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'Ashura - Misrepresentations and Distortions Third Sermon
Martyr Murtada Mutahhari Translated from the Persian by 'Ali Quli Qara'i Vol XIII No. 4 (Winter 1996)
In the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful
All Praise belongs to Allah, the Lord of the worlds and the Maker of
all creation, and may Peace and benedictions be upon His servant and
messenger, His beloved and elect, our master, our prophet, and our sire,
Abu al-Qasim Muhammad, may Allah bless him and his pure, immaculate, and
infallible Progeny.
I seek the refuge of Allah from the accursed Satan:
So for their breaking their compact We cursed them and
made their hearts hard; they would pervert the words from their
meanings, and they forgot a portion of what they were reminded of.
(5:13) We stated earlier that the history of an event of
such greatness as Karbala' has been subject to distortion at our hands
both in respect of its external details as well as its meaning. By
distortion of outward form we mean the accretions that we have piled up on
the corpus of its history which have obscured its bright and luminous
visage and disfigured its beautiful countenance. We cited some instances
in this regard.
Distortions of Meaning:
Regrettably this historic event has also been distorted in respect of
its meaning, and corruption of meaning is much more dangerous than
corruption of external detail. That which has made this great event
ineffectual for us is the corruption of meaning, not that of external
detail. That is, the evil effect of distortions in meaning is greater than
those pertaining to external details.
What is meant by distortion of meaning? Without adding a single word or
deleting a single word, it is possible to misinterpret a statement in such
a manner that it gives a meaning exactly contrary to its real meaning. I
will give just one small example to illustrate this point. At the time
that the early Muslims were building the Mosque of Madinah, 'Ammar Yasir
was working hard, making an extraordinary amount of sincere effort. Among
the reports that are of a definite authenticity is the one that the Noble
Messenger (S) said to him at the time:
'Ammar, you will be killed by the rebellious faction.[1]
The term 'rebellious faction' (al-fi'at al-baghiyah) is
Qur'anic, and it occurs in a verse which states that if two faction of
Muslims fight one another and one of them is rebellious, one must take a
stand against the rebellious faction and join on the side of the other
faction so that the matters are set right.
If two factions of believers fight, make peace between
them, but if one of them rebels against the other, fight the one which
is rebellious until it returns to God's command.
(49:9) The statement, made by the Noble Messenger
concerning 'Ammar, gave him great prestige. Accordingly, during the Battle
of Siffin, when 'Ammar fought on the side of Imam 'Ali ('a), Ammar's
presence in 'Ali's troops was considered a strong point in 'Ali's favour.
There were people with a weak faith who, until 'Ammar had not been killed,
were not convinced that it was right for them to fight on Ali's side and
lawful to kill Mu'awiyah and his soldiers.
But on the day that 'Ammar was killed at the hands of Mu'awiyah's
soldiers, suddenly a cry rose from all sides that the Prophet's prophesy
had come true. The best evidence of the unrighteousness of Mu'awiyah and
his companions was that they were the killers of 'Ammar and the Prophet
had informed years ago through his statement that 'Ammar will be killed by
a rebellious faction.[2]
On this day it became quite clear that the Mu'awiyah's troops
represented the rebellious faction, that is, one which was unjust and
unrighteous, and that justice lay on the side of 'Ali's army. Hence in
accordance with the express injunction of the Qur'an one had to join the
battle on 'Ali's side and against Mu'awiyah's army. This incident
demoralized Mu'awiyah's troops. Mu'awiyah, who always tried to make a
headway by resorting to cunning and subterfuge, resorted to a
misinterpretation. It was not possible to deny that the Prophet had made
such a statement concerning 'Ammar, because perhaps there were at least
five hundred persons who could bear witness that they had heard this
statement from the Prophet himself or from someone who had heard it from
the Prophet. Accordingly, it was not possible to deny the fact of the
prophesy concerning 'Ammar. The Syrians protested to Mu'awiyah, for it
were they who had killed 'Ammar and the Prophet had said that he would be
killed by a rebellious faction. Mu'awiyah told them, "You are mistaken. It
is true that the Prophet said 'Ammar will be killed by a rebellious
faction and army. But it were not we who killed 'Ammar." They said, "He
was killed by our warriors." "No," he said, " 'Ammar was killed by 'Ali
who brought him here and provided the causes of his death."
'Amr ibn 'As had two sons. One of them was a worldly person like
himself. The other one was a youth who was relatively a man of faith and
he did not agree with his father's ways. His name was 'Abd Allah. 'Abd
Allah was present in a gathering where this sophistry was put into effect.
'Abd Allah said, "What a false argument that it was 'Ali who has killed
'Ammar, as he was among his troops. If that is so, then it was the Prophet
who killed Hamzah, the Doyen of the Martyrs, as Hamzah was killed due to
his presence in the Prophet's troops." This enraged Mu'awiyah and he said
to 'Amr ibn As, "Why don't you check this ill-mannered son of yours!" This
is what is called distortion of meaning.
How is the meaning of events and facts distorted?
Historical events and facts have on the one hand certain causes behind
them, and, on the other, they are inspired by certain goals and motives.
Misrepresentation of a historical event lies in ascribing to it causes and
motives other than what they have actually been, or in attributing to it
goals and motives other than what they in fact were. For instance, you
visit someone who has recently returned from a pilgrimage to Makkah. The
purpose you have in mind is that it is mustahabb to visit a hajji and so
you go to see him. Someone makes a remark about your motives for the
visit, describing them as an intention to propose your son's marriage with
his daughter under the pretext of visiting a hajji returning from Makkah.
This is how he misrepresents your motive and purpose. This is what
misrepresentation means.
The historic event of Karbala' had certain causes and motives behind
it, as well as certain sublime goals. We Muslims and followers of Husayn
ibn 'Ali have misrepresented this event in the same way as Mu'awiyah ibn
Abi Sufyan distorted the meaning of the Prophet's statement concerning
'Ammar.
That is, Imam Husayn ('a) had certain goals and motives for staging his
uprising and we have ascribed to him some other motives and goals.
The Character of a Sacred Movement:
Abu 'Abd Allah ('a) made an uprising that was of unusual greatness and
sanctity. The uprising of Abu 'Abd Allah possessed all the charatertistics
that make an uprising sacred, so much so that it is without a parallel in
the entire history of the world. What are those characteristics?
1. The first condition of a sacred movement is that it should
not have a purpose and end that is personal and pertaining to the
individual but one which is universal, covering the entire humanity and
human species. At times persons make uprisings for personal goals, and
sometimes they may launch a movement for the sake of society, or for the
sake of mankind, for the sake truth, or for the sake of justice, equality
and monotheism, and not for some personal goal. In such cases the struggle
and movement is no longer for a personal cause. One who wages such a
struggle represents all human beings. That is why men whose actions and
movements were not for the sake of personal motives and for the sake of
humanity or for the sake of truth, justice and equality, and for the sake
of tawhid and knowledge of God and for the sake of faith, are honored and
loved by all people. And that is why the Prophet (S) said: "Husayn is from
me and I am from Husayn" [3] We also say,
"Husayn is from us and we from Husayn." Why? Because Imam Husayn, may
Peace be upon him, took a stand 1328 years ago[4] for our sake
and for the sake of all mankind. His uprising was sacred and holy and it
transcended personal goals.
2. The second condition for an uprising to be sacred is that it
should be inspired by a powerful vision and insight. To explain, suppose
there is a society who people are unaware, ignorant, and without
understanding. There appears among them a man of vision and understanding
who understands their ailments and their remedies a hundred time better
than they do. At a time when others fail to understand and see, the man of
vision sees very early and distinctly what other people fail to see at
all. He comes forward and takes a stand. Years pass. Twenty, thirty or
fifty years later the people wake up and find out why he had risen up and
they understand the sacred goals that he had sought to attain whose value
and worth was not visible to their fathers and ancestors twenty, forty or
fifty years ago.
To give an example, the marhum Sayyid Jamal al-Din Asadabadi [Afghani]
launched an Islamic movement about sixty or seventy years ago in the
Muslim countries (his death occurred in 1310 H./1892-93, fourteen years
before the Constitution Movement in Iran). When you read today the history
of this man, you see that he was truly a lone and solitary figure. He knew
the maladies of Muslims and their remedy while the people themselves did
not. He was insulted and ridiculed by the people and they did not support
him. Now after sixty or seventy years when the facts of history have
become clearer we see that he understood things at that time which the
people of Iran, ninety-nine out of a hundred, did not. Read at least two
of the letters written by this great man. One of them was written to the
marhum Ayatullah Mirza Shirazi Buzurg, may God elevate his station. The
other was an open letter to the 'ulama' of Iran and is like a manifesto.
Or read the letters written by him to marhum Hajj Shaykh Muhammad Taqi
Bujnardi at Mashhad, or to a certain eminent scholar of Isfahan or Shiraz.
See how well he understood the problems and how clearly he saw things, how
well he knew the character of colonialism and what effective measures he
took for awakening this ummah (pay no attention to things that are still
said about him by some agents of colonialism, for as the proverb goes,
'this henna has lost its colour'!). His movement was sacred because it was
launched by a man who appeared during a difficult era and who saw the
reality behind the appearances which was invisible to and hardly
understood by his contemporaries.
The movement of Imam Husayn is such a movement. Today we understand
fully the character of Yazid and the implications of his rule. We know
what Mu'awiyah did and what were the schemes of the Umayyads. But the
Muslims of that era, ninety-nine out of a hundred, did not understand
these things, especially due to the absence of the media of the mass
communication media which exist nowadays. The people of Madinah did not
understand the situation that existed. They came to know the character of
Yazid and the implications of his caliphate when Husayn ibn 'Ali was
killed. They were shocked and they asked themselves why he had been
killed. They sent a delegation to Syria consisting of some eminent persons
of Madinah and led by a man named 'Abd Allah ibn Hanzalah, known as
"Ghasil al-Mala'ikah." Making the journey from Madinah to Syria when they
reached Yazid's court, after staying there for some time they came to know
the realities of the situation. On returning to Madinah they were asked as
to what they had seen. They said, "All that we can tell you is that so
long as we were in Damascus we were afraid lest stones should rain on our
heads from the heaven." They told them they had seen a caliph who drank
wine openly, gambled, and played with hounds and monkeys and had
incestuous relations with women of his family.
Abd Allah ibn Hanzalah had eight sons. He said to his townsmen,
"Whether you rise up or not, I will make an uprising even if I have to do
it alone with my sons." He fulfilled his words. In the uprising of Harrah
against Yazid he sent forth his sons to fight. They were martyred and he
himself was martyred after them. 'Abd Allah ibn Hanzalah was not aware of
the conditions two or three years earlier when Imam Husayn departed from
Madinah. Where was he at the time when Husyan, as he prepared to leave
Madinah, was saying:
One should bid farewell to Islam when the ummah is
afflicted with such a ruler as Yazid? Husayn ibn 'Ali
had to be killed and the Muslim world had to receive a shock so that the
likes of 'Abd Allah ibn Hanzalah, the Ghasil al-Mala'ikah, and hundreds of
people like him in Madinah, Kufah, and other places may open their eyes
and say that Husayn ('a) was right in saying what he said.
3. The third characteristic of a sacred movement is its solitary
and exclusive character; that is, it is like a flash of lightening in
total darkness, a cry in the wilderness of silence, and a movement in the
sea of absolute stillness. In conditions of total repression when the
people cannot speak out, when there is total darkness, despair, absence of
hope, and absolute silence and stillness, there appears suddenly a man and
he breaks the magic silence and stillness. He makes a movement and it is
like a flash of light in the midst of surrounding darkness. It is then
that others begin to stirr and gradually start moving behind him and
following him. Wasn't the uprising of Husayn such a movement? Yes, it was.
Such was the movement that Imam Husayn launched. But what were his
objectives in launching it? Why were the Infallible Imams so insistent
that the tradition of mourning Husayn ibn 'Ali ('a) should always remain
alive? There is no need for us to look far for the reasons. Husayn ibn
'Ali himself has declared the reasons behind his movement:
Indeed, I have not risen up to do mischief, neither as an
adventurer, nor to cause corruption and tyranny. I have risen up solely
to seek the reform of the Ummah of my grandfather
(s). He says in most explicit terms: "Our society has
become corrupt and the ummah of my Grandfather has become degenerate. I
have risen up to carry out reform and I am a reformer."
I want to command what is good and stop what is wrong, and
(in this) I follow the conduct of my grandfather and my father, 'Ali ibn
Abi Talib.
Don't you see that righteousness is not acted upon and vice
goes unforbidden. In such a situation, the man of faith yearns for the
meeting with his Lord ... I see death as nothing but felicity and life
under oppressors as nothing but disgrace. Imam Husayn
('a) says, "I have risen up to carry out amr bil ma'ruf, to revive
the faith, and to struggle against corruption. My movement is one which is
Islamic and aimed at reform."
But what we say is something else. We have made two skillful
manipulations which are very amazing (I don't know whether I should say
skillful or ignorant). In one of these cases, we said that Husayn ibn 'Ali
rose in order to be killed for the sake of the atonement of the sins of
the ummah. Now if someone were to ask us as to the source of this notion,
whether it was Imam Husayn ('a) himself who said such a thing or if it was
the Prophet or some Imam, we cannot cite any authority. But still we keep
on insisting that Imam Husayn got killed so that our sins are atoned. I
don't know whether we have borrowed this notion from Christianity. Muslims
have unwittingly adopted many ideas from Christendom which are contrary to
Islam.
One of the doctrines of Christianity is the notion of the crucifixion
of Christ as a sacrifice made for the sake of the atonement of man's sins.
Jesus is called 'the Sacrifice,' and it is an essential part of the
Christian doctrine that Jesus went upon the cross for atoning the sins of
his people. They have made Jesus carry the burden of their sins! However,
we did not suspect that this notion belongs to Christianity and that it is
consistent neither with the spirit of Islam nor with the statements of
Husayn ('a) himself. By God, it is a calumny if we ascribe such a thing to
Aba 'Abd Allah ('a)! By God, should one attribute such a notion to Husayn
ibn 'Ali while he is keeping a fast in the month of Ramadan and claim that
Husayn's martyrdom was for the sake of such a purpose and should he
ascribe such a statement to him, his fast would be void for ascribing a
falsehood to the Imam. Abu 'Abd Allah rose to struggle against sin,
whereas we said that he rose in order to be a refuge for sinners!
We claim that Imam Husayn founded an insurance company to guarantee
security to sinners! He has insured us against the consequences of sin in
return for our tears. All that we have to do is to shed tears for him and
in return he guarantees immunity to the sinners. Now one could be whatever
one liked to be, one could be an Ibn Ziyad or 'Umar ibn Sa'd, as if one
'Umar ibn Sa'd, one Sinan ibn Anas, and one Khuli were not enough! Imam
Husayn wanted that the likes of Khuli and 'Umar ibn Sa'd should
proliferate in the world and so he came and announced: 'O people, be as
evil as you can be, for I am your security!"
There is a second misrepresentation involved in interpreting the event
of Karbala'. According to it, Imam Husayn made an uprising and was killed
in order to carry out a special command that was solely addressed to him.
He was told to go and get martyred. So his action does not relate to us
and it is not something which can be followed and emulated: it does not
relate to those precepts of Islam which are general and universal.
See, what a great difference there is between what the Imam declares
and what we say! Imam Husayn cried out that the causes and motives of his
uprising are matters that coincide with the general principles of Islam.
There was no need for a special order. After all special orders are given
in situations where the general prescription is not adequate. Imam Husayn
declared in unequivocal terms that Islam is a religion that does not
permit any believer (he did not say, an Imam) to remain indifferent in the
face of oppression, injustice, perversity and sin. Imam Husayn established
a practical ideology which is the same as the ideology of Islam. Islam had
set forth its principles and Husayn put them into effect. We have divested
this event of its ideological character. When it is shorn of its
ideological character, it is no more capable of being followed, and when
it can not be followed, one cannot make any use of Imam Husayn's teaching
and draw any lesson from the event of Karbala'. We have rendered this
event barren from the viewpoint of being beneficial and useful. Could
there be a worse kind of treachery? This is the reason why I say that the
distortion in the meaning of the event of 'Ashura' is a hundred times more
dangerous than textual corruption.
Why did the Infallible Imams (and there are even traditions from the
Noble Messenger in this regard) want this movement to be kept alive? that
it should not be consigned to oblivion?-that the people should mourn Imam
Husayn? What was the objective that led them to issue this command? We
have distorted that objective, declaring that their only goal was that the
mourning ceremonies are to be held for the sake of offering consolation to
Hadrat Zahra', may Peace be upon her. Although she is with her great son
in Paradise, we imagine that she is continually restless and full of
sorrow, so she should be given consolation by the mourning of such
worthless people as us! Can there be a greater insult of Hadrat Zahra'
than this notion?
Some others say that Imam Husayn was murdered without any guilt at
Karbala' at the hands of a group of aggressors and this was a tragedy. It
is true that Imam Husayn was killed without any guilt. But is this all
there is to the event that an innocent person was murdered by a group of
aggressors!? Every day a thousand innocent persons are killed and wiped
out throughout the world by criminals, and this is of course a tragic
fact. But does this kind of death have such a value that one should go on
expressing sorrow over it and continue to mourn it year after year, for
years, or rather for centuries, for ten and twenty centuries, expressing
sorrow and regretting that Husayn ibn 'Ali was killed without guilt and
that his innocent blood was shed for no reason by aggressors? But who can
dare say that Husayn ibn 'Ali's death was in vain and his blood was shed
futilely? If one can find anyone in the whole world who did not allow one
drop of his blood to be wasted, that is Husayn ibn 'Ali. If you can find
anyone in the whole world who did not let one particle of his personality
to go waste it is Husayn ibn 'Ali. He set such a high value for every
single drop of his blood that it is indescribable! If you take into
account the amount of wealth that has been and is spent for his sake and
will continue to be spent until the day of Judgment, you will see that
humanity has spent billions and trillions for every drop of his blood. Can
anyone say that a man wasted his life whose death, for ever and ever,
sends out tremors through the castles of the oppressors?-that his blood
went in vain? Is his martyrdom to be saddening for us because Husayn ibn
'Ali was killed in vain? It is we, wretched and ignorant people that we
are, I and you, whose lives go waste. We should grieve for ourselves! You
insult Husayn ibn Ali when you say that his life was lost in vain! Husayn
ibn 'Ali is someone about whom it is said.
Indeed you have a station with God which cannot be attained
except through martyrdom. Did Husayn ibn 'Ali desire to
die a vain death when he aspired for martyrdom?
The Imams have exhorted us to keep alive the tradition of mourning over
Husayn ibn Ali because his goal was a sacred goal. Husayn ibn 'Ali
established a school, and they wanted his school to remain alive and
flourish.
You will not find a practical school of thought in the whole world that
may be likened to that of Husayn ibn 'Ali ('a). If you can find a single
another example of Husayn ibn 'Ali, you may ask why we should revive his
memory every year. If you can find another example of that which was
manifested in Husayn ibn 'Ali during the event of 'Ashura', in those
ordeals and taxing conditions, of the meaning of twahid, of faith, of the
knowledge of God, of perfection, convinced faith in the other world, of
resignation and submission, of fortitude and manliness, of self
contentment, of steadiness and steadfastness, of honor and dignity, of the
love and quest for freedom, of concern for mankind, of the passion to
serve humanity-if you can find a single example in the whole world, then
you may question the need to refresh his memory every year. But he is
unique and without a parallel.
Keeping alive the memory of his name and his movement is for the
purpose that our spirits may be illumined by the light of the spirit of
Husayn ibn 'Ali ('a).
If a tear that we shed for him should signify a harmony between our
souls and his spirit, it represent a brief flight that our spirit makes
along with Husayn's spirit. Should it create within us a little glow of
his valor, a particle of his free nature, a particle of his faith, a
particle of his piety, and a small spark of his tawhid, such a tear has an
infinite value. They have said that it has the worth an entire world even
if it is so small as the 'wing of a gnat.' Believe it! But that is nor a
tear shed for a pointless death, but a tear for the greatness of Husayn
and his great spirit, a tear that signifies harmony with Husayn ibn 'Ali
and of movement in his steps. Yes, such a tear has an incalculable worth
even if it is so small as a gnat's wing.
They wanted this practical ideology to remain for ever before the
people's view, to witness that the Prophet's family are a proof and
testimony of the truthfulness of the Prophet himself. If it is said that a
certain Muslim warrior displayed great faith and valor in such and such a
battle against Iran or Byzantine, for instance, it is not so much of an
evidence of the Prophet's truthfulness as when it is said that the
Prophet's son did such and such an act. A leader's family is always
subject to more suspicion and doubt than any of his followers. But when we
observe the family of the Prophet at the highest summit of faith and
sincerity, that is the best evidence of the Prophet's truthfulness. No one
was so close to the Prophet (S) like 'Ali ('a). He grew up by the
Prophet's side. No one had a faith in the Prophet like him or was more
dedicated to the Prophet. This is the first evidence of the Prophet's
truthfulness. Husayn is the Prophet's son. When he manifests his faith in
the Prophet's teaching it is a manifestation of the Prophet himself.
Things which are always declared by human beings verbally but are rarely
observed in practice are clearly visible in Husayn's being. What makes a
human being so undefeatable? Subhan Allah! See the heights to which a
human being can rise! See how undefeatable is the spirit of the human
being whose body bears wounds from head to foot, his young sons have been
cut to pieces before his very eyes, he is suffering from extreme thirst
and when he looks up at the sky it appears dark in his eyes, he sees that
the members of his family will be taken captive, he has lost all that he
had and all that has remained for him is his own undefeatable
spirit.
Show me such a spectacle of human greatness in an event other than
Karbala' and I will celebrate its memory instead of Karbala! Accordingly,
we should keep alive the memory of such an event, of a group of
seventy-two persons who defeated the spirit of a host of thirty thousand.
How did they inflict such a defeat? Firstly, though a minority facing
certain death, not a single one of them pined the enemy's side. Yet some
men from the thirty thousand pined their ranks, including one of their
commanders, Hurr ibn Yazid Riyahi and another thirty. This indicates the
moral victory of this group and the defeat of the other one. 'Umar ibn
Sa'd took certain measures in Karbala' which disclose his moral defeat. In
Karbala' 'Umar ibn Sa'd's men refrained from a man-to-man encounter during
the battle. At first they complied in accordance with the custom prevalent
in those days, before launching an all-out attack and shooting arrows. The
man-to-man fight was a kind of contest in which one man from one side
fought a man from the other. After several men were killed in these
encounters with the companions of Imam Husayn, strengthening their morale,
'Umar ibn Sa'd ordered his men to refrain from man-to-man fights.
When did Abu 'Abd Allah come to the field for the final battle?
Imagine, it is afternoon on the day of 'Ashura'. Until this time there
were still several of his companions who offered the prayers with him. He
has been very busy from the morning until the afternoon of that day as it
was he, most of the time, who has brought the bodies of his companions
from the battlefield and placed them in the tent of the martyrs. He
himself has rushed to the side of his companions in their last moments and
it is he himself who consoles and reassures his family members. Apart from
all this, there is his personal grief for the dear ones that he has lost.
He is the last of all to come into the field of battle. They imagine that
it would be a simple task to deal with Husayn in such a circumstance. But
he does not give a moment's reprieve to any contestant that dares to come
forward to combat him. 'Umar ibn Sa'd then cries out: "Woe to you! Do you
know whom you are fighting? This is the son of the most fatal of Arab
warriors. He is the son of 'Ali ibn Abi Talib. By God, his father's soul
is in his body. Don't fight him singly!"
Wasn't this an indication of defeat? Thirty thousand men combat against
a single man, lonely and solitary, who has suffered all those sorrows and
ordeals., and who has been through the arduous and grueling labors of the
day, thirsty and hungry, and he defeats them and makes them flee.
They faced a defeat not only against the sword of Abu 'Abd Allah but
also his logic and eloquence. Abu 'Abd Allah delivered two or three
sermons on the day of 'Ashura' before the commencement of his battle.
These sermons are truly amazing. Those who practice the act of oration
know that it is not possible for someone in an ordinary state to say
things which are sublime or at the height of sublimity. One's spirit must
be in a state of fervour, especially if the oration is of an elegiac
character. It is only with a heart burning with feeling that one can
deliver a good elegy. If one wants to compose a ghazal, he must be
strongly moved with the passion of love so as to say a good ghazal. If one
wishes to compose epic poetry, he must be moved with warlike
emotions.
When Abu 'Abd Allah began his address, especially the sermon that he
made on the day of 'Ashura', which is one of the most elaborate of his
sermons, 'Umar ibn Sa'd was alarmed by the effect it might have on his
men's morale. The Imam alighted from his horse and mounted a camel in
order to make the sermon, as he wanted to make his voice heard better from
a higher point.[5]
Words, which are truly reminiscent of the sermons of 'Ali ('a). Aside
from the sermons of 'Ali we won't find a more powerful and vibrant sermon
in the whole world. He spoke three times. 'Umar ibn Sa'd was frightened
lest Husayn's sermon should change the minds of his troops. The second
time when Abu 'Abd Allah started to address them, due to the defeatist
morale of the enemy, Umar ibn Sad ordered his men to hoot and beat their
mouth with their hands so that no one could hear Husayn. Is that not an
evidence of their defeat and the sign of Husyan's victory?
If a man has faith in God, in tawhid, if he has a link with God
and faith in the other world, single-handedly he can inflict a moral
defeat on a host of twenty and thirty thousand. Is this not a lesson for
us? Where can you find another example of it? Who else can you find in the
whole world who could utter two sentences of that sermon in conditions in
which Husayn ibn 'All spoke, or for that matter two sentences like the
sermon of Zaynab ('a) at the city gates of Kufah? If our Imams have told
us to revive this mourning every year and to keep it alive for ever it is
for the purpose that we may understand these points, that we may realize
the greatness of Husayn, so that if we shed tears for him it is out of
understanding.
Our knowledge of Husayn elevates us. It makes us human beings, free
men, followers of truth and justice, and real Muslims. The school of
Husayn is a man-making school, not a school that produces sinners. Husayn
is the bastion of righteous conduct, not a citadel for sin and
sinfulness.
The historians report that at daybreak on the day of 'Ashura', after
offering the prayer with his companions, he turned to them and said,
"Companions, get prepared. Death is nothing but a bridge that takes you
across this world into another, from a world that is very coarse, hard and
base to one that is sublime, noble and gentle." These were his words. But
now observe his conduct. The reports do not come from Husayn ibn 'All but
from those who have chronicled the events. The episode has been reported
even by Hilal ibn Nafi', who was accompanying 'Umar ibn Sa'd as his
chronicler. He says, al Husayn ibn 'Ali was astonishing to me. As the time
of his martyrdom drew nearer and his ordeals became severer, his
countenance appeared to be more refreshed and ruddier, like someone about
to meet his beloved."
Even in the last moments when that accursed wretch approached him to
sever his sacred head, he says, "When I approached Husayn ibn 'Ali and my
eyes fell on him, the light and burnish of his face so gripped me that I
forgot my intention to kill him:
The light of his face and its awe-inspiring beauty so
gripped me that I was distracted from the thought of killing
him. They write that Abu Abd Allah had chosen a point
for his combat which was nearer the tents of the womenfolk. That was for
two reasons. Firstly, he knew the unmanly and inhuman character of the
enemies. They lacked even the sense of honor to spare the tents of their
attacks as it was he whom they were fighting. Therefore he wanted to
restrain them from attacking his camp so long as he was alive and had the
strength to stop them. He would make a frontal attack and they would flee.
But he would not pursue them but return to guard the tents of his
womenfolk from any assault. Secondly, so long as he was alive he wanted
the members of his family to know that he was alive. Accordingly, he had
chosen a point from where his voice could be heard by them. Whenever he
returned after making an attack he would stand at that point and cry
out:
There is no power or strength save that which derives from
God, the Exalted and the Almighty. His cries would
reassure the women who knew that the Imam was still alive. The Imam had
told them not to come out of the tents as long as he was alive (Don't
believe those who say that the women kept running out every now and then.
Never. The Imam had ordered them to remain in the tents as long as he was
alive). He had told them that they must not make any untoward utterance
which might reduce their reward with God. He had told them that they would
find deliverance and that their ultimate end would be a good one, that God
will punish their enemies. They did not have the Imam's permission to come
out of their tents, and they did not. Husayn ibn Ali's sense of manly
honor and their own sense of feminine honor did not permit them to come
out. Accordingly, when they heard the Imam utter 'La hawl wala quwatta
illa billahil aliyyil azim', they felt reassured. And as the Imam had
come back to them once or twice after bidding them farewell, they still
expected the Imam to return.
In those days they used to train Arabic horses for the battlefield, as
the horse is an animal that can be trained. Such a horse would show a
particular reaction when its master were killed. The members of Abu 'Abd
Allah's household were in the tents awaiting the Imam, that he might
return to them once again and they might see his angelic visage one again.
Suddenly they heard the sound of the neighing of the Imam's horse. They
rushed to the tent's door imagining that the Imam had come. But they saw
the horse without its rider with its saddle overturned. It was then that
the children and the women raised the cries of Wa Husaynah! and
Wa Muhammada! They surrounded the horse and each of them
began to mourn for him. Mourning is part of human nature. When a person
wants to express his grief he mournfully addresses the heaven, or an
animal, or some person. The Imam had told them that they must not weep or
lament so long as he was alive. But of course they could mourn him when he
died. And so in that state they began their lamentations.
They write that Husayn ibn 'Ali had a daughter named Sukaynah, whom he
loved greatly. Later she grew up to become a learned lady of letters much
revered and respected by all scholars and literary men. This child was
very dear to Abu 'Abd Allah ('a) and she too had an unusual love for her
father. They write that this child uttered some sentences in the way of
mourning which are very heartrending. In a mournful tone she addressed the
horse and said:
O my father's stallion, my father was thirsty when he went
out. Did they give him water or was he killed
thirsty?' That was at the time when Abu 'Abd Allah lay
fallen on the ground.
Notes to part 3:
[1] al Halabi,
Sirah v2, p77
[2]
Musnad, Ahmad b. Hanbal, v2, p199
[3] al Mufid,
al Irshad, p249, Alam al Wara, p216, Ibn Shahr Ashub, al
Manaqib, v4, p71, Hilyat al abrar, v1, p560, Kashf al
Ghummah, v2 pp10,61, Mulhaqt Ihqaq al haqq, v11, pp
256-279
[4] This sermon
was delivered in the year 1389 H, corresponding to Farvardin 1348
(March-April 1969)
[5] al Masudi,
Muruj al Dhahab, v3, p69
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