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The
Termination of the Caliphate of 'Ali Amir al-mu'minin and His Method of Rule


The caliphate of Ali began toward the end of the year 35/656 and lasted about
four years and nine months. During his period as caliph Ali followed the ways of
the Holy Prophet and brought conditions back to their original state. He forced
the resignation of all the incompetent political elements who had a hand in
directing affairs and began in reality a major transformation of a
"revolutionary" nature which caused him innumerable difficulties.


On his first day as caliph, in an address to the people, Ali said, "O
People, be aware that the difficulties which you faced during the apostolic
period of the Prophet of God have come upon you once again and seized you. Your
ranks must be turned completely around so that the people of virtue who have
fallen behind should come forward and those who had come to the fore without
being worthy should fall behind. There is both truth (haqq) and falsehood (batil).
Each has its followers; but a person should follow the truth. If falsehood be
prevalent it is not something new, and if the truth is rare and hard to come by,
sometimes even that which is rare wins the day so that there is hope of advance.
Of course it does not occur often that something which has turned away from man
should return to him."


Ali continued his radically different type of government based more on
righteousness than political efficacy but, as is necessary in the case of every
movement of this kind, elements of the opposition whose interests were
endangered began to display their displeasure and resisted his rule. Basing
their actions on the claim that they wanted to revenge the death of Uthman, they
instigated bloody wars which continued throughout almost all the time that Ali
was caliph. From the Shi'ite point of view those who caused these civil wars had
no end in mind other than their own personal interest. The wish to revenge the
blood of the third caliph was no more than an excuse to fool the crowd. There
was no question of a misunderstanding.


After the death of the Holy Prophet, a small minority, following Ali, refused
to pay allegiance. At the head of the minority there were Salman, Abu Dharr,
Miqdad, and Ammar. At the beginning of the caliphate of Ali also a sizable
minority in disagreement refused to pay allegiance. Among the most persistent
opponents were Sa'id ibn 'Ass, Walid ibn 'Uqbah, Marwan ibn Hakam, 'Amr ibn
'Ass, Busr ibn Artat, Samurah ibn Jundab, and Mughirah ibn Shu'bah.



The study of the biography of these two groups, and meditation upon the acts
they have performed and stories recounted of them in history books, reveal fully
their religious personality and aim. The first group were among the elite of the
companions of the Holy Prophet and among the ascetics, devout worshipers and
selfless devotees of Islam who struggled on the path of Islamic freedom. They
were especially loved by the Prophet. The Prophet said, "God has informed
me that He loves four men and that I should love them also." They asked
about their names. He mentioned Ali and then the names of Abu Dharr, Salman and
Miqdad. (Sunan of Ibn Majah, Cairo, 1372, vol. I, p. 66.) 'A'ishah has
recounted that the Prophet of God said, "If two alternatives are placed
before Ammar, he will definitely choose that which is more true and right."
(Ibn Majah, vol. I, p. 66.) The Prophet said, "There is no one
between heaven and earth more truthful than Abu Dharr." (Ibn Majah, vol.
I, p. 68.) There is no record of a single forbidden act committed by these men
during their lifetime. They never spilled any blood unjustly, did not commit
aggression against anyone, did not steal anyone's property, never sought to
corrupt and misguide people.


History is, however, full of accounts of unworthy acts committed by some of
the second group. The various acts committed by some of these men in opposition
to explicit Islamic teachings are beyond reckoning. These acts cannot be excused
in any manner except the way that is followed by certain groups among the Sunnis
who say that God was satisfied with them and therefore they were free to perform
whatever act they wished, and that they would not be punished for violating the
injunctions and regulations existing in the Holy Book and the Sunnah.


The first war in the caliphate of Ali, which is called the "Battle of
the Camel," was caused by the unfortunate class differences created during
the period of rule of the second caliph as a result of the new socioeconomic
forces which caused an uneven distribution of the public treasury among members
of the community. When chosen to the caliphate, Ali divided the treasury evenly
as had been the method of the Holy Prophet, but this manner of dividing the
wealth upset Talhah and Zubayr greatly. They began to show signs of disobedience
and left Medina for Mecca with the alleged aim of making the pilgrimage. They
persuaded "the mother of the Faithful" (umm al-mu'minin),
A'ishah, who was not friendly with Ali, to join them and in the name of wanting
to revenge the death of the third caliph they began the bloody Battle of the
Camel. This was done despite the fact that this same Talhah and Zubayr were in
Medina when the third caliph was besieged and killed but did nothing to defend
him. Furthermore, after his death they were the first to pay allegiance to Ali
on behalf of the immigrants (muhajirun) as well as on their own. Also,
the "mother of the Faithful," A'ishah, did not show any opposition to
those who had killed the third caliph at the moment when she received the news
of his death. It must be remembered that the main investigators of the
disturbances that led to the death of the third caliph were those companions who
wrote letters from Medina to people near and far inviting them to rebel against
the caliph, a fact which is repeated in many early Muslim histories.



As for the second war, called the Battle of Siffin, which lasted for a year and
a half, its cause was the covetousness of Mu'awiyah for the caliphate which for
him was a worldly political instrument rather than a religious institution. But
as an excuse he made the revenge of the blood of the third caliph the main issue
and began a war in which more than a hundred thousand people perished without
reason. Naturally, in these wars Mu'awiyah was the aggressor rather than the
defender, for the protest to revenge someone's blood can never occur in the form
of defense. The pretext of this war was blood revenge. During the last days of
his life, the third caliph, in order to quell the uprising against him, asked
Mu'awiyah for help, but the army of Mu'awiyah which set out from Damascus to
Medina purposely waited on the road until the caliph was killed. Then he
returned to Damascus to begin an uprising to revenge the caliph's death. After
the death of Ali and his gaining the caliphate himself, Mu'awiyah forgot the
question of revenging the blood of the third caliph and did not pursue the
matter further.


After Siffin there occurred the battle of Nahrawan in which a number people,
among whom there could be found some of the companions, rebelled against Ali,
possibly at the instigation of Mu'awiyah. These people were causing rebellion
throughout the lands of Islam, killing the Muslims and especially the followers
of Ali. They even attacked pregnant women and killed their babies. Ali put down
this uprising as well, but a short while later was himself killed in the mosque
of Kufa by one of the members of this group who came to be known as the Khawarij.


The opponents of Ali claim that he was a courageous man but did not possess
political acumen. They claim that at the beginning of his caliphate he could
have temporarily made peace with his opponents. He could have approached them
through peace and friendship, thus courting their satisfaction and approval. In
this way he could have strengthened his caliphate and only then turned to their
extirpation and destruction. What people who hold this view forgot is that the
movement of Ali was not based on political opportunism. It was a radical and
revolutionary religious movement (in the true sense of revolution as a spiritual
movement to reestablish the real order of things and not in its current
political and social sense); therefore it could not have been accomplished
through compromise or flattery and forgery. A similar situation can be seen
during the apostleship of the Holy Prophet. The infidels and polytheists
proposed peace to him many times and swore that if he were to abstain from
protesting against their gods they would not interfere with his religious
mission. But the Prophet did not accept such a proposal, although he could in
those days of difficulty have made peace and used flattery to fortify his own
position, and then have risen against his enemies. In fact, the Islamic message
never allows a right and just cause, nor a falsehood to be rejected and
disproven through another falsehood. There are many Quranic verses concerning
this matter.




The
Benefit which the Shi'ah Derived from the

Caliphate of Ali


During the four years and nine months of his caliphate, Ali was not able to
eliminate the disturbed conditions which were prevailing throughout the Islamic
world, but he was successful in three fundamental ways:


1. As a result of his just and upright manner of living he revealed once
again the beauty and attractiveness of the way of life of the Holy Prophet,
especially to the younger generation. In contrast to the imperial grandeur of
Mu'awiyah, he lived in simplicity and poverty like the poorest of people. He
never favored his friends or relatives and family above others, nor did he ever
prefer wealth to poverty or brute force to weakness.


2. Despite the cumbersome and strenuous difficulties which absorbed his time,
he left behind among the Islamic community a valuable treasury of the truly
divine sciences and Islamic intellectual disciplines. Nearly eleven thousand of
his proverbs and short sayings on different intellectual, religious and social
subjects have been recorded. In his talks and speeches he expounded the most
sublime Islamic sciences in a most elegant and flowing manner. He established
Arabic grammar and laid the basis for Arabic literature.


He was the first in Islam to delve directly into the questions of metaphysics
(falsafah-i ilahi) in a manner combining intellectual rigor and logical
demonstration. He discussed problems which had never appeared before in the same
way among the metaphysicians of the world. Moreover, he was so devoted to
metaphysics and gnosis that even in the heat of battle he would carry out
intellectual discourse and discuss metaphysical questions.


3. He trained a large number of religious scholars and Islamic savants, among
whom are found a number of ascetics and gnostics who were the forefathers of the
Sufis, such men as Uways al-Qarani, Kumayl al-Nakha'i, Maytham al-Tammar and
Roshaid al-Hajari. These men have been recognized by the later Sufis as the
founders of gnosis in Islam. Others among his disciples became the first
teachers of jurisprudence, theology, Quranic commentary and recitation.




The
Transfer of the Caliphate to Mu'awiyah and Its Transformation into a Hereditary
Monarchy


After the death of Ali, his son, Hasan ibn Ali, who is recognized by the
Shi'ah as their second Imam, became caliph. This designation occurred in
accordance with Ali's last will and testament and also by the allegiance of the
community to Hasan. But Mu'awiyah did not remain quiet before this event. He
marched with his army toward Iraq, which was then the capital of the caliphate ,
and began to wage war against Hasan.


Through different intrigues and the payment of great sums of money, Mu'awiyah
was able gradually to corrupt the aides and generals of Hasan. Finally he was
able to force Hasan to hand the caliphate over to him so as to avoid bloodshed
and to make peace. Hasan handed the caliphate to Mu'awiyah on the condition that
the caliphate would be returned to him after the death of Mu'awiyah and that no
harm would come to his partisans.


In the year 40/661 Mu'awiyah finally gained control of the caliphate. He then
set out immediately for Iraq and in a speech to the people of that land said:
"I did not fight against you for the sake of the prayers or of fasting.
These acts you can perform yourself. What I wanted to accomplish was to rule
over you and this end I have achieved." He also said, "The agreement I
made with Hasan is null and void. It lies trampled under my feet." With
this declaration Mu'awiyah made known to the people the real character of his
government and revealed the nature of the program he had in mind.


He indicated in his declaration that he would separate religion from politics
and would not give any guarantees concerning religious duties and regulations.
He would spend all his force to preserve and to keep alive his own power,
whatever might be the cost. Obviously a government of such a nature is more of a
sultanate and a monarchy than a caliphate and vicegerency of the Prophet of God
in its traditional Islamic sense. That is why some who were admitted to his
court addressed him as "king." He himself in some private gatherings
interpreted his government as a monarchy, while in public he always introduced
himself as the caliph.


Naturally any monarchy that is based on force carries with it inherently the
principle of inheritance. Mu'awiyah, too, finally realized this fact, and chose
his son, Yazid, who was a heedless young man without the least religious
personality, as the "crown prince" and his successor. This act was to
be the cause of many regrettable events in the future. Mu'awiyah had previously
indicated that he would refuse to permit Hasan ibn Ali to succeed him as caliph
and that he had other thoughts in mind. Therefore he had caused Hasan to be
killed by poisoning, thus preparing the way for his son, Yazid.


In breaking his agreement with Hasan, Mu'awiyah made it clear that he would
never permit the Shi'ah of the Household of the Prophet to live in a peaceful
and secure environment and continue their activity as before, and he carried
into action this very intention. It has been said that he went so far as to
declare that whoever would transmit a hadith in praise of the virtues of the
Household of the Prophet would have no immunity or protection concerning his
life, merchandise and property. At the same time he ordered that whoever could
recite a hadith in praise of the other companions or caliphs would be given
sufficient reward. As a result a noticeable number of hadiths were recorded at
this time praising the companions, some of which are of doubtful authenticity.
He ordered pejorative comments to be made about Ali from the pulpits of mosques
throughout the lands of Islam, while he himself sought to revile Ali. This
command continued to be more or less in effect until the caliphate of Umar ibn
'Abd al-'Aziz, when it was discontinued. With the help of his agents and
lieutenants, Mu'awiyah caused elite and the most outstanding among the partisans
of Ali to be put to death and the heads of some of them to be carried on lances
throughout different cities. The majority of Shi'ites were forced to disown and
even curse Ali and to express their disdain for him. If they refused, they were
put to death.




The
Bleakest Days of Shi'ism


The most difficult period for Shi'ism was the twenty-year rule of Mu'awiyah,
during which the Shi'ites had no protection and most of them were considered as
marked characters, under suspicion and hunted down by the state. Two of the
leaders of Shi'ism who lived at this time, Imams Hasan and Husayn, did not
possess any means whatsoever to change the negative and oppressive circumstances
in which they lived. Husayn, the third Imam of Shi'ism, had no possibility of
freeing the Shi'ites from persecution in the ten years he was Imam during
Mu'awiyah's caliphate, and when he rebelled during the caliphate of Yazid he was
massacred along with all his aides and children.


Certain people in the Sunni world explain as pardonable the arbitrary, unjust
and irresponsible actions carried out at this time by Mu'awiyah and his aides
and lieutenants, some of whom were like Mu'awiyah himself, among the companions.
This group reasons that according to certain hadiths of the Holy Prophet all the
companions could practice ijtihad, that they were excused by God for the sins
they committed, and that God was satisfied with them and forgave them whatever
wrong they might have performed. The Shi'ites, however, do not accept this
argument for two reasons:


1. It is not conceivable that a leader of human society like the Prophet
should rise in order to revivify truth, justice and freedom and to persuade a
group of people to accept his beliefs - a group all of whose members had
sacrificed their very existence in order to accomplish this sacred end - and
then as soon as this end is accomplished give his aides and companions complete
freedom to do with these sacred laws as they will. It is not possible to believe
that the Holy Prophet would have forgiven the companions for whatever wrong
action they might have performed. Such indifference to the type of action
performed by them would have only destroyed the structure which the Holy Prophet
had built with the same means that he had used to construct it.


2. Those sayings which depict the companions as inviolable and pardoned in
advance for every act they might perform, even one unlawful or inadmissible, are
most likely apocryphal ; the authenticity of many of them has not been fully
established by traditional methods. Moreover, it is known historically that the
companions did not deal with one another as if they were inviolable and pardoned
for all their sins and wrongdoings. Therefore, even judging by the way the
companions acted and dealt with each other, it can be concluded that such
sayings cannot be literally true in the way some have understood them. If they
do contain an aspect of the truth it is in indicating the legal inviolability of
the companions and the sanctification which they enjoyed generally as a group
because of their proximity to the Holy Prophet. The expression of God's
satisfaction with the companions in the Holy Quran, because of the services they
had rendered in obeying His Command, refers to their past actions, and to God's
satisfaction with them in the past, not to whatever action each one of them
might perform in the future.




The
Establishment of Umayyad Rule


In the year 60/680 Mu'awiyah died and his son Yazid became caliph, as the
result of the allegiance which his father had obtained for him from the powerful
political and military leaders of the community. From the testimony of
historical documents it can be seen clearly that Yazid had no religious
character at all and that even during the lifetime of his father he was
oblivious to the principles and regulations of Islam. At that time his only
interest was debauchery and frivolity. During his three years of caliphate he
was the cause of calamities that had no precedent in the history of Islam,
despite all the strife that had occurred before him.


During the first year of Yazid's rule Imam Husayn, the grandson of the Holy
Prophet, was massacred in the most atrocious manner along with his children,
relatives, and friends. Yazid even had some of the women and children of the
Household of the Prophet killed and their heads displayed in different cities.
During the second year of his rule, he ordered a general massacre of Medina and
for three days gave his soldiers freedom to kill, loot, and take the women of
the city. During the third year he had the sacred Ka'bah destroyed and burned.


Following Yazid, the family of Marwan gained possession of the caliphate,
according to details that are recorded in the history books. The rule of this
eleven-member group, which lasted for nearly seventy years, was successful
politically but from the point of view of purely religious values it fell short
of Islamic ideals and practices. Islamic society was dominated by the Arab
element alone and non-Arabs were subordinated to the Arabs. In fact a strong
Arab empire was created which gave itself the name of an Islamic caliphate.
During this period some of the caliphs were indifferent to religious sentiments
to the extent that one of them - who was the "vicegerent of the Holy
Prophet" and was regarded as the protector of religion - decided without
showing any respect for Islamic practices and the feelings of Muslims to
construct a room above the Ka'bah so that he could have a place to enjoy and
amuse himself during the annual pilgrimage. It is even recounted of one of these
caliphs that he made the Holy Quran a target for his arrow and in a poem
composed to the Quran said: "On the Day of Judgment when you appear before
God tell Him 'the caliph tore me.'"


Naturally the Shi'ites, whose basic differences with the Sunnis were in the
two questions of the Islamic caliphate and religious authority, were passing
through bitter and difficult days in this dark period. Yet in spite of the
unjust and irresponsible ways of the governments of the time the asceticism and
purity of the leaders of the Household of the Prophet made the Shi'ites each day
ever more determined to hold on to their beliefs. Of particular importance was
the tragic death of Husayn, the third Imam, which played a major role in the
spread of Shi'ism, especially in regions away from the center of the caliphate,
such as Iraq, the Yemen, and Persia. This can be seen through the fact that
during the period of the fifth Imam, before the end of the first Islamic
century, and less than forty years after the death of Husayn, the Shi'ites took
advantage of the internal differences and weaknesses in the Umayyad government
and began to organize themselves, flocking to the side of the fifth Imam. People
came from all Islamic countries like a flood to his door to collect hadith and
to learn the Islamic sciences. The first century had not yet ended when a few of
the leaders who were influential in the government established the city of Qum
in Persia and made it a Shi'ite settlement. But even then the Shi'ah continued
to live for the most part in hiding and followed their religious life secretly
without external manifestations.


Several times the descendants of the Prophet (who are called in Persian sadat-i
'alawi) rebelled against the injustice of the government, but each time they
were defeated and usually lost their lives. The severe and unscrupulous
government of the time did not overlook any means of crushing them. The body of
Zayd, the leader of Zayd Shi'ism, was dug out of the grave and hanged; then
after remaining on the gallows for three years it was brought down and burned,
its ashes being thrown to the wind. The Shi'ites believe that the fourth and
fifth Imams were poisoned by the Umayyads as the second and third Imams had been
killed by them before.


The calamities brought about by the Umayyads were so open and unveiled that
the majority of the Sunnis, although they believed generally that it was their
duty to obey the caliphs, felt the pangs of their religious conscience and were
forced to divide the caliphs into two groups. They came to distinguish between
the "rightly guided caliphs" (khulafa rashidun) who are the
first four caliphs after the death of the Holy Prophet (Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman,
Ali), and the others who began with Mu'awiyah and who did not possess by any
means the religious virtues of the rightly guided caliphs.


The Umayyads caused so much public hatred as a result of their injustice and
heedlessness during their rule that after the definitive defeat and death of the
last Umayyad caliph his two sons and a number of their family encountered great
difficulties in escaping from the capital. No matter where they turned no one
would give them shelter. Finally after much wandering the deserts of Nubia,
Abyssinia, and Bajawah (between Nubia and Abyssinia) during which many of them
died from hunger and thirst, they came to Bab al-Mandab of the Yemen. There they
acquired travel expenses from the people through begging and set out for Mecca
dressed as porters. In Mecca they finally succeeded in disappearing among the
mass of the people.




Shi'ism
During the 2nd/8th Century


During the latter part of the first third of the 2nd/8th century, following a
series of revolutions and bloody wars throughout the Islamic world which were
due to the injustice, repressions, and wrongdoings of the Umayyads, there began
an anti-Umayyad movement in the name of the Household of the Prophet in Khurasan
in Persia. The leader of this movement was the Persian general, Abu Muslim
Marwazi, who rebelled against Umayyad rule and advance his cause step by step
until he was able to overthrow the Umayyad government.


Although this movement originated from a profound Shi'ite background and came
into being more or less with the claim of wanting to avenge the blood of the
Household of the Prophet, and although people were even asked secretly to give
allegiance to a qualified member of the family of the Prophet, it did not rise
directly as a result of the instructions of the Imams. This is witnessed by the
fact that when Abu Muslim offered the caliphate to the sixth Imam in Medina he
rejected it completely saying "You are not one of my men and the time is
not my time."


Finally the Abbasids gained the caliphate in the name of the family of the
Prophet and at the beginning showed some kindness to people in general and to
descendants of the Prophet in particular. In the name of avenging the martyrdom
of the family of the Prophet, they massacred the Umayyads, going to the extent
of opening their graves and burning whatever they found in them. But soon they
began to follow unjust ways of the Umayyads and did not abstain in any way from
injustice and irresponsible action. Abu Hanifah, the founder of one of the four
Sunni schools of law, was imprisoned by al-Mansur and whipped. The sixth Imam
died from poisoning after much torture and pain. The descendants of the Holy
Prophet were sometimes beheaded in groups, buried alive, or even placed within
walls of government buildings under construction.


Harun al-Rashid, the Abbasid caliph, during whose reign the Islamic empire
reached the apogee of its expansion and power, occasionally would look at the
sun and address it in these words: "Shine wherever thou wilt, thou shalt
never be able to leave my kingdom." On the other hand his armies were
advancing in the East and West, on the other hand a few steps from the palace of
the caliph, and without his knowledge, officials had decided on their own to
collect tolls from people who wanted to cross the Baghdad bridge. Even one day
when the caliph himself wanted to cross the bridge he was stopped and asked to
pay the toll.


A singer, by chanting two lascivious verses, incited the passions of the
Abbasid caliph, Amin, who awarded him three million dirhams. The chanter
in joy threw himself at the feet of the caliph saying, "Oh, leader of the
faithful! You give me all this money?" The caliph answered, "It does
not matter. We receive money from an unknown part of the country."


The bewildering amount of wealth that was pouring every year from all corners
of the Islamic world into the public treasury in the capital helped creating
luxury and a mundane atmosphere. Much of it in fact was often spent for the
pleasures and iniquities of the caliph of the time. The number of beautiful
slave girls in the court of some of the caliphs exceeded thousands. By the
dissolution of Umayyad rule and the establishment of the Abbasids, Shi'ism did
not benefit in any way. Its repressive and unjust opponents merely changed their
name.




Shi'ism
in the 3rd/9th Century


At the beginning of the 3rd/9th century Shi'ism was able to breathe once
again. This more favorable condition was first of all due to the fact that many
scientific and philosophical books were translated from Greek, Syriac, and other
languages into Arabic, and people eagerly studied the intellectual and rational
sciences. Moreover, al-Ma'mun, the Abbasid caliph from 198/813 to 218/833, had
Mu'tazilite leanings and since in his religious views he favored intellectual
demonstration, he was more inclined to give complete freedom to the discussion
and propagation of different religious views. Shi'ite theologians and scholars
took full advantage of this freedom and did their utmost to further scholarly
activities and propagate Shi'ite teachings. Also, al-Ma'mun, following demands
of the political forces at the time, had made the eight Shi'ite Imam his
successor, as is recounted in most standard histories. As a result, the
descendants of the Holy Prophet and their friends were to a certain extent free
from pressures from the government and enjoyed some degrees of liberty. Yet
before long the cutting edge of the sword once again turned towards the Shi'ites
and the forgotten ways of the past came upon them again. This was particularly
true in the case of al-Mutawakkil (233/847-247/861) who held a special enmity
towards Ali and the Shi'ites. By his order the tomb of the third Imam in Karbala
was completely demolished.




Shi'ism
in the 4th/10th Century


In the 4th/10th century certain conditions again prevailed which aided
greatly the spread and strengthening of Shi'ism. Among them were the weaknesses
that appeared in the central Abbasid government and administration and the
appearance of the Buyid rulers. The Buyids, who were Shi'ite had the greatest
influence not only in the provinces of Persia but also in the capital of the
caliphate in Baghdad, and even upon the caliph himself. This new strength of
considerable proportions enabled the Shi'ites to stand up before their opponents
who previously had tried to crush them by relying upon the power of the
caliphate. It also made it possible for the Shi'ites to propagate their
religious views openly.


As recorded by historians, during this century most of the Arabian peninsula
was Shi'ite with the exception of some of the big cities. Even some of the major
cities like Hajar, Uman, and Sa'dah were Shi'ite. In Basra, which had always
been a Sunni city and competed with Kufa which was considered a Shi'ite center,
there appeared a notable group of Shi'ites. Also in Tripoli, Nablus, Tiberias,
Aleppo, Nayshapur, and Herat there were many Shi'ites, while Ahwaz and the coast
of the Persian Gulf on the Persian side were also Shi'ite.


At the beginning of this century Nasir Utrush, after many years of
propagation of his religious mission in northern Persia, gained power in
Tabaristan and established a kingdom which continued for several generations
after him. Before Utrush, Hasan ibn Zayd al-'Alawi had reigned from many years
in Tabaristan. Also in this period the Fatimids, who were Isma'ili, conquered
Egypt and organized a caliphate which lasted for over two centuries
(296/908-567/1171). Often disputation and fighting occurred in major cities like
Baghdad, Cairo and Nayshapur between Shi'ites and Sunnis, in some of which the
Shi'ites would gain the upper hand and come out victorious.




Shi'ism
from the 5th/11th to the 9th/15th Centuries


From the 5th/11th to the 9th/15th centuries Shi'ism continued to expand as it
had done in the 4th/10th century. Many kings and rulers who were Shi'ite
appeared in different parts of the Islamic world and propagated Shi'ism. Toward
the end of the 5th/11th century the missionary activity of Isma'ilism took root
in the fort of Alamut and for nearly a century and a half the Isma'ilis lived in
complete independence in the central regions of Persia. Also the Sadat-i
Mar'ashi, who were descendants of the Holy Prophet, ruled for many years in
Mazandaran (Tabaristan). Shah Muhammad Khudabandah, one of the well-known Mongol
rulers, became Shi'ite and his descendants ruled for many years in Persia and
were instrumental in spreading Shi'ism. Mention must also be made of the kings
of the Aq Qoyunlu and Qara Qoyunlu dynasties who ruled in Tabriz and whose
domain extended to Fars and Kerman, as well as of the Fatimid government which
was ruling in Egypt.


Of course religious freedom and the possibility of exerting religious power
by the populace differed under different rulers. For example, with the
termination of Fatimid rule and coming to power of the Ayyubids the scene
changed completely and the Shi'ite population of Egypt and Syria lost its
religious independence. Many of the Shi'ites of Syria were killed during this
period merely on the accusation of following Shi'ism. One of these was Shahid-i
awwal (the First Martyr) Muhammad ibn Makki, one of the great figures in Shi'ite
jurisprudence, who was killed in Damascus in 786/1384. Also Shaykh al-ishraq
Shihab al-Din Suhrawardi was killed in Aleppo on the accusation that he was
cultivating Batini teachings and philosophy. Altogether during this period
Shi'ism was growing from the point of view of numbers, even though its religious
power and freedom depended upon local conditions and the rulers of the time.
During this period, however, Shi'ism never became the official religion of any
Muslim state.




Shi'ism
in the 10th/16th and 11th/17th Centuries


In the 10th/16th century Isma'il, who was of the household of Shaykh Safi
al-Din Ardibili (d. 735/1334), a Sufi master and also a Shi'ite, began a revolt
in Ardibil, with three hundred Sufis who were disciples of his forefathers, with
the aim of establishing an independent and powerful Shi'ite country. In this way
he began the conquest of Persia and overcame the local feudal princes. After a
series of bloody wars with local rulers and also the Ottomans who held the title
of caliph, he succeeded in forming Persia piece by piece into a country and in
making Shi'ism the official religion in his kingdom.


After the death of Shah Isma'il other Safavid kings reigned in Persia until
the 12th/18th century and each continued to recognize Shi'ism as the official
religion of the country and further to strengthen its hold upon this land. At
the height of their power, during the reign of Shah 'Abbas, the Safavids were
able to increase the territorial expansion and the population of Persia to twice
its present size. As for other Muslim lands, the Shi'ite population continued
the same as before and increased only through the natural growth of population.




Shi'ism from the 12th/18th to the 14th/20th Centuries


During the past three centuries Shi'ism has followed its natural rate of
growth as before. At the present moment, during the latter part of the 14th/20th
century, Shi'ism is recognized as the official religion in Iran, and in the
Yemen and Iraq the majority population is Shi'ite. In nearly all lands where
there are Muslims one can find a certain number of Shi'ites. It has been said
that altogether in the world today there are about eighty to ninety million
Shi'ites.


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