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KHALIFAH
ALI IBN ABI TAALIB
"You [Ali]
are my brother in this world and the next." (Ahaadeeth)
Ali 's Election
After Uthman 's martyrdom, the office of the caliphate remained
unfilled for two or three days. Many people insisted that Ali
should
take up the office, but he was embarrassed by the fact that the
people who pressed him hardest were the rebels, and he therefore
declined at first. When the notable Companions of the Prophet
Muhammad
urged him, however, he finally agreed.
Ali 's Life
Ali bin Abi Talib was the first cousin of the Prophet
Muhammad . More than that, he had grown up in the Prophet
Muhammad 's own
household, later married his youngest daughter, Fatimah
, and remained
in closest association with him for nearly thirty years.
Ali was ten years old when the Divine Message came to
Muhammad
. One night he saw the Prophet Muhammad
and his wife
Khadijah
bowing and prostrating. He asked the Prophet Muhammad
about the
meaning of their actions. The Prophet Muhammad
told him that they were
praying to God Most High and that Ali
too should accept Islaam. Ali said that he would first like to ask his father about it. He spent a
sleepless night, and in the morning he went to the Prophet Muhammad
and said,
"When God created me He did not consult my father, so why
should I consult my father in order to serve God?" and he
accepted the truth of Muhammad 's message.
When the Divine command came, "And warn thy nearest
relatives" Al-Qur'ân Soorah Ash-shu'araa
26:214, Muhammad
invited his relatives for a meal. After
it was finished, he addressed them and asked, "Who will join me
in the cause of God?" There was utter silence for a while, and
then Ali stood up. "I am the youngest of all present
here," he said, "My eyes trouble me because they are sore
and my legs are thin and weak, but I shall join you and help you in
whatever way I can." The assembly broke up in derisive
laughter. But during the difficult wars in Mecca, Ali
stood by these
words and faced all the hardships to which the Muslims were
subjected. He slept in the bed of the Prophet
Muhammad
when the Quraish
planned to murder Muhammad . It was he to whom the Prophet
Muhammad
entrusted,
when he left Mecca, the valuables which had been given to him for
safekeeping, to be returned to their owners.
Apart from the expedition of Tabuk, Ali
fought in all the early
battles of Islaam with great distinction, particularly in the
expedition of Khaybar. It is said that in the Battle of Uhud he
received more than sixteen wounds.
The Prophet Muhammad
loved Ali
Ibn Abi Talib
dearly and called him by
many fond names. Once the Prophet Muhammad
found him sleeping in the dust. He
brushed off Ali 's clothes and said fondly, "Wake up, Abu Turab
(Father of Dust)." The Prophet
Muhammad
also gave him the title of 'Asadullah'
('Lion of God'). Ali
's humility, austerity, piety, deep knowledge of the
Qur'ân and his sagacity gave him great distinction among the Prophet
Muhammad 's
Companions. Abu Bakr Siddeeq
,
'Umar Farooq
and
Uthman
Gani
consulted him frequently
during their Khilafah (caliphates) Many times 'Umar
had made him his
vice-regent at Medina when he was away. Ali
was also a great scholar
of Arabic literature and pioneered in the field of grammar and
rhetoric. His speeches, sermons and letters served for generations
afterward as models of literary expression. Many of his wise and
epigrammatic sayings have been preserved. Ali thus had a rich and
versatile personality. In spite of these attainments he remained a
modest and humble man. Once during his caliphate when he was going
about the marketplace, a man stood up in respect and followed him.
"Do not do it" said Ali . "Such manners are a
temptation for a ruler and a disgrace for the ruled." Ali
and his household lived extremely simple and austere lives.
Sometimes they even went hungry themselves because of Ali
's great
generosity, and none who asked for help was ever turned away from
his door. His plain, austere style of living did not change even
when he was ruler over a vast domain. Ali
's Caliphate
As mentioned previously, Ali
accepted the caliphate very
reluctantly. Uthman
's murder and the events surrounding it were a
symptom, and also became a cause, of civil strife on a large scale.
Ali
felt that the tragic situation was mainly due to inept
governors. He therefore dismissed all the governors who had been
appointed by Uthman
and appointed new ones. All the governors
excepting Muawiya
, the governor of Syria, submitted to his orders.
Muawiya
declined to obey until Uthman
's blood was avenged. The Prophet
Muhammad (peace be on him)'s widow Aa'ishah
also took the position that Ali
should first
bring the murderers to trial. Due to the chaotic conditions during
the last days of Uthman
it was very difficult to establish the
identity of the murderers, and Ali
refused to punish anyone whose
guilt was not lawfully proved. Thus a battle between the army of Ali
and the supporters of Aa'ishah
took place.
Aa'ishah
later realized her
error of judgment and never forgave herself for it.
The situation in Hijaaz (the part of Arabia in which Mecca and
Medina are located) became so troubled that Ali
moved his capital to
Iraq. Muawiya
now openly rebelled against Ali
and a fierce battle
was fought between their armies. This battle was inconclusive, and
Ali
had to accept the de facto government of Muawiya
in Syria.
However, even though the era of Ali
's
caliphate was marred by
civil strife, he nevertheless introduced a number of reforms,
particularly in the levying and collecting of revenues.
It was the fortieth year of Hijrah.
A fanatical group called
Kharijites, consisting of people who had broken away from Ali
due to
his compromise with Muawiya
, claimed that neither
Ali
, the Caliph,
nor Muawiya
the ruler of Syria, nor Amr bin Al-Aas
, the ruler of
Egypt, were worthy of rule. In fact, they went so far as to say that
the true caliphate came to an end with 'Umar
and that Muslims should
live without any ruler over them except God. They vowed to kill all
three rulers, and assassins were dispatched in three directions.
The assassins who were deputed to kill Muawiya
and Amr
did not
succeed and were captured and executed, but Ibn-e-Muljim, the
assassin who was commissioned to kill Ali
accomplished his task.
One morning when Ali
was absorbed in prayer in a mosque, Ibn-e-Muljim
stabbed him with a poisoned sword. On the 20th of Ramadan, 40 A.H.,
died the last of the Rightly Guided Caliphs of
Islam. May God Most
High be pleased with them and grant to them His eternal reward. Aameen.
With the death of Ali
, the first and most notable phase in the
history of Muslim peoples came to an end. All through this period it
had been the Book of God and the practices of His Messenger that
is, The Qur'ân and the Sunnah
which had guided the leaders and
the led, set the standards of their moral conduct and inspired their
actions. It was the time when the ruler and the ruled, the rich and
the poor, the powerful and the weak, were uniformly subject to the
Divine Law. It was an epoch of freedom and equality, of
God-consciousness and humility, of social justice which recognized
no privileges, and of an impartial law which accepted no pressure
groups or vested interests.
After Ali
, Mu'awiyah
assumed the caliphate and thereafter the
caliphate became hereditary, passing from one king to another.
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