)
2) To relate anyone’s fault while giving advice is not backbiting because dishonesty and
duplicity is not permissible in counseling.
3) If in connection with seeking therequirements of a religious commandment the naming of a
particular individual cannot be avoided, then to state the fault of such person to the extent
necessary would not be backbiting.
4) To relate the misappropriation or dishonesty committed by someone with a view to saving
a Muslim brother from harm would not be backbiting.
5) To relate the fault of someone before one who can prevent him from committing it is not
backbiting.
6) Criticism and expression of opinion about a relater of traditions is not backbiting.
7) If a person is well acquainted with someone’s shortcoming, then to relate such a fault in
order to define his personality, for example, describing a deaf, dumb, lame or handless person as
thus, is not backbiting.
8) To describe any fault of a patient before a physician for purposes of treatment is not
backbiting.
9) If someone claims wrong lineage then to expose his correct lineage is not backbiting.
10) If the life, property or honor of someone can be protected only by informing him of some
fault, it would not be backbiting.
11) If two persons discuss a fault of another which is already known to both it would not be
backbiting, although to avoid discussing it is better, since it is possible one of the two might have
forgotten it.
12) To expose the evils of one who openly commits evils is not backbiting as the tradition
runs:
AThere is no backbiting in the case of he who has torn away the veil of shamefulness.
SERMON 140
Again reliance on hearsay
O people! If a person knows his brother to be steadfast in faith and of correct ways he should
not lend ear to what people may say about him. Sometimes the bowman shoots arrows but the
arrow goes astray; similarly talk can be off the point. Its wrong perishes, while Allah is the
Hearer and the Witness. There is nothing between truth and falsehood except four fingers.
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Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was asked the meaning of this whereupon he closed his fingers
together and put them between his ear and eye and said: It is falsehood when you say, AI have
heard so, while it is truth when you say, AI have seen.
SERMON 141
Against misplaced generosity
He who shows generosity to those who have no claim to it or who are not fit for it would not
earn anything except the praise of the ignoble and appreciation of bad persons. Although as long
as he continues giving, the ignorant will say how generous his hand is, even though in the affairs
of Allah he is a miser.
Therefore, to whosoever Allah gives wealth he should use it in extending good behavior to his
kinsmen, in entertaining, in releasing prisoners and the afflicted; in giving to the poor and to
debtors. And he should endure (the troubles arising out of) the fulfilllment of rights (of others)
and hardships in expectation of reward. Certainly, the achievement of these qualities is the height
of greatness in this world and achievement of the distinctions of the next world, if Allah so wills.
SERMON 142
Praying for rain
Beware; the earth which bears you and the sky which overshadows you are obedient to their
Sustainer (Allah). They have not been bestowing their blessings on you for any feeling of pity on
you or inclination towards you, nor for any good which they expect from you. But they were
commanded to bestow benefits on you and they are obeying, and were asked to maintain your
good and so they are maintaining it.
Certainly, Allah tries his creatures in respect of their evil deeds by decreasing fruits, holding
back blessings and closing the treasures of good, so that he who wishes to repent may repent, he
who wishes to turn away (from evils) may turn away, he who wishes to recall (forgotten good)
may recall, and he who wishes to abstain (from evil) may abstain. Allah, the Glorified, has made
Theseeking of (His) forgiveness a means for the pouring down of livelihood and mercy on the
people as Allah has said:
Seek the forgiveness, all of you, of your Lord! Verily, He is the Most forgiving, He will send
(down) upon you the cloud raining in torrents, and help you with wealth and sons (children).
(Holy Qur’an, 17:10-12)
Allah may shower mercy on him who took up repentance, gave up sins and hastened (in
performing good acts before) his death.
O Lord! we have come out to You from under the curtains and coverings (of houses) when the
beasts and children are crying, seeking Your Mercy, hoping for the generosity of Your bounty
and fearing Your chastisement and retribution. O Lord! give us to drink from Your rain and do
not disappoint us, nor kill us by years (of drought) nor punish us for what the foolish among us
have committed, O the Most Merciful of all.
O Lord! we have come out to You to complain to You what is (already) not hidden from You,
when Theseven troubles have forced us, droughty famines have driven us, distressing wants have
made us helpless and troublesome mischief has incessantly befallen us. O Lord! we beseech You
not to send us back disappointed, nor to return us with down-cast eyes, nor to address us
(harshly) for our sins, nor deal with us according to our deeds.
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O Lord! do pour on us Your mercy, Your blessing, Your sustenance and Your pity, and make
us enjoy a drink which benefits us, quenches our thirst, produces green herbage with which all
that was lost gets a growing and all that had withered comes to life again. It should bring about
the benefit of freshness and plenty of ripe fruits. With it plains may be watered, rivers may begin
flowing, plants may pick up foliage and prices may come down. Surely, You art powerful over
whatever You wills.
SERMON 143
Deputation of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Allah deputed prophets and distinguished them with His revelation. He made them as pleas
for Him among His creation, so that there should not remain any excuse for people. He invited
people to the right path through a truthful tongue. You should know that Allah fully knows
creation. Not that He was not aware of what they concealed from among their hidden secrets and
inner feelings, but in order to try them as to whom from among them performs good acts, so that
there is reward in respect of good acts and chastisement in respect of evil acts.
The position of Ahl al-Bayt () (the Household of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) ) :
Where are those who falsely and unjustly claimed that they are deeply versed in knowledge,
as against us, although Allah raised us in position and kept them down, bestowed upon us
knowledge but deprived them, and entered us (in the fortress of knowledge) but kept them out.
With us guidance is to be sought and blindness (of misguidance) is to be changed into brightness.
Surely Imams (the Divine leaders) will be from the Quraish. They have been planted in this line
through Hashim. It would not suit others nor would others be suitable as heads of affairs.
A portion of the same sermon: about those who are against Ahl al-Bayt () :
They have adopted this world and abandoned the next world; left clean water and drunk
stinking water. I can almost see their wicked one1 who committed unlawful acts, associated
himself with them, befriended them and accorded with them till his hair became gray and his
nature acquired their tinge. He proceeded onwards emitting foam like a torrential stream not
caring whom he drowned, or, like fire in straw, without realizing what he burnt.
Where are the minds which seek light from the lamps of guidance, and the eyes which look at
minarets of piety? Where are the hearts dedicated to Allah, and devoted to the obedience of
Allah? They are all crowding towards worldly vanities and quarrelling over unlawful issues. The
ensigns of Paradise and Hell have been raised for them but they have turned their faces away
from Paradise and proceeded to Hell by dint of their performances. Allah called them but they
showed dislike and ran away. When Satan called them they responded and proceeded (towards
him).
1. Here the reference is to AAbdul-Malik ibn Marwan who committed extreme atrocities
through his officer al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf ath-Thaqafi.
SERMON 144
About this world
O people, you are, in this world, the target for the arrows of death. With every drinking there
is choking and with every eating there is suffocation. You do not get any benefit in it except by
foregoing another (benefit) and no one among you advances in age by a day except by the taking
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away of a day from his life. Nothing more is added to his eating unless it reduces what was there
before. No mark appears for him unless a mark disappears. Nothing new comes into being unless
the new becomes old. No new crop comes up unless a crop has been reaped. Those roots are
gone whose off-shoots we are. How can an off-shoot live after the departure of its root?
A portion of the same sermon: on innovation (bid’a)
No innovation is introduced unless one Sunna is forsaken, keep away from innovations and
stick to the broad road. Surely the old tested ways are he best and the innovated ones are bad.
SERMON 145
Delivered when AOmer ibn al-Khattab consulted Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) about taking
part in the battle of then Persia.1
In this matter, victory of defeat is not dependent on the smallness or greatness of forces. It is
Allah’s religion which He has raised above all faiths, and His army which He has mobilized and
extended, till it has reached the point where it stands now, and has reached its present positions.
We hold a promise from Allah, and He will fulfill His promise and support His army.
The position of the head of government is that of the thread for beads, as it connects them and
keeps them together. If the thread is broken, they will disperse and be lost, and will never come
together again. The Arabs today, even though small in number are big because of Islam and
strong because of unity. You should remain like the axis for them, and rotate the mill (of
government) with (the help of) the Arabs, and be their root. Avoid battle, because if you leave
this place the Arabs will attack you from all sides and directions till the unguarded places left
behind by you will become more important than those before you.
If the Persians see you tomorrow they will say, AHe is the root (chief) of Arabia. If we do
away with him we will be in peace. In this way this will heighten their eagerness against you and
their keenness to aim at you. You say that they have set out to fight against the Muslims. Well,
Allah detests their setting out more than you do, and He is more capable of preventing what He
detests. As regards your idea about their (large) number, in the past we did not fight on the
strength of large numbers but we fought on the basis of Allah’s support and assistance.
1. When some people advised AOmer to partake in the battle of judgesiyyah or Nahawand, he
finding it against his personal inclination, thought it necessary to consult Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S), so that if he advised against it he would plead before others that he had stayed back on
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s advice, but also if he advised partaking in the battle some other excuse
would be found. However, unlike others, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) advised him to stay
back. The other people had advised him to join in fighting, because the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) did not send only others to fight but took part in it himself as well, keeping
his close relations also with him. What Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had in view was that
AOmer’s presence in the battle could not be beneficial to Islam, but rather his staying back
would save the Muslims from dispersion.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s view that Athe position of the head of government is that of the
axis around which the system of the government rotates is a point of principle: It does not
concern any particular personality. Whether the ruler is a Muslim or an unbeliever, just or
despotic, virtuous or vicious, for the administration of the state his presence is a necessity, as
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has explained elsewhere at greater length:
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The fact is that there is no escape for men from a ruler, good or bad. Faithful persons perform
(good) acts in his rule while the unfaithful enjoys (worldly) benefits in it. During the rule, Allah
will carry everything to its end. Through the ruler tax is collected, the enemy is fought, roads are
protected and the right of the weak is taken from the strong till the virtuous enjoy peace and are
allowed protection from (the oppression of) the wicked. (Sermon 40)
The words which Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) uttered in his advice are not indicative of any
quality of AOmer except his being the ruler. There is no doubt that he held worldly authority,
irrespective of the question of whether it was secured in the right way or wrong way. And where
there is authority there is centering of people’s affairs. That is why Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S) said that if AOmer would go out the Arabs would follow him in large numbers towards the
battlefield, because when the ruler is on the march the people will not like to stay behind. The
result of their going would be that city after city would become vacant, while the enemy will
infer from their reaching the battlefield that the Islamic cities are lying vacant, and that if these
people were repulsed no assistance would reach the Muslims from the center. Again, if the ruler
were killed the army would disperse automatically, because the ruler is as its foundation. When
the foundation is shaken the walls cannot remain standing. The word Aaslu’l-AArab (the root
chief) of Arabia has not been used by Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) as his own but he has taken
it from the Persians. Obviously in his capacity as the head of the State, AOmer was, in their view,
the chief of Arabia. Besides, the reference is to the country, not to Islam or Muslims, so that
there is no suggestion of any importance for him from the Islamic point of view.
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) pointed out to AOmer that on his reaching there the
Persians would aim at him, and that if he fell into their hands they would not spare him without
killing, although such words would have touched the brave to the quick and would have
heightened their spirits, AOmer liked the advice to stay back and thought it better to keep himself
away from the flames of battle. If this advice had not been in accord with his personal inclination
he would not have received it so heartily and would have tried to argue that the administration of
the country could be maintained by leaving a deputy. Again when other people had already
advised him to go out, what was the need for consulting Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) except to
get an excuse to stay back.
SERMON 146
The purpose of the deputation of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and the
condition of the time when people would go against the Holy Qur’an
Allah deputed Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) with Truth so that he may
take out His people from the worship of idols towards His worship and from obeying Satan
towards obeying Him and sent him with the Holy Qur’an which He explained and made strong,
in order that the people may know their sustainer (Allah) since they were ignorant of Him, may
acknowledge Him since they were denying Him, and accept Him since they were refusing (to
believe in) Him. Because He the Glorified, revealed Himself to them through His Book without
their having seen Him, by means of what He showed them out of His might and made them fear
His sway. How He destroyed those whom He wished to destroy through His chastisement and
ruined those whom He wished to ruin through His retribution!
On the future
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Certainly, a time will come upon you after me when nothing will be more concealed than
rightfulness, nothing more apparent than wrongfulness - and nothing more current than untruth
against Allah and His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . For the people of this period
nothing will be more valueless than the Holy Qur’an being recited as it ought to be recited, nor
anything more valuable than the Holy Qur’an being misplaced from its position. And in the
towns nothing will be more hated than virtue, nor anything more acceptable than vice.
The holders of the book will throw it away and those who memorize it would forget it. In
these days the Holy Qur’an and its people will be exiled and expelled. They will be companions
keeping together on one path, but no one will offer them asylum. Consequently at this time the
Holy Qur’an and its people will be among the people but not among them, will be with them but
not with them, because misguidance cannot accord with guidance even though they may be
together. The people will have united on division and will therefore have cut away from the
community, as though they were the leaders of the Holy Qur’an and not the Holy Qur’an their
leader. Nothing of it will be left with them except its name, and they will know nothing save its
writing and its words. Before that, they will inflict hardships on the virtuous, naming the latter’s
truthful views about Allah false allegations, and enforcing for virtues the punishment of the vice.
Those before you passed away because of the lengthening of their desires and the forgetting
of their death, till that promised event befell them about which excuses are turned down,
repentance is denied and punishment and retribution is inflicted.
About Ahl al-Bayt ()
O people, he who seeks counsel from Allah secures guidance, and he who adopts His word as
guide is led towards what is more straight, because Allah’s lover feels secure and His opponent
feels afraid. It does not behoove one who knows His greatness to assume greatness, but the
greatness of those who know His greatness is that they should know before Him, and the safety
for those who know what His power is lies in submitting to Him. Do not be scared away from the
truth like the scaring of the healthy from the scabbed person, or the sound person from the sick.
You should know that you will never know guidance unless you know who has abandoned it,
you will never abide by the pledges of the Holy Qur’an unless you know who has broken them,
and will never cling to it unless you know who has forsaken it. Seek these things from those who
own them because they are the life spring of knowledge and death of ignorance. They are the
people whose commands will disclose to you their (extent of) knowledge, their silence will
disclose their (capacity of) speaking and their outer appearance will disclose their inner self.
They do not go against religion, and do not differ from one other about it, while it is among them
a truthful witness and a silent speaker.
SERMON 147
About Talhah and az-Zubayr and the people of Basra
Both of these two (Talhah and az-Zubayr) wish the Caliphate for himself, and is drawing
towards himself as against the other fellow. They do not employ any connection for getting
access to Allah nor proceed towards Him through any means. Both of them bear malice against
the other. Shortly his veil over it will be uncovered. But Allah, if they achieve what they aim at,
one of them will kill the other, and one will finish the other. The rebellious party has stood u, p.
Where are Theseekers of virtue; for the paths have already been determined and they have been
given the news. For every misguidance there is a cause and for every break of pledge there is a
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misrepresentation. By Allah, I shall not be like him who listens to the voice of mourning, hears
the man who brings news of death and also visits the mourner yet does not take lesson.
SERMON 148
Before his passing away (last will)
O people, every one has to meet what he wishes to avoid by running away.1 Death is the place
to which life is driving. To run away from it means to catch it. How many days did I spent in
searching for Thesecret of this matter, but Allah did not allow save its concealment. Alas! It is a
treasured knowledge. As for my last will, it is that concerning Allah, do not believe in a partner
for Him, and concerning Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household), do not disregard his
Sunna. Keep these two pillars and burn these two lamps. Till you are not divided, no evil will
come to you.2 Every one of you has to bear his own burden. It has been kept light for the
ignorant. Allah is Merciful. Faith is straight. The leader (Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
) is the holder of knowledge. Yesterday I was with you; today I have become the object of a
lesson for you; and tomorrow I shall leave you. Allah may forgive me and you.
If the foot remains firm in this slippery place, well and good. But if the foot slips, this is
because we are under the shade of branches, the passing of the winds and the canopy of the
clouds whose layers are dispersed in the sky, and whose traces disappeared3 in the earth. I was
your neighbor. My body kept you company for some days and shortly you will find just an
empty body of mine which would be stationary after (all its) movement and silent after speech so
that my calmness, the closing of my eyes, and the stillness of my limbs may provide you counsel,
because it is more of a counsel for those who take a lesson (from it) than eloquent speech and a
ready word. I am departing from you like one who is eager to meet (someone). Tomorrow you
will look at my days, then my inner side will be disclosed to you and you will understand me
after the vacation of my place and its occupation by someone else.
1. This means that during all the time spent in the attempts that a man makes to avoid death
and in the means he adopts for it, it is only the span of life that is shortened. As the time passes
the objective of death approaches near, so much as that in one’s attempt to seek life one meets
death.
2. AWa khalakum dhammun (No evil will come to you). This sentence is used as a proverb. It
was first employed by Qasir, slave of Khazimah ibn Malik al-Abrash.
3. The intention is that when all these things die, how can those who inhabit them remain
safe? Certainly they too, like everything else, have to pass away some day or other. Then why
should there be any wonder at my life coming to an end?
SERMON 149
About future events and some activities of the hypocrites
They took to the right and the left piercing through to the ways of evil and leaving the paths of
guidance. Do not make haste for a matter which is to happen and is awaited, and do not wish for
delay in what the morrow is to bring for you. For, how many people make haste for a matter, but
when they get it they begin to wish they had not got it. How near is today to the dawning of
tomorrow. O my people, this is the time for the occurrence of every promised event and the
approach of things which you do not know. Whoever from among us will be during these days
will move through them with a burning lamp and will tread on the footsteps of the virtuous, in
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order to unfasten knots, to free slates, to divide the united and to unite the divided. He will be in
concealment from people. The stalker will not find his footprints even though he pursues with his
eye. Then a group of people will be sharpened like the sharpening of swords by the blacksmith.
Their sight will be brightened by revelation, the (delicacies of) commentary will be put in their
ears and they will be given drinks of wisdom, morning and evening.
A portion of the same sermon:
Their period became long in order that they might complete (their position of) disgrace and
deserve vicissitudes, till the end of the period was reached, and a group of people turned towards
mischief and picked up their arms for fighting. The virtuous did not show any obligation to Allah
but calmly endured, and did not feel elated for having engaged themselves in truthfulness.
Eventually the period of trial came to an end according to what was ordained. Then they
propagated their good views among others and sought nearness to Allah according to the
command of their leader.
When Allah took the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) (to himself) a group of men
went back on their tracks. The ways (of misguidance) ruined them and they placed trust in
deceitful intriguers, showed consideration to other than kinsmen, abandoned the kin whom they
had been ordered to love, and shifted the building from its strong foundation and built it in other
than its (proper) place. They are the source of every shortcoming and the door of gropes in the
dark. They were moving to and fro in amazement and lay intoxicated in the way of the people of
the Pharaohs. They were either bent on this world and taking support on it or away from the fait
and removed from it.
SERMON 150
The condition of the people during disorder, and advice against oppression and unlawful
earning
I praise Allah and seek His help from (what led to the) punishment of Satan and his deceitful
acts, and (I seek His) protection from Satan’s traps and way-layings. I stand witness that there is
no god but Allah and I stand witness that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) is His
slave and His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) - peace be upon him and his progeny - and
his chosen and his selected one. Muhammed’s distinction cannot be paralleled nor can his loss be
made good. Populated places were brightened through him when previously there was dark
misguidance, overpowering ignorance and rude habits, and people regarded unlawful as lawful,
humiliated the man of wisdom, passed lives when there were no prophets and died as
unbelievers.
You, O people of Arabia, will be victims of calamities which have come near. You should
avoid the intoxication of wealth, fear the disasters of chastisement, keep steadfast in the darkness
and crookedness of mischief when its hidden nature discloses itself, its secrets become manifest
and its axis and the pivot of its rotation gain strength. It begins in imperceptible stages but
develops into great hideousness. Its youth is like the youth of an adolescent and its marks are like
the marks of beating by stone.
Oppressors inherit it by (mutual) agreement. The first of them serves as a leader for the latter
one and the latter one follows the first one. They vie with each other in (the matter of) this lowly
world, and leap over this stinking carcass. Shortly the follower will denounce his connection
with the leader, and the leader with the follower. They will disunite on account of mutual and
curse one another when they meet. Then after this there will appear another arouser of mischief
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who will destroy ruined things. The heart will become wavering after being normal, men will be
misled after safety, desires will multiply and become diversified and views will become
confused.
Whoever proceeds towards this mischief will be ruined and whoever strives for it will be
annihilated. They will be biting each other during it as the wild asses bite each other in the herd.
The coils of the rope will be disturbed and the face of affairs will be blinded. During it sagacity
will be on the ebb, and the oppressors will (get the opportunity to) speak. The mischief will
smash the Bedouins with its hammers and crush them with its chest. In its dust the single
marchers will be lost, and in its way the horsemen will be destroyed. It will approach with the
bitterness of destiny and will give pure blood (instead of milk). It will breach the minarets of
faith and shatter the ties of firm belief. The wise will run away from it while the wicked will
foster it. It will thunder and flash (like lightning). It will create a severe disaster. In it kinship will
be forsaken and Islam will be abandoned. He who declaims it will also be affected by it, and he
who flees from it will (be forced to) stay in it.
A portion of the same sermon:
Among them some will be un-avenged martyrs and some will be stricken with fear and seek
protection. They will be deceived by pledges and fraudulent belief. You should not become
landmarks of mischief and signs of innovations but should adhere to that on which the rope of
the community has been wound and on which the pillars of obedience have been founded.
Proceed towards Allah as oppressed and do not proceed to Him as oppressors. Avoid the paths of
Satan and the places of revolt. Do not put in your bellies unlawful morsels because you are
facing Him Who has made disobedience unlawful for you, and made the path of obedience easy
for you.
SERMON 151
About the greatness and the attributes of Allah1
Praise to Allah who is proof of His existence through His creation, of His being external
through the newness of His creation, and through their mutual similarities of the fact that nothing
is similar to Him. Senses cannot touch Him and curtains cannot veil Him, because of the
difference between the Maker and the made, the Limiter and the limited and the Sustainer and
the sustained.
He is One but not by the first in counting, is Creator but not through activity or labor, is
Hearer but not by means of any physical organ, is Looker but not by a stretching of eyelids, is
Witness but not by nearness, is Distinct but not by measurement of distances, is Manifest but not
by seeing and is Hidden but not by subtlety (of body). He is Distinct from things because He
overpowers them and exercises might over them, while things are distinct from Him because of
their subjugation to Him and their turning towards Him.
He who describes Him limits Him. He who limits Him numbers Him. He who numbers Him
rejects His eternity. He who said Ahow sought a description for Him. He who said Awhere
bounded him. He is the Knower even though there be nothing to be known. He is the Sustainer
even though there be nothing to be sustained. He is the Powerful even though there be nothing to
be overpowered.
A portion of the same sermon about the Divine leaders (Imams) :
The riser has risen, the sparkler has sparkled, the appearer has appeared and the curved has
been straightened. Allah has replaced one people with another and one day with another. We
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awaited these changes as the famine-stricken await the rain. Certainly the Imams are the
vicegerents of Allah over His creatures and they make the creatures know Allah. No one will
enter Paradise except he who knows them and knows Him, and no one will enter Hell except he
who denies them and denies Him.
Allah the Glorified, has distinguished you with Islam and has chosen you for it. This is
because it is the name of safety and the collection of honor. Allah the Glorified, chose its way
and disclosed its pleas through open knowledge and secret maxims. Its (Holy Qur’an) wonders
are not exhausted and its delicacies do not end. It contains blossoming bounties and lamps of
darkness. (The doors of) virtues cannot be opened save with its keys, nor can gloom be dispelled
save with its lamps. Allah has protected its inaccessible points (from enemies), allowing grazing
(of its followers) in its pastures. It contains cover (from the ailment of misguidance) for
Theseeker of cure and full support for Theseeker of support.
1. The first part of this sermon consists of important issues concerning the science of
knowledge about Allah, wherein Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has thrown light on the matter
that Allah is forever and His attributes are the same as He Himself. When we cast a glance at
creation, we see that for every movement there is a mover, from which every man of ordinary
wisdom is compelled to conclude that no effect can appear without a cause, so much so, that
even an infant a few days old, when his body is touched, feels in the depth of his consciousness
that someone has touched him. He indicates it by opening his eyes or turning and looking. How
then can the creation of the world and the system of all creation be arranged without a Creator or
Organizer? Once it is necessary to believe in a Creator, then He should exist by Himself, because
everything which has a beginning must have a center of existence from which it should
terminate. If that too needed a creator, there would be the question of whether this creator is also
the creation of some other creator or exists by itself. Thus unless a Self-created Creator is
believed in, who should be the cause of all causes, the mind will remain groping in the unending
labyrinth of cause and effect, and never attain the idea of the last extremity of Theseries of
creation. It would fall into the fallacy of circular arguing and would not reach any end. If the
creator were taken to have created himself, then there would be (one of the two positions,
namely) either he should be non-existent or existent. If he were not existent, then it would not be
possible for something non-existent to create any existent being. If he were existent before
creating himself, there would be no sense in coming into being again. Therefore it is necessary to
believe that the Creator should be a Being not dependent on any other creator for His own
existence, and everything else should be dependent on Him. This dependence of the entire
creation is a proof that the existence of the Source of all creation is from ever and eternal. And
since all beings other than He are subject to change, are dependent on position and place and are
similar to one another in qualities and properties, and since similarity leads to plurality whereas
unity has no like save itself, therefore nothing can be like Him. Even things called one cannot be
reckoned after His Unity because He is One and Singular in every respect. He is free and pure
from all those attributes which are found in body or matter because He is neither body, nor color,
nor shape, nor does He lie in any direction, nor is He bounded within some place or locality.
Therefore, man cannot see or understand Him through his senses or feelings, because senses can
know only those things which accord with the limitations of time, place and matter. To believe
that He can be seen is to believe that He has body, but since He is not a body, and He does not
exist through a body, and He does not lie in any direction or place, there is no question of His
being seen. But His being unseen is not like that of subtle material bodies, due to whose delicacy
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the eye pierces through them and eyes remain unable to see them; as for example the wind in the
vast firmament. But He is the unseen by His very existence. Nevertheless, nothing is unseen for
Him. He sees as well as hears, but is not dependent on instruments of seeing or hearing, because
if He were in need of organs of the body for hearing and seeing He would be in need of external
things for His perfection and would not be a perfect Being, whereas He should be perfect in all
respects and no attribute of perfection should be apart from His Self. To believe in attributes
separately from His Self would mean that there would be a self and a few attributes and the
compound of Theself and the attributes would be Allah. But a thing which is compounded is
dependent on its parts and these parts must exist before their composition into the whole. When
the parts exist from before, how can the whole be from ever and eternal because its existence is
later than that of its parts. But Allah had the attributes of knowledge, power and sustaining even
when nothing was existent, because none of His attributes were created in Him from outside, but
His attributes are His Self and His Self is His attributes. Consequently, His knowledge does not
depend on the object of knowledge existing first and then His knowledge, because His Self is
prior to things coming into existence. Nor is it necessary for His power that there should first
exist the object to be over-powered and then alone He would be called Powerful, because
Powerful is that who has power equally for doing or abandoning and as such the existence of the
object to be over-powered is not necessary. Similarly Sustainer means master. Just as He is the
Master of the non-existent after its coming into existence, in the same way He has power to bring
it into existence from non-existence, namely if He so wills He may bestow existence upon it.
SERMON 152
About negligent persons and the characteristics of beasts, carnivores and women
He has been allowed time by Allah. He is falling into error along with negligent persons and
goes early in the morning with sinners, without any road to lead or any Imam to guide.
A portion of the same sermon:
At last when Allah will make clear to them thereward for their sins, and take them out from
the veils of their neglectfulness they will proceed to what they were running away from, and run
away from what they were proceeding to. They will not benefit from the wants they will satisfy
or the desires they would fulfill.
I warn you and myself from this position. A man should derive benefit from his own self.
Certainly, prudent is he who hears and ponders over it, who sees and observes and who benefits
from instructive material and then treads on clear paths wherein he avoids falling into hollows
and straying into pitfalls, and does not assist those who misguide him by turning away from
truthfulness, changing his words or fearing truth.
O my listener! be cured from your intoxication, wake up from your slumber, decrease your
hasty activity and ponder over what has come to you through the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) , the Ummi1 which is inevitable and inescapable. You should turn away from
him who opposes him and leave him and leave whatever he has adopted for himself. Put off your
vanity, drop your haughtiness and recall your grave because your way passes over it. You will be
dealt with as you deal with others, you will reap what you sow, and what you send today will
meet you tomorrow. So provide for your future and send (some good acts) for your day (of
reckoning). Fear, fear, O listener! Act, act, O careless! No one will warn you like him who
knows.
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One of the firm decisions of Allah in the Wise Reminder (Holy Qur’an) upon which He
bestows reward or gives punishment, and through which He likes or dislikes is that it will not
benefit a man, even though he exerts himself and acts sincerely if he leaves this world to meet
Allah with one of these acts without repenting, namely that he believed in a partner with Allah
during his obligatory worship, or appeased his own anger by killing an individual, or spoke about
acts committed by others, or sought fulfilllment of his needs from people by introducing an
innovation in his religion, or met people with a double face, or moved among them with a double
tongue. Understand this because an illustration is a guide for its like.
Beasts are concerned with their bellies. Carnivores are concerned with assaulting others.
Women are concerned with the adornments of this ignoble life and the creation of mischief
herein.2 (On the other hand) believers are humble, believers are admonishers and believers are
afraid (of Allah).
1. The word Aummi has been used in the Holy Qur’an with reference to the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) in cha, p. 7:157-158. For better understanding of the word refer
to the books of commentary on the Holy Qur’an.
2. The intention is to say that the cause of all mischief and evil is the passion to satisfy bodily
needs and the passion to subdue. If a human being is subjugated by the passion to satisfy bodily
needs and considers filling the stomach as his aim there will be no difference between him and a
beast, because a beast too has no aim except to fill its belly. But if he is over-powered by the
passion to subdue others and takes to killing and devastation there will be no difference between
him and a carnivorous beast, because the latter’s aim is also tearing and devouring. If both the
passions are at work in him then he is like a woman, because in a woman both these passions act
side by side and because of this she is extremely eager of adornment and is active in fanning
mischief and disturbance. However, a true believer will never agree to adopt these habits as his
mode of behavior, rather he keeps his passions suppressed so that he neither allows pride and
vanity to approach near him nor does he fan mischief or disturbance for fear of Allah.
Ibn Abul-Hadid has written that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) delivered this sermon at the
time of marching towards Basra, and since the trouble of Basra was theresult of a woman’s
instigation. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has, after mentioning beasts and carnivore, held a
woman also to possess such qualities. Thus the battle of Basra was theresult of these qualities,
whereby thousands of persons were involved in death and destruction.
SERMON 153
About Ahl al-Bayt () and their Opponents
He who has an intelligent mind looks to his goal. He knows his low road as well as his high
road. The caller has called. The shepherd has tended (his flocks). So respond to the caller and
follow the shepherd.
Those who oppose have entered the oceans of disturbance and have taken to innovations
instead of the Sunna (the Prophet’s holy deeds, utterances and his unspoken approvals), while the
believers have sunk down, and the misguided and the liars are speaking. We are the near ones,
companions, treasure holders and doors (to the Sunna). Houses are not entered save through their
doors. Whoever enters them from other than the door is called a thief.
A portion of the same sermon:
The delicacies of the Holy Qur’an are about them (Ahl al-Bayt (), the descendants of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) and they are the treasurers of Allah. When they speak
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they speak the truth, but when they keep quiet no one can speak unless they speak. The
forerunner should report correctly to his people, should retain his wits and should be one of the
children (a man) of the next world, because he has come from there and would return to it.
The beginning of the action of one who sees with the heart and acts with the eyes is to assess
whether the action will go against him or for him. If it is for him he indulges in it, but if it is
against him he keeps away from it. For, he who acts without knowledge is like one who treads
without a path. Then his deviation from the path keeps him at a distance from his aim. And he
who acts according to knowledge is like he who treads the clear path. Therefore, he who can see
should see whether he should proceed or return.
You should also know that the outside (of everything) has a similar inside. Of whatever the
outside is good, its inside too is good, and whatever the outside is bad, its inside too is bad. The
truthful Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) - peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and
his progeny - has said that: AAllah may love a man but hate his action, and may love the action
but hate the man. You should also know that every action is like vegetation, and vegetation
cannot do without water while waters are different. So where the water is good the plant is good
and its fruits are sweet, whereas where the water is bad, the plant will also be bad and its fruits
will be bitter.
SERMON 154
About the wonderful creation of the bat
Praise to Allah who is such that it is not possible to describe thereality of knowledge about
Him, since His greatness has restrained the intellects, and therefore they cannot find the way to
approach the extremity of His realm. He is Allah, the True, the Manifester of Truth. He is more
True and more Manifest than eyes can see. Intellects cannot comprehend Him by fixing limits for
Him since in that case to Him would be to attribute shape. Imagination cannot catch Him by
fixing quantities for Him for in that case to Him would be attributed body. He created creatures
without any example, and without the advice of a counsel, or the assistance of a helper. His
creation was completed by His command, and bowed to His obedience. It responded (to Him)
and did not defy (Him). It obeyed and did not resist.
An example of His delicate production, wonderful creation and deep sagacity which He has
shown us is found in these bats which keep hidden in the daylight although daylight reveals
everything else, and are mobile in the night although the night shuts up every other living being;
and how their eyes get dazzled and cannot make use of the light of the sun so as to be guided in
their movements and so as to reach their known places through the direction provided by the sun.
Allah has prevented them from moving in the brightness of the sun and confined them to their
places of hiding instead of going out at the time of its shining. Consequently they keep their
eyelids down in the day and treat night as a lamp and go with its help in search of their
livelihood. The darkness of night does not obstruct their sight nor does the gloom of darkness
prevent them from movement. As soon as the sun removes its veil and the light of morning
appears, and the rays of its light enter upon the lizards in their holes, the bats pull down their
eyelids on their eyes and live on what they had collected in the darkness of the night. Glorified is
He who has made the night as day for them to seek livelihood and made the day for rest and stay.
He has given them wings of flesh with which, at the time of need, they rise upwards for
flying. They look like the ends of ears without feathers or bones. Of course, you can see the
veins quite distinctly. They have two wings which are neither too thin so that get turned in
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flying, nor too thick so that they prove heavy. When they fly their young ones hold on to them
and seek refuge with them, getting down when they get down and rising up when they rise. The
young does not leave them till its limbs become strong, its wings can support it for rising, and it
begins to recognize its places of living and its interest. Glorified is He who creates everything
without any previous sample by someone else.
SERMON 155
About the malice borne by AA’isha; and warning the people of Basra about what was to occur
Whoever can at this time keep himself clinging to Allah should do so. If you follow me I shall
certainly carry you, if Allah so wills, on the path of Paradise, even though it may be full of
severe hardship and of bitter taste.
As regards a certain woman,1 she is in the grip of womanly views, and malice is boiling in her
bosom like the furnace of the blacksmith. If she were called upon to deal with others as she is
dealing with me she would not have done it. (As for me), even hereafter she will be allowed her
original respect, while thereckoning (of her misdeeds) is an obligation of Allah.
A portion of the same sermon:
This path is the lightest course and the brightest lam, p. Guidance towards virtuous actions is
sought through faith while guidance towards faith is achieved through virtuous actions.
Knowledge is made to prosper through faith, and death is feared because of knowledge. This
world comes to an end with death, while the next world is secured (by virtuous actions) in this
world. For people there is no escape from resurrection. They are heading for this last end in its
appointed course.
A portion of the same sermon:
They have got up from theresting places in their graves and have set off for the final
objectives. Every house has its own people. They are not changed nor shifted from there.
Commanding for good and refraining from evil are two characteristics of Allah, the Glorified.
They can neither bring death near nor lessen sustenance.
You should adhere to the Book of Allah because it is the strong rope, a clear light, a
benefiting cure, a quenching for thirst, protection for the adherent and deliverance for the
attached. It does not curve so as to need straightening and does not deflect so as to be corrected.
Frequency of its repetition and its falling on ears does not make it old. Whoever speaks
according to it, speaks truth and whoever acts by it is forward (in action).
A man stood up and said: O Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) tell us about this disturbance and
whether you enquired about it from the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Thereupon
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
When Allah, the Glorified sent down the verse:
Aleef laam meem (A.L.M.) What?! Do people imagine that they will be left alone on saying:
AWe believe and they will not be tried?! (Holy Qur’an, 29:1-2)
I came to know that the disturbance would not befall us so long as the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) - peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and his progeny - is among us. So I
said, AO Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah, what is this disturbance of which
Allah, the Sublime, has informed you? and he replied, AO Ali, my people will create trouble
after me. I said, AO Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah on the day of Uhud, when
people had fallen martyrs and I was not among them, and this had been very annoying to me, did
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you not say tome, Acheer up, as martyrdom is for you hereafter? the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) replied, AYes it is so, but what about you enduring the present? I said, AO Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah, this is not an occasion for endurance, but rather an
occasion for cheering up and gratefulness. Then he said:
AO Ali (A.S) , people will fall into mischief through their wealth, will show obligation to
Allah on account of their faith, will expect His mercy, will feel safe from His anger and regard
His unlawful matters as lawful by raising false doubts and by their misguiding desires. They will
then hold lawful (the use of) wine by calling it barley water, a bribe by calling it a gift, and
taking of usurious interest by calling it sale. I said, AO Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of
Allah, how should I deal with them at the time, whether to hold them to have gone back in
heresy or just in revolt. He said, Ain revolt.
1. There is no denying the fact that AA’isha’s behavior towards Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
was throughout inimical, and very often her heart’s turbidity expressed itself on her face, and her
hatred and dislike became quite apparent, so much so that if in connection with some affair
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s name came up a frown appeared on her forehead and she did not relish
pronouncing it with her tongue. For example, when AUbaydullah ibn AAbdillah ibn AUtbah
mentioned to AAbdullah ibn AAbbas the narration by AA’isha namely that Ain his death-illness
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , taking support on al-Fadl ibn AAbbas and another
person, came to her (AA’isha’s) house, AAbdullah ibn AAbbas said:
ADo you know who this Aother man’ was? He said, ANo. Then he said, Ali (A.S) ibn Abu
Talib, but she is averse to name him in a good context. (Ahmed ibn Hanbal Al-Musnad, Vol. 6,
pp. 34, 228; ibn Sa’d, Al-Tabaqat al-Kubra, Vol. 2, part 2, p. 29 al-Tabari, Tarikh, Vol. 1, pp.
1800-1801. Al-Balathiri, Ansab al-Ashraf, Vol. 1, pp. 544-545; al-Bayhaqi, Al-Sunan al-Kubra,
Vol. 3, p. 396).
One cause for this hatred and malice was the presence of Hadrat Fatima (S.A) whose
wholesome dignity and esteem pricked her heart like a thorn. Her jealousy towards the other
wives (of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) did not allow her to let the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) love the daughter of his other wife to such a degree that he
should stand on her approach, seat her in his own place, declare her most honorable of all the
women of the world and bear such love towards her children as to call them his own sons. All
these things caused her a lot of pain; naturally, her feelings on such an occasion were that if she
had given birth to children, they would have been the Prophet’s sons and they would have been
the pivot of the Prophet’s affection instead of Imam Hasan and Imam Husain. But she was not
gifted with any issue, and she was satisfied with being a mother by adopting the surname of
Umm AAbdillah (mother of the slave of Allah), after her sister’s son. In short all these things
created the passion of hatred in her heart, as a result of which she off and on complained to the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) against Fatima (S.A) but could not succeed in diverting
the Prophet’s attention from her. News about this mortification and estrangement also reached
the ears of Abu Bakr. That would only perturb him as he too could do nothing, except that his
verbal sympathies were with his daughter. At last the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) left
this world and thereins of Government fell into Abu Bakr’s hands. Now was the opportunity for
him to avenge as best as he could and to perpetrate whatever violence he had in mind.
Consequently, the first step he took was that, in order to deprive Fatima (S.A) of inheritance, he
denied the principle of inheritance in the case of the prophets and held that neither do the
prophets inherit nor are they inherited from, but the property left by them escheats to the state.
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Fatima (S.A) was so affected that she gave up speaking to him and passed away from this world
with these very feelings. AA’isha did not even take the trouble to express any sorrow at her tragic
death. Thus ibn Abul-Hadid has written.
When Fatima (S.A) expired all the wives of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) came
to Banu Hashim in condolence except AA’isha. She did not come and showed herself sick and
words from her reached Ali which displayed her joy. (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, p. 198, Vol. 9)
As long as she bore so much malice against Fatima (S.A), how could Fatima’s spouse be
spared similar enmity and malice? Particularly when such events also occurred which worked
like a fan and roused her feeling of hatred, such as the incident of Aifk when Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) said to the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) : AShe is no better than the
buckles of your shoe, leave her and divorce her. On hearing this AA’isha must have felt
miserable in her bed, and must have developed Theseverest feeling of hatred against him. There
were also moments when distinction was conferred on Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) in
preference to Abu Bakr. For instance, in connection with the dispatch of the Holy Qur’anic
verses on Bara’ah (innocence), the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) removed Abu Bakr
from the job, recalled him and assigned it to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) saying that he had
been commanded by Allah to take it himself or send it through a member of his family. Similarly
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) closed all the doors opening into the mosque
including that of Abu Bakr but allowed the door of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s house to continue
to open.
AA’isha could not relish Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s distinction over her father, and whenever
there was any occasion for such distinction she did her best to undo it. When in his last days the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ordered the contingent under Usamah ibn Zayd to
march, and ordered Abu Bakr and AOmer also to go under his command, they received a
message from the wives of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) that his condition was
serious and therefore the contingent should come back instead of proceeding further. This was
because their far-reaching sight had realized that their only purpose in getting Medina vacated by
the Muhajirun and the Ansar could be that after the death of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) no one should stand in Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s way and that he should get the
caliphate without any trouble. On receipt of this message the contingent under Usamah came
back. When the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) learned this he again ordered Usamah to
march with the contingent and even said, AAllah may curse him who keeps away from the
contingent, whereupon they again set off, but they were again called back till the Prophet’s
illness assumed serious proportions, but Usamah’s contingent did not go out as it did not want to.
After this Abu Bakr was sent word through Bilal that he should deputize the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) in leading the prayers in order to pave the way for his Caliphate.
Accordingly keeping this in view he was first shown as the Prophet’s caliph (deputy) in prayers
and eventually was accepted as his caliph for all purposes. Thereafter matters were so contrived
that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) could not get the Caliphate. However, after thereign of the
third caliph circumstances took such a turn that people were obliged to swear allegiance to Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib’s hand. On this occasion AA’isha was present in Mecca. When she learned
about Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s caliphate her eyes began emitting flames, and rage and anger
perturbed her mind, and her hatred for Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) assumed such seriousness
that she rose against him on the excuse of avenging blood of the same man (AOthman) whom
she had herself proclaimed fit to be killed, and openly declared war as a result of which so much
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bloodshed occurred that the whole land of Basra was smeared with the blood of those killed, and
the door of disunity was opened for good. (Sharh, Ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 9, pp. 190-200)
SERMON 156
Urging people towards piety (taqwa)
Praise to Allah Who made praise the key for His remembrance, a means for an increase of His
bounty and a guide for His Attributes and Dignity.
O creatures of Allah! Time will deal with the survivors just as it dealt with those gone by. The
time that has passed will not return and whatever there is in it will not stay for ever. Its later
deeds are the same as the former ones. Its trouble try to excel one another. Its banners follow
each other. It is as though you are attached to the last day which is driving you as rapidly as are
driven the she-camels which are dry for seven months. He who busies himself with things other
than improvement of his own self becomes perplexed in darkness and entangled in ruination. His
evil spirits immerse him deep in vices and make his bad actions appear handsome. Paradise is the
end of those who are forward (in good acts) and Hell is the end of those who commit excesses.
Know O creatures of Allah! That piety is a strong house of protection while impiety is a weak
house which does not protect its people, and does not give security to him who takes refuge
therein. Know that the sting of sins is cut by piety and the final aim is achieved by conviction of
belief.
O creatures of Allah! (fear) Allah, (fear) Allah, in the matter of your own selves, which are
the most beloved and dear to you, because Allah has clarified to you the way of truthfulness and
has lit its paths. So (you may choose) either ever-present misfortune or eternal happiness. You
should therefore provide in these mortal days for the eternal days. You have been informed of
the provision, ordered to march and told to make haste in setting off. You are like staying riders
who do not know when they would be ordered to march on. Beware, what will he, who has been
created for the next world, do with this world? What will a person do with wealth which he
would shortly be deprived of while only its ill effects and reckoning would be left behind for
him?
O creatures of Allah! the good which Allah has promised should not be abandoned and the
evil from which He has refrained should not be coveted. O creatures of Allah! Fear the day when
actions will be reckoned; there will be much quaking and even children will get old.
Know, O creatures of Allah! that your own self is a guard over you; limbs are watchmen and
truthful vigil-keepers who preserve (therecord of) your actions and the numbers of your breaths.
The gloom of the dark night cannot conceal you from them, nor can closed doors hide you from
them. Surely tomorrow is close to today.
Today will depart with all that is has and tomorrow will come in its wake. It is as though
every one of you has reached that place on earth where he would be alone, namely the location
of his grave. So, what would you say about the lonely house, the solitary place of staying and the
solitary exile? It is as though the cry(of the Horn) has reached you, the Hour has overtaken you
and you have come out (of your graves) for the passing of judgment. (The curtains of) falsehood
have been removed from you and your excuses have become weak. The truth about you has been
proved. All your matters have proceeded to their consequences. Therefore, you should (now)
take counsel from examples, learn lessons from vicissitudes and take advantage of those who
warn.
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SERMON 157
About the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and the Holy Qur’an
Allah deputed the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) at a time when there had been no
prophets for some time. People had been in slumber for a long time and the twist of the rope had
loosened. The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) came with (a Book containing)
testifications to what (Vols.) were already there and also with a light to be followed. It is the
Holy Qur’an. If you ask it to speak it won’t do so; but I will tell you about it. Know that it
contains knowledge of what is to come about, stories of the past, cure for your ills and regulation
for whatever faces you.
A portion of the same sermon:. About the autocracy of the Umayyads:
At that time there will remain no house or tent but oppressors would inflict it with grief and
inject sickness in it. On that day no one in the sky will listen to their excuse and no one on the
earth will come to their help. You selected for the governance (caliphate) one who is not fit for it
and you raised him to a position which was not meant for him. Shortly Allah will take revenge
from every one who has oppressed, food for food and drink for drink, namely (they will be
given) colocynth for eating, myrrh and aloes for drinking, and fear for an inner and the sword for
an outer covering.
They are nothing but carrier-beasts laden with sins and camels laden with evil deeds. I swear
and again swear that the Umayyads will have to spit out the caliphate as phlegm is spat and
thereafter they will never taste it nor relish its flavor so long as day and night rotate.
SERMON 158
Good behavior with people and ignoring their faults
I lived as a good neighbor to you and tried my best to look after you, and I freed you from the
snare of humbleness and the fetters of oppression through my gratefulness for the little good
(from your side) and closed my eyes to your many misdeeds which my eyes had observed and
my body had witnessed.
SERMON 159
Praising Allah
Allah’s verdict is judicious and full of wisdom. His pleasure implies protection and mercy. He
decides with knowledge and forgives with forbearance.
O Lord! Praise be to You for what You takes and gives and for that from which You cures or
with which You afflicts. Praise which is the most acceptable to You, the most like by You and
the most dignified before You; praise which fills all Your creation and reaches where You
desires; praise which is not veiled from You and does not end, and whose continuity does not
cease.
Greatness of Allah
We do not know thereality of Your greatness except that we know that thou art Ever-living
and Self-subsisting by Whom all things subsist. Drowsiness or sleep do not overtake You, vision
does not reach You and sight does not grasp You. You sees the eyes and counts the ages. You
holds (people as slaves) by foreheads and feet. We see Your creation and wonder over it because
of Your might, and describe it as (a result of) Your great authority. Whereas what is hidden from
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us, of which our sight has fallen short, which our intelligence has not attained, and between
which and ourselves curtains of the unknown have been cast, is far greater.
He who frees his heart (from all other engagements) and exerts his thinking in order to know
how You established Your throne, how You created Your creatures, how You suspended the air
in Your skies and how You spread Your earth on the waves of water, his eyes would return tired,
his intelligence defeated, his ears eager and his thinking wandering.
A portion of the same sermon: about hope and fear in Allah
He claims according to his own thinking that he hopes from Allah. By Allah, the Great, he
speaks a lie. The position is that his hope (in Allah) does not appear through his action although
the hope of every one who hopes is known through his action. Every hope is so, except the hope
in Allah, the Sublime, if it is impure; and every fear is established except the fear for Allah if it is
unreal.
He hopes big things from Allah and small things from men but he gives to man (such
consideration as) he does not give to Allah. What is the matter with Allah, glorified be His
praise? He is accorded less (consideration) than what is given to His creatures. Do you ever fear
to be false in your hope in Allah? Or do you not regard Him the center of your hope? Similarly,
if a man fears man he gives him (such consideration) out of his fear which he does not give to
Allah. Thus, he has made his fear for men ready currency while his fear from the Creator is mere
deferment or promise. This is the case of every one in whose eye this world appears big (and
important) and in whose heart its position is great. He prefers it over Allah, so he inclines
towards it, and becomes its devotee.
The example of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Certainly, in the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah - peace and blessing of
Allah be upon him and his progeny - was a sufficient example for you and a proof concerning the
vices of the world, its defects, the multitude of its disgraces and its evils. Because its sides had
been constringed for him, while its flanks had been spread for others; he was deprived of its milk
and turned away from its adornments.
The example of Musa (Moses)
If you want, I will, as a second example, relate to you concerning Musa, the Interlocutor of
Allah () when he said, AO Allah! I need whatever good You may grant me. (Holy Qur’an,
28:24) By Allah, he asked Him only for bread to eat because he was used to eating the herbs of
the earth, and the greenness of the herbs could be seen from the delicate skin of his belly due to
his thinness and paucity of his flesh.
The example of Dawud (David)
If you desire I can give you a third example of Dawud (). He is the holder of the Psalms and
thereciter among the people of Paradise. He used to prepare baskets of date palm leaves with his
own hands and would say to his companions: AWhich of you will help me by purchasing it? He
used to eat barley bread (bought) out of its prices.
The example of AIsa (Jesus)
If you desire I will tell you about AIsa () son of Maryam (Mary). He used a stone for his
pillow, put on coarse clothes and ate rough food. His condiment was hunger. His lamp at night
was the moon. His shade during the winter was just the expanse of earth eastward and westward.
His fruits and flowers were only what grows from the earth for the cattle. He had no wife to
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allure him, nor any son to give grief, nor wealth to deviate (his attention), nor greed to disgrace
him. His two feet were his conveyance and his two hands his servant.
Following the example of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
You should follow your Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , the pure, the chaste, may
Allah bless him and his descendants. In him is the example for the follower, and the consolation
for Theseeker of consolation. The most beloved person before Allah is he who follows His
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and who treads in his footsteps. He took the least (share)
from this world and did not take a full glance at it. Of all the people of the world he was the least
satiated and the most empty of stomach. The world was offered to him but he refused to accept
it. When he knew that Allah, the Glorified, hated a thing, he too hated it; that Allah held a thing
low, he too held it low, that Allah held a thing small, he too held it small. If we love what Allah
and His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) hate and hold great what Allah and His prophet
hold small that would be enough isolation from Allah had transgression of His commands.
The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) used to eat on the ground, and sat like a slave. He
repaired his shoe with his hand, and patched his clothes with his hand. He would ride an
unsaddled ass and would seat someone behind him. If there was a curtain on his door with
pictures on it he would say to one of his wives, AO such-and-such, take it away out of my sight
because if I look at it I recall the world and its allurements. Thus, he removed his heart from this
world and destroyed its remembrance from his mind. He loved that its allurements should remain
hidden from his eye so that he should not secure good dress from it, should not regard it a place
of stay and should not hope to live in it. Consequently he removed it from his mind, let it go
away from his heart and kept it hidden from his eyes. In the same way he who hates a thing
should hate to look at it or to hear about it.
Certainly there was in the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah all that would
apprise you of the evils of this world and its defects, namely that he remained hungry along with
his chief companions, and despite his great nearness the allurements of the world remained
remote from him. Now, one should see with one’s intelligence whether Allah honored
Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) - the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him
and his descendants - as a result of this or disgraced him. If he says that Allah disgraced him, he
certainly lies and perpetrates a great untruth. If he says Allah honored him, he should know that
Allah dishonored the others when He extended the (benefits of the) world for him but held them
away from him who was the nearest to Him of all men.
Therefore, one should follow His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , tread in his
footsteps and enter through his entrance. Otherwise he will not be safe from ruin. Certainly,
Allah made Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) - the peace and blessing of Allah
be upon him and his descendants - a sign for the Day of Judgment, a conveyor of tidings for
Paradise and a warner of retribution. He left this world hungry but entered upon the next world
safe. He did not lay one stone upon another (to make a house) till he departed and responded to
the call of Allah. How great is Allah’s blessing in that He blessed us with the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) as a predecessor whom we follow and a leader behind whom we tread.
The example of himself
By Allah, I have been putting patches in my shirts so much that now I feel shy of the patches.
Someone asked me whether I would not put it off, but I said, AGet away from me. Only in the
morning do people (realized the advantage of and) speak highly of the night journey.
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SERMON 160
Deputation of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Allah deputed the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) with a sparkling light, a clear
argument, an open path and a guiding book. His tribe is the best tribe and his lineal tree the best
lineal tree whose branches are in good proportion and fruits hanging (in plenty). His birth-place
was Mecca, and the place of his immigration Taybah (Medina), from where his name rose high
and his voice spread far and wide.
Allah sent him with a sufficing plea, a convincing discourse and a rectifying announcement.
Through him Allah disclosed the ways that had been forsaken, and destroyed the innovations that
had been introduced. Through Him he explained the detailed commands. Now, whoever adopts a
religion other than Islam, his misery is definite, his stick (of support) will be cracked, his fate
will be serious, his end will be long grief and distressing punishment.
Drawing lessons from this world
I trust in Allah, the trust of bending towards Him, and I seek His guidance for the way that
leads to His Paradise and takes to the place of His pleasure. I advise you, O creatures of Allah, to
exercise fear of Allah and to obey Him because it is salvation tomorrow and deliverance forever.
He warned (you of chastisement) and did so thoroughly. He persuaded (you towards virtues) and
did so fully. He described this world, its cutting away from you, its decay and its shifting.
Therefore keep aloof from its attractions, because very little of it will accompany you. This
house is the closest to the displeasure of Allah and theremotest from the pleasure of Allah.
So close your eyes, O creatures of Allah, from its worries and engagements, because you are
sure about its separation and its changing conditions. Fear it like one who sincerely fears and one
who struggles hard, and take a lesson from what you have seen about the falling places of those
before you, namely that their joints were made to vanish, their eyes and ears were destroyed,
their honor and prestige disappeared and their pleasure and wealth came to an end. The nearness
of their children changed into remoteness. The company of their spouses changed into separation
with them. They do not boast over each other, nor do they beget children nor meet each other nor
live as neighbors. Therefore, fear O creatures of Allah, like the fear of one who has control over
himself, who can check his passions and perceive with his wisdom. Surely, the matter is quite
clear, the banner is standing, the course is level and the way is straight.
SERMON 161
One of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s companions (from Banu Asad) asked him: AHow was it
that your tribe (Quraish) deprived you of this position (Caliphate) although you deserved it most?
Then in reply he said:
O brother of Banu Asad! Your girth is loose and you have put it on the wrong way.
Nevertheless you enjoy in-law kinship and also the right to ask, and since you have asked, listen.
As regards the oppression against us in this matter although we were the highest as regards
descent and the strongest in relationship with the Messenger of Allah. It was a selfish act over
which the hearts of people became greedy, although some people did not care for it. The Arbiter
is Allah and to Him is thereturn on the Day of Judgment.
ANow1 leave this story of devastation about which there is hue and cry all around.
Come and look at the son of Abu Sufyan (Mu’awiyah). Time has made me laugh after
weeping. No wonder, by Allah; what is this affair which surpasses all wonder and which has
increased wrongfulness. These people have tried to put out the flame of Allah’s light from His
lamp and to close His fountain from its source. They mixed epidemic-producing water between
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themselves and me. If the trying hardships were removed from among us, I would take them on
the course of truthfulness otherwise:
.So let not thy self go (in vain) in grief for them; verily
Allah knoweth all that they do. (Holy Qur’an, 35:8)
1. This is a hemistich from the couplet of the famous Arab poet Imri’ul-Qays al-Kindi. The
second hemistich is:
And let me know the story of what happened to the riding camels.
The incident behind this couplet is that when the father of Imri’ul-Qays namely Hijr ibn alHarith was killed, he roamed about the various Arab tribes to avenge his father’s life with their
help. In this connection he stayed with a man of Jadilah (tribe) but finding himself unsafe left
that place, and stayed with Khalid ibn Sadus an-Nabhani. In the meantime a man of Jadilah
named Ba’ith ibn Huways drove away some of his camels. Imri’ul-Qays complained of this
matter to his host and he asked him to send with him his she-camels then he would get back his
camels. Consequently Khalid went to those people and asked them to return the camels of his
guest which they had robbed. They said that he was neither a guest nor under his protection.
Thereupon Khalid swore that he was really his guest and showed them his she-camels that he had
with him. They then agreed to return the camels. But actually instead of returning the camels
they drove away the she-camels as well. One version is that they did return the camels to Khalid
but instead of handling them over to Imri’ul-Qays he kept them for himself. When Imri’ul-Qays
came to know this he composed a few couplets out of which this is one. It means Anow you
leave the story of these camels which were robbed but now let me know about the she-camels
snatched from my hands.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s intention in quoting this verse as an illustration is that ANow that
Mu’awiyah is at war, we should talk about and should leave the discussion about the devastation
engendered by those who had usurped my rights. That time has gone away. Now is the time for
grappling with the mischief of the hour. So discuss the event of the moment and do not start
untimely strain. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said this because the man had put the question to
him at the time of the battle of Siffin, when the battle was raging and bloodshed was in full
swing.
SERMON 162
Attributes of Allah
Praise to Allah, Creator of people; He has spread the earth. He makes streams to flow and
vegetation to grow on high lands. His primality has no beginning, nor has His eternity any end.
He is the First and from ever. He is the everlasting without limit. Foreheads bow before Him and
lips declare His oneness. He determined the limits of things at the time of His creating them,
keeping Himself away from any likeness.
Imagination cannot surmise Him within the limits of movements, limbs or senses. It cannot be
said about Him: Awhence;? and no time limit can be attributed to Him by saying Atill. He is
apparent, but it cannot be said Afrom what. He is hidden, but it cannot be said Ain what. He is
not a body which can die, nor is He veiled so as to be enclosed therein. He is not near to things
by way of touch, nor is He remote from them by way of separation.
The gazing of people’s eyes is not hidden from Him, nor therepetition of words, nor the
glimpse of hillocks, nor the tread of a footstep in the dark night or in the deep gloom, where the
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shining moon casts its light and the effulgent sun comes in its wake, through its setting and
appearing again and again with the rotation of time and periods, by the approach of the
advancing night or the passing away of the running day.
He precedes every extremity and limit, and every counting and numbering. He is far above
what those whose regard is limited attribute to Him, such as the qualities of measure, having
extremities, living in house and dwelling in abodes, because limits are meant for creation and are
attributable only to other than Allah.
Allah, the Originator from naught
He did not create things from eternal matter nor after every-existing examples, but He created
whatever He created and then He fixed limits thereto, and He shaped whatever He shaped and
gave the best shape thereto. Nothing can disobey Him, but the obedience of something is of no
benefit to Him. His knowledge about those who died in the past is the same as His knowledge
about the survivors, and His knowledge about whatever there is in the high skies is like His
knowledge of whatever there is in the low earth.
A portion of the same sermon:: Man’s creation, and pointing towards therequirements of life:
O creature who has been equitably created and who has been nurtured and looked after in the
darkness of wombs with multiple curtains. You were originated from the essence of clay (Holy
Qur’an, 23:12) and placed in a still place for a known length (Holy Qur’an, 77:21-22) and an
ordained time. You used to move in the womb of your mother as an embryo, neither responding
to a call nor hearing any voice.
Then you where taken out from your place of stay to a place you had not seen, and you were
not acquainted with the means of awaiting its benefits, or with who guided you to eke out your
sustenance from the udder of your mother. And, who, when you were in need, appraised you of
the location of what you required or aimed at. Alas! Certainly he who is unable to understand the
qualities of a being with shape and limbs is the more unable to understand the qualities of the
Creator and the more remote from appreciating Him through the limitations of creatures.
SERMON 163
When people went to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) in a deputation and complained to him
through what they had to say against AOthman, and requested him to speak to him on their
behalf and to admonish him for their sake, he went to see him and said:1
The people are behind me and they have made me an ambassador between you and
themselves; but by Allah, I do not know what to say to you. I know nothing (in this matter)
which you do not know, nor can I lead you to any matter of which you are not aware. You
certainly know what we know, we have not come to know anything before you which we could
tell you; nor did we learn anything in secret which we should convey to you. You have seen as
we have seen and you have heard as we have heard. You sat in the company of the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah as we did. (Abu Bakr) ibn AbiQuhafah and (AOmer) ibn
al-Khattab were no more responsible for acting righteously than you, since you are nearer than
both of them to the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah through kinship, and you
also hold relationship to him by marriage which they do not hold.
Then (fear) Allah, in your own self; for, by Allah, you are not being shown anything as if you
are blind or being apprised of anything as if you are ignorant. The was are clear while the
banners of faith are fixed. You should know that among the creatures of Allah, the most
distinguished person before Allah is the just Imam who has been guided (by Allah) and guides
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others. So, he stands by therecognized ways of the Prophet’s behavior and destroys unrecognized
innovations. The (Prophet’s) ways are clear and they have signs, while innovations are also clear
and they too have signs. Certainly, the worst man before Allah is the oppressive Imam who has
gone astray and through whom others go astray. He destroys the accepted Sunna and revives
abandoned innovations. I heard the Messenger of Allah saying: AOn the Day of Judgment the
oppressive Imam will be brought without anyone to support him or anyone to advance excuses
on his behalf. Then he will be thrown into Hell where he will rotate as the hand-mill rotates, then
(eventually) he will be confined to its hollow.
I swear to you by Allah that you should not be that Imam of the people who will be killed
because it has been said that, AAn Imam of this people will be killed after which killing and
fighting will be made open for them till the Day of Judgment, and he will confuse their matters
and spread troubles over them. As a result, they will not discern truth from wrong. They will
oscillate like waves and would be utterly misled. You should not behave as the carrying beast for
Marwan so that he may drag you wherever he likes, despite (your) seniority of age and length of
life.
Then AOthman said to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) :
Speak to the people to give me time until I redress their grievances. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S) said: So far as Medina is concerned here is no question of time. As for remoter areas you
can have the time needed for your order to reach there.
1. During the Caliphate of AOthman when the Muslims were weary of the oppression of the
Government. Its officials collected in Medina to complain to Thesenior companions of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . They came to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) in a
peaceful manner and requested him to see AOthman and advise him not to trample on the
Muslims’ rights and to put an end to the troubles which were proving the cause of the people’s
ruin. Whereupon Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) went to him and uttered these words.
In order to make the bitterness of the admonition palatable Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
adopted that way of speech in the beginning which would create a sense of responsibility in the
addressee and direct him towards his obligations. Thus, by mentioning his companionship of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , his personal position, and his kinship to the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) as against the two previous Caliphs, his intention was to make
him realize his duties. In any case, this was obviously not an occasion for eulogizing him, so that
its later portion can be disregarded and the whole speech be regarded as an eulogy of his
attainments, because from its very beginning it is evident that whatever AOthman did, he did it
wilfully, that nothing was done without his knowledge or his being informed, and that he could
not be held unaccountable for it because of his being unaware of it. If the adoption of a line of
action which made the whole Islamic world raise hue and cry in spite of his having being a
companion of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , having heard his instructions, having
seen his behavior and having been acquainted with the commandments of Islam can be regarded
as a distinction, then this taunt may also be regarded as praise. If that is not a distinction then this
too cannot be called an eulogy. In fact, the words about which it is argued that they are in praise
are enough to prove Theseriousness of his crime, because a crime in ignorance and unawareness
is not so serious as the weight given to Theseriousness of the commission of a crime despite
knowledge and awareness. Consequently a person who is unaware of the rise and fall of a road
and stumbles in the dark night is excusable but a person who is aware of the rise and fall of the
road and stumbled in broad day light is liable to be blamed. If on this occasion he is told that he
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has eyes and is also aware of the rise and fall of the way, it would not mean that his vastness of
knowledge or the brightness of his eye-sight is being praised, but the intention would be that he
did not notice the pitfalls despite his eyes, and did not walk properly, and that therefore for him,
having or not having eyes is the same, and knowing or not knowing is equal.
In this connection great stress is laid on his being a son-in-law, namely that the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) married his two daughters Ruqayya and Umm Kulthum to him
one after the other. Before taking this to be a distinction, thereal nature of AOthman’s son-inlawship should be seen. History shows that in this matter AOthman did not enjoy the distinction
of being the first, but before him Ruqayya and Umm Kulthum had been married to two sons of
Abu Lahab namely AUtbah and AUtaybah, but despite their being sons-in-law, they have not
been included among people of position of pre-prophethood period. How then can this be
regarded as a source of position without any personal merit, when there is no authority about the
importance of this relationship, nor was any importance attached to this matter in such a way that
there might have been some competition between AOthman and some other important
personality in this regard and that his selection for it might have given him prominence, or that
these, two girls might have been shown to possess an important position in history, tradition or
biography as a result of which this relationship could be given special importance and regarded
as a distinction for him? If the marriage of these two daughters with AUtbah and AUtaybah in the
pre-prophethood period is held as lawful on the ground that marriage with unbelievers had not
till then been made unlawful, then in AOthman’s case also the condition for lawfulness was his
acceptance of Islam, there is no doubt that he had pronounced the kalimah ash-shahadatayn
(there is no god but Allah and Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) is His
Messenger) and had accepted Islam outwardly. As such this marriage can be held a proof of his
outward Islam, but no other honor can be proved through it. Again, it is also not agreed that these
two were thereal daughters of the Messenger of Allah, because there is one group which denies
them to be his real daughters, and regards them as being the daughters of Khadijah’s sister
Halah, or the daughters of her own previous husband. Thus, Abul-Qasim al-Kufi (d. 352 A.H.)
writes:
When the Messenger of Allah married Khadijah, then some time thereafter Halah died leaving
two daughters, one named Zainab and the other named Ruqayyah and both of them were brought
up by the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and Khadijah and they maintained them, and it
was the custom before Islam that a child was assigned to whoever brought him u, p. (alIstighasah, p.69)
Ibn Hisham has written about the issues of Hadrat Khadijah as follows:
Before marriage with the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) she was married to Abu
Halah ibn Malik. She delivered for him Hind ibn Abu Halah and Zainab daughter of Abu Halah.
Before marriage with Abu Halah she was married to AUtayyiq ibn AAbid ibn AAbdillah ibn
AAmr ibn Makhzum and she delivered for him AAbdullah and a daughter. (as-Sira annabawiyyah, Vol. 4, p. 293)
This shows that Hadrat Khadijah had two daughters before being married to the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) and according to all appearances they would be called his
daughters and those to whom they were married would be called his sons-in-law, but the position
of this relationship would be the same as if those girls were his daughters. Therefore, before
putting it forth as a matter for pride thereal status of the daughters should be noted and a glance
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should be cast at AOthman’s conduct. In this connection, al-Bukhari and other narrators (of
traditions) and historians record this tradition as follows:
Anas ibn Malik relates that: AWe were present on the occasion of the burial of the Prophet’s
daughter Umm Kulthum, while the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was sitting beside
her grave. I saw his eyes shedding tears. Then he said, AIs there any one among you who has not
committed a sin last night? Abu Talhah (Zayd ibn Sahl al-Ansari) said, AI’, then the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) said, AThen you get into the grave, consequently he got down
into the grave.
The commentators said about Acommitted sin’ that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) meant to say Aone who had not had sexual intercourse. On this occasion the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) unveiled the private life of AOthman and prevented him
from getting down into the grave, although it was a prominent merit of the Prophet’s character
that he did not disgrace or belittle any one by making public his private life, and despite of
knowledge of other’s shortcomings, ignored them; but in this case the filth was such that it was
deemed necessary to disgrace him before the whole crowd.
Since AOthman did not show any regard for the demise of his wife (Umm Kulthum) nor was
he moved or felt sorry (for this event), and paid no heed to the cutting off his relationship with
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) (for being his son-in-law), he (AOthman) had
sexual intercourse on the same night, therefore the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
deprived him of this right and honor. (al-Bukhari, Sahih, Vol. 2, pp. 100-101, 114; Ahmed ibn
Hanbal, Al-Musnad, Vol. 3, pp. 126, 228, 229, 270; al-Hakim, Al-Mustadrak, Vol. 4, p. 47; alBayhaqi, Al-Sunan al-Kubra, Vol. 4, p. 53; ibn Sa’d, Al-Tabaqat al-Kubra, Vol. 8, p. 26; asSuhayli, Al-Rawd al-AAnif, Vol. 2, p. 107; Ibn Hajar, Al-Isaba, Vol. 4, p. 489; Fath al-Bari, Vol.
3, p. 122; al-AAyni, AUmdat al-Qari, Vol. 4, p. 85; ibn al-Athir, Al-Nihaya, Vol. 3, p. 276; Ibn
Manzur, Lisan al-AArab, Vol. 9, pp. 280-281; az-Zabidi, Taj al-AArus, Vol. 6, p. 220).
SERMON 164
Describing the wonderful creation of the peacock About the wonderful creation of birds
Allah has provided wonderful creations including the living, the lifeless, the stationary, and
the moving. He has established such clear proofs for His delicate creative power and great might
that minds bend down to Him in acknowledgment thereof and in submission to Him, and
arguments about His oneness strike our ears. He has created birds of various shapes which live in
the burrows of the earth, in the openings of high passes and on the peaks of mountains.
They have different kinds of wings, and various characteristics. They are controlled by therein
of (Allah’s) authority. They flutter with their wings in the expanse of the vast firmament and the
open atmosphere. He brought them into existence from non-existence in strange external shapes,
and composed them with joints and bones covered with flesh. He prevented some of them from
flying easily in the sky because of their heavy bodies and allowed them to use their wings only
close to the ground. He has set them in different colors by his delicate might and exquisite
creative power.
Among them are those which are tinted with one hue and there is no other hue except the one
in which they have been dyed. There are others which are tinted with one color, and they have a
neck ring of a different color than that with which they are tinted.
About the Peacock
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The most amazing among them in its creation is the peacock, which Allah has created in the
most symmetrical dimensions, and arranged its hues in the best arrangement with wings whose
ends are inter-weaved together and whose tail is long. When it moves to its female it spreads out
its folded tail and raises it up so as to cast a shade over its head, as if it were the sail of a boat
being pulled by the sailor. It feels proud of its colors and swages with its movements. It
copulates like the cocks. It leaps (on the female) for fecundation like lustful energetic men at the
time of fighting.
I am telling you all this from observation, unlike he who narrates on the basis of weak
authority. For example, the belief of some people that it fecundates the female by a tear which
flows from its eyes and when it stops on the edges of the eyelids the female swallows and lays its
eggs thereby and not through fecundation by a male other than by means of this flowing tear.
Even if they say this, it would be no more amazing than (what they say about) the mutual feeding
of the crows (for fecundation). You would imagine its feathers to be sticks made of silvers and
the wonderful circles and sun-shaped feathers growing thereon to be of pure gold and pieces of
green emerald. If you likened them to anything growing on land, you would say that it is a
bouquet of flowers collected during every spring. If you likened them to cloths, they would be
like printed apparels or amazing variegated cloths of Yemen. If you likened them to ornaments
then they would be like gems of different color with studded silvers.
The peacock walks with vanity and pride, and throws open its tail and wings and laughs,
admiring the handsomeness of its dress and the hues of its necklace of gems. But when it casts its
glance at its legs it cries loudly with a voice which indicates its call for help and display its true
grief, because its legs are thin like the legs of Indo-Persian cross-bred cocks. At the end of its
shin there is a thin thorn and on the crown of its head there is a bunch of green variegated
feathers. Its neck begins in the shape of a goblet and its stretch up to its belly is like the hair-dye
of Yemen in color or like silk cloth put on a polished mirror which looks as if it has been covered
with a black veil, except that on account of its excessive luster and extreme brightness it appears
that a lush green color has been mixed with it. Along the openings of its ears there is a line of
shining bright daisy color like the thin end of a pen. Whiteness shines on the black background.
There is hardly a hue from which it has not taken a bit and improved it further by regular polish,
luster, silken brightness and brilliance. It is therefore like scattered blossoms which have not
been seasoned by the rains of spring or the sun of the summer.
It also sheds its plumage and puts off its dress. They all fall away and grow again. They fall
way from the feather stems like the falling of leaves from twigs, and then they begin to join
together and grow till they return to the state that existed before their falling away. The new hues
do not change from the previous ones, nor does any color occur in other than its own place. If
you carefully look at one hair from the hairs of its feather stems it would look like red rose, then
emerald green and then golden yellow.
How can sharpness of intellect describe such a creation, or faculty of mind, or the utterances
of describers manage to tell of it. Even its smallest parts have made it impossible for the
imagination to pick them out or for tongues to describe them. Glorified is Allah who has disabled
intellects from describing the creation which He placed openly before the eyes and which they
see bounded, shaped, arranged and colored. He also disabled tongues from briefly describing its
qualities and also from expanding in its praise.
The magnificence of the Creator in great and small creation
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Glorified is Allah who has assigned feet to small ants and gnats and also to those above them,
Theserpents and the elephants. He has made it obligatory upon Himself that no skeleton in which
He infuses the spirit would move, but that death is its promised place and destruction its final
end.
A portion of the same sermon: describing paradise
If you cast your mind’s eye at what is described to you about Paradise, your heart would
begin to hate the delicacies of this world that have been displayed here, namely its desires and its
pleasures, and the beauties of its scenes. And you would be lost in the rustling of the trees whose
roots lie hidden in the mounds of musk on the banks of the rivers in Paradise and in the attraction
of the bunches of fresh pearls in the twigs and branches of those trees, and in the appearance of
different fruits from under the cover of their leaves. These fruits can be picked without difficulty
as they come down at the desire of their pickers. Pure honey and fermented wine will be handed
round to those who settle down in the courtyards of its palaces.
They are a people whom honor has always followed till they were made to settle in the house
of eternal abode, and they obtained rest from the movement of journeying. O listener! If you
busy yourself in advancing towards these wonderful scenes which will rush towards you, then
your heart will certainly die due to eagerness for them, and you will be prepared to seek the
company of those in the graves straight away from my audience here and hasten towards them.
Allah may, by His mercy, include us and you too among those who strive with their hearts for
the abodes of the virtuous.
Note explaining some of the wonderful and obscure portions of this sermon
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: In Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s words Aya’urru
bimalaqihihi, Aal-arr implies Acopulation, e.g. When it is said Aarra’r-rajulu al-mar’ata
ya’urruha, it means AHe copulated with the woman.
In his words Aka’annahu qal’u dariyyin Aanajahu nutiyyuhu, Aal-qal’means the sail of a boat.
Adari means belonging to Darin which is a small town on the coast from where scents are
bought. And Aanajahu means Aturned it. It is said Aanajtun’n-naqata - like nasartu - a’najuha
Aanjan. AWhen you turn the she-camel. And Aan-nuti means sailor. His words Adaffatay jufunihi
means edges of the eyelids, since Aad-daffatan means the two edges. His words Awa filadhu’zzabarjadi: Aal-filadh is the plural of Aal-fildhah it means piece. His words Aka ba’isi’l-lu’lu’i’rratibi. Aal-kibasah means bunch of dates. Aal-Aasalij means twigs. Its singular is Ausluj.
SERMON 165
Advice for observing courtesy and kindness and keeping in and out of the same
The young among you should follow the elders while the elders should be kind to the young.
Do not be like those rude people of the pre-Islamic (al-jahiliyyah) period who did not exert
themselves in religion nor use their intellects in the matter of Allah. The y1 are like the breaking
of eggs in the nest of a dangerous bird, because their breaking looks bad, but keeping them intact
would mean the production of dangerous young ones.
A portion of the same sermon: about the autocracy and oppression of the Umayyads and their
fate
They will divide after their unity and scatter away from their center. Some of them will stick
to the branches, and bending down as the branches bend, until Allah, the Sublime, will collect
them together for the day that will be worst for the Umayyads just as the scattered bits of clouds
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collect together in the autumn. Allah will create affection among them. Then He will make them
into a strong mass like the mass of clouds. Then he will open doors for them to flow out from
their starting place like the flood of the two gardens (of Saba’) from which neither high rocks
remained safe nor small hillocks, and its flow could be repulsed either by strong mountains nor
by high lands. Allah will scatter them in the low lands of valleys and then He will make them
flow like streams throughout the earth, and through them He will arrange the taking of rights of
one people by another people and make one people to stay in the houses of another people. By
Allah, all their position and esteem will dissolve as fat dissolves on the fire.
The cause of tyranny
O people! If you had not evaded support of the truth and had not felt weakness from crushing
wrong then he who was not your match would not have aimed at you and he who overpowered
you would not have overpowered you. But you roamed about the deserts (of disobedience) like
Banu Isra’il (Children of Israel). I swear by my life that after me your tribulations will increase
several times, because you will have abandoned the truth behind the backs, severed your
connection with your near ones and established relations with remote ones. Know that if you had
followed him who was calling you (to guidance) he would have made you tread the ways of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , then you would have been spared the difficulties of
misguidance, and you would have thrown away the crushing burden from your necks.
1. The implication is that the outer Islam of these people required that they should not be
molested, but the consequence of sparing them in this way was that they would create mischief
and rebellion.
SERMON 166
At the beginning of his Caliphate
Fulfillment of rights and obligations and advice to fear Allah in all matters.
Allah, the Glorified, has sent down a guiding Book wherein He has explained virtue and vice.
You should adopt the course of virtue whereby you will have guidance, and keep aloof from the
direction of vice so that you remain on the right way. (Mind) the obligations, (mind) the
obligations. Fulfil them for Allah and they will take you to Paradise. Surely, Allah has made
unlawful the things which are not unknown and made lawful the things which are without defect.
He has declared paying regard to Muslims as the highest of all regards. He has placed the rights
of Muslims in the same grade (of importance) as devotion (to himself and His oneness).
Therefore, a Muslim is one from whose tongue and hand every (other) Muslim is safe save in the
matter of truth. It is not, therefore, lawful to molest a Muslim except when it is obligatory.
Hasten towards the most common matter which is peculiar to every one; and that is death.
Certainly, people (who have already gone) are ahead of you while the hour (Day of Judgment) is
driving you from behind. Remain light, in order that you may overtake them. Your backs are
being awaited for the sake of the fronts. Fear Allah in the matter of His creatures and His cities
because you will be questioned even about lands and beasts. Obey Allah and do not disobey
Him. When you see virtue adopt it, and when you see vice avoid it.
SERMON 167
After swearing of allegiance to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), some people from among the
companions of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said to him. AYou should punish the
people who assaulted AOthman, whereupon he said:
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O my brothers! I am not ignorant of what you know, but how do I have the power for it while
those who assaulted him are in the height of their power. They have superiority over us, not we
over them. They are now in the position that even your slaves have risen with them and Bedouin
Arabs too have joined them. They are now among you and are harming you as they like. Do you
see any way to be able to do what you aim at.
This demand is certainly that of the pre-Islamic (al-jahiliyya) period and these people have
support behind them. When the matter is taken up, people will have different views about it. One
group will think as you do, but another will not think as you think, and there will be still another
group who will be neither this way nor that way. Be patient till people quiet down and hearts
settle in their places so that rights can be achieved for people easily. Let me assure you, and see
what is given to you by me. Do not do anything which shatters your power, weakens your
strength and engenders feebleness and disgrace. I shall control this affair as far as possible, but if
I find it necessary the last treatment will, of course, be branding with a hot iron (through
fighting).
SERMON 168
When the people of Jamal set off for Basra Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
There is no doubt that Allah sent down the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) as a guide
with an eloquent Book and a standing command. No one will be ruined by it except one who
ruins himself. Certainly, only doubtful innovations cause ruin except those from which Allah
may protect. In Allah’s authority lies the safety of your affairs. Therefore, render Him such
obedience as is neither blameworthy nor insincere. By Allah, you must do so, otherwise Allah
will take away from you the power of Islam, and will never thereafter return it to you till it
reverts to others.
Certainly, these people are in agreement in disliking my authority. I will carry on till I
perceive disunity among you; because if, in spite of the unsoundness of their view, they succeed,
the whole organization of the Muslims will be shattered. They are hankering after this world out
of jealousy against him on whom Allah has bestowed it. So they intend reverting the matters on
their backs (pre-Islamic period), while on us it is obligatory, for your sake, to abide by the Book
of Allah (Holy Qur’an), the Sublime, and the conduct of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) of Allah, to stand by His rights and therevival of his Sunna.
SERMON 169
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) approached Basra an Arab met him and spoke to him, as
he had been sent to him by a group of people of Basra to inquire from him on their behalf his
position vis-a-vis the people of Jamal. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) explained to him his
position with respect to them, from which he was convinced that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
was in the right. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) asked him to swear allegiance, but he replied AI
am just a message carrier of a people and shall not do anything until I get back to them. Upon
this Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said to him:
If those at your back send you as a forerunner to search out a rain-fed area for them, and you
return to them and apprise them of greenery and water but they disagree with you and go towards
dry and barren land, what would you do then? He said: I would leave them and go towards
greenery and water. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) then said: "So, then, stretch your hand."
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This man related that: By Allah, by such a clear argument I could not refrain from swearing
allegiance to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S).
This man was known as Kulayb al-Jarmi.
SERMON 170
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) decided to fight the enemy face to face at Siffin he said:
O Lord! Sustainer of the high sky and the suspender firmament which You has made a shelter
for the night and the day, an orbit for the sun and the moon and a path for the rotating stars, and
for populating it You has created a group of Your angels who do not get weary of worshipping
You. O Sustainer of this earth which You has made an abode for people and a place for the
movement of insects and beasts and countless other creatures seen and unseen. O Sustainer of
strong mountains which You has made as pegs for the earth and (a means of) support for people.
If You gives us victory over our enemy, save us from excesses and keep us on the straight path
of truth. But if You gives them victory over us, then grant us martyrdom and save us from
mischief.
Where are those who protect honor, and those self-respecting persons who defend respectable
persons in the time of hardship? Shame is behind you while Paradise is in front of you.
SERMON 171
About the Consultative Committee and the Battle of Jamal
Praise to Allah from whose view one sky does not conceal another sky nor one earth another
earth.
A portion of the same sermon: about the Consultative Committee after the death of AOmer
ibn al-Khattab
Someone1 said to me, AO son of Abu Talib, you are eager for the caliphate. Then I told him,
ARather, you are, by Allah, more greedy, although more remote, while I am more suited as
well as nearer. I have demanded it as my right, while you are intervening between me and it, and
you are turning my face from it. When I knocked at his ears with arguments among the crowd of
those present he was startled as if he was stunned not knowing what reply to give me about it.
O Lord! I seek Your succor against the Quraish and those who are assisting them, because
they are denying me (the rights of) kinship, have lowered my high position, and are united in
opposing me in the matter (of the caliphate) which is my right, and then they said, AKnow that
the rightful thing is that you have it and also that you may leave it.2
A portion of the same sermon: describing the people of Jamal
They (Talhah, az-Zubayr and their supporters) came out dragging the wife of the Messenger
of Allah - the peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and his descendants - just as a maidslave
is dragged for sale. They took her to Basra where those two (Talhah and az-Zubayr) put their
own women in their houses but exposed the wife of the Messenger of Allah to themselves and to
others in the army in which there was not a single individual who had not offered me his
obedience and sworn to me allegiance quite obediently, without any compulsion.
Here in Basra they approached my governor and treasurers of the public treasury and its other
inhabitants. They killed some of them in captivity and others by treachery. By Allah, even if they
had willfully killed only one individual from among the Muslims without any fault, it would
have been lawful for me to kill the whole of this army because they were present in it but did not
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disagree with it nor prevented it by tongue or hand, not to say that they killed from among the
Muslims a number equal to that with which they had marched on them.
1. On the occasion of the Consultative Committee Sa’d ibn Abu Waqqas repeated to Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) what AOmer had said in his last hours namely that AO Ali, you are very
greedy for the position of Caliphate, and Ali replied that, AHe who demands his own right cannot
be called greedy; rather greedy is he who prevents Thesecuring of the right and tries to grab it
despite being unfit for it.
There is no doubt that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) considered the Caliphate to be his right,
and demanded his right. The demand for a right does not dispel a right so that it may be put forth
as an excuse for not assigning him the caliphate, and the demand may be held as a mark of greed.
Even if it was greed, who was not involved in this greed? Was not the pull between the
Muhajirun and the Ansar, the mutual struggle between the members of the Consultative
Committee and the mischief mongering of Talhah and az-Zubayr the product of this very greed.
If Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had been greedy for this position, he would have stood for it,
closing his eyes to the consequences and results. When AAbbas (uncle of the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) ) and Abu Sufyan pressed him for (accepting) allegiance, and when, after
the third Caliph people thronged to him for (swearing) allegiance, he should have accepted their
offer without paying any attention to the deteriorated conditions. But at no time did Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) take any step which could prove that he wanted the Caliphate for the sake of
caliphate. But rather his demand for the caliphate was only with the object that it features should
not be altered and thereligion should not become the victim of others’ desires, not that he should
enjoy the pleasures of life which could be attributed to greed.
2. Explaining the meaning, Ibn Abul-Hadid writes that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s intention
was to say:
They (the Quraish and those who are assisting them) were not only content to keep me away
from my right over the caliphate which they have usurped (from me), but rather claimed that it
was their right whether to give it to me or prevent me from the same; and that I have no right to
argue with them.
Furthermore, the intention (of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) ) is that:
If they had not said that it is right to keep away from the caliphate, it would have been easy to
endure it because this would have, at least, showed their admitting my right although they were
not prepared to concede it. (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 9, p. 306)
SERMON 172
On eligibility for the Caliphate
The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) is the trustee of Allah’s revelation, the Last of
His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) s, the giver of tidings of His mercy and the warner of
His chastisement.
O people, the most rightful of all persons for this matter (namely the caliphate) is he who is
most competent among them to maintain it, and he who knows best Allah’s commands about it.
If any mischief is created by a mischief-monger, he will be called upon to repent. If he refuses,
he will be fought. By my life,1 if the question of Imamat was not to be decided unless all the
people were present, then there would be no such case. But those who agreed about it imposed
the decision on those who were absent, so much so that he who was present could not dissent and
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the one who was absent could not choose (any one else). Know that I shall fight two persons one who claims what is not his and the other who ignores what is obligatory upon him.
The need for sagacity in fighting against Muslims
O creatures of Allah! I advise you to have fear of Allah because it is the best advice to be
mutually given by persons, and the best of all things before Allah. The door of war has been
opened between you and the other Muslims. And this banner will be borne only by him who is a
man of sight, of endurance and of knowledge of the position of rightfulness. Therefore, you
should go ahead with that you are ordered and desist from what you are refrained. Do not make
haste in any matter till you have clarified it. For in the case of every matter which you dislike we
have a right to change it.
The behavior of this world with its adherents
Know that this world which you have started to covet and in which you are interested, and
which sometimes enrages you and sometimes pleases you is not your (permanent) abode, nor the
place of your stay for which you might have been created, nor one to which you have been
invited. Know that it will not last for you nor will you live along with it. If anything out of this
world deceives you (into attraction), its evils warn you too. You should give up (the objects of)
its deceits in favor of (the objects of) its warning and(the objects of) its attractions in favor of
(the objects of) its terrors. And while here in it, advance towards that house to which you have
been called, and turn away your hearts from the world. None of you should cry like a maid slave
over anything which she has been deprived of. Seek the perfection of Allah’s bounty over you by
endurance in obedience to Allah and in guarding what He has asked you to guard, namely His
Book.
Know that the loss of anything of this world will not harm you, if you have guarded the
principles of your religion. Know also that after the loss of your religion nothing of this world for
which you have cared will benefit you. May Allah carry our hearts and your hearts towards the
right and may He grant you and us endurance.
1. When the people collected in the saqifa of Banu Sa’idah in connection with the election,
even those who were not present there were made to follow the decision taken there. And the
principle was adopted that those present at the election had no right to reconsider the matter or to
break the allegiance and those not present could do nothing but acquiesce in the agreed decision.
But when the people of Medina swore allegiance at the hands of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S),
the Governor of Syria (Mu’awiyah) refused to follow suit on the ground that since he was not
present on the occasion he was not bound to abide by it, whereupon Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S) gave a reply in this sermon on the basis of these accepted and agreed principles and
conditions which had been established among these people and had become unable to convert.
AWhen the people of Medina and the Ansar and the Muhajirun have sworn allegiance on my
hand, Mu’awiyah had no right to keep aloof from it on the ground that he was not present on the
occasion, nor were Talhah and az-Zubayr entitled to break the pledge after swearing allegiance.
On this occasion, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) did not argue on the strength of any saying of
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) which would serve as his final say about the
caliphate, because the grounds for refusal in his case was in respect of the modus operandi of the
principle of election. Therefore, in keeping with therequirements of the situation a reply based on
the agreed principles of the adversary could alone quiet him. Even if he had argued on the
strength of the Prophet’s command it would have been subjected to various interpretations and
the matter would have been prolonged instead of being settled. Again Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
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(A.S) had seen that soon after the death of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) all his
sayings and commands had been set aside. Therefore, how after the lapse of a long time, could
one be expected to accept it when habit had been established to follow one’s free will against the
Prophet’s sayings.
SERMON 173
About Talhah ibn AUbaydillah
Delivered when he received the news that Talhah and az-Zubayr had already left for Basra to
fight against him
As for me, I would never be frightened of fighting or be made to fear striking because I am
satisfied with Allah’s promise of support to me. By Allah, Talhah has hastened with drawn
sworn to avenge AOthman’s blood for fear lest the demand for AOthman’s blood be made
against himself, because the people’s idea in this matter is about him, and, in fact, he was the
most anxious among them for his killing. Therefore, he has tried to create misunderstanding by
collecting forces in order to confuse the matter and to create doubt.
By Allah, he did not act in either of three ways about AOthman. If the son of AAffan
(AOthman) was in the wrong, as Talhah believed, it is necessary for him to support those who
killed1 him or to keep away from his supporters. If AOthman was the victim of oppression, then
Talhah should have been among those who were keeping (the assaulters) way from him or were
advancing pleas on his behalf. If he was in doubt about these two alternatives, then it was
incumbent upon him to leave him (AOthman) and retire aside and leave the men with him (to
deal with him as they wished). But he adopted none of these three ways, and came out with a
thing in which there is no good, and his excuses are not acceptable.
1. It means that if Talhah considered AOthman an oppressor, then after his assassination,
instead of getting ready to avenge his blood, he should have supported his killers and justified
their action. It is not the intention that in the case of AOthman being in the wrong Talhah should
have supported the attackers because he was already supporting and encouraging them.
SERMON 174
Warning to neglectful people, and about the vastness of his own knowledge
O people who are (negligent of Allah but) not neglected (by Allah), and those who miss
(doing good acts) but are to be caught. How is it that I see you becoming removed from Allah
and becoming interested in others? You are like the camel whom the grazier drives to a diseasestricken pasture and a disastrous watering place. They are like beasts who are fed in order to be
slaughtered, but they do not know what is intended for them. When they are treated well they
think that day to be their whole life, and eating their full to be their aim.
By Allah, if I wish, I can tell every one of you from where he has come, where he has to go
and all his affairs, but I fear lest you abandon the Messenger of Allah - peace and blessing of
Allah be upon him and his progeny - in my favor. I shall certainly convey these things to
Theselected ones who will remain safe from that fear. By Allah, Who deputed the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) with Right and distinguished him over creation. I do not speak
save the truth. He (the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) informed me of all this and also
about the death of every one who dies, the salvation of every one who is granted salvation, and
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the consequences of this matter (the caliphate). He left nothing (that could) pass into my head
without putting it in my ear and telling me about it.1
O people! By Allah, I do not impel you to any obedience unless I practice it before you and
do not restrain you from any disobedience unless I desist from it before you.
1. Those who drink from the springs of revelation and the Divine inspiration see things hidden
behind the curtains of the unknown and the events which will occur in the future in the same way
as objects can be seen with the eyes, and this does not conflict with the saying of Allah that:
Say: ANone (either) in the heavens or in the earth knoweth the
unseen save Allah. (Holy Qur’an, 27:65)
because this verse contains the negation of personal knowledge of the unknown, but not the
negation of knowledge which is required by the prophets and holy persons through the Divine
inspiration, by virtue of which they make prophesies about the future and unveil many events
and happenings. Several verses of the Holy Qur’an support this view such as:
When the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) confided unto one of his wives a matter,
she divulged it (unto others) and Allah apprised him thereof. He made known a part of it and
avoided a part; so when he informed her of it, said she: AWho informed thee of this? He said:
AInformed me, the All-knowing, the All-aware. (Holy Qur’an, 66:3)
These are of the tidings of the unseen which We reveal unto
thee (O Our Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy
Household) ).(Holy Qur’an, 11:49)
Therefore, it is incorrect to argue in support of the view that if it is said that the prophets and
holy persons possess knowledge of the unknown it would imply duality in the Divine attributes.
It would have implied duality if it were said that someone other than Allah has personal
knowledge of the unknown. When it is not so and the knowledge possessed by the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) s and Imams is that given by Allah it has no connection with
duality. If duality should mean what is alleged, what would be the position of AIsa’s (Jesus’s)
assertion related in the Holy Qur’an namely:
.Out of clay will I make for you like the figure of a bird, and I will breathe into it, and it shall
become a flying bird by Allah’s permission; and I shall heal the blind and the leper and will rise
the dead to life by Allah’s permission; and I will declare to you what ye eat and what ye store up
in you houses.(Holy Qur’an, 3:49)
If it is believed that AIsa (Jesus) could create and bestow life with Allah’s permission does it
mean that he was Allah’s partner in the attributes of creation and revival? If this is not so then
how can it be held that if Allah gives someone the knowledge of the unknown it implies that he
has been taken to be His partner in His attributes. And how can one extol one’s belief in the
oneness of Allah by holding that the knowledge of the unknown implies duality.
No one can deny the fact that some people either see in dreams certain things which have yet
to occur in the future, or that things can be read through interpretation of the dream, while during
a dream neither do Thesenses function nor do the powers of understanding and comprehension
cooperate. Therefore, if some events become known to some people in wakefulness why should
there be amazement over it and what are the grounds for rejecting it, when it stands to reason that
things possible in dreams are also possible in wakefulness. Thus, Ibn Maytham al-Bahrani has
written that it is possible to achieve all this, because in a dream the spirit becomes free from
looking after the body and is removed from bodily connections. As a result of this it perceives
such hidden realities which could not be seen because of the obstruction of the body. In the same
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way those perfect beings who pay no heed to bodily matters, and turn with all the attention of
spirit and heart towards the center of knowledge can see those realities and secrets which the
ordinary eyes are unable to discern. Therefore, keeping in view the spiritual greatness of Ahl alBayt () (members of the Prophet’s family) it should not appear strange that they were aware of
events which were going to occur in future. Ibn Khaldun has written:
When thaumaturgic feats are performed by others what do you think about those who were
distinguished in knowledge and honesty and were a mirror of the Prophet’s traits, while the
consideration Allah had for their noble root (namely the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
) is a proof of the high performances of his chaste offshoots (Ahl al-Bayt () ). Consequently
many events about knowledge of the unknown are related about Ahl al-Bayt () which are not
related about others. (al-Muqaddamah, p. 23).
In this way there is no cause for wonder over Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s claim since he was
brought up by the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and was a pupil of Allah’s school. Of
course, those whose knowledge does not extend beyond the limits of physical objectivity and
whose means of learning are confined to the bodily senses refuse to believe in the knowledge
about the paths of the Divine cognizance and reality. If this kind of claim were unique and were
heard only from Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) then minds could have wavered and
temperaments could have hesitated in accepting it. But if the Holy Qur’an records even such a
claim of AIsa (Jesus) that - AI can tell you what you eat or drink or store in your houses, then
why should there be hesitation over Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s claim, when it is agreed that
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had succeeded to all the attainments and distinctions of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and it cannot be contended that the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) did not know what AIsa (Jesus) knew. Thus, if the successor of the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) advances such a claim, why should it be rejected, particularly as
this vastness of knowledge of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) is the best evidence and proof for
the Prophet’s knowledge and perfection and a living miracle of his truthfulness.
In this connection, it is amazing that even having knowledge of events Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) did not, through any of his words or deeds, indicate that he knew them. Thus,
commenting of the extraordinary importance of this claim, Sayyid Ibn Tawus writes:
An amazing aspect of this claim is that despite the fact that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was
aware of conditions and events, he observed such conduct by way of his words and deeds that
one who saw him could not believe that he knew Thesecrets and unknown acts of others, because
the wise agree that if a person knows what event is likely to take place or what step his comrade
is going to take, or if the hidden secrets of people are known to him, then the effects of such
knowledge would appear through his movements and the expressions of his face. But the man
who, in spite of knowing everything, behaves in a way as though he is unaware and knows
nothing, then his personality is a miracle and a combination of contradictions.
At this stage, the question arises as to why Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) did not act upon the
dictates of his secret knowledge. The reply to this is that the commands of the shari’ah are based
on apparent conditions. Otherwise secret knowledge is a kind of miracle and power which Allah
grants to His prophets and Imams. Although the prophets and Imams possess this power always,
they cannot make use of it at any time unless and until by the permission of Allah and on the
proper occasion. For example, the verse quoted above about AIsa (Jesus) which tells that he had
the power to give life, to heal the blind and declare what one ate and stored in his house, etc., he
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(Jesus) did not used to practice this power on everything or every corpse or everyone who met
him. He used to practice this power only by the permission of Allah and on the proper occasion.
If prophets and other the Divines acted on the basis of their secret knowledge it would have
meant serious dislocation and disturbance in the affairs of the people. For example, if a prophet
or the Divine, on the basis of his secret knowledge, punishes a condemnable man by killing him,
there would be great commotion and agitation among those who see it on the ground that he
killed an innocent man. That is why Allah has not permitted the basing of conclusions on secret
knowledge save in a few special cases, and has enjoined the following of observable factors.
Thus, despite his being aware of the hypocrisy of some of the hypocrites, the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) extended to them the treatment that should be extended to a Muslim.
Now, there can be no scope for the objection that if Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) knew
secret matters then why did he not act according to them because it has been shown that he was
not obliged to act according to therequirements of his secret knowledge. Of course, where
conditions so required he did disclose some matters for the purposes of preaching, admonishing,
giving good tidings (of reward) or warning (against punishment), so that future events could be
fore-closed. For example, Imam Ja’fer as-Sadiq () informed Yahya ibn Zayd that if he went out
he would be killed. Ibn Khaldun writes in this connection:
It has been authentically related from Imam Ja’fer as-Sadiq that he used to apprise some of his
relations of the events to befall them. For example, he warned his cousin Yahya ibn Zayd of
being killed but he disobeyed him and went out and was killed in Juzajan. (Al-Muqaddamah, p.
233).
Nevertheless, where there was apprehension that minds would get worried it was not at all
disclosed. That is why in this sermon Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) avoided more details, in
view of the fear that people would begin to regard him higher than the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) . Despite all this people did go astray about AIsa (Jesus), and in the same way
about Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) also they began to say all sorts of things and were misled
into resorting to exaggeration.
SERMON 175
Preaching
(O creatures!) Seek benefit from the sayings of Allah, be admonished of Allah and accept the
advice of Allah because Allah has left no excuse for you by providing clear guidance, has put
before you the plea and clarified for you what acts He likes and what acts He hates, so that you
may follow the one and avoid the other. The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah
used to say, AParadise is surrounded by unpleasant things while Hell is surrounded by desires.
You should know that every act of obedience to Allah is unpleasant in appearance while every
disobedience to Allah has the appearance of enjoyment. Allah may have mercy on the person
who kept aloof from his desire and uprooted the appetite of his heart, because this heart has farreaching aims and it goes on pursuing disobedience through desires.
You should know, O creatures of Allah, that a believer should be distrustful of his heart every
morning and evening. He should always blame it (for shortcomings) and ask it to add to (its good
acts). You should behave like those who have gone before you and the precedents in front of
you. They left this world like a traveler and covered it as distance is covered.
The greatness of the Holy Qur’an
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And know that this Holy Qur’an is an adviser who never deceives, a leader who never
misleads and a narrator who never speaks a lie. No one will sit beside this Holy Qur’an but that
when he rises he will achieve one addition or one diminution - addition in his guidance or
elimination in his (spiritual) blindness. You should also know that no one will need any thing
after (guidance from) the Holy Qur’an and no one will be free from want before (guidance from)
the Holy Qur’an. Therefore, seek cure from it for your ailments and seek its assistance in your
distresses. It contains a cure for the biggest diseases, namely unbelief, hypocrisy, revolt and
misguidance. Pray to Allah through it and turn to Allah with its love. Do not ask the people
through it. There is nothing like it through which the people should turn to Allah, the Sublime.
Know that it is an interceder and its intercession will be accepted. It is a speaker who is
testified. For whoever the Holy Qur’an intercedes on the Day of Judgment, its intercession for
him would be accepted. He about whom the Holy Qur’an speaks ill on the Day of Judgment shall
testify to it. On the Day of Judgment an announcer will announce, ABeware, every sower of a
crop is in distress except the sowers of the Holy Qur’an. Therefore, you should be among the
sowers of the Holy Qur’an and its followers. Make it your guide towards Allah. Seek its advice
for yourselves, do not trust your views against it, and regard your desires in the matter of the
Holy Qur’an as deceitful.
About the believers and their good deeds; and the hypocrites and their bad deeds
Action! Action! Then (look at) the end; the end, and (remain) steadfast; steadfast; thereafter,
(exercise) endurance, endurance, and piety, piety. You have an objective. Proceed towards your
objective. You have a sign. Take guidance from your sign. Islam has an objective. Proceed
towards its objective. Proceed towards Allah’s by fulfillling His rights which He has enjoined
upon you. He has clearly stated His demands for you. I am a witness for you and shall plead
excuses on your behalf on the Day of Judgment.
Beware! What had been ordained has occurred, and that which had been destined has come
into play. I am speaking to you with the promise and pleas of Allah.
Allah the Sublime, has said:
Verily, those who say: Our Master is Allah! And persevere aright, the angels descend upon
them (saying) : AFear ye not, nor be grieved, and receive the glad tidings of the Garden which
ye were promised. (Holy Qur’an, 41:30)
You have said, AOur Master is Allah. Then keep steadfast to His Book, to the way of His
command and to the virtuous course of His worship. Thereafter do not go out of it, do not
introduce innovation in it, and do not turn away from it, because those who go away from this
course will be cut off from (the mercy of) Allah on the Day of Judgment.
Beware from destroying your manners and changing them, maintain one tongue. A man
should control his tongue because the tongue is obstinate with its master. By Allah, I do not find
that fear of Allah benefits a man who practices it unless he controls his tongue. Certainly the
tongue of a believer is at the back of his heart while the heart of a hypocrite is at the back of his
tongue; because, when a believer intends to say anything, he thinks it over in his mind. If it is
good he discloses it, but if it is bad he lets it remain concealed. While a hypocrite speaks
whatever comes to his tongue, without knowing what is in his favor and what goes against him.
The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah - peace and blessing of Allah be upon
him and his descendants - said: AThe belief of a person cannot be firm unless his heart is firm,
and his heart cannot be firm unless his tongue is firm. So whoever of you can manage to meet
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Allah, the Sublime, in such a position that his hands are not smeared with the blood of Muslims
and their property and his tongue is safe from exposing them, he would do so.
Following the Sunna and refraining from innovation
Know, O creatures of Allah, that a believer should regard lawful this year what he regarded
lawful in the previous year, and should consider unlawful this year what he considered unlawful
in the previous year. Certainly people’s innovation cannot make lawful for you what has been
declared unlawful; rather, lawful is that which Allah has made lawful and unlawful is that which
Allah has made unlawful. You have already tested the matters and tried them; you have been
preached by those before you. Illustrations have been drawn for you and you have been called to
clear fact. Only a deaf man can remain deaf to all this, and only a blind man can remain blind to
all this.
One whom Allah does not allow to benefit from trials and experience cannot benefit from
preaching. He will be faced with losses from in front, so that he will approve what is bad and
disapprove what is good. People are of two categories - the follower of the Shari’ah (religious
laws), and the follower of the innovations to whom Allah has not given any testimony by way of
Sunna or the light of any plea.
Guidance from the Holy Qur’an
Allah the Glorified, has not counseled anyone on the lines of this Holy Qur’an, for it is the
strong rope of Allah and His trustworthy means. It contains the blossoming of the heart and the
springs of knowledge. For the heart, there is no other gloss than the Holy Qur’an, although those
who remembered it have passed away while those who forgot, or pretended to have forgotten,
have remained. If you see any good give your support to it, but if you see evil evade it, because
the Messenger of Allah used to say: AO son of Adam, do good and evade evil; by doing so you
will be treading correctly.
Categories of oppression
Know that injustice is of three kinds - one, the injustice that will not be forgiven, another, that
will not be left unquestioned, and another that will be forgiven without being questioned. The
injustice that will not be forgiven is duality of Allah. Allah has said: Verily Allah forgiveth not
that (anything) be associated with Him. (Holy Qur’an, 4:48, 116). The injustice that will be
forgiven is the injustice a man does to himself by committing small sins; and the injustice that
will not be left unquestioned is the injustice of men against other men. The retribution in such a
case is severe. It is not wounding with knives, nor striking with whips, but it is so severe that all
these things are small against it. You should therefore avoid change in the matter of Allah’s
religion for your unity in respect of a right which you dislike is better than your scattering away
in respect of a wrong that you like. Certainly, Allah the Glorified has not given any person,
whether among the dead or among those who survive, any good from separation.
O people, blessed is the man whose own shortcomings keep him away from (looking into) the
shortcomings of others, and also blessed is the man who is confined to his house, eats his meal,
buries himself in obeying his Allah, and weeps over his sins, so that he is engaged in himself and
people are in safety from him.
SERMON 176
About the two arbiters (after the battle of Siffin)
Your party had decided to select two persons, and so we took their pledge that they would act
according to the Holy Qur’an and would not commit excess, that their tongues should be with it
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and that their hearts should follow it. But they deviated from it, abandoned what was right
although they had it before their eyes. Wrong-doing was their desire, and going astray was their
behavior, although we had settled with them to decide with justice, to act according to the light
and without the interference of their evil views and wrong judgment. Now that they have
abandoned the course of right and have come out with just the opposite of what was settled, we
have strong ground (to reject their verdict).
SERMON 177
Praise of Allah, transience of this world, and causes of the decline of Allah’s blessings
(Delivered at the beginning of his caliphate after the killing of AOthman)
One condition does not prevent him from (getting into) another condition, time does not
change Him, place does not locate him and the tongue does not describe Him. The numbers of
drops of water, of stars in the sky, or of currents of winds in the air, are not unknown to Him, nor
are the movements of ants on rocks, or the resting place of grubs in the dark night. He knows the
places where leaves fall, and Thesecret movements of the pupils of the eyes.
I stand witness that there is no god but Allah, Who has no parallel, Who is not doubted,
Whose religion is not denied and Whose creativeness is not questioned. My witnessing is like
that of a man whose intention is free, whose conscience is clear, whose belief is pure and whose
loads (of good actions) are heavy. I also stand witness that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy
Household) - the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him and his progeny - is His slave and
His Messenger, chosen from His creations, selected for detailing His realities, picked for His
selected honors and chosen for His esteemed messages. Through him the signs of guidance have
been lighted and the gloom of blindness (misguidance) has been dispelled.
O people, surely this world deceives him who longs for it and who is attracted towards it. It
does not behave niggardly with him who aspires for it and overpowers him who overpowers it.
By Allah, no people are deprived of the lively pleasures of life after enjoying them, except as a
result of sins committed by them, because certainly Allah is not unjust to His creatures. Even
then, when calamities descend upon people and pleasures depart from them, they turn towards
Allah with true intention and the feeling in their hearts that He will return them everything that
has fled from them and cure all their ills.
I fear about you lest you fall into ignorance (that prevailed before the appearance of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ). In the past there were certain matters in which you
were deflected, and in my view you were not worthy of admiration; but if your previous position
could be returned to you then you would become virtuous. I can only strive; but if I were to
speak I would (only) say may Allah forgive your past actions.
SERMON 178
Dhi’lib al-Yemeni asked Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) whether he had seen Allah, when I
replied, ADo I worship one whom I have not seen? Then he enquired, AHow have you seen Him?
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) replied:
Eyes do not see Him face to face, but hearts perceive Him through therealities of belief. He is
near to things but not (physically) contiguous. He is far from them but not (physically) separate.
He is a speaker, but not with reflection. He intends, but not with preparation. He moulds, but not
with (the assistance of) limbs. He is subtle but cannot be attributed with being concealed. He is
great but cannot be attributed with haughtiness. He sees but cannot be attributed with Thesense
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(of sight). He is Merciful but cannot be attributed with weakness of heart. Faces feel low before
His greatness and hearts tremble out of fear of Him.
SERMON 179
Condemning his disobedient men
I praise Allah for whatever matter He ordained and whatever action He destines, and for my
trial with you, O group of people who do not obey when I order and do not respond when I call
you. If you are at ease you engage in (conceited) conversation, but if you are faced with battle
you show weakness. If people agree on one Imam you taunt each other. If you are faced with an
arduous matter you turn away from it. May others have no father (woe to your enemy!) what are
you waiting for, in the matter of your assistance and for fighting for your rights? For you there is
either death or disgrace. By Allah, if my day (of death) comes, and it is sure to come, it will
cause separation between me and you, although I am sick of your company and feel lonely with
you.
May Allah deal with you! Is there no religion which may unite you nor sense of shamefulness
that may sharpen you? Is it not strange that Mu’awiyah calls out to some rude low people and
they follow him without any support or grant, but when I call you, although you are the
successors of Islam and the (worthy) survivors of the people, with support and distributed grants
you scatter away from me and oppose me? Truly, there is nothing between me to you which I
like and you also like it, or with which I am angry and you may also unite against it. What I love
most is death. I have taught you the Holy Qur’an, clarified to you arguments, apprised you of
what you were ignorant and made you swallow what you were spitting out. Even a blind man
would have been able to see, and he who was sleeping would have been awakened. How
ignorant of Allah is their leader Mu’awiyah and their instructor ibn an-Nabighah.1
1. AAn-Nabighah (the genius) is the surname of Layla daughter of Harmalah al-AAnaziyyah,
mother of AAmr ibn al-AAs. The reason for attributing him to his mother is her common
reputation in the matter. When Arwa daughter of al-Harith ibn AAbdul-Muttalib went to
Mu’awiyah, during the conversation, when AAmr ibn al-AAs intervened, she said to him: AO son
of an-Nabighah, you too dare speak, although your mother was known publicly and was a singer
of Mecca. That is why five persons claimed you (as a son), and when she was asked she admitted
that five people had visited her and that you should be regarded as the son of him resembled
most. You must have resembled al-AAs ibn Wa’il and therefore you came to be known as his
son.
These five persons were (1) al-AAsi ibn Wa’il, (2) Abu Lahab, (3) Umayyah ibn Khalaf, (4)
Hisham ibn al-Mughirah, and (5) Abu Sufyan ibn Harb. (Ibn AAbd Rabbih, Al-AIqd al-Farid,
Vol. 2, p. 120; Ibn Tayfur, Balaghat an-Nisa’, p. 27; Ibn Hijjah, Thamarat al-Awraq, Vol. 1, p.
132; Safwat, Jamharat khutab al-AArab, Vol. 2, p. 363; ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 6, pp. 283-285,
291; al-Halabi, Al-Sira, Vol. 1, p. 46).
SERMON 180
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) sent one of his men to bring him news about a group of the
army of Kufa who had decided to join the Kharijites but were afraid of him.1 When the man
came back Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said to him: AAre they satisfied and staying or feeling
weak and going astray?
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The man replied, AThey have gone away, O Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib. Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) said:
May Allah’s mercy remain away from them as in the case of Thamud. Know that when the
spears are hurled towards them and the swords are struck at their heads they will repent of their
doings. Surely today Satan has scattered them and tomorrow he will disclaim any connection
with them, and will leave them. Their departing from guidance, returning to misguidance and
blindness, turning away from truth and falling into wrong is enough (for their chastisement).
1. A man of the tribe Banu Najiyah named al-Khirrit ibn Rashid an-Naji was on Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib’s side in the battle of Siffin, but after Arbitration he became rebellious, and, coming to
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) with thirty persons, said: ABy Allah, I will no more obey your
command, nor offer prayers behind you, and shall leave you tomorrow. Whereupon Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said: AYou should first take into account the grounds underlying this
Arbitration and discuss it with me. If you are satisfied, you do as you will. He said he would
come the next day to discuss the matter. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) then cautioned him,
ALook, on going from here do not get mislead by others and do not adopt any other course. If
you have the will to understand, I will get out of this wrong path and put you on the course of
guidance. After this conversation he went away, but his countenance indicated he was bent on
revolt, and would not see reason by any means. And so it happened. He stuck to his point and on
reaching his place he said to his tribesmen, AWhen we are determined to abandon Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) there is no use going to him. We should do what we have decided to do. On this
occasion AAbdullah ibn Qu’ayn al-Azdi also went to them to enquire, but when he came to know
the position he asked Mudrik ibn ar-Rayyan an-Naji to speak to him and to apprise him of the
ruinous consequence of this rebellion, whereupon Mudrik assured him that this man would not
be allowed to take any ste, p. Consequently, AAbdullah came back satisfied and related the
whole matter before Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) on returning the next day. Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) said, ALet us see what happens when he comes. But when the appointed hour passed
and he did not turn up Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) asked AAbdullah to go and see what the
matter was and what was the cause for the delay. On reaching there AAbdullah found that all of
them had left. When he returned to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) he spoke as in this sermon.
The fate that befell al-Khirrit ibn Rashid an-Naji has been stated under Sermon 44.
SERMON 181
It has been related by Nawf al-Bikali that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) delivered this sermon
at Kufa standing on a stone which Ja’dah ibn Hubayrah al-Makhzumi had placed for him. Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had a woollen apparel on his body, the belt of his sword was made of
leaves, and the sandals on his feet too were of palm leaves. His forehead had a hardened spot like
that a camel (on its knee, due to many and long prostrations). About Allah’s attributes, His
creatures and His being above physical limitations.
Praise to Allah to Whom is thereturn of all creation and the end of all matters. We render Him
praise for the greatness of His generosity, the charity of His proofs, the increase of His bounty
and His favors, - praise which may fulfill His right, repay His thanks, take (us) near His reward
and be productive of increase in His kindness. We seek His help like one who is hopeful of His
bounty, desirous of His benefit, and confident of His warding off (calamities), who
acknowledges His gifts and is obedient to Him in word and deed. We believe in Him like him
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who reposes hope in Him with conviction, inclines to Him as a believer, humbles himself before
Him obediently, believes in His oneness exclusively, regards Him great, acknowledging His
dignity, and seeks refuge with Him with inclination and exertion.
Allah the Glorified has not been born so that someone could be (His) partner in glory. Nor has
He begotten anyone so as to be inherited from after dying. Time and period have not preceded
Him. Increase and decrease do not occur to Him. But He has manifested Himself to our
understanding through our having observed His strong control and firm decree. Among the
proofs of His creation is the creation of the skies which are fastened without pillars and stand
without support. He called them and they responded obediently and humbly without being lazy
or loathsome. If they had not acknowledged His Godhead and obeyed Him He would not have
made them the place for His throne, the abode of His angels and the destination for the rising up
of the pure utterances and the righteous deeds of the creatures.
He has made the stars in the skies by way of signs by which travelers wandering the various
routes of the earth may be guided. The gloom of the dark curtains of the night does not prevent
the flame of their light, nor do the veils of blackish nights have the power to turn back the light
of the moon when it spreads in the skies. Glory be to Allah from Whom neither the blackness of
dark dusk or of gloomy night (falling) in the low parts of the earth or on high dim mountains is
hidden, nor the thundering of clouds on the horizons of the skies, nor the sparking of lightning in
the clouds, nor the falling of leaves blown away from their falling places by the winds of
hurricanes or by downpour from the sky. He knows where the drops fall and where they stay,
where the grubs leave their trails or where they drag themselves, what livelihood would suffice
the mosquitoes and what a female bears in its womb.
Praise to Allah Who exists from before the coming into existence of Theseat, the throne, the
sky, the earth, the jinn or human being. He cannot be perceived by imagination nor measured by
understanding. He who begs from Him does not divert Him (from others), nor does giving away
cause Him diminution. He does not see by means of an eye, nor can He be confined to a place.
He cannot be said to have companions. He does not create with (the help of) limbs. He cannot be
perceived by senses. He cannot be thought of after the people.
It is He who spoke to Musa clearly and showed Him His great signs without the use of bodily
parts, the organ of speech or the uvula. O you who exert yourself in describing Allah if you are
serious then (first try to) describe Gabriel, Michael or the host of angels who are close (to Allah)
in thereceptacles of sublimity; but their heads are bent downwards and their wits are perplexed as
to how to assign limits (of definition) to the Highest Creator. This is because those things can
only be perceived through qualities which have shape and parts and which succumb to death
after reaching the end of their times. There is no god but He. He has lighted every darkness with
His effulgence and has darkened every light with the darkness (of death).
An account of past peoples and about learning from them
I advise you, creatures of Allah, to practice fear of Allah Who gave you good clothing and
bestowed an abundance of sustenance on you. If there was anyone who could secure a ladder to
everlasting life or a way to avoid death it was Sulayman ibn Dawud () who was given control
over the domain of the jinn and men along with prophethood and great position (before Allah).
But when he finished what was his due in food (of this world) and exhausted his (fixed) time the
bow of destruction shot him with arrow of death. His houses became vacant and his habitations
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became empty. Another group of people inherited them. Certainly, the by-gone centuries have a
lesson for you.
Where are the Amalekites1 and the sons of Amalekites? Where are the Pharaohs?2 Where are
the people of the cities of ar-Rass3 who killed the prophets, destroyed the traditions of the holy
messengers and revived the traditions of the despots? Where are those who advanced with
armies, defeated thousands, mobilized forces and populated cities?
A portion of the same sermon: about the Imam al-Mahdi
He will be wearing the amour of wisdom, which he will have secured with all its conditions,
such as full attention towards it, its (complete) knowledge and exclusive devotion to it. For him it
is like a thing which he had lost and which he was then seeking, or a need which he was trying to
fulfill. If Islam is in trouble he will feel forlorn like a traveler and like a (tired) camel beating the
end of its tail and with its neck flattened on the ground. He is the last of Allah’s proofs and one
of the vicegerents of His prophets.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) continued:
On the method of his ruling, and grief over the martyrdom of his companions
O people! I have divulged to you advice which the prophets used to preach before their
peoples, and I have conveyed to you what the vicegerents (of the prophets) conveyed to those
coming after them. I tried to train you with my whip but you could not be straightened. I drove
you with admonition but you did not acquire proper behavior. May Allah deal with you! Do you
want an Imam other than me to take you on the (right) path, and show you the correct way?
Beware, the things in this world which were forward have become things of the past, and
those of which were behind are going ahead. The virtuous people of Allah have made up their
minds to leave and they have purchased, with a little perishable (pleasure) of this world, a lot of
such (reward) in the next world that will remain. What loss did our brothers whose blood was
shed in Siffin suffer by not being alive today? Only that they are not suffering choking on
swallowing and not drinking turbid water. By Allah, surely they have met Allah and He has
bestowed upon them their rewards and He has lodged them in safe houses after their (having
suffered) fear.
Where are my brethren who took the (right) path and trod in rightousness. Where is
AAmmar?4 Where is ibn at-Tayyihan?5 Where is Thul-Shahadatayn?6 And where are others like
them7 from among their comrades who had pledged themselves to death and whose (severed)
heads were taken to the wicked enemy.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) wiped his hand over his auspicious, honored beard and wept
for a long time, then he continued:
O! my brothers, who recited the Holy Qur’an and strengthened it, thought over their
obligation and fulfillled it, revived the Sunna and destroyed innovation. When they were called
to jihad they responded and trusted in their leader then followed him.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) shouted at the top of his voice:
Al-jihad, al-jihad! O servants of Allah! By Allah, I am mobilizing the army today. He who
desires to proceed towards Allah should come forward.
Nawf says the following: Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) put Husain () over (a force of) ten
thousand, Qays ibn Sa’d (mercy of Allah be upon him) over ten thousand, Abu Ayyub al-Ansari
over ten thousand, and others over different numbers, intending to return to Siffin, but Friday did
not appear again and the accursed ibn Muljim (may Allah curse him) killed him. Consequently,
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the armies came back and were left like sheep who had lost their shepherd while wolves were
snatching them away from all sides.
1. History shows that very often the ruin and destruction of peoples has been due to their
oppression and open wickedness and profligacy. Consequently, communities which had
extended their sway over all the corners of the populated world and had flown their flags in the
East and West of the globe disappeared from the surface of the earth like a wrong word, on
disclosure of their vicious actions and evil doings.
Amalekites: ancient nomadic tribe, or collection of tribes, described in the Old Testament as
relentless enemies of Israel, even though they were closely related to Ephraim, one of the twelve
tribes of Israel. Their name derives from Amalek, who is celebrated in Arabian tradition but
cannot be identified. The district over which they ranged was south of Judah and probably
extended into northern Arabia. The Amalekites harassed the Hebrews during their exodus out of
Egypt and attacked them at Rephidim (near Mt. Sinai), where they were defeated by Joshua.
They also filled out the ranks of the nomadic raiders defeated by Gideon and were condemned to
annihilation by Samuel. The Amelekites, whose final defeat occurred in the time of Hezekiah,
were the object of a perpetual curse. (The New Encyclopedia Britannica [Micropaedia], Vol. I, p.
288, ed. 1973 - 1974; also see [for further reference] the Encyclopedia Americana, [International
Edition] Vol. I, p. 651, ed. 1975).
2. Pharaoh: Hebrew form of the Egyptian per-Ao (Athe great house), signifying the royal
palace, an epithet applied in the New Kingdom and after, as a title of respect, to the Egyptian
king himself. In the 22nd dynasty the title was added to the king’s personal name. In official
documents the full titulary of the Egyptian king contained five names. The first and oldest
identified him as the incarnation of the falcon god, Horus; it was often written inside a square
called serekh, depicting the facade of the archaic palace. The second name, Atwo ladies, placed
him under the protection of Nekh-bet and Buto, the vulture and uraeus (snake) goddesses of
Upper and Lower Egypt; the third, Agolden Horus, signified perhaps originally AHorus
victorious over his enemies. the last two names, written within a ring or cartouche, are generally
referred to as the praenomen and nomen, and were the ones most commonly used; the
praenomen, preceded by the hieroglyph meaning AKing of Upper and Lower Egypt, usually
contained a reference to the king’s Unique relationship with the sun god, Re, while the fifth, or
nomen, was preceded by the hieroglyph for ASon of Re, or by that for AMaster of the two lands.
the last name was given him at birth, therest at his coronation. (The New Encyclopedia
Britannica [Micropodia], Vol. VII, p. 927, ed. 1973-1974; also see [for further reference] the
Encyclopedia Americana, [International Edition], Vol. 21, p. 707, ed. 1975).
Among the Pharaohs was the Pharaoh of the days of Prophet Musa (). His pride, egotism,
insolence and haughtiness were such that by making the claim AI am your sublime Allah he
deemed himself to be holding sway over all other powers of the world, and was under the
misunderstanding that no power could wrest therealm and government from his hands. The Holy
Qur’an has narrated his claim of AI and no one else in the following words:
And proclaimed Pharaoh unto his people, AO my people! is not the kingdom of Egypt mine?
And these rivers flow below me; What?! Behold ye not? (Holy Qur’an 43:51)
But when his empire came near the end it was destroyed in a few moments. Neither his
position and servants could come in the way of its destruction nor could the vastness of his realm
prevent it. Rather, the waves of the very streams which he was extremely proud to possess,
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wrapped him in and dispatched his spirit to Hell throwing the body on the bank to serve as a
lesson for the whole of creation.
e. The people of the cities of ar-Rass: In the same way the people of ar-Rass were killed and
destroyed for disregarding the preaching and call of a prophet, and for revolt and disobedience.
About them the Holy Qur’an says the following:
And the (tribes of) AAd and Thamud and the inhabitants of ar-Rass, and generations between
them, in great number: Unto each of them We did give examples and every one (of them) We did
destroy with utter extermination. (Holy Qur’an 25:38,39)
Belied (also) those before them the people of Noah and the dwellers of ar-Ras and Thamud;
And AAd and Pharaoh, and the brethren of Lot; And the dwellers of the Wood and the people of
Tubba’; all belied the Messengers, so was proved true My promise (of the doom) (Holy Qur’an
50:12-14)
4. AAmmar ibn Yasir ibn AAmir al-Mathhaji al-Makhzumi (a confederate of Banu Makhzum)
was one of the earliest converts to Islam, and the first Muslim to build a mosque in his own
house in which he used to worship Allah (Al-Tabaqat, Vol. 3, Part 1, p. 178; Usd al-Ghabah,
Vol. 4, p. 46; Ibn Kathir, Tarikh, Vol. 7, p.311).
AAmmar accepted Islam along with his father Yasir and his mother Sumayya. They suffered
great tortures by the Quraish, due to their conversion to Islam, to such an extent that AAmmar
lost his parents; and they were the first martyrs - man and woman in Islam.
AAmmar was among those who immigrated to Abyssinia, and the earliest immigrants
(Muhajirun) to Medina. He was present in the battle of Badr and all other battles as well as
places of assembly by the Muslims during the lifetime of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) ; and he showed his might and favor in all Islamic struggles in the best way.
Many traditions are narrated from the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) about
AAmmar regarding his virtues, outstanding traits and his glorious deeds, such as the tradition
which AAishah and others have narrated that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
himself had said that AAmmar was filled with faith from the crown of his head to the soles of his
feet. (Ibn Majah, Sunan, Vol. 1, p. 65; Abu Nu’aym, Hilyat al-Awliya’, Vol. 1, p. 139; alHaytami, Majma’ az-Zawa’id, Vol. 9, p.295; Al-Isti’ab, Vol. 3, p. 1137; Al-Isaba, Vol. 2, p. 512)
In another tradition the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said about AAmmar:
AAmmar is with the truth and the truth is with AAmmar. He turns wherever the truth turns.
AAmmar is as near to me as an eye is near to the nose. Alas! a rebellious group will kill him. (AlTabaqat, Vol. 3, part 1, p. 187; Al-Mustadrak, Vol. 3, p. 392; Ibn Hisham, Sira, Vol. 2, p. 143;
Ibn Kathir, Tarikh, Vol. 7, pp. 268-270).
Also in the decisive and widely known tradition which al-Bukhari (in Sahih, Vol. 8, pp. 185186), at Tirmithi (in al-Jami’ Sahih, Vol. 5, p. 669) ; Ahmed ibn Hanbal (in Al-Musnad, Vol. 2,
pp. 161, 164, 206; Vol. 3, pp. 5, 22, 28, 91; Vol. 4, pp. 197, 199; Vol. 5, pp. 215, 306, 307; Vol.
6, pp. 289, 300, 311, 315), and all the narrators of Islamic traditions and historians transmitted
through twenty-five Companions that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said
about AAmmar:
Alas! a rebellious group which swerves from the truth will murder AAmmar. AAmmar will be
calling them towards Paradise and they will be calling him towards Hell. His killer and those
who strip him of arms and clothing will be in Hell.
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Ibn Hajar al-AAsqalani (in Tahthib al-Tahthib, Vol. 7, p. 409; Al-Isaba, Vol. 2, p.512) and alSayyuti (in Al-Khasa’is al-Kubra, Vol. 2, p. 140) say: AThe narration of this (above mentioned)
tradition is mutawatir (i.e. narrated successively by so many people that no doubt can be
entertained about its authenticity).
Ibn AAbdul-Barr (in Al-Isti’ab, Vol. 3, p. 1140) says the following:
The narration followed uninterrupted succession from the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) , that he said: AA rebellious group will murder AAmmar, and this is a prophecy of
the Prophet’s secret knowledge and the sign of his prophethood. This tradition is among the most
authentic and the most rightly ascribed traditions.
After the death of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , AAmmar was one of the
closest adherents and best supporters of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) during thereign of the
first three Caliphs. During the caliphate of AOthman when the Muslim protested (to AOthman)
against his policy on the distribution of the Public Treasury (baytul-mal) AOthman said in a
public assembly that, Athe money which was in the treasury was sacred and belonged to Allah,
and that he (as being the successor of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) had the right
to dispose of them as he thought fit. He (AOthman) threatened and cursed all who presumed to
censure or murmur at what he said. Upon this, AAmmar ibn Yasir boldly declared his
disapprobation and began to charge him with his inveterate propensity to ignore the interests of
the general public; accused him with reviving the heathenish customs abolished by the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Whereupon AOthman commanded him to be beaten and
immediately some of the Umayyads, the kindred of the Caliph fell upon the venerable AAmmar,
and the Caliph himself kicking him with his shoes (on his feet) on AAmmar’s testicles, and
afflicted him with a hernia. AAmmar became unconscious for three days, and he was taken care
of by Umm al-Mu’minin Umm Salamah in her own house. ( al-Balathiri, Ansab al-Ashraf, Vol.
5, pp. 48, 54, 88; Ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 3, pp. 47-52; Al-Imamah wal-Siyasa, Vol. 1, pp. 35-36;
Al-AIqd al-Farid, Vol. 4, p. 307; Al-Tabaqat, Vol. 3, Part 1, p. 185; Tarikh al-Khamis, Vol. 2, p.
271)
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) became Caliph, AAmmar was one of his most sincere
supporters. He participated fully in all social, political and military activities during this period,
especially in the first battle (the Battle of Jamal) and The second one (the battle of Siffin).
However, AAmmar was martyred on 9th Safar 37 A.H. in the battle of Siffin when he was
over ninety years of age. On the day AAmmar ibn Yasir achieved martyrdom, he turned his face
to the sky and said:
O Lord! surely You art aware that if I know that Your wish is that I should plunge myself into
this River (the Euphrates) and be drowned, I will do it. O Lord! Surely You knowest that if I
knew that You would be pleased if I put my scimitar on my chest (to hit my heart) and pressed it
so hard that it came out of my back, I would do it. O Lord! I do not think there is anything more
pleasant to You than fighting with this sinful group, and if I knew that any action were more
pleasant to You I would do it.
Abu AAbd ar-Rahman al-Salami narrates:
AWe were present with Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) at Siffin where I saw AAmmar ibn
Yasir was not turning his face towards any side, nor valleys (wadis [of the land]) of Siffin but the
companions of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) were following him as if he was
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a sign for them. Then I heard AAmmar say to Hashim ibn AUtbah (al-Mirqal) : AO Hashim!
Rush into enemy’s ranks, paradise is under sword!
Today I meet beloved one, Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) and his party.
AThen he said: ABy Allah, if they put us to fight (and pursue us) to the date-palms of Hajar (a
town in Bahrain, Persian Gulf [i.e., if they pursue us along all the Arabian desert] nevertheless)
we know surely that we are right and they are wrong.
AThen he (AAmmar) continued (addressing the enemies) :
We struck you to (believe in) its (Holy Qur’an) revelation; And oday we strike you to (believe
in) its interpretation; Such strike as to remove heads from their resting places; And to make the
friend forget his sincere friend; Until the truth returns to its (right) path.
The narrator says the following: AI did not see the Holy Prophet’s companions killed at any
time as many as they were killed on this day.
Then AAmmar spurred his horse, entered the battlefield and began fighting. He persistently
chased the enemy, made attack after attack, and raised challenging slogans till at last a group of
mean-spirited Syrians surrounded him on all sides, and a man named Abul-Ghadiyah al-Juhari
(al-Fazari) inflicted such a wound upon him that he could not bear it, and returned to his cam, p.
He asked for water. A tumbler of milk was brought to him. When AAmmar looked at the tumbler
he said: AThe Messenger of Allah had said the right thing. People asked him what he meant by
these words. He said, AThe Messenger of Allah informed me that the last sustenance for me in
this world would be milk. Then he took that tumbler of milk in his hands, drank the milk and
surrendered his life to Allah, the Almighty. When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) came to know
of his death, he came to AAmmar’s side, put his (AAmmar’s) head on his own lap, and recited
the following elegy to mourn his death:
Surely any Muslim who is not distressed at the murder of the son of Yasir, and is not be
afflicted by this grievous misfortune does not have true faith.
May Allah show His mercy to AAmmar the day he embraced Islam, may Allah show His
mercy to AAmmar the day he was killed, and may Allah show His mercy to AAmmar the day he
is raised to life.
Certainly, I found AAmmar (on such level) that three companions of the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) could not be named unless he was the fourth, and four of them
could not be mentioned unless he was the fifth.
There was none among the Holy Prophet’s companions who doubted that not only was
Paradise once or twice compulsorily bestowed upon AAmmar, but that he gained his claim to it
(a number of times). May Paradise give enjoyment to AAmmar.
Certainly, it was said (by the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) ASurely,
AAmmar is with the truth and the truth is with AAmmar. He turns wherever the truth turns. His
killer will be in hell.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) stepped forward and offered funeral prayers for him, and then
with his own hands, he buried him with his clothes.
AAmmar’s death caused a good deal of commotion in the ranks of Mu’awiyah too, because
there were a large number of prominent people fighting from his side under the impression
created in their minds that he was fighting Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) for a right cause. These
people were aware of the saying of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) that
AAmmar would be killed by a group who would be on the wrong side. When they observed that
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AAmmar had been killed by Mu’awiyah’s army, they became convinced that they were on the
wrong side and that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was definitely on the right. This agitation thus
caused among the leaders as well as the rank and file of Mu’awiyah’s army, was quelled by him
with the argument that it was Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) who brought AAmmar to the
battlefield and therefore it was he who was responsible for his death. When Mu’awiyah’s
argument was mentioned before Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) he said it was as though the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was responsible for killing Hamzah as he brought him to
the battle of Uhud. (al-Tabari, Tarikh, Vol. 1, pp. 3316-3322; Vol. 3, pp. 2314-2319; ibn Sa’d,
Al-Tabaqat, Vol. 3, Part 1, pp. 176-189; ibn al-Athir, Al-Kamil, Vol. 3, pp. 308-312; ibn Kathir,
Tarikh, Vol. 7, pp. 267-272; al-Minqari, Siffin, pp. 320-345; ibn AAbdul-Barr, Al-Isti’ab, Vol. 3,
pp. 1135-1140; Vol. 4, p. 1725; ibn al-Athir, Usd al-Ghaba, Vol. 4, pp. 43-47; Vol. 5, p. 267; ibn
Abul-Hadid, Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 5, pp. 252-258; Vol. 8, pp. 10-28; Vol. 10, pp. 102107, al-Hakim, al-Mustadrak, Vol. 3, pp. 384-394; ibn AAbk Rabbih, Al-AIqd al-Farid, Vol. 4,
pp. 340-343; al-Mas’udi, Muruj al-Thahab, Vol. 2, pp. 381-382, al-Haytami, Majama’ azZawa’id, Vol. 7, pp. 238-244; Vol. 9, pp. 291-298; al-Balathiri, Ansab al-Ashraf (Biography of
Amir al-Mu’minin), pp. 310-319.
5. Abul-Haytham (Malik) ibn at-Tayyihan al-Ansari was one of the twelve chiefs (naqib [of
Ansar] who attended the fair and met at al-AAqabah - in the first AAqabah and among those who
attended in The second AAqabah - where he gave the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) the Apledge of Islam’. He was present in the battle of Badr and all other battles as
well as places of assembly by the Muslims during the lifetime of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) . He was also among the sincere supporters of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
and he attended the Battle of Jamal as well as Siffin where he was martyred. (Al-Isti’ab, Vol. 4,
p. 1773; Siffin, p. 365; Usd al-Ghaba, Vol. 4, p. 274; Vol. 5, p. 318; Al-Isaba, Vol. 3, p. 341;
Vol. 4, pp. 312-313; ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 10, pp. 107-108; Ansab al-Ashraf, p. 319).
6. Khuzaymah ibn Thabit al-Ansari. He is known as AThul-Shahadatayn (the man with the
two testimonials) because the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) considered his
evidence equivalent to the evidence of two witnesses. He was present in the battle of Badr, and
other battles as well as in the places of assembly of the Muslims during the lifetime of the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . He is counted among the earliest of those who showed
their adherence to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and he was also present in the Battle of Jamal
and Siffin. AAbd ar-Rahman ibn Abu Layla narrated that he saw a man in the battle of Siffin
fighting the enemy valiantly and when he protested against his action, the man said:
I am Khuzaymah ibn Thabit al-Ansari, I have heard the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) saying, AFight, fight, by the side of Ali. the orator, al-Baghdadi, Muwaddih Awham
al-Jam’ wal-Tafriq, Vol. 1, p. 277).
Khuzaymah was narrated in the battle of Siffin soon after the martyrdom of AAmmar ibn
Yasir.
Sayf ibn AOmer al-Usaydi (the well known liar) has fabricated another Khuzaymah, and
claimed that the one who was martyred in the battle of Siffin was this one and not the one with
the surname of AThul-Shahadatayn’. Al-Tabari has quoted this fabricated story from Sayf either
intentionally or otherwise, and through him this story has affected some other historians who
quoted from al-Tabari or relied on him. (For further reference, see al-AAskari, Khamsun wa
miah sahabi mukhtalaq [one hundred and fifty fabricated companions], Vol. 2, pp. 175-189).
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After having denied this story ibn Abul-Hadid adds (in Sharh Nahj al-Balaghah, Vol. 10, pp.
109-110) that:
Furthermore, what is the need for those who to defend Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) to make
a boast of abundance with Khuzaymah, Abul-Haytham, AAmmar and others. If people treat this
man (Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) ) with justice and look at him with healthy eyes they will
certainly realize that should he be alone (on one side) and the people all together (on the other
side) fighting him, he will be in the truth and all the rest will be in the wrong. (Al-Tabaqat, Vol.
3, Part 1, pp. 185, 188; al-Mustadrak, Vol. 3, pp. 385, 397; Usd al-Ghaba, Vol. 2, p. 114; Vol. 4,
p. 47; Al-Isti’ab, Vol. 2, p. 448; al-Tabari, Vol. 3, pp. 2316, 2319, 2401; Al-Kamil, Vol. 3, p.
325; Siffin, pp. 363, 398; Ansab al-Ashraf, pp. 313-314).
7. Among the people who were present in the Battle of Jamal on the side of Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) there were one hundred and thirty Badris (those who participated in the battle of
Badr with the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) and seven hundred of those who
were present in the Apledge of ar-Ridwan’ (Bay’atu’r-Ridwan) which took place under a tree.
(al-Thahbi, Tarikh al-Islam, Vol. 2, p. 171; Khalifah ibn Khayyat, Tarikh, Vol. 1, p. 164). Those
who were killed in the Battle of Jamal from the side of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) numbered
some five hundred (some said that the number of martyrs were more than that). But on the side
of the people of Jamal twenty thousand were killed. (Al-AIqd al-Farid, Vol. 4, p. 326).
Among those who were present in the battle of Siffin on the side of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S), there were eighty Badris and eight hundred of those who swore to the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) the pledge of al-Ridwan (Al-Mustadrak, Vol. 3, p. 104; AlIsti’ab, Vol. 3, p. 1138; Al-Isaba, Vol. 2, p. 389; Tarikh, al-Ya’qubi, Vol. 2, p. 188).
On the side of Mu’awiyah forty-five thousand were killed, and on the sides of Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) twenty-five thousand. Among these martyrs (of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) )
there were twenty-five or twenty-six Badris and sixty-three or three hundred and three of the
people of the Apledge of ar-Ridwan’. (Siffin, p. 558; Al-Isti’ab, Vol. 2, p. 389; Ansab al-Ashraf,
p. 322; ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 10, p. 104; Abul-Fida’, Vol. 1, p. 175; ibn al-Wardi, Tarikh, Vol. 1,
p. 240; ibn Kathir, Vol. 7, p. 275; Tarikh al-Khamis, Vol. 2 , p. 277).
Besides the distinguished and eminent companions of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) like
AAmmar, Thul-Shahadatayn and Ibn al-Tayyihan, who lay martyred in Siffin were:i.Hashim ibn AUtbah ibn Abu Waqqas al-Mirqal was killed on the same day when AAmmar
was martyred. He was the bearer of the standard of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s army on that day.
ii.’Abdullah ibn Budayl ibn al-Warqa al-Khuza’i was sometimes the right wing Commander
of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s army and sometimes the infantry Commander.
SERMON 182
Praise of Allah for His bounties
Praise to Allah Who is recognized without being seen and Who creates without trouble. He
created the creation with His Might, and receives the devotion of rulers by virtue of His dignity.
He exercises superiority over great men through His generosity. It is He who made His creation
to populate the world and sent towards the jinn and human beings His messengers to unveil it for
them, to warn them of its harm, to present to them its examples, to show them its defects and to
place before them a whole collection of matters containing lessons about the changing of health
and sickness in this world, its lawful things and unlawful things and all that Allah has ordained
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for the obedient and the disobedient, namely, Paradise and Hell and honor and disgrace. I extend
my praise to His Being as He desires His creation to praise Him. He has fixed for everything a
measure, for every measure a time limit, and for every time limit a document.
A portion of the same sermon:
About the greatness and importance of the Holy Qur’an
The Holy Qur’an orders as well as refrains, remains silent and also speaks. It is the proof of
Allah before His creation. He has taken from them a pledge (to act) upon it. He has perfected its
effulgence, and completed through it His religion. He let the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) leave this world when he had conveyed to the people all His commands of guidance
through the Holy Qur’an. You should therefore regard Allah great as he has held Himself great,
because He has not concealed anything of His religion from you, nor has He left out anything
which He likes or which He dislikes, but He made for it a clear emblem (of guidance) and a
definite sign which either refrains from it or calls towards it. His pleasure is the same for all time
to come.
You should know that He will not be pleased with you for anything for which He has
displeased with those before you, and He will not be displeased with you for anything for which
He was pleased with those before you. You are treading on a clear path, and are speaking the
same as the people before you had spoken. Allah is enough for your needs in this world. He has
persuaded you to remain thankful, and has made it obligatory on you to mention Him with your
tongues.
Warning against punishment on the Day of Judgment
He has advised you to exercise fear and has made it the highest point of His pleasure and all
that He requires from His creatures. You should therefore fear Allah, who is such that you are as
though just in front of Him, and your forelocks are in His grip, and your change of position is in
His control. If you conceal a matter, He will know of it. If you disclose a matter, He will record
it. For this He has appointed honored guards (angels) who do not omit any rightful matter nor
include anything correct. You should know that whoever fears Allah, He would make for him a
way to get out of troubles and (grant him) a light (to help him) out of darkness. He will ever keep
him in whatever (condition) he wishes, and will make him stay in a position of honor near
Himself, in the house which He has made for Himself. The shade of this house is His house is
His throne, its light is His effulgence, its visitors are His angels and its companions are His
prophets.
Therefore, hasten towards the place of return and go ahead of (your) deaths (by collecting
provision for the next world). Shortly, the expectations of the people will be cut short and death
will overtake them while the door of repentance will be closed for them. You are still in a place
to which those who were before you have been wishing to return. In this world, which is not your
house, you are just a traveler in motion. You have been given the call to leave from here, and you
have been ordered to collect provision while you are here. You should know that this thin skin
cannot tolerate the Fire (of Hell). So, have pity on yourselves because you have already tried it in
the tribulations of the world.
Have you ever seen the crying of a person who has been pricked with a thorn or who bleeds
due to stumbling or whom hot sand has burnt? How would he feel when he is between two frying
pans of Hell with stones all round with Satan as his companion? Do you know that when Malik
(the guard-in-charge of Hell) is angry with the fire, its parts begin to clash with each other (in
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rage), and, when he scolds it, it leaps between the doors of Hell crying on account of his
scolding.
O you old and big whom old age has made hoary, how will you feel when rings of fire will
touch the bones of your neck, and handcuffs hold so hard that they eat away the flesh of the
forearms? (Fear) Allah! Allah! O crowd of men, while you are in good health before sickness
(grips you) and you are in ease before straightness (overtakes you). You should try for the
release of your necks before their mortgage is foreclosed, your eyes, thin down bellies, use your
feet, spend your money, take your bodies and spend them over yourselves, and do not be
niggardly about them, because Allah the Glorified, has said:
If you help (in the way) of Allah, He will (also) help you, and will set firm your feet. (Holy
Qur’an, 47:7)
and He, the Sublime has said:
Who is he who would loan unto Allah a goodly loan? so that He may double it for him, and
for him shall be a noble recompense. (Holy Qur’an, 57:11)
He does not seek your support because of any weakness, nor does He demand a loan from you
because of shortage. He seeks your help, although He possesses all the armies of the skies and
the earth and He is strong and wise. He seeks a loan from you, although He owns the treasures of
the skies and the earth and He is rich and praiseworthy. (Rather) He intends to try you as to
which of you performs good acts. You should therefore be quick in performance of (good) acts
so that your way be with His neighbors in His abode; He made His Prophet’s companions of
these neighbors and made the angels to visit them. He has honored their ears so that the sound of
Hell fire may never reach them, and He has afforded protection to their bodies from weariness
and fatigue.
... that is the grace of Allah, He bestoweth it upon whomsoever He willeth; and Allah is the
Master of Mighty Grace. (Holy Qur’an, 57:21)
I say you are hearing. I seek Allah’s help for myself and yourselves. He is enough for me and
He is the best dispenser.
SERMON 183
One of the Kharijites, al-Burj ibn Mus’hir at-Ta’i, raised the slogan, ACommand behoves only
Allah in such a way that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) heard it. On hearing it he said:
Keep quiet, may Allah make you ugly, O you with broken tooth. Certainly, by Allah, when
truth became manifest even then your personality was weak and your voice was loose. But when
wrong began to shout loudly you again shouted up like the horns of a kid.
SERMON 184
Praise of Allah and His wonderful creatures
Praise to Allah. He is such that senses cannot perceive Him, place cannot contain Him, eyes
cannot see Him and veils cannot cover Him. He proves His eternity by the coming into existence
of His creation, and (also) by originating His creation (He proves) His existence, and by their
(mutual) spirituality He proves that there is nothing similar to Him. He is true in His promise. He
is too high to be unjust to His creatures. He stands by equity among His creation and practices
justice over them in His commands. He provides evidence through the creation of things of His
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being from ever, through their marks of incapability of His power, and through their
powerlessness against death of His eternity.
He is One, but not by counting. He is everlasting without any limit. He is existent without any
support. Minds admit of Him without (any activity of the) senses. Things which can be seen
stand witness to Him without confronting Him. Imagination cannot encompass Him. He
manifests Himself to the imagination with his help for the imagination, and refuses to be
imagined by the imagination. He has made imagination the arbiter (in this matter). He is not big
in Thesense that volume is vast and so His body is also big. Nor is He great in Thesense that His
limits should extend to the utmost and so His frame be extensive. But He is big in position and
great in authority.
About the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
I stand witness that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) is His slave, His chosen
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and His responsible trustee - may Allah bless him and
his descendants. Allah sent him with undeniable proofs, a clear success and open paths. So he
conveyed the message declaring the truth with it. He led the people on the (correct) highway,
established signs of guidance and minarets of light, and made Islam’s ropes strong and its knots
firm.
A portion of the same sermon:
About the creation of animal species
Had they pondered over the greatness of His power and the vastness of His bounty they would
have returned to the right path and feared the punishment of the Fire; but hearts are sick and eyes
are impure. Do they not see the small things He has created, how He strengthened their system
and opened for them hearing and sight and made for them bones and skins? Look at the ant with
its small body and delicate form. It can hardly be seen in the corner of the eye, nor by the
perception of the imagination - how it moves on the earth and leaps at its livelihood. It carries the
grain to its hole and deposits it in its place of stay. It collects during the summer for its winter,
and during strength for the period of its weakness. Its livelihood is guaranteed, and it is fed
according to fitness. Allah, the Kind, does not forget it and (Allah the Giver) does not deprive it,
even though it may be in dry stone or fixed rocks.
If you have thought about its digestive tracts in its high and low parts, the carapace of its
belly, and its eyes and its ears in its head you would be amazed at its creation and you would feel
difficulty in describing it. Exalted is He who made it stand on its legs and erected it on its pillars
(of limbs). No other originator took part with Him in its origination and no one having power
assisted Him in its creation. If you tread on the paths of your imagination and reach its extremity
it will not lead you anywhere except that the Originator of the ant is the same as He who is the
Originator of the date-palm, because everything has (the same) delicacy and detail, and every
living being has little difference.
Creation of the Universe
In His creation, the big, the delicate, the heavy, the light, the strong, the weak are all equal.1
So is the sky, the air, the winds and the water. Therefore, you look at the sun, moon, vegetation,
plants, water, stone, the difference of this night and day, the springing of the streams, the large
number of the mountains, the height of their peaks, the diversity of languages and the variety of
tongues. Then woe be to him who disbelieves in the Ordainer and denies the Ruler. They believe
that they are like grass for which there is no cultivator nor any maker for their diverse shapes.
They have not relied on any argument for what they assert, nor on any research for what they
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have heard. Can there be any construction without a constructor, or any offense without an
offender.
The wonderful creation of the locust
If you wish you can tell about the locust (as well). Allah gave it two red eyes, lighted for them
two moon - like pupils, made for it small ears, opened for it a suitable mouth and gave it keen
sense, gave it two teeth to cut with and two sickle-like feet to grip with. The farmers are afraid of
it in the matter of crops since they cannot drive it away even though they may join together. The
locust attacks the fields and satisfies its desires (of hunger) from them although its body is not
equal to a thin finger.
About the Glory of Allah
Glorified is Allah before Whom every one in the skies or the earth bows in prostration
willingly or unwillingly, submits to Him by placing his cheeks and face (in the dust), drops
before Him (in obedience) peacefully and humbly, and hands over to Him full control in fear and
apprehension.
The birds are bound by His commands. He knows the number of their feathers and their
breaths. He has made their feet to stand on water and on land. He has ordained their livelihoods.
He knows their species: this is the crow, this is the eagle, this is the pigeon and this is the ostrich.
He called out every bird with its name (while creating it) and provided it with its livelihood. He
created heavy clouds and produced from them heavy rain and spread it on various lands. He
drenched the earth after its dryness and grew vegetation from it after its barrenness.
1. The meaning is that if the smaller thing in creation is examined it will be found to contain
all that which is found in the biggest creatures, and each will exhibit the same reflection of
natures, workmanship and performance, and the ratio of each to Allah’s might and power will be
the same, whether it be as small as an ant or as big as a date palm. Is it not that making a small
thing is easy for Him while the making of a big thing is difficult for Him, because the diversity
of color, volume and quantity is just based on the dictates of His sagacity and expediency, but as
regards creation itself there is no difference among them. Therefore, this uniformity of creation is
a proof of the oneness and unity of the Creator.
SERMON 185
About the Oneness of Allah
(This sermon contains principles of knowledge which no other sermon contains.)
He who assigns to Him (different) conditions does not believe in His oneness, nor does he
who likens Him grasp His reality. He who illustrates Him does not signify Him. He who points
at Him and imagines Him does not mean Him. Everything that is known through itself has been
created, and everything that exists by virtue of other things is the effect (of a cause). He works
but not with the help of instruments. He fixes measures but not with the activity of thinking. He
is rich but not by acquisition.
Times do not keep company with Him, and implements do not help Him. His Being precedes
times. His Existence precedes non-existence and His eternity precedes beginning. By His
creating Thesenses it is known that He has no senses. By the contraries in various matters it is
known that He has no contrary, and by the similarity between thins it is known that there is
nothing similar to Him. He has made light the contrary of darkness, brightness that of gloom,
dryness that of moisture and heat that of cold. He produces affection among inimical things.
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He fuses together diverse things, brings near remote things and separates things which are
joined together. He is not confined by limits, nor counted by numbers. Material parts can
surround things of their own kind, and organs can point out things similar to themselves. The
world1 Amundhu (i.e. since) disproves their eternity, the word Aqad (that denotes nearness of
time of occurrence), disproves their being from ever and the word Alawla (if it were not) keep
them remote from perfection.
Through them the Creator manifests Himself to the intelligence, and through them He is
guarded from the sight of the eyes.
Stillness and motion do not occur in Him, and how can that thing occur in Him which He has
Himself made to occur, and how can a thing revert to Him which He first created, and how can a
thing appear in Him which He first brought to appearance. If it had not been so, His Self would
have become subject to diversity, His Being would have become divisible (into parts), and His
reality would have been prevented from being deemed Eternal. If there was a front to Him there
would have been a rear also for Him. He would need completing only if shortage befell Him. In
that case signs of the created would appear in Him, and He would become a sign (leading to
other objects) instead of signs leading to Him. Through the might of His abstention (from
affectedness) He is far above being affected by things which effect others.
He is that which does not change or vanish. The process of setting does not behoove Him. He
has not begotten any one lest He be regarded as having been born. He has not been begotten
otherwise He would be contained within limits. He is too High to have sons. He is too purified to
contact women. Imagination cannot reach Him so as to assign Him quantity. Understanding
cannot think of Him so as to give him shape. Senses do not perceive Him so as to feel Him.
Hands cannot touch Him so as to rub against Him. He does not change into any condition. He
does not pass from one state to another. Nights and days do not turn Him old. Light and darkness
do not alter Him.
It cannot be said that He has a limit or extremity, or end or termination; nor do things control
Him so as to raise Him or lower Him, nor does anything carry Him so as to bend Him or keep
Him erect. He is not inside things nor outside them. He conveys news, but not with the tongue or
voice. He listens, but not with the holes of the ears or the organs of hearing. He says, but does
not utter words. He remembers, but does not memorize. He determines, but not by exercising His
mind. He loves and approves without any sentimentality (of heart). He hates and feels angry
without any painstaking. When He intends to create someone He says ABe and there he is, but
not through a voice that strikes (the ears) is that call heard. His speech is an act of His creation.
His like never existed before this. If it had been eternal it would have been The second god.
It cannot be said that He came into being after He had not been in existence because in that
case the attributes of the created things would be assigned to Him and there would remain no
difference between them and Him, and He would have no distinction over them. Thus, the
Creator and the created would become equal and the initiator and the initiated would be on the
same level. He created (the whole of) creation without any example made by someone else, and
He did not secure the assistance of any one out of His creation for creating it.
He created the earth and suspended it without being busy, retained it without support, made it
stand without legs, raised it without pillars, protected it against bending and curving and
defended it against crumbling and splitting (into parts). He fixed mountains on it like stumps,
solidified its rocks, caused its streams to flow and opened wide its valleys. Whatever He made
did not suffer from any flow, and whatever He strengthened did not show any weakness.
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He manifests Himself over the earth with His authority and greatness. He is aware of its inside
through his knowledge and understanding. He has power over everything in the earth by virtue of
His sublimity and dignity. Nothing from the earth that He may ask for defies Him, nor does it
oppose Him so as to overpower Him. No swift-footed creature can run away from Him so as to
surpass Him. He is not needy towards any possessing person so that he should feed Him. All
things bow to Him and are humble before His greatness. They cannot flee away from His
authority to someone else in order to escape His benefit or His harm. There is no parallel for Him
who may match Him and no one like Him so as to equal Him.
He will destroy the earth after its existence, till all that exists on it will become non-existent.
But the extinction of the world after its creation is no stranger than its first formation and
invention. How could it be? Even if all the animals of the earth, whether birds or beasts, stabled
cattle or pasturing ones, of different origins and species, dull people and sagacious men - all
jointly try to create (even) a mosquito they are not able to bring it into being and do not
understand what is the way to its creation. Their wits are bewildered and wandering. Their
powers fall short and fail, and return disappointed and tired, knowing that they are defeated and
admitting their inability to produce it, also realizing that they are too weak (even) to destroy it.
Surely, after the extinction of the world, Allah the Glorified will remain alone with nothing
else beside Him. He will be, after its extinction, as He was before its production: without time or
place or moment or period. At this moment, period and time will not exist, and years and hours
will disappear. There will be nothing except Allah, the One, the All-powerful. To Him is
thereturn of all matters. Its initial creation was not in its power; and the prevention of its
extinction was (also) not in its power. If it had the power to prevent it, it would have existed for
ever. When He made anything of the world, the making of it did not cause Him any difficulty,
and the creation of anything which He created and formed did not fatigue Him. He did not create
it to heighten His authority nor for fear of loss or harm, nor to seek its help against an
overwhelming foe, nor to guard against any avenging opponent with its help, nor for the
extension of His domain by its help, nor for boasting (over largeness of His possession) against a
partner, nor because He felt lonely and desired to seek its company.
Then after its creation He will destroy it, but not because any worry has overcome Him in its
upkeep and administration, nor for any pleasure that will accrue to Him, nor for the
cumbrousness of anything over Him. The length of its life does not weary Him so as to induce
Him to its quick destruction. By Allah, the Glorified, has maintained it with His kindness, kept it
intact with His command and perfected it with His power. Then after its destruction, He will
resuscitate it, but not for any need of His own towards it, nor to seek the assistance of any of its
things against it, nor to change over from the condition of loneliness to that of company, nor
from the condition of ignorance and blindness to that of knowledge and search, nor from paucity
and need towards needlessness and plenty, nor from disgrace and lowliness towards honor and
prestige.
1. The meaning is that the sense for which the words Amundhu, Aqad and Alawla have been
formed is opposed to the attributes of AEver, AEternal and APerfect. Therefore, their application
to anything would prove that they have come into existence from non-existence and are
imperfect. For example, Amundhu is used to denote time as is Aqad wujida mundu kadha (this
thing is found since so-and-so). Here a time limit has been stated, and anything for which a limit
of time can be described cannot exist from ever or forever. The word Aqad shows (indicating the
present perfect tense) the immediate past. This sense also can apply to a thing which is limited in
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time. The word Alawla is used to denote the negation of something in another thing, as Ama
ahsanahu wa akmalahu lawla annahu kadha) how handsome and perfect it would be if it were soand-so). Therefore, the thing for which this word is used would be in need of others in
handsomeness and perfection, and would remain deficient by itself.
SERMON 186
Regarding the vicissitudes of time (The mischief that is to occur and the absence of lawful
ways of livelihood)
May my father and my mother be sacrificed for those few whose names are well-known in the
sky and not known on the earth. Beware, you should expect what is to befall you such as
adversity in your affairs, severance of relations and the rising up of inferior people. This will
happen when the blow of a sword will be easier for a believer than to secure one Dirham
lawfully. This will happen1 when thereward of the beggar is more than that of the giver. This will
be when you are intoxicated, not by drinking, but with wealth and plenty, you are swearing
without compulsion and are speaking lies without compulsion. This will be when troubles hurt
you as the saddle hurts the hump of the camel. How long will these tribulations be and how
distant the hope (for deliverance from them) ?
O people, throw away the reins of the horses who carry on their backs the weight of your
hands (i.e. sins), do not cutaway from your chief (Imam) otherwise you will blame yourself for
your own doings. Do not jump in the fire which is in flames in front of you; keep away from its
courses and leave the middle way for it. This is so because, by my life, the believer will die in its
flames, and others will remain safe in it.
I am among you like a lamp in the darkness. Whoever enters by it will be lit from it. So listen
O men, preserve it and remain attentive with the ears of your hearts so that you may understand.
1. In that period the reward of the beggar who takes will be higher than that of the giver
because the ways of earning livelihood of the rich will be unlawful, and whatever he will donate
of it, its purpose will be showing himself, hypocrisy and seeking fame, for which he will not be
entitled to any reward, while the poor who take it by force of their poverty and helplessness, and
to spend it in the right manner, will deserve more reward and recompense.
The commentator, Ibn Abul-Hadid has written another meaning of it also, namely if the
beggar does not take the wealth from the rich and it remains with him he will spend it on
unlawful matters and enjoyments, and since his taking it from him prevents him from using it in
unlawful manner; therefore, for this prevention of evil, the beggar will deserve more reward and
recompense. (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 13, p. 97)
SERMON 187
Allah’s favors
I advise you. O people, to fear Allah and to praise Him profusely for His favors to you and
His reward for you and His obligations on you. See how He chose you for favors and dealt with
you with mercy. You sinned openly; He kept you covered. You behaved in a way to incur His
punishment, but He gave you more time.
Condition of persons facing death
I also advise you to remember death and to lessen your heedlessness towards it. Why should
you be heedless of Him Who is not heedless of you? Why expect from him (i.e. The angel of
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death) who will not give you time? the dead whom you have been watching suffice as preachers.
They were carried to their graves, not riding themselves, and were placed in them but not of their
own accord. It seems as if they never lived in this world and as if the next world had always been
their abode. They have made lonely the place where they were living, and are now living where
they used to feel lonely. They remained busy about what they had to leave, and did not care for
where they were to go. Now, they cannot remove themselves from evil, nor add to their virtues.
They were attached to the world and it deceived them. They trusted it and it overturned them.
Transience of this world
May Allah have pity on you. You should therefore hasten towards (the preparation of) houses
which you have been commanded to populate, and towards which you have been called and
invited. Seek the completion of Allah’s favors on you by exercising endurance in his obedience
and abstention from His disobedience, because tomorrow is close to today. How fast are the
hours of the day? How fast are the days in the month? How fast are the months in the years and
how fast the years in life go?
SERMON 188
Steadfast and transient belief
One belief is that which is firm and steadfast in hearts, and one is that which remains
temporarily in the heart and the breast up to a certain time. If you were to acquit (yourself)
before any person, you should wait till death approaches him, for that is the time limit for being
acquitted.
And immigration stands as its original position. Allah has no need towards him who secretly
accepts belief or him who openly does so. Immigration will not apply to any one unless he
recognizes the proof (of Allah) on the earth. Whoever recognizes him and acknowledges him
would be a muhajir (immigrant). istid’af (i.e. freedom from the obligation of immigration) does
not apply to him whom the proof (of Allah) reaches and he hears it and his heart preserves it.1
The challenge of AAsk me before you miss me and a prophecy about the Umayyads
Certainly, our case is difficult and complicated. No one can bear it except a believer whose
heart Allah has tried with belief. Our traditions will not be preserved except by trustworthy
hearts and (men of) solid understanding. O people! Ask me before you miss me, because
certainly I am acquainted with the passages of the sky more than the passages of the earth,2 and
before that mischief springs upon its feet which would trample even the nose string and destroy
the wits of the people.
1. This is the interpretation of the word Amuhajir and Amustad’af as mentioned in the Holy
Qur’an:
Verily those whom the angels take away (at death) while they are unjust to their (own) selves
(in sin), they (the angels) shall ask (the sinning souls) : AIn what state were ye? They shall reply,
AWeakened (mustad’af - and oppressed) were we in the land; They (angels) will say AWas not
the land of Allah vast (enough) for you to immigrate therein? So these (are those) whose refuge
shall be Hell; and what a bad resort it is. Except the (really) weakened ones from among the men
and the women and the children, who have not in their power the means (to escape from the
unbelievers) and nor do they find the (right) way. So these, may be, Allah will pardon them; and
Allah is the Clement, the Oft-forgiving. (4:97-99)
The meaning of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) here is that hijra (migration) was not only
obligatory during the lifetime of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , but it is a
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permanent obligation. This immigration is even now obligatory for attaining the proof of Allah
and the true religion. Therefore, if one has attained the proof of Allah and believed in it, even if
he is in midst of the unbelievers of his locality, he is not duty bound to immigrate.
The Amustad’af (weakened) is one who is living among the unbelievers and is far from being
informed of the proofs of Allah, and at the same time he is unable to immigrate in order to attain
the proofs of Allah.
2. Some people have explained this saying of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) to mean that by
the passages of the earth he means matters of the world and by passages of the sky matters of
religious law and that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) intends to say that he knows the matters of
religious law and commandments more than the worldly matters. Thus, Ibn Maytham al-Bahrani
writes (in Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 4, pp. 200-201) :
It is related from’allama al-Wabari, that he said that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s intention is to
say that the scope of his religious knowledge is larger than his knowledge about matters of the
world.
But taking the context into account, this explanation cannot be held to be correct because this
sentence (which is the subject of explanation) has been used as the cause of the sentence AAsk
me before you miss me, and after it, is the prophecy about revolt. In between these two the
occurrence of the sentence that AI know religious matters more than worldly matters, makes the
whole utterance quite uncounted, because Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s challenge to ask whatever
one likes is not confined to matters of religious law only so this sentence could be held as its
cause. The n, after that, the prophecy of the rising up of therevolt has nothing to do with matters
of religious law, so that it could be put forth as a proof of more knowledge of religious matters.
To ignore the clear import of the words and to interpret them in a way which does not suit the
occasion, does not exhibit a correct spirit, when from the context also the same meaning accrues
which the words openly convey. Thus, it is to give a warning about the Umayyad’s mischief that
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) uttered the words: AAsk me whatever you like’; because I know
the paths and courses of the Divine destiny more than the passages of the earth. So, even if you
ask me about matters which are recorded in the Apreserved tablet’ and concern the Divine
destiny I can tell you, and a serious mischief is to rise against me in those matters in which you
should have doubt, because my eyes are more acquainted with those ethereal lines which concern
the occurrence of events and mischiefs than with what I know about life appearing on the earth.
The occurrence of this mischief is as certain as an object seen with eyes. You should therefore
ask me its details and the way to keep safe from it, so that you may be able to manage your
defense when the time comes. This meaning is supported by the successive sayings of Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib (A.S) which he uttered in connection with the unknown, and to which the future
testified. Thus, Ibn Abul Hadid comments on this claim of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) as
follows:
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s claim is also supported by his sayings about future events which he
uttered not once or a hundred times but continuously and successively, from which there remains
no doubt that whatever he spoke was on the basis of knowledge and certainly and not in the way
of chance. (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 13, p. 106)
In connection with this saying of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) it has already been shown
and explained (in Sermon 92, Foot-note No. 2) that no one else dared advance such a claim, and
those who made such a claim had to face only disgrace and humility. About the prophesies made
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by Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) see Ibn Abul-Hadid, Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 7, pp. 47-51;
judge Nurullah al-Mar’ashi, Ihqaq al-Haqq (New ed.), Vol. 8, pp. 87-182.
SERMON 189
Importance of fear of Allah, desolateness of the grave, and about the death of the lover of Ahl
al-Bayt () being like that of a martyr
I praise Him out of gratefulness for His reward, and I seek His assistance in fulfillling His
rights. He has a strong army. His dignity is grand. I stand witness that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and
His Holy Household) - peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and his progeny - is His slave
and His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . He called (people) to His obedience and
overpowered His enemies by fighting for the sake of His religion. People’s joining together to
falsify him and their attempt to extinguish His light did not prevent him from it.
You should therefore exercise fear of Allah because it has a rope whose twist is strong and its
pinnacle is lofty and invulnerable. Hasten towards death in its pangs (by doing good acts) and be
prepared for it before its approach, because the ultimate end is the Day of Judgment. This is
enough preaching for one who understands and enough of a lesson for one who does not know.
What idea do you have, before reaching that end, of the narrowness of grave, the hardship of
loneliness, fear of the passage towards the next world, the pangs of fear, the shifting of ribs here
and there (due to narrowing of the grave), the deafness of ears, the darkness of the grave, fear of
the promised punishment, the closing of the receptacle of the grave and the laying of stones?
Therefore, (fear) Allah, (fear) Allah, O creatures of Allah, because the world is behaving with
you in the usual way and you and the Day of Judgment are in the same rope (close to each other).
As though it has come with its signs, has approached with its pleas and has made you stand in its
way. And as though it has come forward with all its quaking and has settled down with its chest
on the ground while the world has parted from its people and has turned them out of its la, p. It
was like a day that has passed or a month that has gone by. Its new things have become old and
the fat ones have become thin.
They are in a narrow place, in very complicated affairs and in a Fire whose pain is sharp, cries
are loud, flames are rising, sound is trembling, burning is severe and abatement is remote. Its fuel
is burning, its threats are fearful, its hollows are hidden, its sides are dark, its vessels are aflame,
and everything about it is abominable.
And shall be conveyed those who feared (the wrath of) their Master, in companies unto the
garden. (Holy Qur’an, 39:73)
They are safe from chastisement, away from punishment, and kept aloof from fire. Their
abode will be peaceful and they will be pleased with their longing and their place of stay. These
are the people whose acts in this world were chaste, their eyes were tearful, their night in this
world were like days because of fearing and seeking forgiveness, and their days were like nights
because of feeling of loneliness and separation. Therefore, Allah made Paradise the place of their
(eventual) return and a reward in recompense. They were most eligible and suitable for it (Holy
Qur’an, 48:26) in the eternal domain and everlasting favors.
Therefore, O creatures of Allah, pay regard to all that by being regardful of which one will
succeed and by ignoring which one will incur loss, and hasten towards your death by means of
your (good) acts, because you are bound by what you have done in the past and you have to your
credit only what (good acts) you have sent forward. (Behave in such a way) as though the feared
event (death) has come upon you, so that you cannot return (to do good acts) nor can you be
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cleared of evil acts. Allah may prompt us and you for His obedience and obedience of His
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , and forgive us and you by His great mercy.
Stick to the earth, keep patient in trials, do not move your hands and swords after the liking of
your tongues, and do not make haste in matters in which Allah has not asked for haste, because
any one of you who dies in his bed while he had knowledge of the rights of Allah and the rights
of His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and members of the Prophet’s house, will die as
martyr. His reward is incumbent on Allah. He is also eligible to the recompense of what good
acts he has intended to do, since his intention takes the place of drawing his sword. Certainly, for
everything there is a time and a limit.
SERMON 190
Praise of Allah
Praise to Allah Whose praise is wide-spread, Whose army is over-powering and Whose
dignity is grand. I praise Him for His successive favors and His great gifts. His forbearance is
high so that He forgives and is just in whatever He decides. He knows what is going on and what
has already passed. He crafted all creation by His knowledge and produced it by His intelligence
without limitation, without learning without following the example of any intelligent producer,
without committing any mistake and without the availability of any group (for help). I stand
witness that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) - the peace and blessing of Allah
be upon him and his descendants - is His slave and His Messenger whom He deputed (at a time)
when people were collecting in the abyss and moving in bewilderment. The reins of destruction
were dragging them, and the locks of malice lay fixed on their hearts.
Advice about fear of Allah and an account of this world and its people
I advise you, O creatures of Allah, that you should have fear of Allah because it is a right of
Allah over you and it creates your right over Allah, and that you should seek Allah’s help in it,
and its help in (meeting) Allah. Certainly, for today fear of Allah is a protection and a shield, and
for tomorrow (the Day of Judgment) it is the road to Paradise. Its way is clear and he who treads
it is the gainer. Whoever holds it, guards it. It has presented itself to the people who have already
passed and to those coming from behind, because they will need it tomorrow (on the Day of
Judgment) when Allah will revive His creation again, take back what He has given and take
account of what He has bestowed. How few will be those who accept it and practice it as it ought
to be practiced. They will be very few in number, and they are the people who correspond to the
description given by Allah, the Glorified, when He says the following:
.And very few of My creatures are grateful! (Holy Qur’an, 34:13)
Therefore, hasten with your ears towards it and intensify your efforts for it. Make it a
substitute for all your past (short-comings) to take their place as a successor, and make it your
supporter against every opponent. Turn your sleep into wakefulness by its help, and pass your
days with it. Make it the equipment of your hearts, wash your sins with it, treat your ailments
with it and hasten towards your death with it. Take a lesson from him who neglects it, so that
others who follow it should not take a lesson from you (i.e., from your neglecting it). Beware,
therefore; you should take care of it and should take care of yourselves through it.
Keep away from this world and proceed towards the next world with infatuation. Do not
regard humble he whom fear of Allah has given a high position, and do not accord a high
position to him whom this world has given a high position. Do not keep your eyes on the shining
clouds of the world, do not listen to him who speaks of it, do not respond to him who calls
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towards it, do not seek light from its glare, and do not die in its precious things, because its
brightness is deceitful, its words are false, its wealth is liable to be looted, and its precious things
are to be taken away.
Beware, this world attracts and then turns away. It is stubborn, refusing to go ahead. It speaks
lies and misappropriates. It disowns and is ungrateful. It is malicious and abandons (its lovers). It
attracts but causes trouble. Its condition is changing, its step shaking, its honor disgrace, its
seriousness jest, and its height lowliness. It is a place of plunder and pillage, and ruin and
destruction. Its people are ready with their feet to drive, to overtake and to depart. Its routes are
bewildering, its exits are baffling, and its schemes end in disappointment. Consequently,
strongholds betray them, houses throw them out and cunning fails them.
Some of them are like hocked camel, some like butchered meat, some like severed limbs,
some like spilt blood, some are biting their hands (in pain) some are rubbing their palms (in
remorse), some are holding their cheeks on their hands (in anxiety), some are cursing their own
views and some are retreating from their determination. But the time for action has gone away
and the hour of calamity has approached, while (there was no longer) the time to escape (Holy
Qur’an, 38:3). Alas! Alas! what has been lost is lost! what has gone is gone! the world has
passed in its usual manner.
So wept not on them the heavens and the earth nor were they respited. (Holy Qur’an, 44:29)
SERMON 191
Known as Aal-Khutbah al-Qasi’a (Sermon of Disparagement)
(It comprises disparagement of Satan [Iblis] for his vanity and his refusing to prostrate before
Adam (), and his being the first to display bigotry and to act through vanity; it comprises a
warning to people treading in Satan’s path)
Praise to Allah who wears the apparel of Honor and Dignity and has chosen them for Himself
instead of for His creation. He has made them inaccessible and unlawful for others. He has
selected them for His own great self, and has hurled a curse on him who contests with Him
concerning them.
Allah’s trial, vanity of Iblis
Then He put His angels on trial concerning these attributes in order to distinguish those who
are modest from those who are vain. Therefore, Allah, who is aware of whatever is hidden in the
hearts and whatever lies behind the unseen said:
.Verily I am about to create man from clay. And when I have completed and have breathed
into him of My spirit, then fall ye prostrating in obeisance unto him. And did fall prostrating in
obeisance the angels all together. Save Iblis." (Holy Qur’an, 38:71 - 74)
His vanity stood in his way. Consequently, he felt proud over Adam by virtue of his creation
and boasted over him on account of his origin. Thus, this enemy of Allah is the leader of those
who boast, and the fore-runner of the vain. It is he who laid the foundation of factionalism,
quarreled with Allah about the robe of greatness, put on the dress of haughtiness and took of the
covering of humility. Do you not see how Allah made him low on account of his vanity and
humiliated him for his feigning to be high? He discarded him in this world and provided for him
burning fire in the next world.
If Allah, had wanted to create Adam from a light whose glare would have dazzled the eyes,
whose handsomeness would have amazed the wits and whose smell would have caught the
breath, He could have done so; and if He had done so, people would have bowed to him in
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humility and the trial of the angels through him would have become easier. But Allah, the
Glorified, tries His creatures by means of those things whose real nature they do not know in
order to distinguish (good and bad) for them through the trial, and to remove vanity from them
and keep them and keep them aloof from pride and self-admiration.
You should take a lesson from what Allah did with Satan. Namely He nullified his great acts
and extensive efforts on account of the vanity of one moment, although Satan had worshipped
Allah for six thousand years - whether by the reckoning of this world or of the next world is not
known. Who now can remain safe from Allah after Satan by committing a similar disobedience?
None at all. Allah, the Glorified, cannot let a human being enter Paradise if he does the same
thing for which Allah turned out from it an angel. His command for the inhabitants in the sky
and of the earth is the same. There is no friendship between Allah and any individual out of His
creation so as to give him license for an undesirable thing which He has held unlawful for all the
worlds.
Warning against Satan
Therefore, you should fear lest Satan infects you with his disease, or leads you astray through
his call, or marches on you with his horsemen and footmen, because, by my life, he has put the
arrow in the bow for you, has stretched the bow strongly, and has aimed at you from a nearby
position, and:
He (Satan) said: AMy Master! Because You hast left me to stray, certainly will I adorn unto
them the path of error, and certainly will I cause them all to go astray. (Holy Qur’an, 15:39)
Although he (Satan) had said so only by guessing about the unknown future and by wrong
conjecturing, yet the sons of vanity, the brothers of haughtiness and the horsemen of pride and
intolerance proved him to be true, so much so that when disobedient persons from among you
bowed before him, and his greed about you gained strength, and what was a hidden secret turned
into a clear fact, he spread his full control over you and marched with his forces towards you.
Then they pushed you into the hollows of disgrace, threw you into the whirlpools of slaughter,
and trampled you, wounding you by striking your eyes with spears, cutting your throats, tearing
your nostrils, breaking your limbs and taking you in ropes of control towards the fire already
prepared. In this way he became more harmful to your religion and a greater kindler of flames
(of mischief) about your worldly matters than the enemies against whom you showed open
opposition and against whom you marched your forces.
You should therefore spend all your force against him, and all your efforts against him,
because, by Allah, he boasted over your (i.e., Adam’s) origin, questioned your position and
spoke lightly of your lineage. He advanced on you with his army, and brought his footmen
towards your path. They are chasing you from every place, and they are hitting you at every
finger joint. You are not able to defend by any means, nor can you repulse them by any
determination. You are in the thick of disgrace, the ring of straitness, the field of death and the
way of distress.
You should therefore put out the fires of haughtiness and the flames of intolerance that are
hidden in your hearts. This vanity can exist in a Muslim only by the machinations of Satan, his
haughtiness, mischief and whisperings. Make up your mind to have humility over your heads, to
trample self-pride under your feet and to cast off vanity from your necks. Adopt humility as the
weapon between you and your enemy, Satan and his forces. He certainly has, from every people,
fighters, helpers, footmen and horsemen. Do not be like him who feigned superiority over the
son of his own mother without any distinction given to him by Allah except the feeling of envy
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which his feeling of greatness created in him and the fire of anger that vanity kindled in his heart.
Satan blew into his nose his own vanity, after which Allah gave him remorse and made him
responsible for the sins of all killers up to the Day of Judgment.
Caution against vanity and boasting about ignorance
Beware! you strove hard in revolting and created mischief on the earth in open opposition to
Allah and in challenging the believers over fighting. (You should fear) Allah! Allah! in feeling
proud of your vanity and boasting over ignorance, because this is the root of enmity and the
design of Satan wherewith he has been deceiving past people and bygone ages, with theresult
that they fell into the gloom of his ignorance and the hollows of his misguidance, submitting to
his driving and accepting his leadership. In this matter the hearts of all the people were similar,
and centuries passed by, one after the other, in just the same way, and there was vanity with
which chests were tightened.
Caution against obeying haughty leaders and elders
Beware! beware of obeying your leaders and elders who felt proud of their achievements and
boasted about their lineage. They hurled the (liability for) things on Allah and quarreled with
Allah in what he did with them, contesting His decree and disputing His favors. Certainly, they
are the main foundation of obstinacy, the chief pillars of mischief and the swords of pre-Islamic
boasting over fore-fathers. Therefore, fear Allah, do not become antagonistic to His favors on
you, nor jealous of His bounty over you1 and do not obey the claimants (of Islam) whose dirty
water you drink along with your clean one, whose ailments you mix with your healthiness and
whose wrongs you allow to enter into your rightful matters.
They are the foundation of vice and the linings of disobedience. Satan has made them carriers
of misguidance and the soldiers with whom he attacks men. They are interpreters through whom
he speaks in order to steal away your wits, enter into your eyes and blow into your ears. In this
way he makes you the victim of his arrows, the treading ground of his footsteps and source of
strength for his hands. Take instruction from how he brought wrath, violence, chastisement and
punishment on those who were vain among the past people. Take admonition from their lying on
their cheeks and falling on their sides, and seek Allah’s protection from the dangers of vanity, as
you seek His protection from calamities.
The humbleness of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Certainly, if Allah were to allow anyone to indulge in pride He would have allowed it to his
selected prophets and vicegerents. But Allah, the Sublime, disliked vanity for them and like
humbleness for them. Therefore, they laid their cheeks on the ground, smeared their faces with
dust, bent themselves down for the believers and remained humble people. Allah tried them with
hunger, afflicted them with difficulty, tested them with fear, and upset them with troubles.
Therefore, do not regard wealth and progeny the criterion for Allah’s pleasure and displeasure, as
you are not aware of the chances of mischief and trials during richness and power as Allah, the
Glorified, the Sublime, has said:
What?! Do they think that on account of what We aid them with wealth and children, We are
hastening unto them the good things?! Nay! They (only) perceive not. (Holy Qur’an, 23:55-56)
Certainly, Allah the Glorified, tries His creatures who are vain about themselves through His
beloved persons who are humble in their eyes.
When Musa son of AImran went to Pharaoh along with his brother Harun (Aaron) wearing
(coarse) shirts of wool and holding sticks in their hands, they guaranteed him retention of his
country and continuity of his honor if he submitted. But he said: ADo you not wonder at these
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two men guaranteeing me the continuity of my honor and the retention of my country although
you see their poverty and lowliness. Otherwise, why do they not have gold bangles on their
wrists? He said so feeling proud of his gold and collected possessions, and considering wool and
its cloth as nothing.
When Allah, the Glorified, deputed His prophets, if He had wished to open for them treasures
and mines of gold and (surround them with) planted gardens and to collect around them birds of
the skies and beasts of the earth, He could have done so. If He had done so then there would have
been no trial, nor recompense and no tidings (about the affairs of the next world). Those who
accepted (His message) could not be given the recompense falling due after trial and the
believers could not deserve the reward for good acts, and all these words2 would not have
retained their meanings. But Allah, the Glorified, makes His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) s firm in their determination and gives them weakness of appearance as seen from
the eyes, along with contentment that fills the hearts and eyes resulting from care-freeness, and
with want that pains the eyes and ears.
If the prophets possessed authority that could not be assaulted, or honor that could not be
damaged or domain towards which the necks of people would turn and the saddles of mounts
could be set, it would have been very easy for people to seek lessons and quite difficult to feel
vanity. They would have then accepted belief out of fear felt by them or inclination attracting
them, and the intention of them all would have been the same, although their actions would have
been different. Therefore, Allah, the Glorified decided that people should follow His prophets,
acknowledge His books, remain humble before His face, obey His command and accept His
obedience with sincerity in which there should not be an iota of anything else. And as the trial
and tribulation would be stiffer the reward and recompense too should be larger.
The Holy Ka’ba
Do you not see that Allah, the Glorified, has tried all the people among those who came
before beginning with Adam, up to the last ones in this world with stones which yield neither
benefit nor harm, which neither see nor hear. He made those stones into His sacred house which
He made a standby for the people. He placed it in the most rugged stony part of the earth and on
a highland with least soil thereon, among the most narrow valleys between rough mountains, soft
sandy plains, springs of scanty water and scattered habitants, where neither camels nor horses
nor cows and sheep can prosper.
Then He commanded Adam and his sons to turn their attention towards it. In this way it
became the center of their journey in seeking pastures and the rendezvous for meeting of their
carrier-beasts, so that human spirits hasten towards it from distant waterless deserts, deep and
low lying valleys and scattered islands in the seas. They shake their shoulders in humbleness,
recite the slogan of having reached His audience, march with swift feet, and have disheveled hair
and dusted faces. They throw their pieces of cloth on their backs, they have marred the beauty of
their faces by leaving the hair uncut as a matter of great test, severe tribulation, open trial, and
extreme refining. Allah has made it a means to His mercy and an approach to His Paradise.
If Allah, the Glorified, had placed His sacred House and His great signs among plantations,
streams, soft and level plains, plenty of trees, an abundance of fruits, a thick population, close
habitats, golden wheat, lush gardens, green land, watered plains, thriving orchards and crowded
streets, the amount of recompense would have decreased because of the lightness of the trial. If
the foundation on which the House is borne and the stones with which it has been raised had
been of green emerald and red rubies, and there had been brightness and effulgence, then this
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would have lessened the action of doubts in the breasts, would have dismissed the effect of
Satan’s activity from the hearts, and would have stopped the surging of misgivings in people.
But Allah tries His creatures by means of different troubles, wants them to render worship
through hardships and involves them in distresses, all in order to extract out vanity from their
hearts, to settle down humbleness in their spirits and to make all this an open door for His favors
and an easy means for His forgiveness (for their sins).
Caution against rebellion and oppressiveness
(Fear) Allah! Allah! From the immediate consequence of rebellion (to accrue in this world),
and the eventual consequence of weighty oppressiveness (to accrue in the next world), and from
the evil result of vanity, because it is the great trap of Satan and his big deceit which enters the
hearts of the people like a fatal poison. It never goes to waste, nor misses anyone - neither the
learned because of his knowledge, nor the destitute3 in his rags. This is the thing against which
Allah has protected His creatures who are believers by means of prayers, and alms-giving, and
suffering the hardship of fasting in the days in which it has been made obligatory, in order to
give their limbs peacefulness, to cast fear in their eyes, to make their spirits humble, to give their
hearts humility and to remove haughtiness from them. All this is achieved through the covering
of their delicate cheeks with dust in humility, prostrating their main limbs on the ground in
humbleness, and retracting of their bellies so as to reach to their backs due to fasting by way of
lowliness (before Allah), besides giving all sorts of products of the earth to the needy and the
destitute by way of alms.
Look what there is in these acts by way of curbing the appearance of pride and suppressing
the traces of vanity. I cast my glance and noticed that no one in the world, except you, feels
vanity for anything without a cause which may appeal to the ignorant, or a reason which may
cling to the minds of the foolish, because you feel vanity for something for which no reason is
discernable, nor any ground.
As for Satan, he felt proud over Adam because of his origin and taunted at him about his
creation, since he said: AI am of fire while you are of clay. In the same way the rich among the
prosperous communities have been feeling vanity because of their riches, as (Allah) said:
And said they: AWe are more (than you) in wealth and in children, and we shall not be
chastised. (Holy Qur’an, 34:35)
Enthusiasm for attractive manners, respectable position, and taking lessons from the past
In case you cannot avoid vanity, your vanity should be for good qualities, praiseworthy acts,
and admirable matters with which the dignified and noble chiefs of the Arab families
distinguished themselves, as attractive manners, high thinking, respectable position and good
performances. You too should show vanity in praiseworthy habits like the protection of the
neighbor, the fulfilllment of agreements, obedience to the virtuous, opposition to the haughty,
extending generosity to others, abstention from rebellion, keeping aloof from blood-shed, doing
justice to people, suppressing anger and avoiding trouble on the earth. You should also fear what
calamities befell peoples before you on account of their evil deeds and detestable actions.
Remember, during good or bad circumstances, what happened to them, and be cautious that you
do not become like them.
After you have thought over both the conditions of these people, attach yourself to everything
with which their position became honorable, on account of which enemies remained away from
them, through which safety spread over them, by reason of which riches bowed before them and
as a result of which distinction connected itself with their rope. These things were abstention
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from division, sticking to unity, calling each other to it and advising each other about it. You
avoid everything which broke their backbone and weakened their power, such as malice in the
heart, hatred in the chest, turning away (from each other’s help) and withholding the hand from
one another’s assistance.
Think about the condition of people from among the believers who passed before you. What
distresses and trials they were in! Were they not the most over-burdened among all the people
and in the most strained circumstances in the whole world? the Pharaohs took them as slaves.
They inflicted on them the worst punishments and bitter sufferings. They continuously remained
in this state of ruinous disgrace and severe subjugation. They found no method for escape and no
way for protection. Till when Allah, the Glorified, noticed that they were enduring troubles in
His love and bearing distresses out of fear for Him, He provided escape from the distress of
trials. So, He changed their disgrace into honor and fear into safety. Consequently, they became
ruling kings and conspicuous leaders, and Allah’s favors over them reached limits to which their
own wishes had not reached.
Look, how they were when their groups were united, their views were unanimous, their hearts
were moderate, their hands used to help one another, their swords were intended for assisting one
another, their eyes were sharp and their aims were the same. Did they not become masters of the
corners of the earth and rulers over the neck of all the worlds? Thereafter, also see what
happened to them towards the end when division overtook them, unity became fractured, and
differences arose between their words and their hearts. They divided into various groups and
were scattered fighting among themselves. Then Allah took away from them the apparel of His
honor and deprived them of the prosperity produced by His favors. Only their stories have
remained among you for the guidance of those who may learn the lesson from them.
You should take a lesson from the fate of the progeny of Isma’il, the children of Issac and the
children of Israel. How similar are their affairs and how akin are their examples. In connection
with the details of their division and disunity, think of the days when Kisras of Iran and the
Caesars of Rome had become their masters.4 They turned them out from the pastures of their
lands, the rivers of Iraq and the fertility of the world, towards thorny forests, the passages of
(hot) winds and hardships in livelihood. In this way they turned them into just herders of camels.
Their houses were the worst in the world and their places of stay were the most drought-stricken.
There was not one voice towards which they could turn for protection, nor any shade of affection
on whose strength they could repose trust.
Their condition was full of distress. Their hands were scattered. Their majority was divided.
They were in great anguish and under layers of ignorance. They buried their daughters alive,
worshipped idols, disregarded kinship and practiced robbery.
Now, look at the various favors of Allah upon them, that He deputed towards them a prophet
who got them to pledge their obedience to him and made them unite at his call. (Look) how
(Allah’s) bounty spread the wings of its favors over them and flowed for them streams of its
blessing, and the whole community became wrapped in blissful prosperity. Consequently, they
were submerged under its bounty and enjoyed its lush life. Their affairs were settled under the
protection of a powerful ruler, and circumstances offered them overpowering honor, and all
things became easy for them under the auspices of a strong country. They became rulers over the
world and kings in the (various) parts of the earth. They became masters of those who were
formerly their masters, and began issuing commands over those who used to command them.
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They were so strong that neither did their spears need testing nor did their weapons have any
flaw.
Condemning his people
Beware! You have shaken your hands loosely from the rope of obedience, and you have
broken the Divine fort around you by (resorting to) pre-Islamic customs. Certainly, it is a great
blessing of Allah, the Glorified One, that He has engendered among them unity through the cord
of affection in whose shade they walk and take shelter. This is a blessing whose value no one in
the whole world realizes, because it is more valuable than any price and higher than any wealth.
You should know that you have again reverted to the position of the Bedouin Arabs after
immigration (to Islam), and have become different parties after having been once united. You do
not possess anything of Islam except its name, and know nothing of belief save its show. You
say, AThe Fire, yes, but no shameful position, as if you would throw down Islam on its face in
order to defame its honor and break its pledge (for brotherhood) which Allah gave you as a
sacred trust on His earth and (a source of) peace among the people. Be sure that if you incline
towards anything other than Islam, the unbelievers will fight you. Then there will be neither
Gabriel nor Michael, neither Muhajirun nor Ansar to help you, but only the clashing of swords,
till Allah settles the matter for you.
Certainly, there are examples before you of Allah’s wrath, punishment, days of tribulations
and happenings. Therefore, do not disregard His promises, ignoring His punishment, making
light His wrath and not expecting His violence, because Allah, the Glorified, did not curse the
past ages except because they had left off asking others to do good acts and refraining them from
bad acts. In fact, Allah cursed the foolish for committing sins and the wise because they gave up
refraining others from evils. Beware! You have broken the shackles of Islam, have transgressed
its limits, and have destroyed its commands.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s high position and wonderful deeds in Islam
Beware! Surely Allah has commanded me to fight those who revolt, or who break the pledge,
or create trouble on the earth. As regards pledge-breakers, I have fought them; as regards
deviators from truth, I have waged holy war against them, and as regards those who have gone
out of the faith, I have put them in (serious) disgrace.5 As for Satan of the pit,6 he too has been
dealt with by me through the loud cry with which the scream of his heart and shaking of his chest
was also heard. Only a small portion of therebels has remained. If Allah allows me one more
chance over them I will annihilate them except a few remnants that may remain scattered in the
suburb of the cities.
Even in my boyhood I had lowered the chest of (the famous men) of Arabia, and broken the
horn points (i.e., defeated the chiefs) of the tribes of Rabi’ah and Mudar. Certainly, you know
my position of close kinship and special relationship with the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) of Allah - peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and his descendants. When I
was only a child he took charge of me. He used to press me to his chest and lay me beside him in
his bed, bring his body close to mine and make me smell his smell. He used to chew something
and then feed me with it. He found no lie in my speaking, nor weakness in any act.
From the time of his weaning, Allah had put a mighty angel with him to take him along the
path of high character and good behavior through day and night, while I used to follow him like
a young camel following in the footprints of its mother. Every day he would show me in the
form of a banner some of his high traits and commanded me to follow it. Every year he used to
go in seclusion to the hill of Hira’, where I saw him but no one else saw him. In those days Islam
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did not exist in any house except that of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and his descendants - and Khadijah, while I was the
third after these two. I used to see and watch the effulgence of the Divine revelation and
message, and breathed the scent of Prophethood.
When the revelation descended on the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and his descendants - I heard the moan of Satan. I said,
AO Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah, what is this moan? and he replied, AThis is
Satan who has lost all hope of being worshipped. O Ali, you see all that I see and you hear all
that I hear, except that you are not a Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , but you are a
vicegerent and you are surely on (the path of) virtue.
I was with him when a party of the Quraish came to him and said to him, AO Muhammed
(P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household), you have made a big claim which none of your fore-fathers
or those of your family have made. We ask you one thing; if you give us an answer to it and
show it to us, we will believe that you are a prophet and a messenger, but if you cannot do it, we
will know that you are a sorcerer and a liar.
The Messenger of Allah said: AWhat do you ask for? They said: AAsk this tree to move for
us, even with its roots, and stop before you. The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) said,
AVerily, Allah has power over everything. If Allah does it for you, will you then believe and
stand witness to the truth? They said AYes. Then he said, AI shall show you whatever you want,
but I know that you won’t bend towards virtue, and there are among you those who will be
thrown into the pit, and those who will form parties (against me). Then the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) said: AO tree, if you do believe in Allah and the Day of
Judgment, and know that I am the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah, come up
with your roots and stand before me with the permission of Allah. By Him who deputed the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) with truth, the tree did remove itself with its roots and
came with a great humming sound and a flapping like the flapping of the wings of birds, till it
stopped before the Messenger of Allah while some of its twigs came down onto my shoulders,
and I was on the right side of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) .
When the people saw this they said by way of pride and vanity, ANow you order half of it to
come to you and the other half of it remain (in its place). The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) ordered the tree to do the same. Then half of the tree advanced towards him in an
amazing manner and with grater humming. It was about to touch the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) of Allah. Then they said, disbelieving and revolting, AAsk this half to get back to its
other half and be as it was. The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ordered it and it
returned. Then I said, AO Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah, I am the first to
believe in you and to acknowledge that the tree did what it did just now with the command of
Allah, the Sublime, in testimony to your Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) hood and to
heighten your word. Upon this all the people shouted, ARather a sorcerer, a liar; it is wonderful
sorcery, he is very adept in it. Only a man like this (pointing to me) can stand testimony to you in
your affairs.
Certainly, I belong to the group of people who care not for thereproach of anybody in matters
concerning Allah. Their countenance is the countenance of the truthful and their speech is the
speech of the virtuous. They are wakeful during the nights (in devotion to Allah), and over
beacons (of guidance) in the day. They hold fast to the rope of the Holy Qur’an, revive the
traditions of Allah and of His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . They do not boast nor
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indulge in self conceit, nor misappropriate, nor create mischief. Their hearts are in Paradise
while their bodies are busy in (good) acts.
______________________________
1. The intention is that Ayou should not create conditions by which you may be deprived of
Allah’s favors, like the jealous who aims at harming him of whom he is jealous.
2. The intention is to say that if belief is accepted under force of awe and fear and worship is
offered under the influence of power and authority, then neither will it be belief in the true sense,
nor is it worship in the real spirit. This is because belief is the name of inner testimony and heartfelt conviction. The conviction produced by force and compulsion can be only verbal but not
heart-felt. Similarly, worship is the name of open acknowledgment of one’s position of servitude.
Worship which is devoid of the feeling of servitude or the sense of devotion and which is
performed only in view of authority or fear cannot be real worship. Therefore, such belief and
such worship would not present their correct conation.
3. The reason for specifying the learned and the poor is that the learned has the light of
learning to lead him, which the destitution of the poor may deny to him. In spite of this, both the
learned and the poor fall into his deceit.
Then how can the ignorant save himself from his clutches, and how can the rich, who has all
the means to get into wrong ways, defend himself against him.
Nay! Verily man is wont to rebel!
As he deems himself needless!
4. If a glance is cast at the rise and fall and events and happenings of the past people this fact
will shine like daylight that the rise and fall of communities is not the result of luck or change,
but that, to a great extent, it is affected by their acts and deeds. And of whatever type those deeds
are, their results and consequences are in accord with them. Consequently, the stories and events
of past people openly reflect that the result of oppression and evil deeds has always been ruin
and destruction, while the consequence of virtuous action and peaceful living was always good
luck and success. Since time and people make no difference, if the same conditions appear again
and the same actions are repeated the same results must accrue which had appeared in the earlier
set of circumstances, because the accrual of the results of good or bad actions is sure and certain
like the properties and effects of everything. If this were not so it would not be possible to kindle
hope in the minds of the oppressed and the afflicted by presenting to them past events and their
effects, nor could the oppressors and tyrants be warned of the ill-effects of their deeds, on the
ground that it was not necessary that the same would accrue now as had accrued earlier. But it is
the universality of casualty which makes past events the object of a lesson for posterity.
Consequently, it was for this purpose that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) provoked thinking and
consideration and mentioned the various events of Banu Isma’il, Banu Is’haq and Banu Isra’il
and their affliction at the hands of the kings of Iran and Rome.
The progeny ofIsma’il, the elder son of Ibrahim (Abraham), is called Banu Isma’il while the
progeny of his younger son Ishaq (Isaac) is called Banu Is’haq which later continued to divide
into various off-shoots and acquired different names. Their original abode was at Canaan in
Palestine, where Ibrahim had settled after the immigration from the plains of the Euphrates and
the Tigris. His son Isma’il had settled in the Hijaz, where Ibrahim (Abraham) had left him and
his mother Hajar (Hagar). Isma’il married Sayyidah daughter of Mudad a woman of the tribe of
Jurhum which also inhabited this very area. His progeny sprang from her and spread throughout
the world. The other son of Ibrahim namely Is’haq remained in Canaan. His son was Ya’qub
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(Jacob/Israel) who married Liya daughter of his mother’s brother and after her death married his
other daughter. Both of them bore his progeny which is known as Banu Isra’il. One of his sons
was Yusuf (Joseph), who reached the neighboring country, Egypt, through an accident, and, after
suffering slavery and imprisonment, eventually became the ruler and occupier of the throne.
After this change, he sent for all his relations and kith and kin and in this way Egypt became
the abode of Banu Isra’il. For some time, they lived there in peace and security, leading a life of
respect and esteem. But by and by the locals began to view them with disdain and hatred and
made them the target of all sorts of tyrannies, so much so that they used to kill their children and
retained their women as slave-maids, as a result of which their determination and courage was
trampled and their spirit of freedom was completely subdued. At last, conditions changed and the
period of their troubles came to an end, after four hundred years of the shackles of slavery; when
Allah sent Musa to deliver them from the oppression of Pharaoh. Musa set off with them to leave
Egypt but in order to destroy the Pharaoh, Allah turned them towards the Nile where there was
all flood in front, and on therear the huge forces of the Pharaoh. This bewildered them much, but
Allah commanded Musa to enter the river without fear. Thus, when he went forward, there
appeared in the river not only one but several courses to pass through and Musa crossed to the
other side of the river along with Banu Isra’il. Pharaoh was closely following. When he saw
them passing he too advanced with his army but when they reached the middle of the stream the
still water began moving and, engulfing Pharaoh and his army in its waves, finished them. About
them the Holy Qur’an says the following:
And (remember ye) when We delivered you from Pharaoh’s people who afflicted you with
grievous torment, slaying your sons and by letting your women alive, and in that was a great
trial from your Master. (2:49)
However, when, after leaving the boundaries of Egypt, they entered their motherland
Palestine, they established their own state and began to live in freedom, and Allah changed their
lowliness and disgrace into the greatness and sublimity of rule and power. In this connection,
Allah says the following:
And made We inheritors the people who were deemed weak (to inherit) the eastern parts of
the earth and the western parts of it, which we had blessed therein (with fertility) and the good
word of thy Master was fulfillled in the children of Israel for what they did endure; and
destroyed We, what Pharaoh and his people had wrought, and what shade they did make. (Holy
Qur’an, 7:137)
On occupying the throne of rule and regaining prosperity and peacefulness, Banu Isra’il
forgot all the ignominies and disgraces of the period of slavery, and instead of being thankful to
Allah for the favors granted by Him they took to rebellion and revolt. Consequently, they
shamelessly indulged in vices and misconduct and partook in mischief and evil deeds to the
maximum, made lawful things unlawful and unlawful things lawful by false excuses and
disobeyed the prophets who tried to preach and correct them under the command of Allah, and
even killed them. The natural consequence of their vicious activities was that they were caught in
punishment for their deeds. Consequently, Nebuchadnezzar, who was ruling in Babylon (Iraq) in
600 B.C., rose to march against Syria and Palestine and killed seventy thousand Banu Isra’il with
his blood-thirsty swords, divested their towns, drove away the survivors with him like sheep and
goats and threw them in the abyss of ignominy by turning them into slaves. Although after this
ruination there seemed no way for them to regain position and power, yet nature gave them still
another chance to recover. When Nebuchadnezzar died and power came in the hands of
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Belshazzar he started all sorts of oppression on the people. Being disgusted with this, they sent
word to the ruler of Iran that they were tired of enduring the oppression of their ruler and that he
should rescue them from him, and free them from the oppression of Belshazzar. Cyrus the Great,
who was a just and upright ruler, rose up in response to this request and, with the cooperation of
the local population, overturned the government, as a consequence of which the yoke of slavery
on Banu Isra’il’s (the offspring of Ishmael) necks was also removed, and they were allowed to
return to Palestine. Thus, after seventy years of subjugation they again set foot in their homeland
and took over the reins of government. If they had taken their lesson from the past events they
would not have committed the same evils as a consequence of which they had to suffer slavery.
But the mental constitution of his community was such that whenever they achieved prosperity
and freedom from care they lost themselves in the intoxication of riches and in the enjoyment of
pleasure, mocked the laws of religion, derided the prophets and even killing them did not mean
anything serious to them. Thus, when their ruler Herod at the request of his sweetheart, beheaded
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) Yahya (John) and presented his head to her, none of
them raised any voice against this brutality or was affected by it in any manner. This was the
state of their unruliness and fierceness when AIsa made his appearance. He stopped them from
evil deeds and exhorted them to adopt good habits, but they opposed him too and gave him
troubles of various sorts, so much so that they tried to end his life. However, Allah foiled all their
devices and made AIsa (Jesus) safe against their approach. When their disobedience reached this
stage and their capacity to accept guidance was completely wiped out, fate decided to ruin them
and made full arrangements for their annihilation and destruction. The ruler of Rome (Byzantine)
Vespasianus sent his son Titus to attack Syria, he laid siege round Jerusalem, demolished the
houses and broke down the walls of the Synagogue as a result of which thousand of Banu Isra’il
(Israelites) left their houses and became scattered abroad, while thousands died of hunger; and
those who remained were put to sword. Most of them settled in Hijaz, but because of their
rejecting Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy
Household) their unity was so disturbed that they could never again converge on any one center
of honor and could never regain a life of prestige and dignity in place of disgrace and ignominy.
In the same way, the ruler of then Persia made serious attacks on Arabia and subjugated the
inhabitants of those places. Thus, Shahpur ibn Hormuz, at the age of sixteen, took with him four
thousand combatants and attacked the Arabs who resided within the boundaries of Iran and then
advanced towards Bahrain, Qatif and Hajar and ruined Banu Tamim, Banu Bakr ibn Wa’il and
Banu AAbdul-Qays and cut through the shoulders of seventy thousand Arabs, after which his
nickname became ADhu’l-Aktaf (the one with shoulders). He forced the Arabs that they should
live in tents built of hair, should grow long hair on their heads, should not wear white clothes and
should ride unsaddled horses. Then he settled twelve thousand people of Isfahan and other cities
of Iran in the area between Iraq and Syria. In this way, he drove the inhabitants of those places
from fertile lands to waterless forests which had neither any conveniences of life nor means of
livelihood, and for long these people remained the victims of other’s oppression due to their own
disunity and division. At last, Allah deputed the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and
raised them out of disgrace to the highest pinnacle of progress and sublimity.
5. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), Abu Ayyub al-Ansari, Jabir ibn AAbdullah al-Ansari,
AAbdullah ibn Mas’ud, AAmmar ibn Yasir, Abu Sa’id al-Khudri and AAbdullah ibn AAbbas
narrated that the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) commanded Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S) to fight those who are pledge-breakers (nakithin), deviators from truth (qasitin) and those
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who have left the faith (mariqin). (Al-Mustadrak, Vol. 3, p. 139; Al-Isti’ab, Vol. 3, p. 1117; Usd
al-Ghaba, Vol. 3, pp. 32-33; Al-Durr al-Manthur, Vol. 6, p. 18; Al-Khasa’is al-Kubra, Vol. 2, p.
138; Majma’ al-Zawa’id, Vol. 5, p. 186; Vol. 6, p. 235; Vol. 7, p. 238; Kanz al-Aummal, Vol. 6,
pp. 72,82,88,155,215,319,391,392; Tarikh Baghdad, Vol. 8, p. 340; Vol. 13, pp. 186-187;
Tarikh, Ibn AAsakir, Vol. 5, p. 41; Tarikh, Ibn Kathir, Vol. 7, pp. 304-306; Al-Riyad al-Nadira,
Vol. 2, p. 240; Sharh al-Mawahib al-Ladunniyya, Vol. 3, pp. 316-317; Mawaddat al-Awham,
Vol. 1, p. 386).
Ibn Abul-Hadid says, AIt has been proved (by right ascription) from the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) that he said to Ali (A.S) :
You will fight after me those who are pledge-breakers, deviators from truth and those who
have gone out of the faith.
AThe pledge-breakers were the people of Jamal, because they broke their allegiance with
him. The deviators from truth were the people of Syria at Siffin. Those who have gone out of the
faith were the Kharijites at an-Nahrawan. Regarding these three groups, Allah says (about the
first one) :
Verily, those who swear their fealty unto thee do but swear fealty unto Allah; the hand of
Allah is above their hands; so whosoever violates his oath, doth violate it only to the hurt of his
(own) self;.(Holy Qur’an, 48:10)
(About The second group) Allah says the following:
AAnd as for the deviators, they shall be for the hell, a fuel. (Holy Qur’an, 72:15)
Concerning the third group, Ibn Abul-Hadid has referred to the following tradition (hadith)
that al-Bukhari (in Sahih, Vol. 4, pp.166-167, 243), Muslim (in Sahih, Vol. 3, pp. 109-117), alTirmithi (in Jami’al-Sihah, Vol. 4, p. 481), Ibn Majah (in Al-Sunan, Vol. 1, pp. 59-62), al-Nisa’i
(in Al-Sunan, Vol. 3, pp. 65-66), Malik ibn Anas (in Al-Muwatta’, pp. 204-205), al-Dar Qutni (in
Al-Susan, Vol. 3, pp. 131-132), ad-Darmi (in Al-Sunan, Vol. 2, p. 133), Abu Dawud (in AlSunan, Vol. 4 pp.241-246), al-Hakim (in Al-Mustadrak, Vol. 2, pp. 145-154; Vol. 4, p.531),
Ahmed ibn Hanbal (in Al-Musnad, Vol. 1, pp. 88,140,147; Vol. 3, pp.56,65) and al-Bayhaqi (in
Al-Sunan al-Kubra, Vol. 8, pp.170-171) have narrated through a group of the companions of the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) that he said about Thul-Khuwaysira (the surname
for "Thul-Thudayyah" Hurqus ibn Zuhayr at-Tamimi, chief of the Kharijites) :
From this very person’s posterity there will arise people who will recite the Holy Qur’an, but
it will not go beyond their throat; they will kill their followers of Islam and will spare the idolworshippers. They will glance through the teaching of Islam as hurriedly as the arrow passes
through its prey. If I were to ever find them I would kill them like AAd.
Then ibn Abul-Hadid continues:
This is the sign for his (Holy Prophet’s) prophethood and his prophecy of the secret
knowledge. (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 13, p.183)
6. By ASatan of the pit the reference is to Dhu’t-Thudayyah (whose full name already
mentioned in Foot-note No. 5) who was killed in Nahrawan by the stroke of lightning from the
sky, and there was no need to kill him by sword. The Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) had foretold his death. Therefore, after the annihilation of the Kharijites at
Nahrawan, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) came out in search, but could not find his body
anywhere. In the meantime, ar-Rayyan ibn Sabirah saw forty to fifty bodies in a pit on the bank
of the canal. When they were taken out of the body of Thul-Thudayya was also found among
them. He was called Thul-Thudayya because of a mass of flesh on his shoulder. When Imam Ali
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ibn Abu Talib (A.S) saw his body he said, AAllah is Great, neither I spoke a lie nor was I told
wrong. (Ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 13, pp. 183-184; al-Tabari, Vol. 1, pp.3383 - 3384; Ibn al-Athir,
Vol. 3, p.348).
SERMON 192
It is related that a companion of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) called Hammam1 who was a
man devoted to worship said to him, AO Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), describe to me the pious
man in such a way as though I see them. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) avoided thereply and
said, AO Hammam, fear Allah and perform good acts because AVerily, Allah is with those who
guard (themselves against evil), and those who do good (to others) : (Holy Qur’an, 16:128).
Hammam was not satisfied with this and pushed him to speak. Thereupon, Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) praised Allah and extolled Him and sought His blessings on the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) and then spoke:
Now then, Allah the Glorified, the Sublime, created (the things of) creation. He created them
without any need for their obedience or being safe from their sinning, because the sin of anyone
who sins does not harm Him nor does the obedience of anyone who obeys Him benefit Him. He
has distributed among them their livelihood, and has assigned them their positions in the world.
Thus, the God-fearing, in it are the people of distinction. Their speech is to the point, their
dress is moderate and their gait is humble. They keep their eyes closed to what Allah has made
unlawful for them, and they put their ears to that knowledge which is beneficial to them. They
remain in the time of trials as though they remain in comfort. If there had not been fixed periods
(of life) ordained for each, their spirits would not have remained in their bodies even for the
twinkling of an eye because of (their) eagerness for the reward and fear of chastisement. The
greatness of the Creator is seated in their heart, and, so, everything else appears small in their
eyes. Thus to them, Paradise is as though they see it and are enjoying its favors. To them, Hell is
also as if they see it and are suffering punishment in it.
Their hearts are grieved, they are protected against evils, their bodies are thin, their needs are
scanty, and their souls are chaste. They endured (hardship) for a short while, and in consequence
they secured comfort for a long time. It is a beneficial transaction that Allah made easy for them.
The world aimed at them, but they did not aim at it. It captured them, but they freed themselves
from it by a ransom.
During a night they are up standing on their feet reading portions of the Holy Qur’an and
reciting it in a well-measured way, creating through it grief for themselves and seeking by it the
cure for their ailments. If they come across a verse creating eagerness (for Paradise) they pursue
it avidly, and their spirits turn towards it eagerly, an they feel as if it is in front of them. And
when they come across a verse which contains fear (of Hell) they bend the ears of their hearts
towards it, and feel as though the sound of Hell and its cries are reaching their ears. They bend
themselves from their backs, prostrate themselves on their foreheads, their palms, their knees and
their toes, and beseech Allah, the Sublime, for their deliverance. During the day they are
enduring, learned, virtuous and God-fearing. Fear (of Allah) has made them thin like arrows. If
any one looks at them he believes they are sick, although they are not sick, and he says that they
have gone mad. In fact, great concern (i.e., fear) has made them mad.
They are not satisfied with their meager good acts, and do not regard their major acts as great.
They always blame themselves and are afraid of their deeds. When anyone of them is spoken of
highly, he says the following: AI know myself better than others, and my Master knows me
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better than I know. O Allah do not deal with me according to what they say, and make me better
than they think of me and forgive me (those shortcomings) which they do not know.
The peculiarity of anyone of them is that you will see that he has strength in religion,
determination along with leniency, faith with conviction, eagerness in (seeking) knowledge in
forbearance, moderation in riches, devotion in worship, gracefulness in starvation, endurance in
hardship, desire for the lawful, pleasure in guidance and hatred from greed. He performs virtuous
deeds but still feels afraid. In the evening he is anxious to offer thanks (to Allah). In the morning
his anxiety is to remember (Allah). He passes the night in fear and rises in the morning in joy fear lest night is passed in forgetfulness, and joy over the favor and mercy received by him. If his
self refuses to endure a thing which it does not like he does not grant its request towards what it
likes. The coolness of his eye lies in what is to last forever, while from the things (of this world)
that will not last he keeps aloof. He transfuses knowledge with forbearance, and speech with
action.
You will see his hopes simple, his shortcomings few, his heart fearing, his spirit contented, his
meal small and simple, his religion safe, his desires dead and his anger suppressed. Good alone is
expected from him. Evil from him is not to be feared. Even if he is found among those who
forget (Allah) he is counted among those who remember (Him), but if he is among those who
remembers and he is not counted among the forgetful. He forgives him who is unjust to him, and
he gives to him who deprives him. He behaves well with him who behaves ill with him.
Indecent speech is far from him, his utterance is lenient, his evils are non-existent, his virtues
are ever present, his good is ahead and mischief has turned its face (from him). He is dignified
during calamities, patient in distresses, and thankful during ease. He does not commit excess
over him whom he hates, and does not commit sin for the sake of him whom he loves. He admits
truth before evidence is brought against him. He does not misappropriate what is placed in his
custody, and does not forget what he is required to remember. He does not call others bad names,
he does not cause harm to his neighbor, he does not feel happy at others misfortunes, he does not
enter into wrong and does not go out of right.
If he is silent his silence does not grieve him, if he laughs he does not raise his voice, and if he
is wronged he endures till Allah takes revenge on his behalf. His own self is in distress because
of him, while the people are in ease from him. He puts himself in hardship for the sake of his
next life and makes people feel safe from himself. His keeping away from others is by way of
asceticism and purification, and his nearness to those to whom he is near is by way of leniency
and mercifulness. His keeping away is not by way of vanity or feeling of greatness, nor his
nearness by way of deceit and cheating.
It is related that Hamman passed into a deep swoon an then expired. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S) said: Verily, by Allah I had this fear about him. Then he added: Effective advice produces
such effects on receptive minds. Someone2 said to him: O Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), how is
it you do not receive such an effect? Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) replied: Woe to you. For
death there is a fixed hour which cannot be exceeded, and a cause which does not change. Now
look, never repeat such talk which Satan had put on your tongue.
1. According to Ibn Abul-Hadid, this is Hamman ibn Shurayh, but’allama al-Majlisi says that
apparently this is Hammam ibn AUbadah.
2. This man was AAbdullah ibn al-Kawwa’ who was in the fore-front of the Kharijite
movement and was a great opponent of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S).
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SERMON 193
In description of hypocrites
We praise Allah for the succor He has given us in carrying out His obedience and in
preventing us from disobedience, and we ask Him to complete His favors (to us) and to make us
hold on to His rope. We stand witness that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) is
His slave and His Messenger. He entered every hardship in search of Allah’s pleasure and
endured for its sake every grief. His near relations changed themselves for him and those who
were remote from him (in relationship) united against him. The Arabs let loose thereins (of their
horses to quicken their march) against him, and struck the bellies of their carriers to (rouse them)
in fighting against him, so much so that enemies came to his threshold from theremotest places
and most distant areas.
I advise you, O creatures of Allah, to fear Allah and I warn you of the hypocrites, because
they are themselves misguided and misguide others, and they have slipped and make others slip
too. They change into many colors, and adopt various ways. They support you with all sorts of
supports, and lay in waiting for you at every look out. Their hearts are diseased while their faces
are clean. They walk stealthily and tread like the approach of sickness (over the body). Their
words speak of cure, but their acts are like incurable diseases. They are jealous of ease, intensify
distress, and destroy hopes. Their victims are found lying down on every path, while they have
means to approach every heart and they have (false) tears for every grief.
They eulogize each other and expect reward from each other. When they ask something they
insist on it, if they reprove (any one) they disgrace (him), and if they pass verdict they commit
excess. They have adopted for every truth a wrong way, for every erect thing a bender, for every
living being a killer, for every (closed) door a key and for every night a lam, p. They covet, but
with despair, in order to maintain with it their markets, and do popularize their handsome
merchandise. When they speak they create doubts. When they describe they exaggerate. First
they offer easy paths but (afterwards) they make them narrow. In short, they are the party of
Satan and the stings of fire.
Satan has gained hold on them, so he makes them forget the remembrance of Allah; they are
Satan’s Party; Beware! Verily, the party of Satan are the losers. (Holy Qur’an, 58:19)
SERMON 194
Allah’s praise, advice about fear of Allah and details about the Day of Judgment
Praise to Allah who has displayed such effects of His authority and the glory of His sublimity
through the wonders of His might that they dazzle the pupils of the eyes and prevent the minds
from appreciating the reality of His attributes. I stand witness that there is no god but Allah by
virtue of belief, certainty, sincerity and conviction. I also stand witness that Muhammed
(P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) is His slave and His Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
whom He deputed when the signs of guidance were obliterated and the ways of religion were
desolate. So, he threw open the truth, gave advice to the people, guided them towards
righteousness and ordered them to be moderate. May Allah bless him and his descendants.
Know, O creatures of Allah, that He has not created you for naught and has not left you free.
He knows the extent of His favors over you and the quantity of His bounty towards you.
Therefore, ask Him for success and for the attainment of aims. Beg before Him and seek His
generosity. No curtain hides you from Him, nor is any door closed before you against Him. He is
at every place, in every moment and every instance. He is with every man and jinn. Giving does
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not create any breach in Him. Gifting does not cause Him diminution. A beggar cannot exhaust
Him and paying (to others) cannot take Him to the end.
One person cannot turn His attention from another, one voice does not detract Him from
another voice, and one grant of favor does not prevent Him from refusing another favor. Anger
does not prevent Him from mercy, mercy does not prevent Him from punishing; His
concealment does not hide His manifestation, and His manifestation does not prevent Him from
concealing. He is near and at the same time distant. He is high and at the same time now, He is
manifest and also concealed. He is concealed yet well-known. He lends but is not lent anything.
He has not created (the things of) creation after devising, nor did He take their assistance on
account of fatigue.
I advise you, O creatures of Allah, to have fear of Allah, for it is therein and the mainstay (of
religion). Hold fast to its salient points, keep hold of its realities. It will take you to abodes of
easiness, places of comfort, fortresses of safety and houses of honor on the Day (of Judgment)
when eyes will be wide open, (Holy Qur’an, 14:42), when there will be darkness all round and
when small groups of camels pregnant for ten months will be allowed free grazing. And when
the Horn will be blown, then every living being will die, every voice will become dumb, the high
mountains and hard rocks will crumble (to pieces) so that their hard stones will turn into moving
sand and their bases will become level. (On that day) there will be no interceder to intercede and
no relation to ward off (trouble) and no excuse will be of avail.
SERMON 195
The condition of the world at the time of the proclamation of prophethood, the transience of
this world and the state of its inhabitants.
Allah deputed the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) when no sign of guidance existed,
no beacon was giving light and no passage was clear.
I advise you, O creatures of Allah, to have fear of Allah, and I warn you of this world which is
a house from which departure is inevitable and a place of discomfort. He who lives in it has to
depart, and he who stays here has to leave it. It is drifting with its people like a boat whom severe
winds dash (here and there) in the deep sea. Some of them get drowned and die, while some of
them escape on the surface of the waves, where winds push them with their currents and carry
them towards their dangers. So, whatever is drowned cannot be restored, and whatever escapes is
on the way to destruction.
O creatures of Allah, you should know now that you have to perform (good) acts, because (at
present) your tongues are free, your bodies are healthy, your limbs have movement, the area of
your coming and going is vast and the course for your running is wide; before the loss of
opportunity or the approach of death. Take death’s approach as an accomplished fact and do not
think it will come (hereafter).
SERMON 196
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s attachment to the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ,
performance of his funeral rites
Those companions of Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) - the peace and
blessing of Allah be upon him and his descendants - who were the custodians (of the Divine
messages) know that I never disobeyed Allah or His Messenger1 -- the peace and blessing of
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Allah be upon him and his descendants -- at all, and by virtue of the courage2 with which Allah
honored me I supported him with my life on occasions when even the brave turned away and feet
remained behind (instead of proceeding forward).
When the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) -- the peace and blessing of Allah be upon
him and his descendants -- died his head was on my chest, and his (last) breath blew over my
palms and I passed it over my face. I performed his (funeral) ablution, may Allah bless him and
his descendants and the angels helped me. The house and the courtyard were full of them. One
party of them was descending and the other was ascending. My ears continually caught their
humming voice, as they invoked Allah’s blessing on him, till we buried him in his grave. Thus,
who can have greater rights with him than I during his life or after his death? Therefore depend
on your enemy, because I swear by Him who is such that there is no god but He, that I am on the
path of truth and that they (the enemy) are on the misleading path of wrong. You hear what I say,
and I seek Allah’s forgiveness for myself and for you.
1. Ibn Abul-Hadid has written (in Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 10, pp. 180-183) that Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib’s saying that he never disobeyed the commands of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) is a sort of taunt to those who felt no hesitation is rejecting the Prophet’s commands,
and sometimes even checked him. For example, when, at the time of the peace of al-Hudaybiya,
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was agreeable to negotiate peace with the
unbelievers among the Quraish, one of the companions became so enraged that he expressed
doubts about the prophethood of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) whereupon Abu
Bakr had to say:
Woe be to you! Keep clinging to him. He is certainly Allah’s
Messenger and He will not ruin him.
The introduction to the oath, Ainna’, and the word of emphasis Alam’ which are used here to
create conviction about the prophethood shows that the addressee had gone farther than mere
doubt, because these words of emphasis are employed only when the stage of denial has been
reached. However, if belief required absence of doubt, the presence of doubt must imply defect
in the belief, as Allah says the following:
The believers are only those who believe in Allah and His
Messenger, they doubt not thereafter. (Holy Qur’an, 49:15)
Similarly, when the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) intended to say the funeral
prayers of Ubayy ibn Sallul the same companion said to him, AHow do you intend to seek
forgiveness for this Chief of hypocrites? And he even drew away the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) by catching the skirt (of his shirt). Then the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
had to say, ANo act of mine is beside the command of Allah. In the same way the Prophet’s
command to accompany the force of Usamah ibn Zayd was ignored. The greatest of all such
insolence was displayed in connection with the Prophet’s intention to write down his advice as to
when such a blame was laid against the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) which proves an
absence of belief in the commands of the Shari’a, and creates a doubt each command as to
whether it is based on the Divine revelation or (Allah may forbid) just the result of mental
disorder.
2. Who can deny that the ever-successful lion of Allah, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
shielded the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) on every critical occasion and performed the
duty of protecting him by dint of the courage and valor gifted to him by Allah. The first occasion
of risking his life was when the unbelievers from the Quraish decided finally to kill the Prophet
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(P.B.U.H. and His Household) and Ali slept on his bed surrounded by enemies and under the
direct peril of swords, whereby the enemies were not able to succeed in their aims. The n, in
those battles where the enemies used to attack the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
together and where the feet of even thereputed heroes could not stand firm. Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) remained steadfast with the banner (of Islam) in his hand. AAbdul-Barr and alHakim writes about it:
Ibn AAbbas says that Ali had four qualities which no one else possessed. Firstly, he was the
first among Arabs and non-Arabs to have said prayers with the Messenger of Allah. Secondly, he
always had the banner of Islam in his hand in every battle. Thirdly, when people ran away from
the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , Ali remained with him; and fourthly it was he who
gave the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) his funeral ablution and laid him in his grave.
(al-Isti’ab, Vol. 3, p. 1090; Al-Mustadrak Aala Sahihayn, Vol. 3, p. 111).
A study of the holy wars of Islam fought in the Prophet’s days leaves no doubt that, except for
the battle of Tabuk in which Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) did not partake, all other battles bear
testimony to his fine performance and all the successes are due to his valour. Thus, in the battle
of Badr seventy unbelievers were killed, half of whom were killed by Ali sword. In the battle of
Uhud, when victory changed into defeat as a result of the Muslims engaging themselves in the
collection of booty, and they fled away under the sudden attack of the enemy, Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) remained steadfast, taking jihad to be a religious obligation, and displayed such
conspicuous performance in support and defence of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
that the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) too acknowledged it and also the Angel. Again,
in the battle of the Trench (al-Khandaq), the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was
accompanied by three thousand combatants, but none dared face AAmr ibn AAbdawadd. At last,
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) killed him and saved the Muslims from ignominy. In the battle of
Hunain, the Muslims were proud of their number because they were ten thousand while the
unbelievers were only four thousand, but here too they leapt onto the booty, as a consequence of
which the unbelievers gained the opportunity, and pounced upon them. Bewildered with this
sudden attack the Muslims fled away as the Holy Qur’an says the following:
Most certainly did Allah help you in many (battle) fields, and on the day of Hunain, when
made you vain your great number, but they availed you nothing, and was straitened the earth
against you with all its extensiveness, then ye turned back in retreat. (9:25)
On this occasion also, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was steady like a rock, and eventually,
with Allah’s support, victory was achieved.
SERMON 197
Allah’s attribute of Omniscience
Allah knows the cries of the beasts in the forest, the sins of the people in seclusion, the
movements of the fishes in the deep seas and the rising of the water by tempestuous winds. I
stand witness that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) is the choice of Allah, the
conveyor of His revelation and the messenger of His mercy.
Advantages of fear of Allah
Now then, I advise you to fear Allah, Who created you for the first time. Toward Him is your
return, with Him lies the success of your aims, at Him terminate (all) your desires, toward Him
runs your path of right and He is the aim of your fears (for seeking protection). Certainly, fear of
Allah is the medicine for your hearts, sight for the blindness of your spirits, the cure for the
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ailments of your bodies, therectifier of the evils of your breasts, the purifier of the pollution of
your minds, the light of the darkness of your eyes, the consolation for the fear of your heart and
the brightness for the gloom of your ignorance.
Therefore, make obedience to Allah the way of your life and not only your outside covering.
Make it your inner habit instead of only outer routine, subtle enough to enter through your ribs
(up to the heart), the guide for all your affairs, the watering place for your getting down (on the
Day of Judgment), the interceder for the achievement of your aims, asylum for the day of your
fear, the lamp of the interior of your graves, company for your long loneliness, and deliverance
from the troubles of your abodes. Certainly, obedience to Allah is a protection against encircling
calamities, expected dangers and the flames of burning fires.
Therefore, whoever entertains fear of Allah, troubles remain away from him after having been
near, affairs become sweet after their bitterness, waves (of troubles) recede from him after
having crowded over him, difficulties become easy for him after occurring, generosity rains fast
over him after there had been famine, mercy bends over him after it had been loath, the favors
(of Allah) spring forth on him after they had been dried, and blessing descends over him in
showers after being scanty. So, fear Allah Who benefits you with His good advice, preaches to
you through His Messenger, and obliges you with His favors. Devote yourselves to His worship,
and acquit yourselves of the obligation of obeying Him.
About Islam
This Islam is the religion which Allah has chosen for Himself, developed it before His eyes,
preferred it as the best among His creations, established its pillars on His love. He has disgraced
other religions by giving honor to it. He has humiliated all communities before its sublimity; He
has humbled its enemies with His kindness and made its opponents lonely by according it His
support. He has smashed the pillars of misguidance with its columns. He has quenched the thirst
of the thirsty from its cisterns, and filled the cisterns through those who draw its water.
He made Islam such that its constituent parts cannot break, its links cannot separate, its
construction cannot fall, its columns cannot decay, its plant cannot be uprooted, its time does not
end, its laws do not expire, its twigs cannot be cut, its parts do not become narrow, its ease does
not change into difficulty, its clarity is not affected by gloom, its straightness does not acquire
curvature, its wood has no crookedness, its vast paths have no narrowness, its lamp knows no
putting off and its sweetness has no bitterness.
It consists of columns whose bases Allah has fixed in truthfulness, and whose foundation He
has strengthened, and of sources whose streams are ever full of water and of lamps, whose
flames are full of light, and of beacons with whose help travelers get guidance, and of signs
through which a way is found to its highways and of watering places which provide water to
those who come to them. Allah has placed in Islam the height of His pleasure, the pinnacle of
His pillars and the prominence of His obedience. Before Allah, therefore, its columns are strong,
its construction is lofty, its proofs are bright, its fires are aflame, its authority is strong, its
beacons are high and its destruction is difficult. You should therefore honor it, follow it, fulfill its
obligations and accord the position due to it.
About the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Then, Allah, the Glorified, deputed Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) - the
peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and his descendants - with truth at a time when the
destruction of the world was near and the next life was at hand, when its brightness was turning
into gloom after shining, it has become troublesome for its inhabitants, its surface had become
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rough, and its decay had approached near. This was during the exhaustion of its life at the
approach of signs (of its decay), the ruin of its inhabitants, the breaking of its links, the dispersal
of its affairs, the decay of its signs, the divulging of its secret matters and the shortening of its
length. Allah made him responsible for conveying His message and (a means of) honor for his
people, a period of bloom for the men of his days, a source of dignity for the supporters and an
honor for his helpers.
About the Holy Qur’an
Then, Allah sent to him the Book as a light whose flames cannot be extinguished, a lamp
whose gleam does not die, a sea whose depth cannot be sounded, a way whose direction does not
mislead, a ray whose light does not darken, a separator (of good from evil) whose arguments do
not weaken, a clarifier whose foundations cannot be dismantled, a cure which leaves no
apprehension for disease an honor whose supporters are not defeated, and a truth whose helpers
are not abandoned. Therefore, it is the mine of belief and its center, the source of knowledge and
its oceans, the plantation of justice and its pools, the foundation stone of Islam and its
construction, the valleys of truth and its plains, an ocean which those who draw water cannot
empty, springs which those who draw water cannot dry up, a watering place which those who
come to take water cannot exhaust, a staging place in moving towards which travelers do not get
lost, signs which no trader fails to see and a highland which those who approach it cannot
surpass it.
Allah has made it a quencher of the thirst of the learned, a bloom for the hearts of religious
jurists, a highway for the ways of the righteous, a cure after which there is no ailment, an
effulgence with which there is not darkness, a rope whose grip is strong, a stronghold whose top
is invulnerable, and honor for him who owes it, a peace for him who enters it, a guidance for him
who follows it, an excuse for him who adopts it, an argument for him who argues with it, a
witness for him who quarrels with it, a success for him who argues with it, a carrier of burden for
him who seeks the way, a shield for him who arms himself (against misguidance), a knowledge
for him who listens carefully, worthy story for him who relates it and a final verdict of him who
passes judgments.
SERMON 198
Containing advice given by Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) to his companions about Prayer
Pledge yourself with prayer and remain steady on it; offer prayer as much as possible and
seek nearness (of Allah) through it, because it is, (imposed) upon the believers as timed
ordinance (Holy Qur’an, 4:103). Have you not heard thereply of the people of Hell when they
were asked: What has brought you into the hell? They shall say: We were not of those who
offered theregular prayers (to Allah) ! (Holy Qur’an, 74:42-43). Certainly, prayer drops out sins
like the dropping of leaves (of trees), and removes them as ropes are removed from the necks of
cattle. The Messenger of Allah - the peace and blessing of Allah be upon him and his
descendants - likened it to a hot bath situated at the door of a person who bathes in it five times a
day. Will then any dirt remain on him?
Its obligation is recognized by those believers whom neither the adornment of property nor
the coolness of the eyes produced by children can turn away from it. Allah, the Glorified, says
the following:
Men whom neither merchandise nor any diverteth from the remembrance of Allah and
constancy in prayer and paying the poor-rate;. (Qur;an, 24:37)
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Even after receiving assurance of Paradise, the Messenger of Allah - peace and blessing of
Allah be upon him and his descendants - used to exert himself for prayers because of Allah, the
Glorified’s command.
And enjoin prayer on thy followers, and adhere thou steadily
unto it,. (Holy Qur’an, 20:132).
Then the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) used to enjoin his followers to prayer
and exert himself for it.
About the Islamic tax (zakat)
Then, Islamic tax has been laid down along with prayer as a sacrifice (to be offered) by the
people of Islam. Whoever pays it by way of purifying his spirit, it serves as a purifier for him and
a protection and shield against fire (of Hell). No one therefore (who pays it) should feel attached
to it afterwards, nor should feel grieved over it. Whoever pays it without the intention of
purifying his heart expects through it more than its due. He is certainly ignorant of the Sunna, he
is allowed no reward for it, his action goes to waste and his repentance is excessive.
Fulfillment of Trust
Then, as regards fulfilllment of trust, whoever does not pay attention to it will be
disappointed. It was placed before the strong skies, vast earth and high mountains but none of
them was found to be stronger, vaster, or higher than it. If anything could be unapproachable
because of height, vastness, power or strength they would have been unapproachable, but they
felt afraid of the evil consequences (of failure in fulfillling a trust) and noticed what a weaker did
not realize it, and this was man.
.Verily he was (proved) unjust, ignorant. (Holy Qur’an, 33:72)
Surely, Allah, the Glorified, the Sublime, nothing is hidden from Him of whatever people do
in their nights or days. He knows all the details, and His knowledge covers them. Your limbs are
a witness, the organs of your body constitute an army (against yourself), your inner self serves
Him as eyes (to watch your sins), and your loneliness is open to Him.
SERMON 199
Treason and treachery of Mu’awiyah and the fate
of those guilty of treason
By Allah,1 Mu’awiyah is not more shrewd than I am, but he deceives and commits evil deeds.
Had I not been hateful of deceitful, I would have been the most cunning of all men. But (the fact
is that) every deceit is a sin and every sin is disobedience (of Allah), and every deceitful person
will have a banner by which he will be recognized on the Day of Judgment. By Allah, I cannot
be made forgetful by strategy, nor can I be overpowered by hardships.
1. People who are ignorant of religion and ethics free from the shackles of religious law and
unaware of the conception of punishment and reward find no paucity of excuses and means for
the achievement of their objects. They can find ways of success at every stage; but when the
dictates of humanity, or Islam, or the limitations imposed by ethics and religious law act as
impediments, the chances of devising and finding means become narrow. The possibility of
action becomes restricted. Mu’awiyah’s influence and control was the result of these devices and
ways of following: He knew neither impediment nor obstacle in his way of what is lawful or
unlawful, nor did he fear the Day of Judgment, so it would prevent him from acting otherwise.
As’allama ar-Raghib al-Isfahani, while taking account of his character, writes the following:
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AHis aim always was to achieve his object whether lawful or unlawful. He did not care for
religion nor did he ever think of the Divine chastisement. Thus, in order to maintain his power he
resorted to mis-statements and concoctions, practiced all sorts of deceits and contrivances. When
he saw that success was not possible without entangling Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) in war he
roused Talhah and az-Zubayr against him. When success could not be achieved by this means he
instigated the Syrians and brought about the civil war of Siffin. And when his rebellions’s
position had become known by the killing of AAmmar, he at once duped the people by saying
that Ali was responsible for killing him as he had brought him into the battlefield. And on
another occasion he interpreted the words Arebellions party’ occurring in the saying of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) to mean Aavenging party’ intending to prove that
AAmmar would be killed by the group that would seek revenge of AOthman’s blood, although
the next portion of this saying namely Ahe will call them towards Paradise while they will call
him to Hell, does not leave any scope for interpretation. When there was no hope of victory even
by these cunning means, he contrived to raise the Holy Qur’an on spears, although in his view
neither the Holy Qur’an nor its commandments carried any weight. If he had really aimed at a
decision by the Holy Qur’an, he should have put this demand before the commencement of the
battle, and when it became known to him that the decision had been secured by AAmr ibn al-AAs
by deceiving Abu Musa al-Ash’ari, and that it did not have even a remote connection with the
Holy Qur’an, he should not have accepted it and should have punished AAmr ibn al-AAs for this
cunning, or at least should have warned and rebuked him. But on the contrary, his performance
was much appreciated and in reward he was made the Governor of Egypt.
In contrast to this Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s conduct was a high specimen of religious law
and ethics. He kept in view therequirements of truth and righteousness even in adverse
circumstances and did not allow his chaste life to be tarnished by the views of deceit and
contrivance. If he wished he could face cunning by cunning, and Mu’awiyah’s shameful
activities could have been answered by similar activities. For example, when he put a guard on
the Euphrates and stopped the supply of its water (to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s men), then the
supply of water could have been cut from them also on the grounds that since they had occupied
the Euphrates it was lawful to retaliate. In this way they could be overpowered by weakening
their fighting power. But Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) could never tarnish his hands with such
an inhuman act which was not permitted by any law or code of ethics, although common people
regard such acts against the enemy as lawful and call this duplicity of character for achievement
of success, a stroke of policy and administrative ability. But Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) could
never think of strengthening his power by fraud or duplicity of behavior on any occasion. Thus,
when people advised him to retain the officers of the days of AOthman in their positions and to
befriend Talhah and az-Zubayr by assigning them governorship of Kufa and Basra, and make use
of Mu’awiyah’s ability in administration by giving him the government of Syria, Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) rejected the advice and preferred the commandments of religious law over
worldly expediency, and openly declared about Mu’awiyah as follow:
If I allow Mu’awiyah to retain what he already has I would be one Awho takes those who lead
(people) astray, as helpers (Holy Qur’an, 18:51). Those who look at apparent successes do not
care to find out by what means the success has been achieved. They support anyone whom they
see succeeding by means of cunning ways and deceitful means and begin to regard him an
administrator, intelligent, a politician, intellectually brilliant and so on, while he who does not
deploy cunning and fraudulent methods owing to his adherence to Islamic commandments and
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the Divine instructions and prefers failure to success secured through wrong methods is regarded
as ignorant of politics and weak in foresight. They do not feel it necessary to think what
difficulties and impediments exist in the way of a person who adheres to principles and laws
which prevent him from proceeding forward even after approaching near success.
SERMON 200
One should not be afraid of the scarcity of those who tread on the right path
O people! Do not wonder at the small number of those who follow the right path, because
people throng only around the table (of this world) whose edibles are few but whose hunger is
insatiable.
O people, certainly, what gathers people together (in categories) is (their) agreement (to good
or bad) and (their) disagreement, for only one individual killed the camel of Thamud1 but Allah
held all of them in punishment because all of them joined him by their acquiescing in their
consenting to it. Thus, Allah, the Glorified, has said:
Then they hamstrung her, and turned (themselves) regretful.
(Holy Qur’an, 26:157).
Then their land declined by sinking (into the earth) as the spike of a plough pierces unploughed weak land. O people, he who treads the clear path (of guidance) reaches the spring of
water, and whoever abandons it strays into waterless desert.
1. Thamud, in ancient Arabia, a tribe or group of tribes, seems to have been prominent from
about the 4th Century B.C. to the first half of the 7th Century A.D. Their place of stay and
homeland was at a place lying on the way between the Hijaz and Syria called the Valley of alQura and bore this name because it consisted of several townships. Allah deputed for their
guidance and directions the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) Salih who preached to them
as Allah relates in his story:
And unto (the people of) Thamud (We did send) their brother Salih, he said: AO my people!
Worship ye Allah (alone). Ye have no god other than Him, indeed came unto you a clear proof
from your Master; this is the She-camel of Allah (which) unto you is a Sign, so leave it (free) to
pasture in Allah’s earth and touch her not with any harm, or ye shall be seized with a painful
chastisement. And remember when He made you successors after the (people) AAd and settled
you earth, ye build mansions on its plain and hew the mountains into dwellings. So remember ye
the bounties of Allah, and seek ye not evil in the earth, making mischief. Said the chiefs of those
who were puffed up with pride among his people to those who were reckoned weak, to those who
believed from among them; AKnow ye that Salih is sent by his Master? Said they: AVerily, in
what he has been sent with we are believers. Said those who were puffed up with pride; AVerily
we, in that which ye believe are disbelievers. They hamstrung the She-camel and rebelled against
the command of their Master, and they said: AO Salih! Bring us what thou did threaten us with,
if thou art of the Messengers. Then the earthquake seized them (as they were unaware, so they
became in their dwellings motionless (dead). Then he turned away from them and said: AO my
people! Indeed I did deliver unto you the message of my Master, and did admonish you, but ye
love not the admonishers. (Holy Qur’an, 7:73-79).
(The people of) Thamud belied the warners, and said they: AWhat?! A single man from
among us?! And we are to follow him?! Verily, we shall then be astray and in distress. It is that
(the duty of) reminding has been bestowed on him (alone), of all the (people) among us? Nay! He
is a great liar, and insolent one! ASoon they shall know on the morrow, (as to) who is the liar,
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the insolent one! (O Our Messenger Salih!) Verily We are going to send She-camel as a trial for
them; so watch them and be patient. And (thou O Salih!) make them aware (beforehand) that the
water is (to be) divided between them; and every drinking share shall be witnessed (on it). But
they called their companions, then he pursued (her) and hamstrung (her). How (great) was My
chastisement and My warning? Verily We sent upon them a single (violent) blast, and they were
(all) like the dry stubble used by a fencer in a fence. (Holy Qur’an, 54:23-31).
SERMON 201
What Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said on the occasion of the burial of
Sayyidatu’n-nisa’ (Supreme lady) Fatima (S.A) while addressing the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) at his grave.
O Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) of Allah, peace be upon you from me and from
your daughter who has come to you and who has hastened to meet you. O Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) of Allah, my patience about your chosen (daughter) has been exhausted, and my
power of endurance has weakened, except that I have ground for consolation in having endured
the great hardship and heart-rending event of your separation. I laid you down in your grave
when your last breath had passed (when your head was) between my neck and chest.
Verily we are Allah’s and verily unto Him shall we return.
(Holy Qur’an, 2:156)
Now, the trust has been returned and what had been given has been taken back. As to my
grief, it knows no bounds, and as to my nights, they will remain sleepless till Allah chooses for
me the house in which you are now residing.
Certainly, your daughter would apprise you of the joining together of your1 umma (people) for
oppressing her. You ask her in detail and get all the news about the position. This has happened
when a long time had not elapsed and your remembrance had not disappeared. My salam
(salutation) be on you both, the salam of a grief stricken not a disgusted or hateful person. For it I
go away it is not because I am weary (of you), and if I stay it is not due to lack of belief in what
Allah has promised those who endure.
1. The treatment meted out to the daughter of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) after
his death was extremely painful and sad. Although Sayyidatul-Nisa’Fatima (S.A) did not live in
this world more than a few months after the death of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
yet even this short period has a long tale of grief and woe (about her). In this connection, the first
scene that strikes the eyes is that arrangements for the funeral rites of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) had not yet been made when the contest for power started in the saqifa of Banu
Sa’idah. Naturally, their leaving the body of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) (without
burial) must have injured Sayyidatul Nisa’ Fatima’s grief-stricken heart when she saw that those
who had claimed love and attachment (with the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) during
his life became so engrossed in their machinations for power that instead of consoling his only
daughter they did not even know when the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) was given a
funeral ablution and when he was buried. And the way they condoled her was that they crowded
at her house with material to set fire to it and tried to secure allegiance by force with all the
display of oppression, compulsion and violence. All these excesses were with a view to so
obliterate the prestigious position of this house that it might not regain its lost prestige on any
occasion. With this aim in view, in order to crush her economic position, her claim for (the estate
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of) Fadak was turned down by dubbing it as false, the effect of which was that Sayyidatul-Nisa’
Fatima (S.A) made the dying will that none of them should attend her funeral.
SERMON 202
Transience of this world, and importance of collecting provisions for the next life
O people! Certainly this world is a passage while the next world is a place of permanent
abode. So, take from the passage (all that you can) for the permanent abode. Do not tear away
your curtain before Him Who is aware of your secrets. Take away from this world your hearts
before your bodies go out of it, because herein you have been put on trial, and you have been
created for the other world. When a man dies people ask what (property) he has left while the
angels ask what (good actions) he has sent forward. May Allah bless you; send forward
something, it will be a loan for you, and do not leave everything behind, for that would be
burden on you.
SERMON 203
What Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said generally to his companions
warning them about the dangers of the Day of Judgment
May Allah have mercy on you! Provide yourselves for the journey because the call for
departure has been announced. Regard your stay in the world as very short, and return (to Allah)
with the best provision that is with you, because surely, in front of you lies a valley, difficult to
climb, and places of stay full of fear and dangers. You have to reach there and stay in them. And
know that the eyes of death are approaching towards you. It is as though you are (already) in its
talons and it has struck itself against you. Difficult affairs and distressing dangers have crushed
you into it. You should therefore cut away all the attachments of this world and assist yourselves
with the provision of Allah’s fear.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: A part of this saying has been quoted before through
another narration.
SERMON 204
After swearing allegiance to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), Talhah
and az-Zubayr complained to him that he had not consulted them or sought their assistance in
the affairs (of state). Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) replied:
Both of you frown over a small matter and leave aside big ones. Can you tell me of anything
wherein you have a right of which I have deprived you or a share which was due to you and
which I have held away from you, or any Muslim who has laid any claim before me and I have
been unable to decide it or been ignorant of it, or committed a mistake about it?
By Allah, I had no inclination towards the caliphate, nor any interest in government, but you
yourselves invited me to it and prepared me for it. When the caliphate came to me, I kept the
Book of Allah in my view and all that Allah had put therein for us, and all that according to
which He has commanded us to take decisions; and I followed it, and also acted on whatever the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) - may Allah bless him and his descendants - had laid
down as his Sunna. In this matter I did not need your advice or the advice of anyone else, nor has
there been any order of which I was ignorant so that I ought to have consulted you or my Muslim
brethren. If it were so I would not have turned away from you or from others.
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As regards your reference to the question of equality (in distribution of shares from the
Muslim common fund), this is a matter in which I have not taken a decision by my own opinion,
nor have I done it by my caprice. But I found, and you too (must have) found, that whatever the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) - may Allah bless him and his descendants - brought had
been finalized. Therefore, I felt no need to turn towards you about a share which had been
determined by Allah and in which His verdict has been passed. By Allah, in this matter,
therefore, you two or anyone else can have no favor from me. May Allah keep our hearts and
your hearts in righteousness, and may He grant us and you endurance.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) added: May Allah have mercy on the person who, when he
sees the truth, supports it, when he sees the wrong, rejects it, and who helps the truth against him
who is on the wrong.
SERMON 205
During the battle of Siffin Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) heard
some of his men abusing the Syrians, then he said:
I dislike you starting to abuse them, but if you describe their deeds and recount their situations
that would be a better mode of speaking and a more convincing way of arguing. Instead of
abusing them you should say, AO Allah! save our blood and their blood, produce reconciliation
between us and them, and lead them out of their misguidance so that he who is ignorant of the
truth may know it, and he who inclines towards rebellion and revolt may turn away from it.
SERMON 206
In the battle of Siffin Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) saw Imam al-Hasan proceeding rapidly to
fight, then he said:
Hold back this young man on my behalf, lest he causes my ruin, because I am loath to send
these two (meaning al-Hasan and al-Husain) towards death, lest the descending line of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) - may Allah bless him and his descendants - is cut away
by their death.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s words Aamiku Aanni hadha’lghulam (i.e. AHold back this young man on my behalf) represents the highest and the most
eloquent form of expression.
SERMON 207
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s companions expressed displeasure
about his attitude concerning Arbitration,1 he said:
O people, matters between me and you went as I wished till war exhausted you. By Allah, it
has overtaken some of you and left others, and has completely weakened your enemy. Till
yesterday I was giving orders but today I am being given orders, and till yesterday I was
dissuading people (from wrong acts) but today I am being dissuaded. You have now shown
liking to live in this world, and it is not for me to bring you to what you dislike.
1. When the surviving forces of the Syrians lost ground and were ready to run away from the
field Mu’awiyah changed the whole phase of the battle by using the Holy Qur’an as his
instrument of strategy, and succeeded in creating such a division among the Iraqis that, despite
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s efforts at counseling, they were not prepared to take any forward step,
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but insisted on stopping the war, whereupon Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) too had to agree to
arbitration. Among these people some had actually been duped and believed that they were being
asked to abide by the Holy Qur’an but there were others who had become weary of the long
period of war and had lost courage. Then people got a good opportunity to stop the war, and so
they cried hoarse for its postponements. There were others who had accompanied Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) because of his temporal authority but did not support him by heart, nor did they
aim at victory for him. There were some people who had expectations with Mu’awiyah, and had
started attaching hopes to him for this, while there were some who were, from the very
beginning, in league with him. In these circumstances and with this type of the army it was really
due to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s political ability and competence of military control and
administration that he carried the war up to this stage, and if Mu’awiyah had not adopted this
trick there could have been no doubt in Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s victory because the military
power of the Syrian forces had been exhausted and defeat was hovering over its head. In this
connection, Ibn Abul-Hadid writes:
Malik al-Ashtar had reached Mu’awiyah and grabbed him by the neck. The entire might of
the Syrians had been smashed. Only so much movement was discernable in them as remains in
the tail of a lizard which is killed, but the tail continues hopping right and left. (Sharh NahjulBalagha, Vol. 11, pp.30-1)
SERMON 208
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) went to enquire about the health of his
companion al-AAla’ ibn Ziyad al-Harithi and when he noticed the
vastness of his house he said:
What will you do with this vast house in this world, although you need this house more in the
next world. If you want to take it to the next world you could entertain in it guests and be
regardful of kinship and discharge all (your) obligations according to their accrual. In this way
you will be able to take it to the next world.
Then al-AAla’ said to him: O Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), I want to complain to you about
my brother AAsim ibn Ziyad.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) enquired: What is the matter with him?
al-AAla’ said: He has put on a woolen coat and cut himself away from the world.
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said: Present him to me.
When he came Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said: O enemy of yourself. Certainly, the evil
(Satan) has misguided you. Do you feel no pity for your wife and your children? Do you believe
that if you use those things which Allah has made lawful for you, He will dislike you? You are
too unimportant for Allah to do so.
He said: O Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), you also put on coarse dress and eat rough food.
Then he replied: Woe be to you, I am not like you. Certainly, Allah, the Sublime, has made it obligatory on true leaders that they should maintain themselves at the level of
low people so that the poor do not cry over their poverty.1
_______________________________
1.
From ancient days asceticism and the abandonment of worldly attachments has been
regarded as a means of purification of the spirit and importance of the character. Consequently,
those who wished to lead a life of abstemiousness and meditation used to go out of the cities and
towns to stay in forests and caves in the mountains and stay there concentrating on Allah
according to their own conception. They would eat only if a casual traveler or the inhabitant of
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nearby dwellings gave them anything to eat, otherwise they remained contented with the fruits of
wild trees and the water of the streams, and thus they passed their life. This way of worship
commenced in a way that was forced by the oppression and hardships of rulers. Certain people
left their houses and, in order to avoid their grip, hid themselves in some wilderness or cave in a
mountain, engaging themselves in worship of and devotion of Allah. Later on, this forced
asceticism acquired a voluntary form and people began to retire to caves and hollows of their
own volition. Thus it became an accepted way that whoever aimed at spiritual development
retired to some corner after severing himself from all worldly ties. This method remained in
vogue for centuries and even now some traces of this way of worship are found among the
Buddhists and the Christians.
The moderate views of Islam do not, however, accord with the monastic life, because for
attaining spiritual development it does not advocate the abandonment of worldly enjoyments and
successes, nor does it view with approbation that a Muslim should leave his house and fellow
men and busy himself in formal worship, hiding in some corner. The conception of worship in
Islam is not confined to a few particular rites, but it regards the earning of one’s livelihood
through lawful means, mutual sympathy and good behavior, and cooperation and assistance also
to be important constituents of worship. If an individual ignores worldly rights and obligations,
and does not fulfilll his responsibility towards his wife and children, nor occupies himself in
efforts to earn a livelihood, but all the time stays in meditation, he ruins his life and does not
fulfilll the purpose of living. If this were Allah’s aim, what would have the need for creating and
populating the world when there was already a category of creatures who were all the time
engaged in worshipping and adoration.
Nature has made man to stand on the cross-roads at which the mid-way is the center of
guidance. If he deviates from this point of moderateness even a bit, this way or that way, there is
shear misguidance for him. That mid-way is that he should neither bend towards this world to
such an extent as to ignore the next life, devoting himself entirely to this one, nor should he
abstain from this world so as not to have any connection with anything of it, confining himself to
some corner leaving everything else. Since Allah has created man in this world he should follow
the code of life for living in this world, and should partake of the comforts and pleasures
bestowed by Allah within moderate limits. The eating and using of things made lawful by Allah
is not against Allah’s worship, but rather Allah has created these things for the very purpose that
they should be taken advantage of. That is why those who were the chosen of Allah lived in this
world with others and ate and drank like others. They did not feel the need to turn their faces
away from the people of the world, and to adopt the wilderness or the caves of mountains as their
abodes, or to live in distant spots. On the other hand they remembered Allah, remained
disentangled from worldly affairs, and did not forget death despite the pleasures and comforts of
life.
The life of asceticism sometimes produces such evils as ruin the next life also as well as this
one, and such an individual proves to be the true picture of Athe looser in this life as well as the
next. When natural impulses are not satisfied in the lawful and legal way the mind turns into a
center of evil-ideas and becomes incapable of performing worship with peace and concentration.
And sometimes passions overcome the ascetic, so much so that breaking all moral fetters, he
devotes himself completely to their satisfaction and consequently falls in an abyss of ruin from
which it is impossible to extract himself. That is why religious law accords a greater position to
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the worship performed by a family man than that by a non-family man, because the former can
exercise mental peace and concentration in the worship and rituals.
Individuals who put on the cloak of Sufism and make a loud show of their spiritual greatness
are cut off from the path of Islam and are ignorant of its wide teachings. They have been misled
by Satan and, relying on their self-formed conceptions, tread wrongful paths. Eventually their
misguidance becomes so serious that they begin to regard their leaders as having attained such a
level that their word is as the word of Allah and their act is as the act of Allah. Sometimes they
regard themselves beyond all the bounds and limitations of religious law and consider every evil
act to be lawful for them. This deviation from faith and religion is named Sufism (complete
devotion to Allah). Its unlawful principles are called Aat-tariqah (ways of achieving communion
with Allah) and the followers of this cult are known as Sufis. First of all Abu Hashim al-Kufi and
Shami adopted this nickname. He was of Umayyad descent and a fatalist (believing that man is
bound to act as pre-ordained by Allah). The reason for giving him this name was that, in order to
make a show of his asceticism and fear for Allah, he put on a woolen cloak. Later on this
nickname became common and various grounds were put forth as the basis of this name. For
example, one ground is that ASufi’ has three letters Asad’, Awaw and Afa’. Asad stands for Asabr
(endurance), Asidq (truthfulness and Asafa (purity of heart) ; Awaw stands for Awudd (love),
Awird (repeating Allah’s name) and Awafa’ (faithfulness to Allah) ; and Afa’ stands for Afard
(unity), Afaqr (destitution) and Afana’ (death or absorption in Allah’s Self). The second view is
that it has been derived from Aas-Suffah, which was a platform near the Prophet’s mosque which
had a covering of date-palm leaves. Those who stayed there were called Ashabu’s-Suffah
(people of the platform). The third view is that the name of the progenitor of an Arab tribe as
Sufah, and this tribe performed the duties of serving the pilgrims and the Ka’ba, and it is with
reference to their connection with this tribe that these people were called Sufis. This group is
divided among various sects but the basic sects are seven only.
1) al-Wahdatiyyah (unitarian) : This sect believes in the oneness of all existence. Its belief is
that everything of this world is Allah, so much so that they assign to even polluted things the
same godly position. They liken Allah with the river and the waves rising in it, and argue that the
waves which sometimes rise and sometimes fall have no separate existence other than the river,
but their existence is exactly the existence of the river. Therefore, nothing can be separated from
its own existence.
2) al-Ittihayyah (the unitists) : They believe that they have united with Allah and Allah has
united with them. They liken Allah with fire and themselves with iron that lies in the fire and
acquires its form and property.
3) al-Huluyyah (the formists) : Their belief is that Allah takes the form of those who claim to
know Him and the perfect ones, and their bodies are places of His stay. In this way, they are
seemingly men but really Allah.
4) al-Wasiliyyah (the combiners) : This sect considers itself to have combined with Allah.
Their belief is that the laws of the Shari’a are a means of development of human personality and
character, and that when the human self combines with Allah it no more needs perfection or
development. Consequently, for the Awasilin, worship and ritual become useless, because they
hold that when truth and reality is achieved Shari’a remains of no avail. Therefore, they can do
anything and they cannot be questioned.
5) az-Zarraqiyyah (the revelers) : This sect regards vocal and instrumental music as worship,
and earns the pleasures of this world through a show of asceticism and begging from door to
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door. They are ever engaged in relating concocted stories of miraculous performances of their
leaders to over-awe the common people.
6) al-AUshshaqiyyah (the lovers) : The theory of this sect is that appearance is the means to
reality, meaning that carnal love is the means to achieve love for Allah. That is, in order to reach
the stage of Allah’s love it is necessary to have love with some human beauty. But the love
which they regard as love for Allah is just the product of mental disorder through which the lover
inclines to one individual with all his attention and his final aim is to have access to the beloved.
This love can lead to the way of evil and vice, but it has no connection with the love of Allah.
A Persian couplet says the following:
The truth of the fact is that carnal is like a jinn and a jinn cannot give you guidance.
7) at-Talqiniyyah (those who encounter) : According to this sect, the reading of religious
sciences and books of scholarship is thoroughly unlawful.
Rather, the position that is achieved by an hour of spiritual effort of the Sufis cannot be
achieved by seventy years of reading books.
According to Shi’a Aulema’ all these sects are on the wrong path and out of the fold of Islam.
In this connection, numerous sayings of the Imams are related. In this sermon also Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) has regarded Theseverance of AAsim ibn Ziyad from this world as the mischief
of Satan, and he forcefully dissuaded him from adopting that course. (For further study, see
Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, al-Hajj Mirza Habibullah a-Khoei, Vol. 13, pp.132-417; Vol. 14, pp. 222).
SERMON 209
Someone1 asked Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) about concocted traditions
and contradictory sayings of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) current among the
people, whereupon he said:
Certainly, what is current among the people is both right and wrong, true and false, repealing
and repealed, general and particular, definite and indefinite, exact and surmised. Even during the
Prophet’s days false sayings had been attributed to him, so much so that he had to say during his
sermon that, AWhoever attributes falsehoods to me makes his abode in Hell. Those who relate
traditions are of four categories,2 no more.
First: the lying hypocrites
The hypocrite is a person who makes a show of faith and adopts the appearance of a Muslim;
he does not hesitate in sinning nor does he keep aloof from vice; he willfully attributes false
things against the Messenger of Allah -- may Allah bless him and his descendants. If people
knew that he was a hypocrite and a liar, they would not accept anything from him and would not
confirm what he says.
Rather they say that he is the companion of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , has
met him, heard (his sayings) from him and acquired (knowledge) from him. They therefore
accept what he says. Allah too had warned you well about the hypocrites and described them
fully to you. They have continued after the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . They
gained positions with the leaders of misguidance and callers towards Hell through falsehoods
and slandering. So, they put them in high posts and made them officers over the heads of the
people, and amassed wealth through them. People are always with the rulers and after this world,
except those to whom Allah affords protection. This is the first of the four categories.
SECOND: Those who are mistaken
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Then there is the individual who heard (a saying) from the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) but did not memorize it as it was, but surmised it. He does not lie willfully. Now, he
carries the saying with him and relates it, acts upon it and claims that: AI heard it from the
Messenger of Allah. If the Muslims come to know that he has committed a mistake in it, they
will not accept it from him, and if he himself knows that he is on the wrong he will give it up.
Third: Those who are ignorant
The third man is he who heard the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ordering to do a
thing and later the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) refrained the people from doing it, but
this man did not know it, or he heard the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) refraining
people from a thing and later he allowed it, but this man did not know it. In this way he retained
in his mind what had been repealed, and did not retain the repealing tradition. If he knew that it
had been repealed he would reject it, or if the Muslims knew, when they heard it from him, that it
had been repealed they would reject it.
Fourth: Those who memorize truthfully
The last, namely the fourth man, is he who does not speak a lie against Allah or against His
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . He hates falsehood out of fear for Allah and respect for
the Messenger of Allah, and does not commit mistakes, but retains (in his mind) exactly what he
heard (from the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ), and he relates it as he heard it without
adding anything or omitting anything. He heard the repealing tradition, he retained it and acted
upon it, and he heard the repealed tradition and rejected it. He also understands the particular and
the general, and he knows the definite and indefinite, and gives everything its due position.
The sayings of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) used to be of two types. One was
particular and the other common. Sometimes a man would hear him but he would not know what
Allah, the Glorified, meant by it or what the Messenger of Allah meant by it. In this way the
listener carries it and memorizes it without knowing its meaning and its real intention, or what
was its reason. Among the companions of the Messenger of Allah all were not in the habit of
putting him questions and ask him the meanings, indeed they always wished that some Bedouin
or stranger might come and ask him () so that they would also listen. Whenever any such thing
came before me, I asked him about its meaning and preserved it. These are the reasons and
grounds of differences among the people in their traditions.
______________________________
1. This was Sulaym ibn Qays al-Hilali who was one of the relaters of traditions through Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S).
2. In this sermon Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has divided the traditionists into four
categories:
The first category is that of a man concocts a tradition and attributes it to the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Traditions were in fact falsified and attributed to him, and this
process continued, with the result that numerous novel traditions came into being. This is a fact
which cannot be denied but if anyone does deny it his basis would be not knowledge or sagacity
by oratory or argumentative necessity. Thus, once, AAlamu’l-Huda (Ensign of Guidance) Sayyid
al-Murtadha had a change of meeting the Sunni Aulema’ (scholars) in confrontation and on this
occasion Sayyid al-Murtadha proves by historical facts that the traditions related about the merits
of the great companions are concocted and counterfeit. On this, the (Sunni) Aulama’ argued that
it was impossible that someone should dare speak a lie against the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
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Household) and prepare a tradition himself and attribute it to him. Sayyid al-Murtadha said there
is a tradition of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) that:
A lot of false things will be attributed to me after my death and whoever speaks a lie against
me would be preparing his abode in Hell. (al-Bukhari, Vol. 1, p. 38; Vol. 2, p. 102; Vol. 4, p.
207; Vol. 8, p. 54; Muslim, Vol. 8, p. 229; Abu Dawud, Vol. 3, pp. 319-320; al-Tirmithi, Vol. 4,
p. 524; Vol. 5, pp. 35-36, 40, 199, 634; Ibn Majah, Vol. 1, pp. 13-15)
If you regard this tradition as true then you should agree that false things have been attributed
to the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , but if you regard it false, this would prove our
point. However, these were people whose hearts were full of hypocrisy and who used to prepare
traditions of their own accord in order to create mischief and dispersion in religion and to
misguide Muslims of weak convictions. They remained mixed with them as they used to do
during the lifetime of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ; and just as they remained
busy in activities of mischief and destruction in those days, in the same way, even after the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , they were not unmindful of deforming the teachings of
Islam and metamorphosing its features. Rather, in the days of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) they were always afraid lest he unveiled them and put them to shame, but after the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) their hypocritical activities increased and they attributed
false things to the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) without demur for their own personal
ends, and those who heard them believed in them because of their status as companions of the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , thinking that whatever they said was correct and
whatever they gave out was true. Afterwards also, the belief that all the companions are correct
put a stopper on their tongues, as a result of which they were taken to be above criticism,
questioning, discussion and censure. Besides, their conspicuous performance had made them
prominent in the eyes of the government, and also because of this it needed courage and daring
to speak against them. This is proved by Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s words:
These people gained positions with the leaders of misguidance and callers towards Hell,
through falsehood and slandering. So, they put them in high posts and made them officers over
the heads of the people.
Along with the destruction of Islam, the hypocrites also aimed at amassing wealth, and they
were doing so claiming to be Muslims, because of which they did not want to remove the veil of
Islam (from their faces) and to come out openly, but they wanted to continue their Satanic
activities under the garb of Islam and engaged themselves in its basic destruction and spreading
of division and dispersal by concocting traditions. In this connection, Ibn Abul-Hadid has
written:
When they were left free they too left many things. When people observed silence about them
they also observed silence about Islam, but they continued their underground activities such as
the fabrication of falsehoods to which Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has alluded, because a lot
of untrue matters had been mixed with the traditions by the group of people of wrong beliefs
who aimed at misguidance and the distortion of views and beliefs, while some of them also
aimed at extolling some particular party with whom they had other worldly aims as well.
On the expiry of this period, when Mu’awiyah took over the leadership of religion and
occupied the throne of temporal authority, he opened an official department for the fabrication of
false traditions, and ordered his officers to fabricate and popularize traditions in disparagement
of Ahl al-Bayt () (the Household of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) ) and to
extol AOthman and the Umayyads, and announced rewards and grants of land for this work.
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Consequently, a lot of traditions about self-made distinctions gained entry in the books of
traditions. Thus, Abul-Hasan al-Mada’ini has written in his book Kitab al-Ahadith and ibn AbulHadid has quoted it, namely:
Mu’awiyah wrote to his officers that they should take special care of those who were
adherents of AOthman, his well-wishers and lovers and to award high position, precedence and
honor to those who related traditions about his merits and distinctions, and to convey to him
whatever is so related by any person, along with his name, the name of his father and the name
of his tribe. They did accordingly and heaped up traditions about the merits and distinctions of
AOthman because Mu’awiyah used to award them rewards, clothes, grants and lands.
When the fabricated traditions about the merits of AOthman had been spread throughout the
realm, with the idea that the position of the earlier Caliphs should not remain low, Mu’awiyah
wrote to his officers:
As soon as you receive this order of mine you should call upon the people to prepare
traditions about the distinctions of the companions and other caliphs also, and take care that if
any Muslim relates any tradition about Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) you should prepare a
similar tradition about the companions to contradict it because this gives me great pleasure and
cools my eyes, and it weakens the position of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and his party men,
and is more severe to them than the merits and distinctions of AOthman.
When his letters were read to the people, a large number of such traditions were related
extolling the companions that are all fabricated with no truth at all. (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol.
11, pp. 43-47)
In this connection Abu AAbdillah Ibrahim ibn Muhammed ibn AArafah known as Niftawayh
(244/858 - 323/935) who was one of the prominent scholars and traditionists has written, and Ibn
Abul-Hadid has quoted him, that:
Most of the false traditions about the merits of the companions were fabricated during the
days of Mu’awiyah in order to gain position in his audience because his view was that in this
way he could disgrace Banu Hashim and render them low. (ibid.)
After that, fabrication of tradition became a habit, the world seekers made it a means of
securing position with kings and nobles and to amass wealth. For example, Ghiyath ibn Ibrahim
an-Nakh’i (2nd cent. A.H.) fabricated a tradition about the flight of pigeons, in order to please alMahdi ibn al-Mansur (the AAbbasid Caliph) and to secure position near him. (Tarikh Baghdad,
Vol. 12, pp. 323-327; Mizan al-I’tidal, Vol. 3, pp.337-338; Lisan al-Mizan, Vol. 4, p.422). Abu
Sa’id al-Mada’ini and others made it a means of livelihood. The limit was reached when the alKarramiyya and some of the al-Mutasawwifah gave the ruling that the fabrication of traditions
for the prevention of sin or for persuasion towards obedience was lawful. Consequently, in
connection with persuading and dissuading, traditions were fabricated quite freely, and this was
not regarded against the religious law or morality. Rather, this work was generally done by those
who bore the appearance of asceticism or fear of Allah and who passed their nights in praying
and days in filling their registers with false traditions. An idea about the number of these
fabricated traditions can be had from the fact that out of six hundred thousand traditions alBukhari selected only two thousand seven hundred and sixty-one traditions, (Tarikh Baghdad,
Vol. 2, p.8; Al-Irshad as-Sari, Vol. 1, p.28; Sifatul-Safwah, Vol. 4, p. 143). Muslim thought fit
for selection only four thousand out of three hundred thousand (Tarikh Baghdad, Vol. 13, p. 101;
Al-Muntzam, Vol. 5, p.32; Tabaqat al-Huffaz, Vol. 2, pp. 151, 157; Wafiyyat al-A’yan, Vol. 5, p.
194). Abu Dawud took four thousand and eight hundred out of five hundred thousand (Tarikh
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Baghdad, Vol. 9, p. 57; Tabaqat al-Huffaz, Vol. 2, p. 154; Al-Muntazam, Vol. 5, p. 97; Wafiyyat
al-A’yan, Vol. 2, p. 404), and Ahmed ibn Hanbal took thirty thousand out of nearly on million
traditions (Tarikh Baghdad, Vol. 4, p. 419-420; Tabaqat al-Huffaz, Vol. 2, p. 17; Wafiyyat alA’yan, Vol. 1, p. 64; Tahthib al-Tahthib, Vol. 1, p. 74). But when this selection is studied some
traditions which come across can, in no circumstances, be attributed to the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) . The result is that a group of considerable number has cropped up among
Muslims who, in view of these (so-called) authoritative collections and true traditions,
completely reject the evidentiary value of the traditions, (For further reference see Al-Ghadir,
Vol. 5, pp. 208-378).
The second category of narrators of traditions are those who, without appreciating the
occasion or context, related whatever they could recollect, right or wrong. Thus, in al-Bukhari
(Vol. 2, pp. 100-102; Vol. 5, p. 98) ; Muslim (Vol. 3, pp. 41-45) ; al-Tirmithi (Vol. 3, pp. 327329) ; al-Nisa’i (Vol. 4, p. 18) ; ibn Majah (Vol. 1, pp. 508-509) ; Malik ibn Anas (Al-Muwatta’,
Vol. 1, p. 234) ; ash-Shafi’i (Ikhtilafu’l-hadith, on the side lines of Aal-Umm, Vol. 7, p. 266) ;
Abu Dawud (Vol. 3, p. 194) ; Ahmed ibn Hanbal (Vol. 1, pp. 41, 42) and al-Baqyhaqi (Vol. 4,
pp. 72-74) in the chapter entitled Aweeping over the dead’ it is stated that when AOmer was
wounded Suhayb came weeping to him, then AOmer said:
O Suhayb! You weep over me, while the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) had said that
the dead person is punished if his people weep over him.
When after the death of AOmer this was mentioned to AA’isha, she said: AMay Allah have
mercy on AOmer. The Messenger of Allah did not say that weeping of relations causes
punishment on the dead, but he said that the punishment of an unbeliever increases if the people
weep over him. After this AA’isha said that according to the Holy Qur’an no person has to bear
the burden of another, so how could the burden of those who weep be put on the dead. After this
the following verse was quoted by AA’isha:
And no bearer of burden shall bear the burden of another; (Holy Qur’an, 6:164; 17:15; 35:18;
39:7; 53:38).
The wife of the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) , AA’isha, relates that once the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) passed by a Jewish woman over whom her people were
weeping. The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) then remarked, AHer people are weeping
over her but she is undergoing punishment in the grave.
The third category of the relaters of traditions is of those who heard some repealed traditions
from the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) but could not get any change to hear the
repealing traditions which he could relate to others. An example of a repealing tradition is the
saying of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) which also contains a reference to the
repealed tradition, namely: AI had disallowed you to visit graves, but now you can visit them.
(Muslim, Vol. 3, p. 65; al-Tirmithi, Vol. 3, p. 370; Abu Dawud, Vol. 3, pp. 218, 332; al-Nisa’i,
Vol. 4, p. 89; ibn Majah, Vol. 1, pp. 500-501; Malik ibn Anas, Vol. 2, p. 485; Ahmed ibn
Hanbal, Vol. 1, pp. 145,452; Vol. 3, pp. 38, 63, 66, 237, 350; Vol. 5, pp. 350, 355, 356, 357, 359,
361; al-Hakim, Al-Mustadrak, Vol. 1, pp. 374-376; and al-Bayhaqi, Vol. 4, pp. 76-77). Herein
the permission to visit graves has repealed the previous restriction on it. Now, those who heard
only therepealed tradition continued acting according to it.
The fourth category of relaters of traditions is of those who were fully aware of the principles
of justice, possessed intelligence and sagacity, knew the occasion when a tradition was first
uttered (by the Prophet []) and were also acquainted with the repealing and the repealed
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traditions, the particular and the general, and the timely and the absolute. They avoided
falsehood and fabrication. Whatever they heard remained preserved in their memory, and they
conveyed it with exactness to others. It is they whose traditions are the precious possession of
Islam, free from fraud and counterfeit and worthy of being trusted and acted upon. That
collection of traditions which has been conveyed through trustworthy bosoms like that of Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and has remained free from cutting, curtailing, alteration or change
particularly present Islam in its true form. The position of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) in
Islamic knowledge has been most certainly proved through the following traditions narrated from
the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) such as:
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), Jabir ibn AAbdullah, Ibn AAbbas and AAbdullah ibn AOmer
have narrated from the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) that he said:
I am the city of knowledge and Ali is its door. He who wants to acquire (my) knowledge
should come through its door. (Al-Mustadrak, Vol. 3, pp. 126-127; Al-Isti’ab, Vol. 3, p. 1102;
Usd al-Ghaba, Vol. 4, p. 22; Tarikh Baghdad, Vol. 2, p. 377; ol. 4, p. 348; Vol. 7, p. 172; Vol.
11, pp. 48-50; Tadhkirah al-huffaz, Vol. 4, p. 28; Majma’ al-Zawa’id, Vol. 9, p. 114; Tahthib alTahthib, Vol. 6, p. 320; Vol. 7, p. 337; Lisan al-Mizan, Vol. 2, pp. 122-123; Tarikh al-Khulafa’,
p. 170; Kanz al-AUmmal, Vol. 6, pp. 152, 156, 401; AUmdat al-Qari, Vol. 7, , p. 631; Sharh alMawahib al-Laduniyya, Vol. 3, p. 143).
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) and ibn AAbbas have also narrated from the Holy Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) that:
I am the store-house of wisdom and Ali is its door. He who wants to acquire wisdom should
come through its door. (Hilyat al-Awliya’, Vol. 1, p. 64; Masabih as-Sunna, Vol. 2, p. 275;
Tarikh Baghdad, Vol. 11, p. 204; Kanz al-AUmmal, Vol. 6, p. 401; Al-Riyad al-Nadira, Vol. 12,
p. 193).
If only people could take the Prophet’s blessings through these sources of knowledge. But it is
a tragic chapter of history that although traditions are accepted through the Kharijites and
enemies of the Prophet’s family, whenever Theseries of relaters includes the name of any
individual from among the Prophet’s family there is hesitation in accepting the tradition.
SERMON 210
The greatness of Allah and the creation of the Universe
It is through the strength of Allah’s greatness and His subtle power of innovation that He
made solid dry earth out of the water of the fathomless, compact and dashing ocean. Then He
made from it layers and separated them into seven skies they had been joined together. So, they
became stationary at His command and stopped at the limit fixed by Him. He so made the earth
that is born by deep blue, surrounded and suspended water which is obedient to His command
and has submitted to His awe while its flow has stopped due to fear of Him.
He also created high hills, rocks of stone and lofty mountains. He put them in their positions
and made them remain stationary. Their peaks rose into the air while their roots remained in the
water. In this way He realized the mountains above the plains and fixed their foundations in the
vast expanse wherever they stood. He made their peaks high and made their bodies lofty. He
made them like pillars for the earth and fixed them in it like pegs. Consequently, the earth
became stationary; otherwise it might bend with its inhabitants or sink inwards with its burden,
or shift from its positions.
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Therefore, glorified is He who stopped it after the flowing of its waters and solidified it after
the watery state of its sides. In this way He made it a cradle for His creatures and spread it for
them in the form of a floor over the deep ocean which is stationary and does not move and is
fixed and does not flow. Severe winds move it here and there and clouds draw up water from it.
Verily in this there is a lesson unto him who feareth (Allah) Holy Qur’an, 79:26)
SERMON 211
About those who give up supporting right
O Lord! whoever listens to our utterance which is just and which seeks the prosperity of
religion and the worldly life and does not seek mischief, but rejects it after listening, then he
certainly turns away from Your support and desists from strengthening Your religion. We make
You a witness over him and You art the greatest of all witness, and we make all those who
inhabit Your earth and thy skies witness owe him. Thereafter, You alone can make us needless of
his support and question him for his sin.
SERMON 212
The Sublimity of Allah and a eulogy of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Praise to Allah who is above all similarity to the creatures, is above the words of describers,
who displays the wonders of His management for the on-lookers, is hidden from the imagination
of thinkers by virtue of the greatness of His glory, has knowledge without acquiring it, adding to
it or drawing it (from someone), and Who is the ordainer of all matters without reflecting or
thinking. He is such that gloom does not concern Him, nor does He seek light from brightness,
night does not overtake Him nor does the day pass over Him (so as to affect Him in any manner).
His comprehension (of things) is not through eyes and His knowledge is not dependent on being
informed.
A portion of the same sermon: about the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
Allah deputed the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) with light, and accorded him the
highest precedence in selection. Through him Allah united those who were divided, overpowered
the powerful, overcame difficulties and leveled rugged ground, and thus removed misguidance
from right and left.
SERMON 213
The Prophet’s nobility of descent
I stand witness that He is just and does justice, He is the arbiter Who decides (between right
and wrong). I also stand witness that Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) is His
slave. His Messenger and the Master over His creatures. Whenever Allah divided the line of
descent, He put him in the better one, and therefore, no evil-doer never shared with him nor was
any vicious person his partner.
Beware! surely Allah, the Glorified, has provided for virtue those who are suited to it, for
truth pillars (that support it), and for obedience protection (against deviation). In every matter of
obedience you will find Allah, the Glorified’s succor that will speak through tongues and accord
firmness to hearts. It has sufficiency for those who seek sufficiency, and a cure for those who
seek a cure.
The characteristics of the virtuous whose guidance must be followed
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Know that, certainly, those creatures of Allah who preserve His knowledge offer protection to
those things which He desires to be protected and make His springs flow (for the benefit of
others). They contact each other with friendliness and meet each other with affection. They drink
water from cups that quench the thirst and return from the watering places fully satiated.
Misgiving does not affect them and backbiting does not gain ground with them. In this way
Allah has tied their nature with good manners. Because of this they love each other and meet
each other. They have become superior, like seeds which are selected by taking some and
throwing away others. This selection has distinguished them and the process of choosing has
purified them.
Therefore, man should secure honor by adopting these qualities. He should fear the day of
Doom before it arrives, and he should appreciate the shortness of his life and the shortness of his
sojourn in the place of stay which has only to last for his change over to the next place. He
should therefore do something for his change over and for the known stages of his departure.
Blessed be he who possesses a virtuous heart, who obeys one who guides him, desists from him
who takes to ruin, catches the path of safety with the help of him who provides him light (of
guidance) and by obeying the leader who commands him, hastens towards guidance before its
doors are closed, opens the door of repentance and removes the (stain of) sins. He has certainly
been put on the right path and guided towards the straight road.
SERMON 214
A prayer which Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) often recited
Praise to Allah! Who made me such that I have not died nor am I sick, nor have my veins
been infected with disease, nor have I been hauled up for my evil acts, nor am I without progeny,
nor have I forsaken my religion, nor do I disbelieve in my Master, nor do I feel strangeness with
my faith, nor is my intelligence affected, nor have I been punished with the punishment of
peoples before me. I am a slave in Your possession, I have been guilty of excesses over myself.
You hast exhausted Your pleas over me and I have no plea (before You). I have no power to take
except what You gives me, and I cannot evade except what You savest me from.
O Lord! I seek Your protection from becoming destitute despite Your riches, from being
misguided despite Your guidance, from being molested in Your realm and from being humiliated
while authority rests with You.
O Lord! Let my spirit be the first of those good objects that You takes from me and the first
trust out of Your favors held in trust with me.
O Lord! We seek Your protection from turning away from Your command or revolting
against Your religion, or being led away by our desires instead of by guidance that comes from
You.
SERMON 215
Delivered at the battle of Siffin Mutual rights of the ruler and the ruled
So now, Allah, the Glorified, has, by placing me over your affairs, created my right over you,
and you too have a right over me like mine over you. A right is very vast in description but very
narrow in equitability of action. It does not accrue to any person unless it accrues against him
also, and right does not accrue against a person unless it also accrues in his favor. If there is any
right which is only in favor of a person with no (corresponding) right accruing against him it is
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solely for Allah, the Glorified, and not for His creatures by virtue of His might over His creatures
and by virtue of the justice permeating all His decrees. Of course, He the Glorified, has created
His right over creatures that they should worship Him, and has laid upon Himself (the obligation
of) their reward equal to several times therecompense as a mark of His bounty and the generosity
that He is capable of.
Then, from His rights, He, the Glorified, created certain rights for certain people against
others. He made them so as to equate with one another. Some of these rights produce other
rights. Some rights are such that they do not accrue except with others. The greatest of these
rights that Allah, the Glorified, has made obligatory is the right of the ruler over the ruled and the
right of the ruled over the ruler. This is an obligation which Allah, the Glorified, has placed on
each other. He has made it the basis of their (mutual) affection, and an honor for their religion.
Consequently, the ruled cannot prosper unless the rulers are sound, while the rulers cannot be
sound unless the ruled are steadfast.
If the ruled fulfilll the rights of the ruler and the ruler fulfillls their rights, then right attains the
position of honor among them, the ways of religion become established, signs of justice become
fixed and the Sunna gains currency.
In this way time will improve, the continuance of government will be expected, and the aims
of the enemies will be frustrated. But if the ruled gain sway over the ruler, or the ruler oppresses
the ruled, then difference crops up in every word, signs of oppression appear, mischief enters
religion and the ways of the Sunna are forsaken. Then desires are acted upon, the commands (of
religion) are discarded, diseases of the spirit become numerous and there is no hesitation in
disregarding even great rights, nor in committing big wrongs. In such circumstances, the virtuous
are humiliated while the vicious are honored, and there are serious chastisements from Allah, the
Glorified, into the people.
You should therefore counsel each other (for the fulfilllment of your obligations) and
cooperate with each other. However extremely eager a person may be to secure the pleasure of
Allah, and however fully he strives for it, he cannot discharge (his obligation for) obedience to
Allah, the Glorified, as is really due to Him, and it is an obligatory right of Allah over the people
that they should advise each other to the best of their ability and cooperate with each other for
the establishment of truth among them. No person, however great his position in the matter of
truth, and however advanced his distinction in religion may be, is above cooperation in
connection with the obligations placed on him by Allah. Again, no man, however small he may
be regarded by others, and however humble he may appear before eyes, is too low to cooperate
or to be afforded cooperation in this matter.
One of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s companions replied to him by a long speech wherein he
praised him much and mentioned his own listening to him and obeying him, where Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) said:
If a man in his mind regards Allah’s glory as being high and believes in his heart that Allah’s
position is sublime, then it is his right that on account of the greatness of these things he should
regard all other things small. Among such persons he on whom Allah’s bounty is great and
Allah’s favors are kind has a greater obligation, because Allah’s bounty over any person does not
increase without an increase in Allah’s right over him.
In the view of virtuous people, the worst position of rulers is that it may be thought about
them that they love glory, and their affairs may be taken to be based on pride. I would really hate
that it may occur to your mind that I love high praises or to hear eulogies. By the grace of Allah I
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am not like this. Even if I had loved to be mentioned like this, I would have given it up in
submissiveness before Allah, the Glorified, rather than accept greatness and sublimity to which
He is more entitled. Generally, people feel pleased at praise after good performances; but do not
mention for me handsome praise for the obligations I have discharged towards Allah and towards
you, because of (my) fear about those obligations which I have not discharged and for issuing
injunctions which could not be avoided, and do not address me in the manner despots are
addressed.
Do not evade me as the people of passion are (to be) evaded, do not meet me with flattery and
do not think that I shall take it ill if a true thing is said to me, because the person who feels
disgusted when truth is said to him or a just matter is placed before him would find it more
difficult to act upon them. Therefore, do not abstain from saying a truth or pointing out a matter
of justice because I do not regard myself above erring.1 I do not escape erring in my actions but
that Allah helps me (in avoiding errors) in matters in which He is more powerful than I.
Certainly, I and you are slaves owned by Allah, other than Whom there is no Master except Him.
He owns our selves which we do not own. He took us from where we were towards that means
prosperity to us. He altered our straying into guidance and gave us intelligence after blindness.
1. That the innocence of angels is different from the innocence of man needs no detailed
discussion. The innocence of angels means that they do not possess the impulse to sin, but the
innocence of man means that, although he has human frailties and passions, yet he possesses a
peculiar power to resist them and he is not over-powered by them so as to commit sins. This very
ability is called innocence and it prevents the rising up of personal passions and impulses. Imam
Ali ibn Abu Talib’s saying that AI do not regard myself above erring refers to those human
dictates and passions, and his saying that AAllah helps me in avoiding Aerrors’ refers to
innocence. The same tone is found in the Holy Qur’an in the words of Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) Yusuf that:
I exculpate not myself, verily (one’s) self is wont to bid (him to) evil, except such as my
Master has had mercy on; verily my Master is Oft-forgiving, All-merciful. (Holy Qur’an 12:53)
Just as in this verse, because of the existence of exception, its first part cannot be used to
argue against his innocence, similarly, due to the existence of the exception Abut that Allah helps
me in avoiding errors in Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s saying, its first part cannot be used to argue
against his innocence. Otherwise the Prophet’s innocence too will have to be rejected. In the
same way, the last sentence of this sermon should not be taken to mean that before the
proclamation of prophethood he had been under the influence of pre-Islamic beliefs, and that just
as others had been unbelievers he too might have been in darkness and misguidance, because
from his very birth Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was brought-up by the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and
His Household) and the effect of his training and up-bringing permeated him. It cannot therefore
be imagined that he who had from infancy trod in the footprints of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) would deviate from guidance even for a moment. Thus, al-Mas’udi has written:
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) never believed in any other god than Allah so that there could
be the question of his accepting Islam. He rather followed the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) in all his actions and (virtually) initiated him, and in this very state he attained
majority. (Muruj al-Thahab, Vol. 2, p. 3).
Here, by those whom Allah led from darkness into guidance, the reference is to the persons
whom Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was addressing. Ibn Abul-Hadid writes in this connection:
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The reference here is not to his own self because he had never been an unbeliever so as to
have accepted Islam after that, but in these words he is referring to those group of people whom
he was addressing. (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 11, p. 108)
SERMON 216
About the excesses of the Quraish
O Lord! I beseech You to take revenge on the Quraish and those who are assisting them, for
they have cut asunder my kinship and over-turned my cup, and have joined together to contest a
right to which I was entitled more than anyone else. They said to me: AIf you get your right, that
will be just, but if you are denied the right, that too will be just. Endure it with sadness or kill
yourself in grief. I looked around but found no one to shield me, protect me or help me except
the members of my family. I refrained from flinging them into death and therefore closed my
eyes despite the dust, kept swallowing saliva despite (the suffocation of) grief and endured pangs
of anger although it was more bitter than colocynth and more grievous than the bite of knives.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: This utterance of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has
already appeared in an earlier Sermon (171), but I have repeated it here because of the difference
of versions.
A portion of the same sermon: about those who went to Basra to fight Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S)
They marched on my officers and the custodians of the public treasury which is still under my
control and on the people of a metropolis, all of whom were obedient to me and were in
allegiance to me. They created division among them, instigated their party against me and
attacked my followers. They killed a group of them by treachery, while another group took up
swords against them and fought with the swords till they met Allah as adherents to truth.
SERMON 217
When Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) passed by the corpses of Talhah ibn AUbaydullah and
AAbd ar-Rahman ibn AAttab ibn Asid who were both killed in the Battle of Jamal, he said:
Abu Muhammed (Talhah) lies here away from his own place. By Allah, I did not like that the
Quraish should lie killed under the stars. I have avenged myself with the descendants of AAbd
Manaf, but the chief persons of Banu Jumah1 have escaped me. They had stretched their necks
towards a matter for which they were not suited, and therefore their necks were broken before
they reached the goal.
______________________________
1. In the Battle of Jamal a group of Banu Jumah was with AA’isha, but the chief men of this
group fled away from the battle-field. Some of them were: AAbdullah at-Tawil ibn Safwan,
Yahya ibn Hakim, Amir ibn Mas’ud and Ayyub ibn Habib. From this group (Banu Jumah) only
two persons were killed.
SERMON 218
Qualities of the God-fearing and the pious
He (the believer) kept his mind alive and killed (the desires of) his heart till his body became
thin, his bulk turned light and an effulgence of extreme brightness shone for him. It lighted the
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way for him and took him on the (right) path. Different doors led him to the door of safety and
the place of (his permanent) stay. His feet, balancing his body, became fixed in the position of
safety and comfort, because he kept his heart (in good acts) and pleased his Allah.
SERMON 219
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) recited the verse
Engage (your) vying in exuberance, until ye come to the graves.1 (Holy Qur’an, 102:1-2)
Then he said:
How distant (from achievement) is their aim, how neglectful are these visitors and how
difficult is the affair. They have not taken lessons from things which are full of lessons, but they
took them from far off places. Do they boast on the dead bodies of their fore-fathers, or do they
regard the number of dead persons as a ground for feeling boastful of their number? They want
to revive the bodies that have become spiritless and the movements that have ceased. They are
more entitled to be a source of lesson than a source of pride. They are more suitable for being a
source of humility than of honor.
They looked at them with weak-sighted eyes and descended into the hollow of ignorance. If
they had asked about them from the dilapidated houses and empty courtyards, they would have
said that they went into the earth in the state of misguidance and you too are heading ignorantly
towards them. You trample their skulls, want to raise constructions on their corpses, you graze
what they have left and live in houses which they have vacated. The days (that lie) between them
and you are also bemoaning you, reciting elegies over you.
They are your fore-runners in reaching the goal and have arrived at the watering places before
you. They had positions of honor and plenty of pride. They were rulers and holders of positions.
Now they have gone into the interstice where earth covers them from above and is eating their
flesh and drinking their blood. They lie in the hollows of their graves lifeless, no more growing,
and hidden, not to be found. The approach of dangers does not frighten them, and the adversity
of circumstances does not grieve them. They do not mind earthquakes, nor do they pay heed to
thunders. They are gone and not expected back. They are existent but unseen. They were united
but are now dispersed. They were friendly and are now separated.
Their accounts are unknown and their houses are silent, not because of length of time or
distance of place, but because they have been made to drink the cup (of death) which has
changed their speech into dumbness, their hearing into deafness and their movements into
stillness. It seems as though they are fallen in slumber. They are neighbors not feeling affection
for each other, or friends who do not meet each other. The bonds of their knowing each other
have been worn out and the connections of their friendship have been cut asunder. Every one of
them is therefore alone although they are a group, and they are strangers, even though friends.
They are unaware of morning after a night and of evening after a day. The night or the day when
they departed has become ever existent for them.2 They found the dangers of their place of stay
more serious than they had apprehended, and they witnessed that its signs were greater than they
had guessed. The two objectives (namely paradise and hell) have been stretched for them up to a
point beyond the reach of fear or hope. Had they been able to speak they would have become
dumb to describe what they witnessed or saw.
Even though their traces have been wiped out and their news has stopped (circulating), eyes
are capable of drawing a lesson, as they looked at them, ears of intelligence heard them and they
spoke without uttering words. So, they said that handsome faces have been destroyed and
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delicate bodies have been smeared with earth. We have put on a worn-out shroud. The
narrowness of the grave has over-whelmed us and strangeness has spread among us. Our silent
abodes have been ruined. The beauty of our bodies has disappeared. Our known features have
become hateful. Our stay in the places of strangeness has become long. We do not get relief from
pain, nor widening from narrowness.
Now, if you portray them in your mind, or if the curtains concealing them are removed from
them for you, in this state when their ears have lost their power and turned deaf, their eyes have
been filled with dust and sunk down, their tongues which were very active have been cut into
pieces, their hearts which were ever wakeful have become motionless in their chests, in every
limb of theirs a peculiar decay has occurred which has deformed it, and has paved the way for
calamity towards it, all these lie powerless, with no hand to help them and no heart to grieve over
them, (then) you would certainly notice the grief of (their) hearts and the dirt of (their) eyes.
Every trouble of theirs is such that its position does not change and the distress does not clear
away. How many a prestigious body and amazing beauty the earth has swallowed, although
when in the world he enjoyed abundant pleasures and was nurtured in honor. He clung to
enjoyments (even) in the hour of grief. If distress befell him he sought refuge in consolation
(derived) through the pleasures of life and playing and games. He was laughing at the world
while the world was laughing at him because of his life full of forgetfulness. Then time trampled
him like thorns, the days weakened his energy and death began to look at him from near. Then he
was overtaken by a grief which he had never felt, and ailments appeared in place of the health he
had previously possessed.
He then turned to that with which the physician had made him familiar, namely suppressing
the hot (diseases) with cold (medicines) and curing the cold with hot doses, but the cold things
did nothing save aggravate the hot ailments, while the hot ones did nothing except increasing the
coldness, nor did he acquire temperateness in his constitution but rather every ailment of his
increased till his physicians became helpless, his attendants grew loathsome and his own people
felt disgusted from describing his disease, avoided answering those who inquired about him and
quarreled in front of him about Theserious news which they were concealing from him. Thus,
someone would say Ahis condition is what it is and would console them with hopes of his
recovery, while another one would advocate patience on missing him, recalling to them the
calamities that had befallen the earlier generations.
In this state when he was getting ready to depart from the world and leave his beloved ones,
such a serious choking overtook him that his senses became bewildered and the dampness of his
tongue dried u, p. Now, there was many an important question whose reply he knew about he
could not utter it, and many a voice that was painful for his heart that he heard but remained
(unmoved) as though he was deaf to the voice of either and elder whom he used to respect or of a
younger whom he used to caress. The pangs of death are too hideous to be covered by
description or to be appreciated by the hearts of the people in this world.
1. The genesis of the descending of this verse is that the tribes of Banu AAbd Manaf and Banu
Sahm began to boast against each other over the abundance of their wealth and the number of
their tribesmen, and in order to prove they had a greater number each one began to include their
dead as well, whereupon this verse was revealed to the effect that abundance of riches and
majority in numbers has made you so forgetful that you count the dead also with the living. This
verse is also taken to mean that abundance of riches and progeny has made you forgetful till you
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reached the graves, but the utterance of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) supports the first
meaning.
2. This means that for him he who dies in the day it is always day whereas for him who dies
in the night the darkness of night never dispels, because they are at a place where there is no
turning of the moon and the sun and no rotation of the nights and the days. The same meaning
has been expressed by a poet like this:
There is sure to be a day without a night,
Or a night that would come without a day.
SERMON 220
Delivered after reciting this verse:
.therein declare glory unto Him in the mornings and the evenings: Men whom neither
merchandise nor any sale diverteth from the remembrance of Allah and constancy in prayer and
paying the poor-rate; they fear the day when the hearts and eyes shall writhe of the anguish.
(Holy Qur’an, 24:36-37)
Certainly, Allah, the Glorified, the Sublime has made His remembrance the light for hearts
which hear with its help despite deafness, see with its help despite blindness and become
submissive with its help despite unruliness.
In all the periods and times when there were no prophets, there have been persons with whom
Allah, precious are His bounties, whispered through their wits and spoke through their minds.
With the help of the bright awakening of their ears, eyes and hearts they keep reminding others
of the remembrance of the days of Allah and making others feel fear for Him like guide-points in
wildernesses. Whoever adopts the middle way, they praise his ways and give him the tidings of
deliverance, but whoever goes right and left they vilify his ways and frighten him with ruin. In
this way, they served as lamps in the darkness and guides through these doubts.
There are some people devoted to the remembrance (of Allah) who have adopted it in place of
worldly matters so that commerce or trade does not turn them away from it. They pass their life
in it. They speak into the ears of neglectful persons warning against matters held unlawful by
Allah, they order them to practice justice and themselves keep practicing it, and they refrain
them from the unlawful and themselves refrain from it. It is as though they have finished the
journey of this world towards the next world and have beheld what lies beyond it. Consequently,
they have become acquainted with all that befell them in the interstice during their long stay
therein, and the Day of Judgment fulfillls its promises for them. Therefore, they removed the
curtain from these things for the people of the world, till it was as though they were seeing what
people did not see and were hearing what people did not hear.
If you picture them in your mind in their admirable positions and well-known sittings, when
they have opened the records of their actions and are prepared to render an account of themselves
in respect of the small as well as the big things they were ordered to do but they failed to do, or
were ordered to refrain from but they indulged therein, and they realized the weight of their
burden (or bad acts) on their backs, and they felt too weak to bear them, then they wept bitterly
and spoke to each other while still crying and bewailing to Allah in repentance and
acknowledgment (of their shortcomings), you would find them to be emblems of guidance and
lamps in darkness, angels would be surrounding them, peace would be descending upon them,
the doors of the sky would be opened for them and positions of honor would be assigned to them
in the place of which Allah had informed them. Therefore, He has appreciated their actions and
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praised their position. They call Him and breathe in the air of forgiveness, they are ever needy of
His bounty and remain humble before His greatness, the length of their grief has pained their
hearts, and the length of weeping their eyes. They knock at every door of inclination towards
Allah. They ask Him Whom generosity does not make destitute and from Whom those who
approach Him do not get disappointed.
Therefore, take account of yourself for your own sake because the account of others will be
taken by one other than you.
SERMON 221
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) recited the verse:
O thou man! what has beguiled thee from thy Master, the Most Gracious One. (Holy Qur’an,
82:6)
Then he said:
The addressee (in this verse) is devoid of argument and his excuse is most deceptive. He is
detaining himself in ignorance.
O man! what has emboldened you to (commit) sins, what had deceived you about your Allah
and what has made you satisfied with the destruction of yourself. Is there no cure for your
ailment or no awakening from your sleep? Do you not have pity on yourself as you have on
others? Generally, when you see anyone exposed to the heat of the sun you cover him with
shade, or if you see anyone afflicted with grief that pains his body you weep out of pity for him.
What has then made you patient over your own disease, what has made you firm in your own
afflictions, and what has consoled you from weeping over yourself although your life is the most
precious of all lives to you, and why does not the fear of an ailment that may befall you in the
night keep you wakeful although you lie on the way to Allah’s wrath due to your sins?
You should cure the disease of languor in your heart by determination, and the sleep of
neglectfulness in your eyes by wakefulness. Be obedient to Allah, and love His remembrance,
and picture yourself that you are running away while He is approaching you. He is calling you to
His forgiveness and concealing your faults with His kindness, while you are fleeing away from
Him towards others. Certainly, Great is Allah the powerful Who is so generous, and how humble
and weak are you and still so bold to commit His disobedience although you live in His
protection and undergo changes of life in the expanse of His kindness. He does not refuse you
His kindness and does not remove His protection from you. In fact, you have not been without
His kindness even for a moment, whether it be a favor that He conferred upon you or a sin of
yours that He has concealed or a calamity that He has warded off from you. What is your idea
about Him if you had obeyed Him? By Allah, if this had been the case with two persons equal in
power and matching in might (one being inattentive and the other showering favors upon you)
then you would have been the first to adjudge yourself to be of bad behavior and evil deeds.
I truthfully say that the world has not deceived you but you have had yourself deceived by it.
The world had opened to you the curtains and divulged to you (everything) equally. And in all
that it foretold you about the troubles befalling your bodies and the decay in your power, it has
been too true and faithful in promise, and did not speak a lie to you or deceive you. There are
many who advise you about it but they are blamed, and speak the truth about it but they are
opposed. If you understand the world by means of dilapidated and far reaching power of drawing
lessons you will find it like one who is kind over you and cautious about you. It is good abode
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for him who does not like it as an abode, and a good place of stay for him who does not regard it
a permanent home for stay.
Only those who run away from this world today will be regarded virtuous tomorrow. When
the earthquake occurs, the Day of resurrection approaches with all its severity, the people of
every worshipping place cling to it, all the devotees cling to the object of their devotion and all
the followers cling to their leader. Then on the day even the opening of an eye in the air and the
sound of a footstep on the ground will be assigned its due through His Justice and His Equity. On
that day many an argument will prove void and a contention for excuses will stand rejected.
Therefore, you should now adopt for yourself the course with which your excuse may hold
good and your plea may be proved. Take from the transient things of this world that which will
stay for you (in the next world), provide for your journey, keep (your) gaze on the brightness of
deliverance and keep ready the saddles (for setting off).
SERMON 222
About keeping aloof from oppression and misappropriation
AAqil’s condition of poverty and destitution
By Allah, I would rather pass a night in wakefulness on the thorns of as-sa’dan (a plant
having sharp prickles) or be driven in chains as a prisoner than meet Allah and His Messenger on
the Day of Judgment as an oppressor over any person or a usurper of anything out of worldly
wealth. And how can I oppress any one for (the sake of a life) that is fast moving towards
destruction and is to remain under the earth for a long time.
By Allah, I certainly saw (my brother) AAqil fallen in destitution and he asked me a saa’
(about three kilograms in weight) out of your (share of) wheat, and I also saw his children with
disheveled hair and a dusty countenance due to starvation, as though their faces had been
blackened by indigo. He came to me several times and repeated his request to me again and
again. I heard him, and he thought I would sell my faith to him and follow his tread leaving my
own way. Then I (just) heated a piece of iron and took it near his body so that he might take a
lesson from it, then he cried as a person in protracted illness cries with pain and he was about to
get burnt with its branding. Then I said to him. AMoaning women may moan over you, O AAqil.
Do you cry on account of this (heated) iron which has been made by a man for fun, while you are
driving me towards the fire which Allah, the Powerful, has prepared for (a manifestation of) His
wrath? Should you cry from pain, but I should not cry from the flames?
A stranger incident than this is that a man1 came to us in the night with a closed flask full of
honey paste but I disliked it as though it was the saliva of a serpent or its vomit. I asked him
whether it was a reward, or zakat (poor tax) or charity, for these are forbidden to us members of
the Prophet’s family. AChildless women may weep over you. Have you come to deviate me from
the religion of Allah, or are you mad, or have you been overpowered by some jinn, or are you
speaking without sense?
By Allah, even if I am given all the domains of the seven (stars) with all that exists under the
skies in order that I may disobey Allah to the extent of snatching one grain of barley from an ant
I would not do it. For me your world is lighter than the leaf in the mouth of a locust that is
chewing it. What has Ali to do with bounties that will pass away and pleasures that will not last?
We do seek protection of Allah from the slip of wisdom and the evils of mistakes, and from Him
we seek succor.
1. It was al-Ash’ath ibn Qays.
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SERMON 223
Supplication
O Lord! preserve (the grace of) my face with easiness of life and do not disgrace my
countenance with destitution, lest I may have to beg a livelihood from those who beg from You,
try to seek the favor of Your evil creatures, engage myself in praising those who give to me, and
be tempted in abusing those who do not give to me, although behind all these thou art the master
of giving and denying.
. Verily You over all things, art the All-powerful. (Holy Qur’an, 66:8)
SERMON 224
Transience of the world and the helplessness of those in graves
This is a house surrounded by calamities and well-known for deceitfulness. Its conditions do
not last and those who inhabit it do not remain safe. Its conditions are variable and its ways
changing. Life in it is blameworthy and safety in it is non-existent. Yet its people are targets; it
strikes them with its arrows and destroys them through death.
Know, O creatures of Allah, that, certainly, you and all the things of this world that you have
are (treading) on the lines of those (who were) before you. They were of longer ages, had more
populated houses and were of more lasting traces. Their voices have become silent, their
movements have become stationary, their bodies have become rotten, their houses have become
empty and their traces have become obliterated. Their magnificent places and spread-out carpets
were changed to stones, laid-in-blocks and cave-like dug out graves whose very foundation is
based on ruins and whose construction has been made with soil. Their positions are contiguous,
but those settled in them are like far-flung strangers. They are among the people of their area but
feel lonely, and they are free from work but still engaged (in activity). They feel no attachment
with homelands nor do they keep contact among themselves like neighbors despite nearness of
neighborhood and priority of abodes. And how can they meet each other when decay has ground
them with its chest, and stones and earth have eaten them.
It is as though you too have gone where they have gone, the same sleeping place has caught
you and the same place has detained you. What will then be your position when your affairs
reach their end and graves are turned upside down (to throw out the dead) ?
There shall every soul realize what it has sent before, and they shall be brought back to Allah,
their true Master, and what they did fabricate (the false deities) will vanish (away) from them.
(Holy Qur’an, 10:30)
SERMON 225
Supplication
O Lord! You art the most attached to Your lovers and the most ready to assist those who trust
in You. You sees them in their concealment, knows whatever is in their consciences, and art
aware of the extent of their intelligence. Consequently, their secrets are open to You and their
hearts are eager from You. If loneliness bores them, Your remembrance gives them solace. If
distresses befall them, they beseech Your protection, because they know that the reins of affairs
are in Your hands, and that their movements depend upon Your commands.
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O Lord! if I am unable to express my request or cannot see my needs, then guide me towards
my betterment and take my betterment and take my heart towards the correct goal. This is not
against (the mode of) Your guidance nor anything new against Your ways of support.
O Lord! deal with me through Your forgiveness and do not deal with me according to Your
justice.
SERMON 226
About a companion who passed away from this world before the occurrence of troubles
May Allah reward such and such man1 who straightened the curve, cured the disease,
abandoned mischief and established the Sunna. He departed (from this world) with untarnished
clothes and little shortcomings. He achieved good (of this world) and remained safe from its
evils. He offered Allah’s obedience and feared Him as He deserved. He went away and left the
people in dividing ways wherein the misled cannot obtain guidance and the guided cannot attain
certainty.
1. Ibn Abul-Hadid has written (in Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 14, pp. 3-4) that the reference
here is to The second AOmer, and that these sentences have been uttered in his praise as
indicated by the word AOmer written under the word Asuch and such in Sayyid ar-Radhi’s own
hand in the manuscript of Nahjul-Balagha written by him. This is ibn Abul-Hadid’s statement,
but it is to be seen that if Sayyid ar-Radhi had written the word AOmer by way of explanation it
should have existed, as other explanations by him have remained, in those versions which have
been copied from his manuscript. Even now there exists in Mosel (Iraq) university the oldest
copy of Nahjul-Balagha written by the famous calligraphist Yaqut al-Musta’simi; but no one has
afforded any clue to this explanation of Sayyid ar-Radhi. Even if the view of ibn Abul-Hadid is
accepted it would be deemed to represent the personal opinion of Sayyid ar-Radhi which may
serve as a supplementary argument in support of an original argument but this personal view
cannot be assigned any regular importance.
It is strange that two and a half centuries after Sayyid ar-Radhi namely in the seventh century
after Hijra, Ibn Abul Hadid makes the statement that the reference here is to AOmer and that
Sayyid ar-Radhi himself had so indicated, as a result of which some other commentators also
followed the same line, but the contemporaries of Sayyid ar-Radhi also wrote about NahjulBalagha have given no such indication in their writings although as contemporaries they should
have had better information about Sayyid ar-Radhi’s writing. Thus,’allama Ali ibn Nasir who
was a contemporary of Sayyid ar-Radhi and wrote an annotation of Nahjul-Balagha under the
name of A’lam Nahjul-Balagha writes in connection with this sermon:
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has praised one of his own companions for his good conduct.
He had died before the troubles that arose after the death of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) of Allah.
This is supported by the annotations of Nahjul-Balagha written by’allama Qutbud-Din arRawandi (d. 573 A.H.). Ibn Abul-Hadid (Vol. 14, p. 4) and ibn Maytham al-Bahrani (in Sharh
Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 4, p. 97) have quoted his following view.
By this Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) refers to one of his own companions who died before
the mischief and disruption that occurred following the death of the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) of Allah.
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AAllama al-Hajj al-Mirza Habibullah al-Khoei is of the opinion that the person is Malik ibn
al-Harith al-Ashtar on the ground that after the assassination of Malik the situation of the Muslim
community was such as Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) explains in this sermon.
Al-Khoei adds that:
"Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has praised Malik repeatedly such as in his letter to the people
of Egypt sent through Malik when he was made the governor of that place, and like his
utterances when the news of Malik’s assassination reached him, he said: AMalik! who is Malik?
If Malik was a stone, he was hard and solid; if he was a rock, he was a great rock which had no
parallel. Women have become barren to give birth to such as Malik. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S) had even expressed in some of his utterances that, AMalik was to me as I was to the Holy
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Therefore, one who possesses such a position certainly
deserves such attributes and even beyond that." (Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 14, pp. 374-375)
If these words had been about AOmer and there was some trustworthiness about it ibn AbulHadid would have recorded the authority or tradition and it would have existed in history and
been known among the people. But here nothing is found to prove the statement except a few
self-concocted events. Thus about the pronouns in the words Akhayraha and Asharraha he takes
them to refer to the caliphate and writes that these words can apply only to one who enjoys
power and authority because without authority it is impossible to establish the Sunna or prevent
innovation. This is the gist of the argument he has advanced on this occasion; although there is
no proof to establish that the antecedent of this pronoun is the caliphate. It can rather refer to the
world (when Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) says, AHe achieved good [of this world] and
remained safe from its evils.) and that would be in accord with the context. Again, to regard
authority as a condition for the safeguarding of people’s interest and the propagation of the
Sunna means to close the door to prompting others to good and dissuading them from evil,
although Allah has assigned this duty to a group of the people without the condition of authority:
And that there should be among you a group who call (mankind) unto virtue and enjoin what
is good and forbid wrong; and these are they who shall be successful. (Holy Qur’an, 3:104)
Similarly it is related from the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) :
So long as people go on prompting for good and dissuading from evil and assisting each other
in virtue and piety they will remain in righteousness.
Again, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S), in the course of a will, says in general terms:
Establish the pillars of the Unity of Allah and the Sunna, and keep both these lamps aflame.
In these sayings there is no hint that this obligation cannot be discharged without authority.
Facts also tell us that (despite army and force, and power and authority) the rulers and kings
could not prevent evil or propagate virtue to the extent to which some unknown godly persons
were able to inculcate moral values by imprinting their morality on heart and minds, although
they were not backed by any army or force and they did not have any equipment save destitution.
No doubt authority and control can bend heads down before it, but it is not necessary that it
should also pave the way for virtue in hearts. History shows that most of the rulers destroyed the
features of Islam. Islam’s existence and progress has been possible by the efforts of those
helpless persons who possessed nothing save poverty and discomfiture.
If it is insisted that the reference here should only be to a ruler, then why should it not be
taken to mean a companion of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) who had been the head of a
Province such as Salman al-Farisi for whose burial Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) went to alMada’in; and it is not implausible that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) might have uttered these
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words after his burial by way of comments on his life and way of governance. However, to
believe that they are about AOmer is without any proof. In the end, Ibn Abul-Hadid has quoted
the following statements of (the historian) al-Tabari in proof of his hypothesis:
AIt is related from al-Mughirah ibn Shu’bah that when AOmer died ibn Abu Hathmah said
crying. AO AOmer, you were the man who straightened the curve, removed ills, destroyed
mischief, revived the Sunna, remained chaste and departed without entangling in evils.
(According to al-Tabari) al-Mughirah related that AWhen AOmer was buried I came to Ali and I
wanted to hear something from him about AOmer. So, on my arrival Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S) came out in this state that was wrapped in one cloth after bathing and was jerking the hair
of his heard and beard and he had no doubt that the Caliphate would come to him. On this
occasion he said, AMay Allah have mercy on AOmer. Ibn Abu Hathmah has correctly said that
he enjoyed the good of the Caliphate and remained safe from its evils. By Allah, she did not say
it herself but was made to say so. (al-Tabari, Vol. 1, p. 2763; Ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 12, p. 5; Ibn
Kathir, Vol. 7, p. 140)
The relater of this event is al-Mughirah ibn Shu’bah whose adultery with Umm Jamil, the
AOmer’s saving him from the penalty despite the evidence, and his openly abusing Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) in Kufa under Mu’awiyah’s behest are admitted facts of history. On this ground
what weight his statements can carry is quite clear. From the factual point of view also, this story
cannot be accepted. Al-Mughirah’s statement that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had no doubt
about his Caliphate is against the facts. What were the factors from which he made this guess
when the actual facts were to the contrary. If the Caliphate was certain for any one, it was
AOthman. Thus, at the Consultative Committee AAbd ar-Rahman ibn AAwf said to Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) : AO Ali! do not create a situation against yourself for I have observed and
consulted the people and they all want AOthman. (al-Tabari, Vol. 1, p. 2786; Ibn al-Athir, Vol. 3,
p. 71; Abul-Fida’, Vol. 1, p. 166)
Consequently, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was sure not to get the caliphate as has already
been stated on the authority of al-Tabari’s Tarikh, under the "sermon of the Camel’s Foam" (ashShaqshaqiyya), namely that on seeing the names of the members of the Consultative Committee,
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had said to al-AAbbas ibn AAbdul-Muttalib that the caliphate
could not be given to anyone except AOthman since all the powers had been given to AAbd arRahman ibn AAwf and he was AOthman’s brother-in-law (sister’s husband) and Sa’d ibn Abu
Waqqas was a relative and tribesman of AAbd ar-Rahman. These two would join in giving the
caliphate to him.
At this stage, the question arises as to what the reason was that actuated al-Mughirah to
prompt Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) to say something about AOmer. If he knew that Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib (A.S) had good ideas about AOmer, he should have also known his impression.
But if he thought that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) did not entertain good ideas about him then
the purpose of his asking Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) would be none other than that whatever
he may say he would, by exposing it, create an atmosphere against him and make the members
of the Consultative Committee suspicious of him. The views of the members of the Consultative
Committee are well understood from the very fact that by putting the condition of following the
conduct of the first two Caliphs in electing the caliph they had shown their adherence to them. In
these circumstances when al-Mughirah tried to play this trick Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said
just by way of relating a fact that AOmer achieved the good (of this world) and remained safe
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from its evil. This sentence has no connection with praise or eulogy. AOmer did in his days enjoy
all kinds of advantages while his period was free from the mischief that cropped up later. After
recording this statement ibn Abul-Hadid writes:
From this event the belief gains strength that in this utterance the allusion is towards AOmer.
If the utterance means the word uttered by ibn Abu Hathmah about which Imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib (A.S) has said that they are not her own heart’s voice but she was made to utter them, then
doubtlessly the reference is to AOmer, but the view that these words were uttered by Imam Ali
ibn Abu Talib (A.S) in praise of AOmer is not at all established. Rather, from this tradition it is
evidently shown that these words were uttered by ibn Abu Hathmah. Allah alone knows on what
ground the words of ibn Abu Hathmah are quoted and then it is daringly argued that these words
were uttered by Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) about AOmer. It seems Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib
(A.S) had uttered these words about someone on some occasion, then ibn Abu Hathmah used
similar words on AOmer’s death and then even Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s words were taken to
be in praise of AOmer. Otherwise, no mind except a mad one can argue that the words uttered by
ibn Abu Hathmah should be deemed a ground to hold that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said
these words in praise of AOmer. Can it be expected, after (a glance at) the sermon of the Camel’s
Foam, that Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) might have uttered these words. Again, it is worth
consideration that if these words had been uttered by Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) on AOmer’s
death, then at the Consultative Committee when he refused to follow the conduct of the (first)
two Caliphs it should have been said to him that only the other day he has said that AOmer had
established the Sunna and banished innovations, so that when his conduct was in accord with the
Sunna what was the sense in accepting the Sunna but refusing to follow his conduct.
SERMON 227
(About allegiance to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) for the Caliphate.
A similar sermon in somewhat different version has already
appeared earlier.)
You drew out my hand towards you for allegiance but I held it back and you stretched it but I
contracted it. Then you crowed over me as the thirsty camels crowd on the watering cisterns on
their being taken there, so much so that shoes were torn, shoulder-cloths fell away and the weak
got trampled. And the happiness of people on their allegiance to me was so manifested that small
children felt joyful, the old staggered (up to me) for it, the sick too reached for it helter skelter
and young girls ran for it without veils.
SERMON 228
Advice about fear of Allah, and an account of those who remain apprehensive of death and
adopt abstemiousness
Certainly, fear of Allah is the key to guidance, provision for the next world, freedom from
every kind of slavery and deliverance from all ruin. With its help the seeker succeeds and he who
makes for safety escapes and achieves his aims.
Perform (good) acts while such acts are being raised (in value), repentance can be of benefit,
prayer can be heard, conditions are peaceful and the pens (of the two angels) are in motion (to
record the actions). Hasten towards (virtuous) actions before the change of age (to oldness) or
lingering illness or snatching death (overtakes you). Certainly, death will end your enjoyments,
mar your pleasures and remove your objectives. It is an unwanted visitor, an invincible adversary
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and a miscalculating killer. Its ropes have entrapped you, its evils have surrounded you, its
arrowheads have aimed at you, its sway over you is great, its oppression on you is continuous
and the chance of its missing you is remote.
Very soon you will be overwhelmed with the gloom of its shades, The severity of its illness,
the darkness of its distresses, the nonsense utterances of its pangs, the grief of its destruction, the
darkness of its encompassment and the unwholesomeness of its taste. It will seem as if it has
come to you all of a sudden, silenced those who were whispering to you, separated your group,
destroyed your doings, devastated your houses and altered your successors to distribute your
estate among the chief relatives, who did not give you any benefit, or the grieved near ones who
could not protect (you), or those rejoicing who did not lament (you).
Therefore, it is upon you to strive, make effort, equip yourself, get ready and provide yourself
from the place of provision. And let not the life of this world deceive you as it deceived those
before you among the past people and by-gone periods - those who extracted its milk, benefited
from its neglectfulness, passed a long time and turned its new things into old (by living long).
Their abodes turned into graves and their wealth into inheritable estate. They do not know who
came to them (at their graves) ; do not pay heed to those who weep over them, and do not
respond to those who call them. Therefore, beware of this world as it is treacherous, deceitful
and cheating, it gives and takes back, covers with clothes and uncovers. Its pleasure does not last,
its hardship does not end and its calamity does not stop.
Part of the same sermon about ascetics
They are from among the people of this world but are not its people, because they remain in it
as though they do not belong to it. They act herein on what they observe and hasten here in (to
avoid) what they fear. Their bodies move among the people of the next world. They see that the
people of this world attach importance to the death of their bodies but they themselves attach
more importance to the death of the hearts of those who are living.
SERMON 229
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) delivered this sermon at Thi-Qar on his way to Basra, and the
historian al-Waqidi has mentioned it (in Kitab al-Jamal).
About the Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) manifested whatever he was commanded and
conveyed the message of his Master. Consequently, Allah repaired through him the cracks,
joined through him the slits and created (through him) affection among kin although they bore
intense enmity in (their) chests and deep-seated rancor in (their) hearts.
SERMON 230
AAbdullah ibn Zama’ah who was one of the followers of Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) came
to him during his Caliphate to ask for some money when Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
This money is not for me nor for you, but it is the collective property of the Muslims and the
acquisition of their swords. If you had taken part with them in their fighting you would have a
share equal to theirs, otherwise the earning of their hands cannot be for other than their mouths.
SERMON 231
On Ja’dah ibn Hubayrah al-Makhzumi’s1 inability to deliver a sermon.
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About speaking the truth
Know that the tongue is a part of a man’s body. If the man desists, speech will not cooperate
with him and when he dilates, speech will not give him time to sto, p. Certainly, we are the
masters of speaking. Its veins are fixed in us and its branches are hanging over us.
Know that - may Allah have mercy on you - you are living at a time when those who speak
about right are few, when tongues are loath to utter the truth and those who stick to the right are
humiliated. The people of this time are engaged in disobedience. Their youths are wicked, their
old men are sinful, their learned men are hypocrites, and their speakers are sycophants. Their
young do not respect their elders, and their rich men do not support the destitute.
1. Once Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) asked his nephew (sister’s son) Ja’dah ibn Hubayrah
al-Makhzumi to deliver a sermon, but when he rose for speaking his tongue faltered and he could
utter nothing, whereupon Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) ascended the pulpit to speak and
delivered a long sermon out of which a few sentences have been recorded here by Sayyid arRadhi.
SERMON 232
Causes for difference in the features and traits of people.
Dhi’lib al-Yamami has related from Ahmed ibn Qutaybah, and
he from AAbdullah ibn Yazid and he from Malik ibn Dihyah
who said, AWe were with Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) when
discussion arose about the differences of men (in features
and conduct) and Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said:
They differ among themselves because of the sources1 of their clay (from which they have
been created). This is because they are either from salty soil or sweet soil or from rugged earth or
soft earth. They resemble each other on the basis of the affinity of their soil and differ according
to its difference. Therefore, sometimes a person of handsome features is weak in intelligence, a
tall statured person is of low courage, a virtuous person is ugly in appearance, a short statured
person is far-sighted, a good-natured person has an evil trait, a person of perplexed heart has
bewildering mind and a sharp-tongued person has a wakeful heart.
1. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has ascribed the differences in features and characters of
people to the differences in the clay from which they are created and according to which their
features are shaped and the skeletons of their characters are formed. Therefore, to the extent that
their clay of origin is akin, their mental and imaginative tendencies too will be similar and to the
extent by which they differ, there will be a difference in their inclinations and tendencies. By
origins of a thing are meant those things on which its coming into existence depends, but they
should not be its cause. The word Atin is the plural of Atinah which means origin or basis. Here
Atinah means semen which after passing through various stages of development emerges in the
human shape. Its origin means those constituents from which those items are created which help
in the formation of semen. Thus, by salty, sweet, soft or hard soil the reference is to these
elementary constituents. Since those elementary constituents carry different properties Thesemen
growing out of them will also bear different characteristics and propensities which will
(eventually) show forth in the differences in features and conduct of those borne in it.
Ibn Abul-Hadid has written (in Sharh Nahjul-Balagha, Vol. 13, p. 19) that Aorigins of tinah
implies those preservative factors which are different in their properties as Plato and other
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philosophers have held. The reason for calling them Aorigins of tinah is that they serve as an
asylum for the human body and prevent the elements from diffusion. Just as the existence of a
thing hinges on its basis, in the same way the existence of this body which is made up of
elements depends on preservative factors. So long as the preservative factor exists the body is
also safe from disruption and disintegration and the elements too are immune to diffusion and
dispersal. When it leaves the body the elements also get dispersed.
According to this explanation Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s words would mean that Allah has
created different original factors among whom some are vicious and some are virtuous, some are
weak and some are strong, and every person will act according to his original factor. If there is
similarity in the inclinations of two persons it is because their original factor are similar, and if
their tendencies differ it is because their original factors do not have any similarity. But this
conclusion is not correct because Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s words do not only refer to
differences in conduct and behavior but also of features and shape and the differences of features
and shape cannot be theresult of differences in original factors.
In any case, whether the original factors are the cause of differences in features and conduct
or the elementary constituents are the cause, these words appear to lead to the negation or
volition and to prove the compulsion (of destiny) in human actions, because if man’s capacity for
thinking and acting is dependent on Atinah then he would be compelled to behave himself in a
fixed way on account of which he would neither deserve praise for good acts nor be held blame
worthy for bad habits. But this hypothesis is incorrect because it is well established that just as
Allah knows everything in creation after its coming into being, in the same way He knew it
before its creation. Thus, He knew what actions man would perform of his free will and what he
could leave. Therefore, Allah gave him capacity to act according to his free will, and created him
from a suitable Atinah. This tinah is not the cause of his actions so as to snatch away from him
his free will but the meaning of creating from suitable tinah is that Allah does not by force stand
in man’s way but allows him to tread the path he wants to tread of his own free will.
SERMON 233
Spoken when Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) was busy in the funeral ablution (ghusl) of the
Holy Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and shrouding him
May my parents be sacrificed for you, O Messenger of Allah! With your death, the process of
prophethood, revelation and heavenly messages has stopped, which had not stopped at the death
of others (prophets). Your position with us (members of your family) is so special that your grief
has become a source of consolation (to us) as against the grief of all others; your grief is also
common so that all Muslims share it equally. If you had not ordered endurance and prevented us
from bewailing, we would have produced a store of tears and even then the pain would not have
subsided, and this grief would not have ended, and they would have been too little of our grief
for you. But this (death) is a matter that cannot be reversed nor is it possible to repulse it. May
my father and my mother die for you; do remember us with Allah and take care of us.
1
SERMON 234
In this sermon, Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) has related his own condition after the
Prophet’s immigration till his meeting with him.
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I began following the path adopted by the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and
treading on the lines of his remembrance till I reached al-AArj.
Sayyid ar-Radhi says the following: Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib’s words Afaata’u dhikrahu
constitute the highest forms of brevity and eloquence. He means to say that he was being given
news about the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) from the commencement of his setting
out till he reached this place, and he has expressed this sense in this wonderful expression.
1. Since the commencement of prophethood, the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household)
remained in Mecca for thirteen years. For him, this period was of Theseverest oppression and
destitution. The unbelievers of the Quraish had closed all the doors of livelihood upon him, and
had left no deficiency in inflicting hardships upon him, so much so that in order to take his life
they began contriving how to do away with him. Forty of their nobles assembled in the hall of
audience (Dar an-Nadwa) for consultation, and decided that one individual should be picked out
from every tribe and they should jointly attack him. In this way, Banu Hashim would not dare to
face all the tribes, and the matter would quiet down on the payment of blood price. To give a
practical shape to this scheme, these people sat in ambush near the house of the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) on the night of the first of Rabi’al-Awwal, so that when the
Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) slept in his bed he would be attacked. On this side the
preparation for killing him was complete, and on the other side Allah informed him of all the
intrigues of the Quraish unbelievers and commanded him to make Ali (A.S) sleep on his bed and
himself to immigrate to Medina. The Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) sent for Ali (A.S)
and disclosing to him his plan, said: Ali (A.S) , you lie on my bed. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
enquired: AO Messenger of Allah, will your life be saved by my sleeping here? the Prophet
(P.B.U.H. and His Household) said: AYes. Hearing this Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S)
performed a prostration in thanks-giving and, exposing himself fully to the danger, lay on the
Prophet’s bed while the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) left from therear door. The
Quraish unbelievers were peeping and getting ready for the attack but Abu Lahab said: AIt is not
proper to attack in the night because there are women and children also in the house. When
morning dawns you attack him, but keep watch during night that he should not move anywhere.
Consequently, they kept their eyes on the bed throughout the night and soon, on the appearance
of the dawn, proceeded forward stealthily. Hearing the sound of their footsteps, Imam Ali ibn
Abu Talib (A.S) removed the covering from his face and stood u, p. The Quraish gazed at him
with stretched eyes as to whether it was an illusion or fact. After making sure that it was Ali they
inquired, AWhere is Muhammed (P.B.U.H. and His Holy Household) ? and Ali replied, ADid
you entrust him to me, that now you are asking me? They had no reply to this. Men ran to chase
him but found footprints only up to the cave [of Hira’] in the mountain of Thawr. Beyond that
there were neither footprints nor any sign of hiding in the cave. They came back bewildered
while the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) after staying in the cave for three days left for
Medina. Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) passed these three days in Mecca, returned to the people
their properties lying in trust with the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) and set off towards
Medina to join the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His Household) . Upto al-AArj which is a place
between Mecca and Medina, he kept getting news about the Prophet (P.B.U.H. and His
Household) and he continued his anxious march in his search till he met the Prophet (P.B.U.H.
and His Household) at Quba on the twelfth of Rabi’ al-Awwal, and entered Medina with him.
(al-Tabari, Tafsir, Vol. 9, pp. 148-151; Tarikh, Vol. 1, pp. 1232-1234; ibn Sa’d, Al-Tabaqat, Vol.
1, Part. 1, pp. 153-154; ibn Hisham, as-Sira, Vol. 2, pp. 124-128; Ibn al-Athir, Usd al-Ghabah,
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Vol. 4, p. 25; Al-Kamil, Vol. 2, pp. 101-104; Ibn Kathir, Tafsir, Vol. 2, pp. 302-303; Tarikh, Vol.
3, pp. 180-181; Ibn Abul-Hadid, Vol. 13, pp. 303-306; al-Sayyuti, Al-Durr al-Manthur, Vol. 3,
pp. 179-180;’allama al-Majlisi, Bihar al-Anwar, Vol. 19, pp. 28-103).
SERMON 235
About collecting provision for the next world while in this world
and performing good acts before death
Perform (good) acts while you are still in the vastness of life, the books are open (for
recording of actions), repentance is allowed, the runner away (from Allah) is being called and the
sinner is being given hope (of forgiveness) before the (light of) action is put off, time expires,
life ends, the door for repentance is closed and angels ascend to the sky.
Therefore, a man should derive benefit from himself for himself, from the living for the dead,
from the mortal, for the lasting and from the departer for the stayer. A man should fear Allah
while he is given age to live up to his death, and is allowed time to act. A man should control his
self by therein and hold it with its bridle, thus by therein he should prevent it from disobedience
towards Allah, and by the bridle he should lead it towards obedience to Allah.
SERMON 236
About the two arbitrators (Abu Musa al-Ash’ari and AAmr ibn al-AAs) and disparagement of
the people of Syria.
Rude, low people and mean slaves! They have been collected from all sides and picked up
from every pack. They need to be taught the tenets (of Islam), disciplined, instructed, trained,
supervised and led by the hand. They are neither Muhajirun (immigrants from Mecca), nor Ansar
(helpers of Medina) nor those who made their dwellings in the abode (in Medina) and in belief.
Look! They have chosen for themselves one who is nearest of all of them to what they desire,
while you have chosen one who is nearest to what you dislike. You may certainly recall that the
other day AAbdullah ibn Qays (Abu Musa) was saying: AIt is a mischief, therefore, cut away
your bow-string and sheathe your swords. If he was right (in what he said) then he was wrong in
marching (with us) without being forced, but if he was lying then he should be viewed with
suspicion. Therefore, send AAbdullah ibn AAbbas to face AAmr ibn al-AAs. Make use of these
days and surround the borders of Islam. Do you not see that your cities are being attacked and
your prowess is being aimed at?
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SERMON 237
Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) describes herein the members
of the Prophet’s family
They are life for knowledge and death for ignorance. Their forbearance
tells you of their knowledge, and their silence of the wisdom of their
speaking. They do not go against right nor do they differ (among
themselves) about it. They are the pillars of Islam and the asylums of (its)
protection. With them right has returned to its position and wrong has left its
place and its tongue is severed from its root. They have understood
thereligion attentively and carefully, not by mere heresy or from relaters,
because therelaters of knowledge are many but those who understand are
few.
SERMON 238
When AOthman ibn AAffan was surrounded, AAbdullah ibn AAbbas
brought a letter to Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) from AOthman in which
he expressed the desire that Imam Ali (A.S) ibn Abu Talib (A.S) should
leave for his estate, Yanbu’, so that the proposal that was being mooted out
for him to become caliph should subside. AOthman had this request earlier
also. Upon this Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (A.S) said to ibn Abbas:
O Ibn Abbas! AOthman just wants to treat me like the water-drawing
camel so that I may go forward and backward with the basket. Once he sent
word that I should go out then sent me word that I should come back. Now,
again he sends me word that I should go out. By Allah, I continued
protecting him till I feared lest I become a sinner.
SERMON 239
Exhorting his men to jihad and asking them to refrain from seeking ease
Allah seeks you to thank Him and assigns to you His affairs. He has
allowed time in the limited field (of life) so that you may vie with each other
in seeking the reward (of Paradise). Therefore, tighten your girdles and wrap
up the skirts. High courage and dinners do not go together. Sleep causes
weakness in the big affairs of the day and (its) darkness obliterates the
memories of courage.
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