Al-Mizan: An Exegesis of the Qur'an Volume 4

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Al-Mizan: An Exegesis of the Qur'an Author:
Translator: Allamah Sayyid Sa'eed Akhtar Rizvi
Publisher: World Organization for Islamic Services (WOFIS)
Category: Quran Interpretation

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Al-Mizan: An Exegesis of the Qur'an

Al-Mizan: An Exegesis of the Qur'an Volume 4

Author:
Publisher: World Organization for Islamic Services (WOFIS)
English

www.alhassanain.org/english

Al-Mizan An Exegesis of the Qur'an, vol 4

From Suratul Baqarah (2), verse 224 to Suratul Baqarah (2), 286

The tafseer of Surah al-Baqarah continues in the fourth volume with the exposition of verses 224-227 and the volume ends with the commentary of the last verses of the same Surah.

Author(s): Allamah Sayyid Muhammad Husayn at-Tabataba'i

Translator(s): Allamah Sayyid Sa'eed Akhtar Rizvi

Publisher(s): World Organization for Islamic Services [W.O.F.I.S.]

www.alhassanain.org/english

English translation

First edition 1982/1402

Translated from the Arabic

al-Mizān fī tafsīri ’l-Qur’ān,

Beirut, 1393/1973 (3rd ed. )

Published by:

World Organization for Islamic Services, P. O. Box No. 11165-1545, Tehran – IRAN.

Features of Volume 4:

The tafseer of Surah al-Baqarah continues in the fourth volume with the exposition of verses 224-227 and the volume ends with the commentary of the last verses of the same Surah.

The discussions of this volume that have Qur'anic, scientific, sociological and philosophical implications are as follows:

The meaning of the 'heart' (qalb) in the Qur'an; the use of words like 'ilm (knowledge) and idrak (perception, cognition) in the Qur'an; the position and rights of woman in Islam and other civilisations with regard to marriage and divorce; the meaning of sakinah (tranquillity of mind); the struggle for existence and natural selection; the meaning of salam; the meaning of existence; the Existence of God; Permanence of the Divine Command and Sovereignty; the negation of compulsion in religion; the concept of benevolence and Divine Guidance; the refutation of injustice and misguidance on the part of God Almighty. At the end are discussed two important economic issues: disbursement and usury (riba) from the stand-point of the Qur'an. With this discussion the fourth volume concludes.

In the Name of Allāh,

The All-compassionate, The All-merciful

Praise belongs to Allāh, the Lord of all being;

the All-compassionate, the All-merciful;

the Master of the Day of Judgement;

Thee only we serve, and to Thee alone we pray

for succour:

Guide us in the straight path;

the path of those whom Thou hast blessed,

not of those against whom Thou art wrathful,

nor of those who are astray.

* * * * *

O’ Allāh! send your blessings to the head of

your messengers and the last of

your prophets,

Muhammad and his pure and cleansed progeny.

Also send your blessings to all your

prophets and envoys.

Notice:

This version is published on behalf of www.alhassanain.org/english

The composing errors are not corrected.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

TRANSLITERATION 10

FOREWORD [IN ARABIC] 11

FOREWORD 13

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 224-227 15

COMMENTARY 15

The Meaning Of “Heart” In The Qur'an: 16

TRADITIONS 19

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 228-242 20

COMMENTARY 22

TRADITIONS 42

A SCIENTIFIC DISCOURSE ABOUT WOMAN 52

THE LIFE OF WOMAN IN UNCIVILIZED NATIONS 52

WOMAN IN PRE-ISLAMIC CIVILIZATIONS 53

WOMAN IN SOME OTHER CIVILIZATIONS 54

WOMAN IN ARABIA: THE ENVIRONMENT IN WHICH THE QUR’ĀN WAS REVEALED 56

WHAT ISLAM BROUGH FOR WOMAN 58

THE FREEDOM OF WOMEN IN WESTERN CIVILIZATION 64

A DISCUSSION ABOUT MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE 65

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verse 243 67

COMMENTARY 67

TRADITIONS 69

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 244-252 71

GENERAL COMMENT 72

COMMENTARY 73

MEANING OF “AS-SAKINAH” 77

TRADITIONS 83

A PHILOSOPHICAL AND SOCIAL DISCUSSION ABOUT THE STRUGGLE FOR EXISTENCE AND THE SURVIVAL OF FITTEST 87

HISTORY AND HOW MUCH THE QUR’ĀN IS CONCERNED WITH IT 92

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 253-254 94

GENERAL COMMENT 94

COMMENTARY 95

A TALK ABOUT THE SPEECH OF ALLĀH 99

TRADITIONS 106

A PHILOSOPHICAL DISCUSSION ABOUT THE SPEECH OF ALLĀH 109

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verse 255 112

COMMENTARY 112

TRADITIONS 119

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 256-257 124

COMMENTARY 124

TRADITIONS 128

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 258-260 130

COMMENTARY 130

GOOD AND EVIL DEEDS, VIS-À-VIS GUIDANCE AND MISGUIDANCE 137

TRADITIONS 157

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 261-274 161

GENERAL COMMENT 162

SPENDING IN THE WAY OF ALLAH 163

COMMENTARY 165

TRADITIONS 180

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 275-281 187

GENERAL COMMENT 187

COMMENTARY 189

TRADITIONS 203

ABOUT INTEREST 207

ANOTHER DISCOURSE ABOUT INTEREST 210

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 282-283 213

COMMENTARY 214

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verse 284 216

COMMENTARY 216

TRADITIONS 218

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 285-286 221

GENERAL COMMENT 221

COMMENTARY 223

LIST OF THE IMPORTANT SUBJECTS 229

NOTES 232

TRANSLITERATION

FOREWORD [IN ARABIC]

FOREWORD

1. al-‘Allāmah as-Sayyid Muhammad Husayn at-Tabātabā’ī (1321/1904 - 1402/1981) - may Allāh have mercy upon him was a famous scholar, thinker and the most celebrated contemporary Islamic philosopher. We have introduced him briefly in the first volume of the English translation of al-Mīzān which will be published, by the help of Allāh, in the near future.

2. al-‘Allāmah at-Tabātabā’ī is well-known for a number of his works of which the most important is his great exegesis al-Mīzān fī tafsīri ’l-Qur’ān which is rightly counted as the fundamental pillar of scholarly work which the ‘Allāmah has achieved in the Islamic world.

3. We felt the necessity of publishing an exegesis of the Holy Qur’ān in English. After a thorough consultation, we came to choose al-Mīzān because we found that it contained in itself, to a considerable extent, the points which should necessarily be expounded in a perfect exegesis of the Holy Qur’ān and the points which appeal to the mind of the contemporary Muslim reader. Therefore, we proposed to al-Ustādh al-‘Allāmah as-Sayyid Sa‘īd Akhtar ar-Radawī to undertake this task because we were familiar with his intellectual ability to understand the Arabic text of al-Mīzān and his literary capability in expression and translation. So we relied on him for this work and consider him responsible for the English translation as al-‘Allāmah at-Tabātabā’ī was responsible for the Arabic text of al-Mīzān and its discussions.

4. We have proceeded to publish the translation of the second volume of the Arabic al-Mīzān earlier as it was ready for printing, whereas the first volume is not ready yet for the reasons which we do not wish to state here. So we saw no reason in delaying its printing. We have included two appendixes: one for the authors cited in all the volumes of al-Mīzān, and the other for the books cited therein. These two appendixes have been attached to the first volume of the English translation. Apart from this, the reader will find two appendixes in all the volumes of the translation of al-Mīzān.

* * * *

We implore upon Allāh to effect our work purely for His pleasure, and to help us to complete this work which we have started. May Allāh guide us in this step which we have taken and in the future steps, for He is the best Master and the best Helper.

WORLD ORGANIZATION FOR ISLAMIC SERVICES

(Board of Writing, Translation and Publication )

6/4/1402

1/2/1982.

Tehran-IRAN.

al-Mīzān

Volume Four

ch.2, vrs. 224-286

[SURHA BAQARAH]

Volume 4: Surah Baqarah, Verses 224-227

وَلَا تَجْعَلُوا اللَّـهَ عُرْضَةً لِّأَيْمَانِكُمْ أَن تَبَرُّوا وَتَتَّقُوا وَتُصْلِحُوا بَيْنَ النَّاسِۗ وَاللَّـهُ سَمِيعٌ عَلِيمٌ ﴿٢٢٤﴾ لَّا يُؤَاخِذُكُمُ اللَّـهُ بِاللَّغْوِ فِي أَيْمَانِكُمْ وَلَـٰكِن يُؤَاخِذُكُم بِمَا كَسَبَتْ قُلُوبُكُمْۗ وَاللَّـهُ غَفُورٌ حَلِيمٌ ﴿٢٢٥﴾ لِّلَّذِينَ يُؤْلُونَ مِن نِّسَائِهِمْ تَرَبُّصُ أَرْبَعَةِ أَشْهُرٍۖ فَإِن فَاءُوا فَإِنَّ اللَّـهَ غَفُورٌ رَّحِيمٌ ﴿٢٢٦﴾ وَإِنْ عَزَمُوا الطَّلَاقَ فَإِنَّ اللَّـهَ سَمِيعٌ عَلِيمٌ ﴿٢٢٧﴾

And make not Allah a target of your swearing (by Him) against your doing good and guarding (against evil) and making peace between men, and Allah is Hearing, Knowing (224). Allah will not call you to account for what is vain in your oaths, but He will call you to account for what your hearts have earned, and Allah is Forgiving, Forbearing (225). For those who swear (to abstain) from their wives is (ordained) a waiting for four months; then if they go back, then Allah is surely Forgiving, Merciful (226). And if they resolved on divorce, then Allah is surely Hearing, Knowing (2:227).

COMMENTARY

QUR'AN: And make not Allah . and Allah is Hearing, Knowing. “al-'Urdah ” is derived fromal-'ard which means to display a thing to show its fitness for the purpose for which it is made. For example, to display goods for sale, to show a house for rent, to offer food for consumption. Some of the uses of al-'urdah are : a target for shooting practice is called al-'urdah of the arrows; a horse readied for a journey is called al-'urdah for travel; a girl of marriageable age is called al-'urdah of marriage. All these are relevant to its original meaning. But the use of this word for a hindrance on the road (and other similar uses) have come into vogue later as metaphors.

“al-Ayman” is plural of “al-yamin” and means “oaths”. Its original meaning is the right hand. As they strike by, raise, or give, the right hand when taking an oath, showing allegiance or concluding a deal, the word was metaphorically used for the oath, borrowing the organ of an action for the action itself, because of their mutual relationship. This same relationship also allows the use of the name of the action for its organ, as as-sabbabah (the one who abuses) is used for the forefinger which is often used to point with when abusing.

The meaning of the verse, then, shall be as follows (And Allah knows better!):­

And do not use (the name of) Allah (like) a target upon which to attach your oaths which you have sworn to the effect that you will not do a good deed or will not guard yourselves against evil or will not make peace between people; because Allah does not like it that His name be made a means of desisting from what He Himself has ordered. (This meaning is supported by the traditions which will be quoted later.)

Based on this meaning, the verse can be analyzed grammatically in three ways:- a) An tabarru (literal meaning: that you do good) is in fact an' la tabarru (that you do not do good). In the translation we have followed this meaning and the negative has been expressed by the word “against” (your swearing against your doing), Such an omission of the negative is common after “an” which turns the verb into an infini­tive. See for example verse 175 of ch. 4: Allah makes it clear for you (lest) you err. (4:177)

b) Or there is no omission; and the words “your doing good . .” is governed by the negative “make not”. The meaning, in this case, will be that Allah forbids you to take such oaths.

c) Or the al-'urdah (target) may imply excess, as a target is used for shooting practice. The verse, in this case, will be a prohibition of excessive swearing by the name of Allah. It will mean, “Do not swear every now and then by the name of Allah, because it will lead you to abstain from doing good, etc.” A habitually swearing man does not care what he swears about. As he becomes used to it, it loses its importance, and it may encourage him to make a false oath. This much about his own attitude. So far as society is concerned, he will lose his respect, people will look down upon him - after all, swearing implies that the man himself is not sure that people will accept his words as true. If, in this way, he degrades his own words, why should other believe what he says. Ultimately, he will become a subject of the verse: and do not obey (i.e. accept the words of) any mean swearer. (68:10)

The words of Allah, “and Allah is Hearing, Knowing” are a sort of threatening, whatever meaning one accepts of the preceding sentence. But the first meaning (upon which our translation is based) is the most obvious.

QURAN: Allah will not call you to account for what is vain in your oaths, but He will call you to account for what your hearts have earned . .:

A “al-laghw” (vain) action is that which has no effect. The effect of a thing varies according to variations in its attachments, etc. An oath may have an effect in so far as it is a word, or in so far as, it emphasizes speech; or thirdly in so far as it is a vow; or fourthly if it is broken, or if one perjures, and so on. In this verse the vain oath is contrasted with that (oath) which hearts have earned. It shows that the vain oath here means that which has no effect on the intention of the speaker, that is, such oaths which one utters (like 'No, By God', 'Yes, By God') without taking those words seriously.

“al-Kasb” (means to earn profits by a work or profession etc. Originally, it was used for the obtaining of those things which fulfill material needs. Then it was metaphorically used for any good or evil a man may get as a result of any of his actions, like earning praise and good, reputation through good character and social services, and earning good knowledge, superiority, and nobility by striving for them; or earning condem­nation, abuse, and slander; or sin and error by one's evil actions. This is the meaning of al-kasb and al-iktisab Some people say that al-iktisab is used when one earns a benefit for one's own self; and al-kasb refers to earning a benefit whether it is done for one's own self or for others, as when a servant earns for his master, or a guardian for his ward.

In any case the active participle al-kasib and al-muktasib (both of which mean “one who earns”) are used only for a human being.

The Meaning Of “Heart” In The Qur'an:

The above explanation is a proof that the words ‘‘your hearts’’ in the verse refer to the man himself - his spirit and soul. The faculties of thought, understanding, love, hate, fear, and so forth, may be attributed (basing what one says on the common man’s belief) to the heart, as hearing is attributed to the ears, sight to the eyes, and taste to the tongue. But the word ‘earning’ can only be attributed to man. As the verse uses the expression, ‘‘for what your hearts have earned’’, it proves that the ‘‘heart’’ here stands for the ‘soul’, ‘spirit’.

The same meaning applies to the verses: . his heart is surely sinful (2:283) and: . and comes with a penitent heart. (50:33)

When man looked at animals and at himself he found that perceptions and thinking sometimes become ineffective, for example, during epilepsy or lunacy, yet life continues, as is witnessed by the heart-beat and the pulse. This led him to believe that the source of life is the heart; he thought that the spirit of life first attaches itself to the heart, and that it is from there that life extends to all parts of the body. He further believed that all the psychological faculties, such as perception, will, love, hate, hope, fear and other such things, belong to the heart because it is the seat of the psyche - the spirit. Of course, every organ is the source of its own function - the mind for thinking, the eyes for seeing, the ears for hearing, the lungs for breathing, and so on. But all are like tools which are used in the work they are made for; it is the heart that is the tool-wielder.

And it is a fact that physical research and experiments have not been able to pin-point the source of control which rules over the whole body. There is no doubt that the limbs and organs of the body, even though they are different from each other and have different functions and duties to perform, are united under the control of one ruling power, and are really one unit.

It is not that the ancients were not aware of the mind and its functions. Man knew the importance of the head from the very beginning. Does one not see that all the nations and races, with their different languages, name the ‘‘authority’’. the ‘‘head’’, and with it its derivatives. For example ar-ra’s ( الرَّأْسُ = head), ar-riyāsah ( (الرِّيَاسَةُ headship, meaning presidency) and ar-ra’īs ( الرَّئِيسُ = head, that is, President). Then there are the phrases like head of a thread, the head (beginning) of a period, the head (starting-point) of a distance, the head (beginning) of a speech, the head (summit) of a mountain, a head (individual number) of animals or cattle, the head of the year (new year’s day), etc.

Apparently, this is the reason why people attribute perception and thinking and sentiments (which are not totally void of perception) like love, hate, hope, fear, will, envoy, chastity, bravery, etc. to the heart. But by heart they mean the spirit which runs into or is attached to, the body. They attribute perceptions and sentiments to the heart, as well as to the spirit and soul, and also to their own selves. They say: I love him; my soul loves him, my heart loves him. Then the metaphorical use of heart for spirit and soul came into general use; then this use was extended to the breast, because the breast contains the heart; and, therefore, to it were attributed the faculties of perception, action and the sentiments.

There are many such uses in the Qur’ān: . He expands his breast for Islam . (6:125); . your breast straitens at what they say (15:97); . and the hearts rose up to the throats . alluding to the constriction of the breast (33:10); Surely, Allāh knows whatever is in your breasts. (5:7)

A point to consider: Can these expressions not be a support for the common belief mentioned earlier, even if it is yet to be clarified? Shaykh Abū ‘Alī ibn Sīnā is inclined to believe that it is the heart that perceives, and the brain is its tool.

Anyhow, now we come back to the verse. The sentence, “but He will call you to account for what your hearts have earned”, is a metaphor in a metaphor. The preceding sentence says: Allah will not call you to account for what is vain in your oaths. The contrasting sentence should have been, “. . for what is firmly considered of your oath”. Instead it mentions the effect, that is, the sin, which will come into being if one breaks that vow. It is done to show that Allah looks only at the heart, as He says:.. and whether you manifest what is in your souls or hide it Allah will call you to account for it (2:284); There does not reach Allah their flesh nor their blood, but to Him reaches your piety . (22:37)

The words, “and Allah is Forgiving, Forbearing”, hint at the undesirability of vain swearing and oath-taking, because such a thing should not be done by a believer. Allah says: Successful indeed are the believers, who are humble in their prayers, and who keep aloof from what is vain . (23:1-3)

QUR'AN: For those who swear (to abstain) from their wives. . surely Hearing, Knowing:

'al-Ila' “ (= to swear), in Islamic jurisprudence, means the swearing by husband that he will not go to his wife, provided it is done in anger with an intention to harm the wife. This is the meaning intended in this verse. The preposition “from” after the verb “swear” gives the meaning of distance; thus the verse implies the meaning of swearing to abstain and to remain aloof from the wife. The waiting of four months implies the same, because it is the period at the end of which cohabitation is, according to the shari'ah, obligatory on the husband.

“If they resolved on divorce”. The verse means the intention followed by its implementation. It is also implied by the words, “Allah is surely Hearing, Knowing”, because “Hearing” can be applied to the spoken words of the divorce, not its intention only.

The words at the end of verse 2:225, “Allah is Forgiving, Forbearing”, show that if one goes back to his wife then one shall not be punished in the hereafter. So far as this life is concerned, he is obliged to pay its penalty, al-kaffarah because this penalty is not forgiven. Allah says: Allah does not call you to account for what is vain in your oaths, but He calls you to account for the making of deliberate oaths; so its expiation is the feeding of ten poor men out of the average (food) you feed your families with, or their clothing, or the freeing of a neck; but whosoever cannot find (means) then fasting for three days; this the expiation of your oaths when you swear. And guard your oaths. (5:89)

The meaning of the verses is that if one swears to abstain from his wife, then the Muslim Qadi (judge) shall give him a time of four months to go back to her. If by the end of that period, he gives the penalty for the oath, and establishes sexual relations with her, then he shall get no punishment in the hereafter. If on the other hand, he decides to divorce her, that is another way out. And Allah is Hearing, Knowing.

TRADITIONS

There is a tradition in at-Tafsir of al-'Ayyashi, from as-Sadiq (a.s.) about the words of Allah: And make not Allah a target of your swearing, that he (the Imam) said: “It is the word of man: 'No, by God', 'Yes, by God'.”

Another tradition in the same book, from al- Baqir and as­Sadiq (a.s.), about this verse, says: “That is, a man swears that he would not talk with his brother, and other such oaths, or that he would not talk with his mother.”

Another tradition in al-Kafi from as-Sadiq (a.s.) about it says: “When you are called to make peace between two persons, do not say on oath that you will not carry out.”

The author says: The first tradition gives one explanation of the verse, the second and third give another. There is another tradition of nearly the same meaning in at-Tafsir of al-'Ayyashi from al-Baqir and as-Sadiq (a.s.) that they said: “He is the man who makes peace between two persons, and carries the burden of the sin that is between them. .” Apparently the tradition means that such a man should not swear that he will not try to do it: he should make peace between them, even if he has to carry the sin, and Allah will forgive him, and he will be an example of him who follows this verse.

There is in al-Kafi from Mas'adah from as-Sadiq (a.s.) that he said about the verse: Allah will not call you to account for what is vain in your oaths. . “Vain is the saying of a man, 'No, by God', and 'Yes, by God', without having any firm intention about anything.”

The author says: The same meaning is narrated in al-Kafi from him by another chain; and in al-Majma'u 'l-bayan from him and al-Baqir (a.s.).

There is a narration in al-Kafi from both Imams that they said: “If a man swears that he will not go near his wife, then she has not got any say or any right for four months; and he has no sin in not going to her in that period. If the four months pass away and he does not touch her, then, so long as she is silent and does not complain, he is absolved and free (from any responsibility). Then if she brings her case (before the Qadi), the husband will be told: either go back to her and touch her or divorce her. 'Resolve of divorce' means that he should leave her; then when she sees her monthly blood and (afterwards) becomes clean, he will divorce her. And he has, moreover, the right of ar-raj'ah (= returning to her; revoking the divorce) before the expiry of three monthly periods. So this is the al-'ila', which Allah revealed in His Book, and which the Apostle of Allah ordained.”

There is in the same book a tradition from as -Sadiq (a. s.) in which he says, inter alia : “And al-'ila' is that he says, 'By Allah, I shall not cohabit with thee so and so' or says, 'By Allah, I shall put thee to sorrow', and then puts her to sorrow.”

The author says: There are some differences between Sunnis and Shi'ahs about some particulars of al-'ila'; but the discussion of it concerns Islamic jurisprudence.

3. The Islamic System in the View of the Shia

The Shia believe that the Islamic system consists of the laws which regulate the life of a person from before birth until after death. They also regulate society and strive to develop the land and advance life and bring about the happiness of mankind in this life and the next. These laws are such as the laws of selling, renting, trade, politics, economics, the army, the State, agriculture, construction, mortgages, travel, residency, security, marriage, divorce, the judiciary, testaments, reparations, inheritance, etc.

To show the comprehensiveness of Islam and that it answers every need of mankind and society we have selected from the Holy Quran and the traditions some texts which show the broad lines of Islamic thought in all areas of life:

1. Doctrine. Almighty Allah has said in the Quran: “Say: We believe in Allah and what He has revealed to us and what He revealed to Abraham and Ishmael and Isaac and Jacob and the Tribes and what was given to Moses and Jesus and what was given to the prophets from their Lord47 . 2. Worship. Almighty Allah has said in the Quran: “And I did not create mankind and the Jinn except that they may worship Me48 .

3. Education. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Are they equal? - Those who know and those who do not know”49 . Also, in the traditions: ‘The seeking of knowledge is compulsory for every Muslim man and woman.’50 .

4. Equality - No racial discrimination. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “The most honourable of you in the sight of Allah is the most pious of you”51 . Also, in the traditions:

‘People are equal like the tooth of a comb’52 .

5. Peace. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “O you who believe, enter into peace one and all53 .

6. Honour. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And we have honoured the sons of Adam and have borne him in the land and in the sea and we have sustained them with the good things”54 .

7. Trade. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “O you who believe, do not eat up your wealth amongst yourselves unjustly, but it should be trade by mutual consent amongst yourselves”55 .

8. Politics. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And their affairs are [decided by] mutual consultation amongst themselves”56 .

And in the hadith, “[The Almighty] made ye [the Ahl al-Bayt] the leaders of the people”.57

9. The Army and Power. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And prepare for them what you can in the way of force”58 .

10. The Conquest of Space. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “O you the Jinn and mankind, if you are able to penetrate the realms of the heavens and the earth then do so. uou will not do so without authority”59 . Also in the traditions: ‘If knowledge was to be found in the Pleiades men would attain it.’60 , and in another tradition: ‘I am more knowledgeable about the ways of the heavens than the ways of the earth.’61

11. Love. Almighty Allah has said in the Quran: “And He has placed between you love and mercy”62 .

12. Freedom. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran in description of the Prophet (S): “And he puts off their heavy burdens and the fetters that were upon them”63 . Also, in the traditions: ‘Do not be the slave of another when Allah has made you free.’64 Also, there is the Islamic principle [which is derived from the prophetic hadith]: ‘people have authority over their wealth and their selves.’65

13. Combatting Crime. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And do not transgress”66 He has also said: “And whoever transgresses thereafter will have a painful torment”67 . He has also said: “Verily the punishment of those who make war on Allah and His Prophet and strive to make corruption in the land is that they be killed or crucified or that their hands and feet be cut off”68 .

14. Cleanliness. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Verily Allah loves those who repent and He loves those who purify themselves”69 . In the traditions: ‘Cleanliness is a part of faith.’70

15. Beauty. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Put on your finery at every prayer place”71 . And in the traditions: ‘Allah is beautiful and loves beauty.’72

16. Health. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And eat and drink but do not be excessive”73 . In the traditions: ‘Fast and be healthy.’74 , ‘Make the pilgrimage and be healthy.’75 , and ‘Travel and be healthy.’76

17. Making use of the potentialities of the universe. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And He has made subject to you the sun and the moon, contatnt in their courses, and he has made subject to you the night and the day g and He has given you all that you asked of Him”77 .

18. Reconciliation. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran:

“And reconciliation is best”78 . He has also said: “And if two groups of believers fight then make peace between them”79 . He has also said: “If the two of them seek to put things to rights then Allah will bring accord between them”80 .

19. Co-operation. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And co-operate in righteousness and piety”81 .

20. Unity. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And this is your nation - a single nation”82 . He has also said: “And be not disunited”83 . He has also said: “And do not dispute amongst yourselves lest you fail and your power will go”84 .

21. Work. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And say: act”85 . Also, in the traditions: ‘One who toils to support his dependants is like one who engages in holy struggle in the way of Allah.’86

22. Virtue and good morals. Almighty Allah has said of the Prophet (S) in the Holy Quran: “And he purifies you and teaches you the book and wisdom”87 . The Almighty also said regarding the Prophet (S): “And indeed you have sublime morals”88 . Also, in the traditions related from the Prophet (S): ‘I was sent to perfect the noblest of morals.’89

23. Tranquillity and the absence of anxiety. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Indeed it is through the remembrance of Allah that the hearts find tranquility”90 . He has also said: “And whoever believes in Allah, He will guide his heart”91 .

24. Justice. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And if you speak then be just”92 He has also said: “And stand upright in equity”93 . He has also said: “Verily Allah orders justice and benefaction”94 .

25. Responsibility and social vigilance. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Let there be of you a nation which invites to what is best, and orders good and forbids evil”95 .

26. Progress. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Race towards the good things”96 . Also, in the traditions: ‘Whoever has two days the same is a loser.’97

27. Seeking the middle course in all things. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And in this way we made you a nation of the middle”98 .

28. Riches. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And if only the people of the towns had faith and piety we would open upon them blessings from the heavens and the earth”99 . In the traditions: ‘How excellent a helper in religion is independence.’100

29. Social Responsibility. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And know that whatever you gain one fifth of it belongs to Allah”101 . He also has said: “Verily charity is for the poor and the indigent . .”102 .

30. Ease and Tolerance. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And for you to forgive is closer to piety”103 He has also said: “Allah desires for ye ease and He does not desire hardship for ye”104 .

31. Civilisation. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “He raised you up from the earth and let you dwell therein”105 . He has also said: “And We made from you peoples and tribes so that you may know one another”106 . Also, in the traditions: ‘Seek knowledge, for if you do not you will be nought but uncivil desertdwellers.’107

32. Life . with all that is meant by the word ‘life’. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “O you who believe, respond to Allah and to the Messenger when he calls you to what will give you life”108 .

33. This world and the hearafter. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And of them there are those who say: O Our Lord, give us in this world good and in the next world good”109 . In the traditions: ‘Work for your worldly life as if you will live forever; and work for your afterlife as if you will die tomorrow.’110

34. A law for everything. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Today I have completed for ye your religion and perfected my blessings upon ye”111 . He has also said: “And We sent down upon you the book as an explanation of everything”112 .

35. Manufacture. In the book nahj al-balaghah related from Imam Ali (a.s.): ‘And have concern for the merchants and craftsmen and give them good counsel.’113 Ali (a.s.) also said:

‘There is no basis to society without merchants and craftsmen.’114

36. Agriculture. In the traditions it is said: ‘The farmers are Allah’s treasures in the earth.’115

37. Development. Also in the book nahj al-balaghah: ‘And let your concern for developing the land be more far reaching than your concern for extracting the land tax.’116

38. Organisation. In the traditions: ‘I urge you by Allah to organise your affairs.’117

39. Empathy between the government (the legal authorities) and the people. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran:

Obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those in authority over you”118 . In the book nahj al-balaghah: ‘Let your heart feel mercy for your subordinates.’119

40. Lastly . universality. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran regarding the Prophet (S): “And We sent you not but as a mercy to the worlds”120 . He also said: “And We sent you not but as a bearer of good news and a warner for all the people”121 . In the traditions: ‘The people are of two types - either your brother in religion or your equal in creation.’122

Thus the Shia are the practical and authentic expression of the way of Islam as put forward by the Prophet (S) and his pure household (a.s.). They are the practical form of all that is mentioned in the Holy Quran and the traditions.

Shiite Doctrine

Shiite doctrines and beliefs are derived from two original sources of Islam - the Quran and the sunnah (the teachings of the prophet Muhammad). They can be summarised as follows:

Divine Unity (tawhid)

The Shia believe that Allah (Allah ) is the Lord and sustainer and that he is the creator of this wide existence which contains millions of galaxies in which are stars larger than our sun by sixty million times, the sun being larger than the earth by thousands of times. This is Allah who has no partner or associate and He is just in his acts and commands, everlasting and subsisting, eternally living, all knowing and all powerful, giving of life and death. In His hands is all good and He has power over all things.

Prophethood (nubuwwah)

The Shia believe that Muhammad (S) is their Prophet and that he was sent as a mercy to the worlds by Allah, and that he is the last and ‘seal’ of the prophets. He came to the world with the religion of Islam as Almighty Allah’s chosen religion. The Prophet Muhammad (S) is the one who teaches humanity what will benefit them in this world and the next; beginning from the advent of his mission in the holy city of Mecca until the end of time. His religion (Islam) abrogates all previous religions.

The Prophets

The prophets according to Shiite belief are the messengers of Almighty Allah to His creation. They were sent to the people with Allah’s laws, and Allah authorised them to lead the people in their worldly lives and direct them towards paradise in the next life. They are 124,000 in number; the first being Adam and the last and best of them being Muhammad ibn Abdullah (S). May Allah’s blessings be upon them all.

There are five ‘Arch prophets’ meaning that their divine messages were universal - Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad (Blessings and peace be upon them all.). The prophets are all brothers in Allah and we venerate and are allied to them all and, as the Quran says: “We do not distinguish between any of His messengers”123 .

Islam

The Shia believe that Islam is the religion of Allah sent down from the heavens to rescue mankind from all problems and to bring about the people’s happiness in this world and the next. The Shia believe that it is obligatory to implement Islam in all areas of life - politics, economics, education, society, war, peace, in the house, in the school, in the workplace, in the barracks, and in all other stages of life.

Islam is a complete religion providing for all the needs of humanity in every place and at every time. Almighty Allah has said: “Today I have perfected for ye your religion and completed my blessings upon ye and have chosen for ye Islam as your religion”124 . Therefore Islam lacks nothing and it is the best of religions and principles. If humanity implemented it eThey would eat from above them and beneath their feet”125 . Islam then is the true religion and none other will be accepted by Allah, and mankind will not find happiness in this world and salvation in the next except by Islam. Almighty Allah has said: “And whoever desires a relgion other than Islam it will not be accepted from him and in the next life he will be among the losers”126 .

Implementing Islam in the world is the hope of the Shia, for Islam provides for every person: correct belief; freedom for individuals and groups; happiness of life through being saved from poverty, illness, ignorance and crime; complete peace between countries, individuals, and nations. Every person has the right to free thought, free speech, freedom to work, freedom to travel and settle, freedom to write, all of this in a pure framework offered by tolerant Islamic law.

Islam consists of fundamentals (osool al-deen), ‘branches’ (foroo‘ al-deen), laws (ahkam al-deen), and morals (akhlaq). Whoever denies one of the fundamentals is considered to be an unbeliever. One is also considered unbeliever if one denies - without being ignorant or subject to ambiguity - any of the other three sections127 . One who does not follow the laws of Islam in his personal life without denying them is considered to be a wrongdoer (fasiq) as Almighty Allah has said: “Whoever does not rule by what Allah has revealed then they are the wrongdoers”128 . The Fundamentals of Islam are divine unity (tawhid), prophethood (nobuwwah) and resurrection (ma‘ad); and following on from divine unity there is divine justice (‘adl) and from prophethood the imamate (imamah).

The ‘Branches’ of Islam are prayer, fasting, tithe, alms, pilgrimage, jihad, enjoining the good, forbidding the bad, allegiance to Allah and His authorities (tawalli), and disassociation from the enemies of Allah and the enemies of His authorities (tabarri), as well as all other types of acts of worship such as the ablutions (wudu’), ritual bath (ghusl), purification with earth (tayammum), spiritual retreat to the mosque (i‘tikaf), etc. The Laws of Islam are all of the systems and laws which the Messenger of Allah (S) brought from Almighty Allah such as the laws of buying and selling, mortgaging129 , renting, divorce, marriage, the judiciary, bearing witness, inheritance, retribution, compensations and the like.

The Shia believe that Islam has not neglected to make clear anything, so politics, economics, education, society, peace, war, agriculture, manufacturing, family life, government and all other affairs to do with mankind from his birth to his death are all clarified in Islam and have particular systems and just laws. If mankind implemented them they would find happiness in this world and the next.

Also, ‘That which Muhammad has declared lawful will remain lawful until the day of resurrection and that which he has declared unlawful will remain unlawful until the day of resurrection.’130

The Qur’an

According to Shiite belief, the Holy Quran which is read by all Muslims day and night is Islam’s holy book and it is the Messenger of Allah’s miracle. If the jinn and mankind gathered together to bring the like of it they would not be able to do so even if they assisted one another. The Quran is that book which is existent today distributed all over the world in many languages and is recited day and night in houses and mosques and on the radio.

There has been no corruption of it and no substitution, no addition and no subtraction and Allah has protected it from those who seek to corrupt it and no-one has been able to add even a single letter or subtract a single letter. As Almighty Allah has said: “Verily We sent down the reminder (the Quran) and We are its protectors”131 . The Shia believe that the Quran was collated in the form we have it today - beginning with the opening chapter (al-fatihah) and ending with the chapter entitled ‘mankind’ (al-nas) - during the time of the Messenger of Allah (S) by order of Allah and under the supervision of His Messenger (S) without corruption or substitution, and without bringing forward or putting back. What some claim about the Qur’"n being collated after the death of the Messenger of Allah is not correct. The Qur’"n is the last of the divine books which Allah sent down upon His messenger Mu9ammad ibn Abdullah (S) to bring the people out of the darkness of ignorance, poverty and crime to the light of knowledge, truth and happiness. By this Allah completed the divine laws and made it a constitution for all humanity until the day of resurrection. The Quran was the source of honour and happiness to the first Muslims since they took it as a constitution to be implemented.

So if current and future Muslim generations wish to attain progress and development, they need to act according to the Qur’an and implement its teaching, and they abandon it, they will be entangled with hardship and deviance. The Almighty states and whoever disregards My message, his shall have a wretched life, and on the Day of Resurrection We shall raise him blind.132

The Shia concern themselves with the Quran to the utmost in its study, its recital in a beautiful way, in its exegesis, in memorising it by heart, and in acting by it and adhering to it, and in respecting it. They have special schools for the memorisation of the Quran, and their policy is to implement the [teachings of the] Quran in their lives and to invite the rest of the world to it.

Direction of Prayer

The Shia believe that the direction for prayer (qiblah) is the holy house of the Kabah in Mecca (may Allah increase its holiness) and that prayer is not correct unless directed towards it.

Imamate

The Shia believe that the successors to the Messenger of Allah (S) are the twelve Imams who were declared for successorship by the Messenger of Allah (S) himself and appointed them as his successors after him at the command of Allah.133 Furthermore the prophet said: ‘Whoever dies without knowing the Imam (leader) of his time has died the death of the age of ignorance.’134 He also said: ‘The successors (khulafa) after me will be twelve.’135

These twelve Imams are:

1. Imam Ali ibn Abi Talib (Amir al-Mo’mineen) (a.s.).

2. Imam Hasan ibn Ali. (al-Mujtaba) (a.s.).

3. Imam Husayn ibn Ali (Sayyid al-Shuhada’) (a.s.).

4. Imam Ali ibn Husayn (al-Sajjad) (a.s.).

5. Imam Muhammad ibn Ali (al-Baqir) (a.s.).

6. Imam Jafar ibn Muhammad (al-sadiq) (a.s.).

7. Imam Musa ibn Jafar (al-Kadim) (a.s.).

8. Imam Ali ibn Musa (al-Rida) (a.s.).

9. Imam Muhammad ibn Ali (al-Jawad) (a.s.).

10. Imam Ali ibn Muhammad (al-Hadi) (a.s.).

11. Imam Hasan ibn Ali (al-Askari) (a.s.).

12. Imam Muhammad ibn Hasan (al-Muntadar al-Mahdi) (a.s.).

The Awaited Imam Mahdi

The Sh:‘ah believe that the twelfth Imam - the Mahdi (a.s.) - is alive and in the world and hidden from sight by order of Almighty Allah. When Allah permits him, he will emerge and fill the earth with justice and equity after it having been filled with wrongdoing and injustice; as the Prophet (S) foretold in many ubiquitous traditions136 related by all Muslim scholars, Sunni and Shia alike, in their trusted books. If one looks at the books muntakhab alathar137 and al-Mahdi138 one will come to know the great amount of narrations from the noble messenger Muhammad (S) and his pure household on this subject.

Our desire and request from Allah is that the Mahdi appear as the Prophet foretold139 and all Muslims should await his appearance and his victory and pray for him night and day for he is the rescuer of the world from destruction and corruption. (Oh Allah, hasten his victory and ease his emergence and make us of his helpers.) In addition, modern science agrees that it is possible for a person to remain alive for thousands of years, and in the Holy Quran regarding Noah it is said that: “So he remained amongst them for one thousand years save fifty years”140 .

Infallibility

The Shia believe that the noble Prophet (S), his daughter Fatimah al-Zahra (a.s.), and the twelve Imams (a.s.) are infallible and incapable of sin, error or forgetfulness since Allah has protected them from these things. There are evidences for this from both rational and traditional sources. Almighty Allah has said: Verily Allah wishes to take away from you all impurity, O Ahl al-Bayt (people of the house), and to purify you a thorough purification”141 This verse is related to the above mentioned infallibles in most Quranic commentaries.142 Additionally, the faculty of reason does not permit that the source of divine laws be exposed to the possibility of error and sin otherwise his words and actions could not be relied upon.

These fourteen infallibles are the authorities of Allah and those who follow them will be saved and those who lag behind them will perish. So it is obligatory to follow their every word, deed and ratification, and this is known as the sunnah or way of the Prophet (S) according to the terminology of the jurists.

These pure people laid down the rules for a noble life - under the directions of Almighty Allah - and they are preferable to all the other discoverers, politicians, and scholars and the like. The Prophet and Knowledge of the Unseen The Shia believe that the Prophet (S) knows the unseen by permission of Almighty Allah; he knows the past, present and future as taught to him by Allah. As Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And He does not show His unseen to anyone except as He pleases to a messenger143 So Almighty Allah shows the messenger His unseen and the messenger teaches that to whoever he wishes at the command of Allah. The Prophet Muhammad (S) did this and taught his household (a.s.) the unseen.

Allegiance and Dissociation

The Shia believe that it is obligatory to be allied (tawalli) to Allah and His messenger and His authorities/patrons (awliya’), and that it is obligatory to be disassociated (tabarri) from the enemies of Allah and the enemies of His messenger and the enemies of His authorities/patrons.

Resurrection

The Shia believe in resurrection on the day of judgement which is the day when the believer who obeys Allah will find salvation and be rewarded with gardens of heaven which are as wide as the heavens and the earth; and the unbeliever who is sinful will be punished in the hellfire in the most severe physical and psychological pain.

Divine Decree

The Shia believe in the concept of revelation in the divine decree (bada) but in the correct way according to Allah’s words: “Allah effaces whatever He wishes and affirms [whatever He wishes]”144 The meaning of bada is revealing after concealing. This does not mean that Almighty Allah did not know something and then came to know it, for that is blatant heresy and no Muslim would say such a thing.

Compulsion and Delegation

The Shia, based on the traditions, believe that [on the question of human free will] ‘there is no compulsion (jabr) and no delegation (tafwid) rather a matter between the two matters.’145 This means that a person is not compelled in his/her actions, nor is he/she absolutely free to act. Bodily organs and limbs and powers are from Almighty Allah, and the will to act well or ill is from the person. If he/she acts well then this is due to Allah’s blessing, and if he/she acts ill then this is due to the person in question.

Dissimulation

The Sh:’ah believe in dissimulation (taqiyyah) as sanctioned by Islamic Law. Dissimulation in its correct form is one of the teachings of Islam. Its meaning is that it is obligatory for a person to protect his person and property and honour and those of all other believers from the unbelievers and the wrongdoers. The Holy Quran and the Prophet (S) and Imams (a.s.) have sanctioned this. In the Quran it says: “Let not the believers take the unbelievers for allies instead of the believers. Whoever does this is not of Allah at all, unless that ye guard yourselves against them”146 Almighty Allah has also said in the Quran: “And He has not placed upon you any hardship in the religion”147 .

Temporary Marriage

The Shia believe in the legality of the divine law of temporary marriage or nik"9 al-mutah148 . Almighty Allah has said: And those of whom ye seek content (by marrying them), give unto them their dowries as an obligation”149 . Also they believe that the mutah of the .ajj pilgrimage which the Messenger of Allah (S) ordered his companions to do in the farewell pilgrimage is part of Islam. Mutah, as with all the other laws of Islam is valid for ever150 , since ‘that which Muhammad has declared lawful will remain lawful until the day of resurrection and that which he has declared unlawful will remain unlawful until the day of resurrection.’151

Prostrating upon Pure Earth

The Shia believe that it is correct only to prostrate on the earth or what grows from it other than that which is edible or wearable as clothing.152 The Messenger of Allah (S) said: ‘The earth has been made a place of prostration for me and its soil is purifying.’153 Usually the Shia keep a tablet of clean pure earth with them upon which to prostrate to Allah during the ritual prayer since one cannot always easily find clean earth everywhere. They do not prostrate in a place not knowing whether it is clean or unclean. Often this tablet of clay comes from the earth of the holy site of Karbala’, the place where Imam Husayn ibn Ali (a.s.), grandson of the Prophet (S), is buried. There are narrations from the Prophet’s household (a.s.) which mention that it is recommended to pray on the earth of Karbala’. This reminds one of how one should defend Islam and make sacrifices in the way of religion just as Imam Husayn rose up against oppression and tyranny.

Combining the Prayers

The Shia believe that it is permissible to combine the noon (duhr) and afternoon (ANr) prayers, and the sunset (maghrib) and evening (isha) prayers as well as it being permissible to pray them separately. This is because the Prophet (S), at certain times, used to combine these prayers [at home, and not for reasons of fear, rain or being on a journey] as is found in a number of traditions.154 Combining the prayers is a way to hasten on the good155 as Almighty Allah has said: “And hasten to forgiveness from your Lord”156 and He has said: “Race for the good things”157 In addition, combining the prayers makes it easy for Allah’s servants as Allah has said: “Allah desires for you ease and He does not desire for you difficulty”158

The Shia also have sufficient evidences for the various legal issues159 such as the ritual ablution (wudu) in the way that is practiced by the Shia, and the adhan or the call to prayer in the way known to them, and praying with the hands by the sides and the like. They restrict themselves to taking minor and major Islamic laws from the Quran and the traditions and proven consensus and reason.

Intercession

The Shia believe that intercession or shafaAh is correct as is to be found in the Holy Quran and the authentic traditions.160 Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “they do not intercede except for someone He approves of”161 Beseeching the Prophet and his Pure Family The Shia believe it is permissible to seek a way to Allah (tawassul) through beseeching or pleading to the Prophet (S) and his pure family (a.s.). Allah has said of them in the Quran: “And seek the way (wasilah) to Him”162 . The Shia also believe that it is permissible to seek the aid of Ahl al-Bayt in asking for needs to be fulfilled by Almighty Allah, for they are alive and receiving sustenance with their Lord, as is found in the Quranic verse about the martyrs163 who have a lesser station than the Prophet (S).164 Just as the companions of the Prophet (S) used to seek a way to Allah through the Prophet (S) and would seek their needs from him when he was alive in the world165 , it is permissible for Muslims to seek a way to Allah through him and seek their needs from him now when the Prophet (S) is alive in the afterlife. The Prophet (S) and his pure household (a.s.) have a high station with Allah so Muslims seek a way to Allah through them to ask Allah to fulfil their needs.

Almighty Allah has said: “And if, when they wrong their own selves, they were to come to you [the Prophet]166 and seek forgiveness from Allah and the Messenger seeks forgiveness for them they would find Allah turning towards them, merciful”167 Therefore, seeking a way to Almighty Allah (tawassul) through the station of pious people in their graves such as the Prophets and friends of Allah is permissible because of the solid evidences from the Quran and the traditions and consensus as well as the practices of the Muslims in this regard.168 Visiting Shrines and Seeking Blessings From Them The Shia believe that it is a commendable act to make a visitation to the grave of the Prophet (S) and the pure Imams [of Ahl al-Bayt] and that it is permissible to seek blessings from them as is found in many holy traditions.169 For they are alive and receiving sustenance with their Lord. Almighty Allah has said: “Do not think that those who have been killed in the way of Allah are dead. Nay they are alive with their Lord receiving sustenance”170 and it is obvious that the Prophet (S) and members of his household have more virtue than the martyrs as we mentioned previously.

For these reasons the Shia visit their graves and seek blessings from their relics171 and kiss their shrines; and this is to show love for Allah and for His pure and saintly friends and is not at all any kind of worship of other than Allah. It is simply respect for the person in the shrines, just as people respect the binding of the Holy Quran and kiss it; not because it is leather but because it is associated with the Holy Quran. In the same way, Islam has ordered respect for ‘the black stone’ [of the holy Kabah] and the kissing of it; because it is one of the rites and symbols of Allah not because it is stone-worship. Kissing the pure shrines is meritorious and brings one closer to Allah and it is like kissing the black stone which the Messenger of Allah (S) himself kissed.172

The Building of Shrines

The Shia believe that it is permissible to erect building around the tombs and that it is recommended to build mosques and domes and shrines around the graves of the Prophet (S), the Pure Imams (a.s.), the faithful Companions of the Prophet (S), and the great Islamic personalities. Indeed, this is considered to be one of the best ways of drawing near to Almighty Allah. This is part of what is meant by Allah’s words: “And whoever magnifies the symbols of Allah it is surely of the piety of the hearts”173 , and also his words regarding the youths of the cave: “And those who prevailed over their affair said: we shall surely build over them a place of worship”174 This is also confirmed by traditions.

Building over tombs and graves was practiced by Muslims throughout the generations from the beginning of Islam, and the grave of the Prophet (S) in the holy city of Medina and the graves of the Imams (a.s.) and those of the righteous scholars in various Islamic lands are the best testimony to this.175

The Visiting of Graves

The Shia believe that is permissible, rather, meritorious to visit graves. This is because the practise of visiting graves provides a lesson for those who wish to take heed or fear Allah. There are many traditions on this subject.176 Women and the Visiting of Graves The Shia also believe that it is religiously recommended for women to enter the graveyard of Baqi or other graves of Prophets, Imams, and righteous persons since women are equal to men in divine law except where there is a clear evidence to the contrary. In this case there is no evidence to the contrary and in fact the evidence points to it being permissible.177 Prayer in the cemetery of Baqi!

The Shia also believe that prayer in the cemetery of Baqi or in the resting places of the Prophets or Imams and righteous persons is religiously recommended in Islam and that there is no evidence for the prohibition of this.178 Almighty Allah has said in the story of the people of the cave: “We shall surely make over them a prayer place”179

Weeping and Mourning for Imam Husayn

The Shia believe in the permissibility, indeed, the merit of weeping for the tribulations of the Prophet (S) and his pure family (a.s.) and it is for this reason that they hold mourning ceremonies particularly for the martyred Imam Husayn ibn Ali ibn Abi Talib (a.s.). The Prophet (S) ordered Muslims to weep for his uncle Hamza the martyr of the battle of Uhud180 , and he also wept for Imam Husayn before his martyrdom.181 This has been a normal practice for Muslims since the advent of Islam.

No to Slandering and Excommunication

The Shia, then, in all these aforementioned matters have religiously legal and rational evidences which are mentioned in the detailed books which have been printed and are distributed in all Islamic countries. So we ask why is there, from some quarters, slandering of the Imami Shia and attributing impiety and unbelief to them? A Muslim should not call another an unbeliever or impious or slander him or her simply because of differences in legal opinion. Rather, one should try to understand the evidences of the other party and its sources for religious rulings. In our opinion, Muslims should use their energies to unite and combat the enemies of Islam and rescue their lands from the pillagers, rather than false accusations of impiety and infidelity.

Mandatory Duties and Islamic Laws

The Shia believe that it is necessary to establish prayer (salah), and fasting (sawm), and to pay the mandatory tithes (khums) and alms (zakah), and to make the .ajj pilgrimage, and to struggle in the way of Allah (jihad), and to enjoin the good and forbid the evil, and to be allied with the friends of Allah (tawalli), and to be disassociated with the enemies of Allah (tabarri), and to fulfil all the mandatory acts, and abstain from all prohibited acts, and to keep away from vices and develop virtues. They believe that it is mandatory to implement all laws of Islam in all areas: acts of worship, social contracts, judiciary, testimonies, criminal punishments, reparations and all the other laws which are recorded in the books of Islamic jurisprudence and which come to almost one hundred thousand laws.

They also believe that all individual and social affairs should be consistent with Islam, in politics and economics, state and nation, morals and etiquettes, social interaction, marriage and divorce, crime and punishment and so forth.

Islamic Morals

The Shia believe that it is incumbent to adopt virtuous morals and Islamic etiquettes and avoid ugly traits and religiously prohibited things. This is their habit and practice. Islamic morals are all those things which Islam promotes or makes mandatory such as truthfulness, trustworthiness, modesty, chastity, bravery, generosity, activity, action, good morals, spreading peace, solving disputes, amiability, brotherhood, abstinence and the like. Ugly traits are those which Islam warns against either by considering them to be undesirable or prohibited such as lying, backbiting, betrayal, bad character, laziness, drunkenness, eating prohibited things, usury, theft, adultery, sodomy, hoarding, causing corruption, miserliness, cowardice, immodest dress, improper singing, slander, inactivity and so forth. Morals are a way to orient the behaviour of a person which have been set down by Allah by making virtuous qualities such as truthfulness, reliability, and steadfastness recommended and keeping away from base qualities such as lying, betrayal and deviation.

The Single Nation

The Shia believe that the Muslims - despite differences in schools of thought and their many different factions - are a single nation and that they are brothers in faith. Almighty Allah has said in the Quran: “uou are the best nation brought out for the people”182 He has also said: “And you became, by the blessing of Allah, brothers”183 And he has said: “Indeed the believers are brothers, so make peace between your two brothers”184 Any attempt to bring about disunity between them in the name of minorities, nationalisms or sectarianism and the like is not permissible either religiously or rationally. The Shia believe that differences in the ‘branches’ of religion between Islamic sects which arise out of differences in legal opinion, providing that the jurist-consult observes and adheres to the Quran and the traditions, are no cause for disunity amongst the Islamic nation.

They also believe that it is incumbent to exert all efforts to unite Muslims under the banner of the Holy Quran and the purified sunnah (or traditions) and that any legal ruling which is not derived from these two sources is false and should be rejected. It is also necessary to consolidate all energies to propagate Islam in the east and the west, and to raise it to the level of implementation. In this regard, as a prelude to that, it is necessary to:

1. Educate Muslims comprehensively in matters of religion and worldly affairs until they have a general awareness which leads in turn to a general opinion.

2. Cultivate Islamic intellectuals which move towards ongoing constructive action for the Islamic nation.

3. Co-ordinate efforts on various levels to move towards a common goal in the light of a single system.

4. Found Islamic institutions on the widest possible scale whether these be cultural, social, educational etc. These should be places for spreading light and coming together.

5. Industrialisation of Islamic lands with light and heavy industry so that they can be self-sufficient. Almighty Allah has said: “And to Allah belongs honour and to His Messenger and to the believers”185 The Prophet (S) said: ‘Islam should be above all and nothing should be above it.’186

Cleaning up Society

The Shia believe that it is necessary to cleanse society from the evil and harmful things which have been prohibited by Islam such as intoxicants, singing, gambling, adultery, usury, hoarding, fraud, theft, murder and other things which have been prohibited in the Quran and the traditions. They believe that rulers and people should combine their efforts to do away with these things, as Allah has said: “uou are the best nation brought out for the people, you enjoin the good and forbid the evil”187

Restoring the Glory of Islam

The Shia believe that it is necessary, and possible, to restore the glory of Islam in society. Indeed Allah has promised this: “Allah has promised those who have faith amongst ye and do good works that He will surely make them successors in the land as he made those before them successors and he will establish for them their religion which He has chosen for them and He will replace their fear with security. They will worship Me and not associate anything with Me”188 However, this is conditional upon true faith and good works and among these good works is amiability, and avoiding disunity, and struggling in the way of Allah with one’s wealth and by word and deed. Whenever these conditions are fulfilled - faith and good deeds - the result promised by Allah will surely come about.

Invitation to Islam

The Shiah believe that it is necessary to invite the people of the east and the west to Islam as Almighty Allah has said: “And let there be amongst you a nation who invites to the good and enjoins what is proper and forbids what is reprehensible. They are indeed the successful ones”189 The guidance of a single person to Islam is better in the sight of Allah than what is in the entire world as the Prophet of Islam has said.190

It is necessary then to form institutions, collect donations, send out missionaries, distribute books, and counter the attacks of the enemies of Islam both within and outside Islamic lands.

3. The Islamic System in the View of the Shia

The Shia believe that the Islamic system consists of the laws which regulate the life of a person from before birth until after death. They also regulate society and strive to develop the land and advance life and bring about the happiness of mankind in this life and the next. These laws are such as the laws of selling, renting, trade, politics, economics, the army, the State, agriculture, construction, mortgages, travel, residency, security, marriage, divorce, the judiciary, testaments, reparations, inheritance, etc.

To show the comprehensiveness of Islam and that it answers every need of mankind and society we have selected from the Holy Quran and the traditions some texts which show the broad lines of Islamic thought in all areas of life:

1. Doctrine. Almighty Allah has said in the Quran: “Say: We believe in Allah and what He has revealed to us and what He revealed to Abraham and Ishmael and Isaac and Jacob and the Tribes and what was given to Moses and Jesus and what was given to the prophets from their Lord47 . 2. Worship. Almighty Allah has said in the Quran: “And I did not create mankind and the Jinn except that they may worship Me48 .

3. Education. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Are they equal? - Those who know and those who do not know”49 . Also, in the traditions: ‘The seeking of knowledge is compulsory for every Muslim man and woman.’50 .

4. Equality - No racial discrimination. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “The most honourable of you in the sight of Allah is the most pious of you”51 . Also, in the traditions:

‘People are equal like the tooth of a comb’52 .

5. Peace. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “O you who believe, enter into peace one and all53 .

6. Honour. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And we have honoured the sons of Adam and have borne him in the land and in the sea and we have sustained them with the good things”54 .

7. Trade. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “O you who believe, do not eat up your wealth amongst yourselves unjustly, but it should be trade by mutual consent amongst yourselves”55 .

8. Politics. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And their affairs are [decided by] mutual consultation amongst themselves”56 .

And in the hadith, “[The Almighty] made ye [the Ahl al-Bayt] the leaders of the people”.57

9. The Army and Power. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And prepare for them what you can in the way of force”58 .

10. The Conquest of Space. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “O you the Jinn and mankind, if you are able to penetrate the realms of the heavens and the earth then do so. uou will not do so without authority”59 . Also in the traditions: ‘If knowledge was to be found in the Pleiades men would attain it.’60 , and in another tradition: ‘I am more knowledgeable about the ways of the heavens than the ways of the earth.’61

11. Love. Almighty Allah has said in the Quran: “And He has placed between you love and mercy”62 .

12. Freedom. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran in description of the Prophet (S): “And he puts off their heavy burdens and the fetters that were upon them”63 . Also, in the traditions: ‘Do not be the slave of another when Allah has made you free.’64 Also, there is the Islamic principle [which is derived from the prophetic hadith]: ‘people have authority over their wealth and their selves.’65

13. Combatting Crime. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And do not transgress”66 He has also said: “And whoever transgresses thereafter will have a painful torment”67 . He has also said: “Verily the punishment of those who make war on Allah and His Prophet and strive to make corruption in the land is that they be killed or crucified or that their hands and feet be cut off”68 .

14. Cleanliness. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Verily Allah loves those who repent and He loves those who purify themselves”69 . In the traditions: ‘Cleanliness is a part of faith.’70

15. Beauty. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Put on your finery at every prayer place”71 . And in the traditions: ‘Allah is beautiful and loves beauty.’72

16. Health. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And eat and drink but do not be excessive”73 . In the traditions: ‘Fast and be healthy.’74 , ‘Make the pilgrimage and be healthy.’75 , and ‘Travel and be healthy.’76

17. Making use of the potentialities of the universe. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And He has made subject to you the sun and the moon, contatnt in their courses, and he has made subject to you the night and the day g and He has given you all that you asked of Him”77 .

18. Reconciliation. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran:

“And reconciliation is best”78 . He has also said: “And if two groups of believers fight then make peace between them”79 . He has also said: “If the two of them seek to put things to rights then Allah will bring accord between them”80 .

19. Co-operation. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And co-operate in righteousness and piety”81 .

20. Unity. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And this is your nation - a single nation”82 . He has also said: “And be not disunited”83 . He has also said: “And do not dispute amongst yourselves lest you fail and your power will go”84 .

21. Work. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And say: act”85 . Also, in the traditions: ‘One who toils to support his dependants is like one who engages in holy struggle in the way of Allah.’86

22. Virtue and good morals. Almighty Allah has said of the Prophet (S) in the Holy Quran: “And he purifies you and teaches you the book and wisdom”87 . The Almighty also said regarding the Prophet (S): “And indeed you have sublime morals”88 . Also, in the traditions related from the Prophet (S): ‘I was sent to perfect the noblest of morals.’89

23. Tranquillity and the absence of anxiety. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Indeed it is through the remembrance of Allah that the hearts find tranquility”90 . He has also said: “And whoever believes in Allah, He will guide his heart”91 .

24. Justice. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And if you speak then be just”92 He has also said: “And stand upright in equity”93 . He has also said: “Verily Allah orders justice and benefaction”94 .

25. Responsibility and social vigilance. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Let there be of you a nation which invites to what is best, and orders good and forbids evil”95 .

26. Progress. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Race towards the good things”96 . Also, in the traditions: ‘Whoever has two days the same is a loser.’97

27. Seeking the middle course in all things. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And in this way we made you a nation of the middle”98 .

28. Riches. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And if only the people of the towns had faith and piety we would open upon them blessings from the heavens and the earth”99 . In the traditions: ‘How excellent a helper in religion is independence.’100

29. Social Responsibility. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And know that whatever you gain one fifth of it belongs to Allah”101 . He also has said: “Verily charity is for the poor and the indigent . .”102 .

30. Ease and Tolerance. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And for you to forgive is closer to piety”103 He has also said: “Allah desires for ye ease and He does not desire hardship for ye”104 .

31. Civilisation. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “He raised you up from the earth and let you dwell therein”105 . He has also said: “And We made from you peoples and tribes so that you may know one another”106 . Also, in the traditions: ‘Seek knowledge, for if you do not you will be nought but uncivil desertdwellers.’107

32. Life . with all that is meant by the word ‘life’. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “O you who believe, respond to Allah and to the Messenger when he calls you to what will give you life”108 .

33. This world and the hearafter. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And of them there are those who say: O Our Lord, give us in this world good and in the next world good”109 . In the traditions: ‘Work for your worldly life as if you will live forever; and work for your afterlife as if you will die tomorrow.’110

34. A law for everything. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “Today I have completed for ye your religion and perfected my blessings upon ye”111 . He has also said: “And We sent down upon you the book as an explanation of everything”112 .

35. Manufacture. In the book nahj al-balaghah related from Imam Ali (a.s.): ‘And have concern for the merchants and craftsmen and give them good counsel.’113 Ali (a.s.) also said:

‘There is no basis to society without merchants and craftsmen.’114

36. Agriculture. In the traditions it is said: ‘The farmers are Allah’s treasures in the earth.’115

37. Development. Also in the book nahj al-balaghah: ‘And let your concern for developing the land be more far reaching than your concern for extracting the land tax.’116

38. Organisation. In the traditions: ‘I urge you by Allah to organise your affairs.’117

39. Empathy between the government (the legal authorities) and the people. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran:

Obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those in authority over you”118 . In the book nahj al-balaghah: ‘Let your heart feel mercy for your subordinates.’119

40. Lastly . universality. Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran regarding the Prophet (S): “And We sent you not but as a mercy to the worlds”120 . He also said: “And We sent you not but as a bearer of good news and a warner for all the people”121 . In the traditions: ‘The people are of two types - either your brother in religion or your equal in creation.’122

Thus the Shia are the practical and authentic expression of the way of Islam as put forward by the Prophet (S) and his pure household (a.s.). They are the practical form of all that is mentioned in the Holy Quran and the traditions.

Shiite Doctrine

Shiite doctrines and beliefs are derived from two original sources of Islam - the Quran and the sunnah (the teachings of the prophet Muhammad). They can be summarised as follows:

Divine Unity (tawhid)

The Shia believe that Allah (Allah ) is the Lord and sustainer and that he is the creator of this wide existence which contains millions of galaxies in which are stars larger than our sun by sixty million times, the sun being larger than the earth by thousands of times. This is Allah who has no partner or associate and He is just in his acts and commands, everlasting and subsisting, eternally living, all knowing and all powerful, giving of life and death. In His hands is all good and He has power over all things.

Prophethood (nubuwwah)

The Shia believe that Muhammad (S) is their Prophet and that he was sent as a mercy to the worlds by Allah, and that he is the last and ‘seal’ of the prophets. He came to the world with the religion of Islam as Almighty Allah’s chosen religion. The Prophet Muhammad (S) is the one who teaches humanity what will benefit them in this world and the next; beginning from the advent of his mission in the holy city of Mecca until the end of time. His religion (Islam) abrogates all previous religions.

The Prophets

The prophets according to Shiite belief are the messengers of Almighty Allah to His creation. They were sent to the people with Allah’s laws, and Allah authorised them to lead the people in their worldly lives and direct them towards paradise in the next life. They are 124,000 in number; the first being Adam and the last and best of them being Muhammad ibn Abdullah (S). May Allah’s blessings be upon them all.

There are five ‘Arch prophets’ meaning that their divine messages were universal - Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad (Blessings and peace be upon them all.). The prophets are all brothers in Allah and we venerate and are allied to them all and, as the Quran says: “We do not distinguish between any of His messengers”123 .

Islam

The Shia believe that Islam is the religion of Allah sent down from the heavens to rescue mankind from all problems and to bring about the people’s happiness in this world and the next. The Shia believe that it is obligatory to implement Islam in all areas of life - politics, economics, education, society, war, peace, in the house, in the school, in the workplace, in the barracks, and in all other stages of life.

Islam is a complete religion providing for all the needs of humanity in every place and at every time. Almighty Allah has said: “Today I have perfected for ye your religion and completed my blessings upon ye and have chosen for ye Islam as your religion”124 . Therefore Islam lacks nothing and it is the best of religions and principles. If humanity implemented it eThey would eat from above them and beneath their feet”125 . Islam then is the true religion and none other will be accepted by Allah, and mankind will not find happiness in this world and salvation in the next except by Islam. Almighty Allah has said: “And whoever desires a relgion other than Islam it will not be accepted from him and in the next life he will be among the losers”126 .

Implementing Islam in the world is the hope of the Shia, for Islam provides for every person: correct belief; freedom for individuals and groups; happiness of life through being saved from poverty, illness, ignorance and crime; complete peace between countries, individuals, and nations. Every person has the right to free thought, free speech, freedom to work, freedom to travel and settle, freedom to write, all of this in a pure framework offered by tolerant Islamic law.

Islam consists of fundamentals (osool al-deen), ‘branches’ (foroo‘ al-deen), laws (ahkam al-deen), and morals (akhlaq). Whoever denies one of the fundamentals is considered to be an unbeliever. One is also considered unbeliever if one denies - without being ignorant or subject to ambiguity - any of the other three sections127 . One who does not follow the laws of Islam in his personal life without denying them is considered to be a wrongdoer (fasiq) as Almighty Allah has said: “Whoever does not rule by what Allah has revealed then they are the wrongdoers”128 . The Fundamentals of Islam are divine unity (tawhid), prophethood (nobuwwah) and resurrection (ma‘ad); and following on from divine unity there is divine justice (‘adl) and from prophethood the imamate (imamah).

The ‘Branches’ of Islam are prayer, fasting, tithe, alms, pilgrimage, jihad, enjoining the good, forbidding the bad, allegiance to Allah and His authorities (tawalli), and disassociation from the enemies of Allah and the enemies of His authorities (tabarri), as well as all other types of acts of worship such as the ablutions (wudu’), ritual bath (ghusl), purification with earth (tayammum), spiritual retreat to the mosque (i‘tikaf), etc. The Laws of Islam are all of the systems and laws which the Messenger of Allah (S) brought from Almighty Allah such as the laws of buying and selling, mortgaging129 , renting, divorce, marriage, the judiciary, bearing witness, inheritance, retribution, compensations and the like.

The Shia believe that Islam has not neglected to make clear anything, so politics, economics, education, society, peace, war, agriculture, manufacturing, family life, government and all other affairs to do with mankind from his birth to his death are all clarified in Islam and have particular systems and just laws. If mankind implemented them they would find happiness in this world and the next.

Also, ‘That which Muhammad has declared lawful will remain lawful until the day of resurrection and that which he has declared unlawful will remain unlawful until the day of resurrection.’130

The Qur’an

According to Shiite belief, the Holy Quran which is read by all Muslims day and night is Islam’s holy book and it is the Messenger of Allah’s miracle. If the jinn and mankind gathered together to bring the like of it they would not be able to do so even if they assisted one another. The Quran is that book which is existent today distributed all over the world in many languages and is recited day and night in houses and mosques and on the radio.

There has been no corruption of it and no substitution, no addition and no subtraction and Allah has protected it from those who seek to corrupt it and no-one has been able to add even a single letter or subtract a single letter. As Almighty Allah has said: “Verily We sent down the reminder (the Quran) and We are its protectors”131 . The Shia believe that the Quran was collated in the form we have it today - beginning with the opening chapter (al-fatihah) and ending with the chapter entitled ‘mankind’ (al-nas) - during the time of the Messenger of Allah (S) by order of Allah and under the supervision of His Messenger (S) without corruption or substitution, and without bringing forward or putting back. What some claim about the Qur’"n being collated after the death of the Messenger of Allah is not correct. The Qur’"n is the last of the divine books which Allah sent down upon His messenger Mu9ammad ibn Abdullah (S) to bring the people out of the darkness of ignorance, poverty and crime to the light of knowledge, truth and happiness. By this Allah completed the divine laws and made it a constitution for all humanity until the day of resurrection. The Quran was the source of honour and happiness to the first Muslims since they took it as a constitution to be implemented.

So if current and future Muslim generations wish to attain progress and development, they need to act according to the Qur’an and implement its teaching, and they abandon it, they will be entangled with hardship and deviance. The Almighty states and whoever disregards My message, his shall have a wretched life, and on the Day of Resurrection We shall raise him blind.132

The Shia concern themselves with the Quran to the utmost in its study, its recital in a beautiful way, in its exegesis, in memorising it by heart, and in acting by it and adhering to it, and in respecting it. They have special schools for the memorisation of the Quran, and their policy is to implement the [teachings of the] Quran in their lives and to invite the rest of the world to it.

Direction of Prayer

The Shia believe that the direction for prayer (qiblah) is the holy house of the Kabah in Mecca (may Allah increase its holiness) and that prayer is not correct unless directed towards it.

Imamate

The Shia believe that the successors to the Messenger of Allah (S) are the twelve Imams who were declared for successorship by the Messenger of Allah (S) himself and appointed them as his successors after him at the command of Allah.133 Furthermore the prophet said: ‘Whoever dies without knowing the Imam (leader) of his time has died the death of the age of ignorance.’134 He also said: ‘The successors (khulafa) after me will be twelve.’135

These twelve Imams are:

1. Imam Ali ibn Abi Talib (Amir al-Mo’mineen) (a.s.).

2. Imam Hasan ibn Ali. (al-Mujtaba) (a.s.).

3. Imam Husayn ibn Ali (Sayyid al-Shuhada’) (a.s.).

4. Imam Ali ibn Husayn (al-Sajjad) (a.s.).

5. Imam Muhammad ibn Ali (al-Baqir) (a.s.).

6. Imam Jafar ibn Muhammad (al-sadiq) (a.s.).

7. Imam Musa ibn Jafar (al-Kadim) (a.s.).

8. Imam Ali ibn Musa (al-Rida) (a.s.).

9. Imam Muhammad ibn Ali (al-Jawad) (a.s.).

10. Imam Ali ibn Muhammad (al-Hadi) (a.s.).

11. Imam Hasan ibn Ali (al-Askari) (a.s.).

12. Imam Muhammad ibn Hasan (al-Muntadar al-Mahdi) (a.s.).

The Awaited Imam Mahdi

The Sh:‘ah believe that the twelfth Imam - the Mahdi (a.s.) - is alive and in the world and hidden from sight by order of Almighty Allah. When Allah permits him, he will emerge and fill the earth with justice and equity after it having been filled with wrongdoing and injustice; as the Prophet (S) foretold in many ubiquitous traditions136 related by all Muslim scholars, Sunni and Shia alike, in their trusted books. If one looks at the books muntakhab alathar137 and al-Mahdi138 one will come to know the great amount of narrations from the noble messenger Muhammad (S) and his pure household on this subject.

Our desire and request from Allah is that the Mahdi appear as the Prophet foretold139 and all Muslims should await his appearance and his victory and pray for him night and day for he is the rescuer of the world from destruction and corruption. (Oh Allah, hasten his victory and ease his emergence and make us of his helpers.) In addition, modern science agrees that it is possible for a person to remain alive for thousands of years, and in the Holy Quran regarding Noah it is said that: “So he remained amongst them for one thousand years save fifty years”140 .

Infallibility

The Shia believe that the noble Prophet (S), his daughter Fatimah al-Zahra (a.s.), and the twelve Imams (a.s.) are infallible and incapable of sin, error or forgetfulness since Allah has protected them from these things. There are evidences for this from both rational and traditional sources. Almighty Allah has said: Verily Allah wishes to take away from you all impurity, O Ahl al-Bayt (people of the house), and to purify you a thorough purification”141 This verse is related to the above mentioned infallibles in most Quranic commentaries.142 Additionally, the faculty of reason does not permit that the source of divine laws be exposed to the possibility of error and sin otherwise his words and actions could not be relied upon.

These fourteen infallibles are the authorities of Allah and those who follow them will be saved and those who lag behind them will perish. So it is obligatory to follow their every word, deed and ratification, and this is known as the sunnah or way of the Prophet (S) according to the terminology of the jurists.

These pure people laid down the rules for a noble life - under the directions of Almighty Allah - and they are preferable to all the other discoverers, politicians, and scholars and the like. The Prophet and Knowledge of the Unseen The Shia believe that the Prophet (S) knows the unseen by permission of Almighty Allah; he knows the past, present and future as taught to him by Allah. As Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “And He does not show His unseen to anyone except as He pleases to a messenger143 So Almighty Allah shows the messenger His unseen and the messenger teaches that to whoever he wishes at the command of Allah. The Prophet Muhammad (S) did this and taught his household (a.s.) the unseen.

Allegiance and Dissociation

The Shia believe that it is obligatory to be allied (tawalli) to Allah and His messenger and His authorities/patrons (awliya’), and that it is obligatory to be disassociated (tabarri) from the enemies of Allah and the enemies of His messenger and the enemies of His authorities/patrons.

Resurrection

The Shia believe in resurrection on the day of judgement which is the day when the believer who obeys Allah will find salvation and be rewarded with gardens of heaven which are as wide as the heavens and the earth; and the unbeliever who is sinful will be punished in the hellfire in the most severe physical and psychological pain.

Divine Decree

The Shia believe in the concept of revelation in the divine decree (bada) but in the correct way according to Allah’s words: “Allah effaces whatever He wishes and affirms [whatever He wishes]”144 The meaning of bada is revealing after concealing. This does not mean that Almighty Allah did not know something and then came to know it, for that is blatant heresy and no Muslim would say such a thing.

Compulsion and Delegation

The Shia, based on the traditions, believe that [on the question of human free will] ‘there is no compulsion (jabr) and no delegation (tafwid) rather a matter between the two matters.’145 This means that a person is not compelled in his/her actions, nor is he/she absolutely free to act. Bodily organs and limbs and powers are from Almighty Allah, and the will to act well or ill is from the person. If he/she acts well then this is due to Allah’s blessing, and if he/she acts ill then this is due to the person in question.

Dissimulation

The Sh:’ah believe in dissimulation (taqiyyah) as sanctioned by Islamic Law. Dissimulation in its correct form is one of the teachings of Islam. Its meaning is that it is obligatory for a person to protect his person and property and honour and those of all other believers from the unbelievers and the wrongdoers. The Holy Quran and the Prophet (S) and Imams (a.s.) have sanctioned this. In the Quran it says: “Let not the believers take the unbelievers for allies instead of the believers. Whoever does this is not of Allah at all, unless that ye guard yourselves against them”146 Almighty Allah has also said in the Quran: “And He has not placed upon you any hardship in the religion”147 .

Temporary Marriage

The Shia believe in the legality of the divine law of temporary marriage or nik"9 al-mutah148 . Almighty Allah has said: And those of whom ye seek content (by marrying them), give unto them their dowries as an obligation”149 . Also they believe that the mutah of the .ajj pilgrimage which the Messenger of Allah (S) ordered his companions to do in the farewell pilgrimage is part of Islam. Mutah, as with all the other laws of Islam is valid for ever150 , since ‘that which Muhammad has declared lawful will remain lawful until the day of resurrection and that which he has declared unlawful will remain unlawful until the day of resurrection.’151

Prostrating upon Pure Earth

The Shia believe that it is correct only to prostrate on the earth or what grows from it other than that which is edible or wearable as clothing.152 The Messenger of Allah (S) said: ‘The earth has been made a place of prostration for me and its soil is purifying.’153 Usually the Shia keep a tablet of clean pure earth with them upon which to prostrate to Allah during the ritual prayer since one cannot always easily find clean earth everywhere. They do not prostrate in a place not knowing whether it is clean or unclean. Often this tablet of clay comes from the earth of the holy site of Karbala’, the place where Imam Husayn ibn Ali (a.s.), grandson of the Prophet (S), is buried. There are narrations from the Prophet’s household (a.s.) which mention that it is recommended to pray on the earth of Karbala’. This reminds one of how one should defend Islam and make sacrifices in the way of religion just as Imam Husayn rose up against oppression and tyranny.

Combining the Prayers

The Shia believe that it is permissible to combine the noon (duhr) and afternoon (ANr) prayers, and the sunset (maghrib) and evening (isha) prayers as well as it being permissible to pray them separately. This is because the Prophet (S), at certain times, used to combine these prayers [at home, and not for reasons of fear, rain or being on a journey] as is found in a number of traditions.154 Combining the prayers is a way to hasten on the good155 as Almighty Allah has said: “And hasten to forgiveness from your Lord”156 and He has said: “Race for the good things”157 In addition, combining the prayers makes it easy for Allah’s servants as Allah has said: “Allah desires for you ease and He does not desire for you difficulty”158

The Shia also have sufficient evidences for the various legal issues159 such as the ritual ablution (wudu) in the way that is practiced by the Shia, and the adhan or the call to prayer in the way known to them, and praying with the hands by the sides and the like. They restrict themselves to taking minor and major Islamic laws from the Quran and the traditions and proven consensus and reason.

Intercession

The Shia believe that intercession or shafaAh is correct as is to be found in the Holy Quran and the authentic traditions.160 Almighty Allah has said in the Holy Quran: “they do not intercede except for someone He approves of”161 Beseeching the Prophet and his Pure Family The Shia believe it is permissible to seek a way to Allah (tawassul) through beseeching or pleading to the Prophet (S) and his pure family (a.s.). Allah has said of them in the Quran: “And seek the way (wasilah) to Him”162 . The Shia also believe that it is permissible to seek the aid of Ahl al-Bayt in asking for needs to be fulfilled by Almighty Allah, for they are alive and receiving sustenance with their Lord, as is found in the Quranic verse about the martyrs163 who have a lesser station than the Prophet (S).164 Just as the companions of the Prophet (S) used to seek a way to Allah through the Prophet (S) and would seek their needs from him when he was alive in the world165 , it is permissible for Muslims to seek a way to Allah through him and seek their needs from him now when the Prophet (S) is alive in the afterlife. The Prophet (S) and his pure household (a.s.) have a high station with Allah so Muslims seek a way to Allah through them to ask Allah to fulfil their needs.

Almighty Allah has said: “And if, when they wrong their own selves, they were to come to you [the Prophet]166 and seek forgiveness from Allah and the Messenger seeks forgiveness for them they would find Allah turning towards them, merciful”167 Therefore, seeking a way to Almighty Allah (tawassul) through the station of pious people in their graves such as the Prophets and friends of Allah is permissible because of the solid evidences from the Quran and the traditions and consensus as well as the practices of the Muslims in this regard.168 Visiting Shrines and Seeking Blessings From Them The Shia believe that it is a commendable act to make a visitation to the grave of the Prophet (S) and the pure Imams [of Ahl al-Bayt] and that it is permissible to seek blessings from them as is found in many holy traditions.169 For they are alive and receiving sustenance with their Lord. Almighty Allah has said: “Do not think that those who have been killed in the way of Allah are dead. Nay they are alive with their Lord receiving sustenance”170 and it is obvious that the Prophet (S) and members of his household have more virtue than the martyrs as we mentioned previously.

For these reasons the Shia visit their graves and seek blessings from their relics171 and kiss their shrines; and this is to show love for Allah and for His pure and saintly friends and is not at all any kind of worship of other than Allah. It is simply respect for the person in the shrines, just as people respect the binding of the Holy Quran and kiss it; not because it is leather but because it is associated with the Holy Quran. In the same way, Islam has ordered respect for ‘the black stone’ [of the holy Kabah] and the kissing of it; because it is one of the rites and symbols of Allah not because it is stone-worship. Kissing the pure shrines is meritorious and brings one closer to Allah and it is like kissing the black stone which the Messenger of Allah (S) himself kissed.172

The Building of Shrines

The Shia believe that it is permissible to erect building around the tombs and that it is recommended to build mosques and domes and shrines around the graves of the Prophet (S), the Pure Imams (a.s.), the faithful Companions of the Prophet (S), and the great Islamic personalities. Indeed, this is considered to be one of the best ways of drawing near to Almighty Allah. This is part of what is meant by Allah’s words: “And whoever magnifies the symbols of Allah it is surely of the piety of the hearts”173 , and also his words regarding the youths of the cave: “And those who prevailed over their affair said: we shall surely build over them a place of worship”174 This is also confirmed by traditions.

Building over tombs and graves was practiced by Muslims throughout the generations from the beginning of Islam, and the grave of the Prophet (S) in the holy city of Medina and the graves of the Imams (a.s.) and those of the righteous scholars in various Islamic lands are the best testimony to this.175

The Visiting of Graves

The Shia believe that is permissible, rather, meritorious to visit graves. This is because the practise of visiting graves provides a lesson for those who wish to take heed or fear Allah. There are many traditions on this subject.176 Women and the Visiting of Graves The Shia also believe that it is religiously recommended for women to enter the graveyard of Baqi or other graves of Prophets, Imams, and righteous persons since women are equal to men in divine law except where there is a clear evidence to the contrary. In this case there is no evidence to the contrary and in fact the evidence points to it being permissible.177 Prayer in the cemetery of Baqi!

The Shia also believe that prayer in the cemetery of Baqi or in the resting places of the Prophets or Imams and righteous persons is religiously recommended in Islam and that there is no evidence for the prohibition of this.178 Almighty Allah has said in the story of the people of the cave: “We shall surely make over them a prayer place”179

Weeping and Mourning for Imam Husayn

The Shia believe in the permissibility, indeed, the merit of weeping for the tribulations of the Prophet (S) and his pure family (a.s.) and it is for this reason that they hold mourning ceremonies particularly for the martyred Imam Husayn ibn Ali ibn Abi Talib (a.s.). The Prophet (S) ordered Muslims to weep for his uncle Hamza the martyr of the battle of Uhud180 , and he also wept for Imam Husayn before his martyrdom.181 This has been a normal practice for Muslims since the advent of Islam.

No to Slandering and Excommunication

The Shia, then, in all these aforementioned matters have religiously legal and rational evidences which are mentioned in the detailed books which have been printed and are distributed in all Islamic countries. So we ask why is there, from some quarters, slandering of the Imami Shia and attributing impiety and unbelief to them? A Muslim should not call another an unbeliever or impious or slander him or her simply because of differences in legal opinion. Rather, one should try to understand the evidences of the other party and its sources for religious rulings. In our opinion, Muslims should use their energies to unite and combat the enemies of Islam and rescue their lands from the pillagers, rather than false accusations of impiety and infidelity.

Mandatory Duties and Islamic Laws

The Shia believe that it is necessary to establish prayer (salah), and fasting (sawm), and to pay the mandatory tithes (khums) and alms (zakah), and to make the .ajj pilgrimage, and to struggle in the way of Allah (jihad), and to enjoin the good and forbid the evil, and to be allied with the friends of Allah (tawalli), and to be disassociated with the enemies of Allah (tabarri), and to fulfil all the mandatory acts, and abstain from all prohibited acts, and to keep away from vices and develop virtues. They believe that it is mandatory to implement all laws of Islam in all areas: acts of worship, social contracts, judiciary, testimonies, criminal punishments, reparations and all the other laws which are recorded in the books of Islamic jurisprudence and which come to almost one hundred thousand laws.

They also believe that all individual and social affairs should be consistent with Islam, in politics and economics, state and nation, morals and etiquettes, social interaction, marriage and divorce, crime and punishment and so forth.

Islamic Morals

The Shia believe that it is incumbent to adopt virtuous morals and Islamic etiquettes and avoid ugly traits and religiously prohibited things. This is their habit and practice. Islamic morals are all those things which Islam promotes or makes mandatory such as truthfulness, trustworthiness, modesty, chastity, bravery, generosity, activity, action, good morals, spreading peace, solving disputes, amiability, brotherhood, abstinence and the like. Ugly traits are those which Islam warns against either by considering them to be undesirable or prohibited such as lying, backbiting, betrayal, bad character, laziness, drunkenness, eating prohibited things, usury, theft, adultery, sodomy, hoarding, causing corruption, miserliness, cowardice, immodest dress, improper singing, slander, inactivity and so forth. Morals are a way to orient the behaviour of a person which have been set down by Allah by making virtuous qualities such as truthfulness, reliability, and steadfastness recommended and keeping away from base qualities such as lying, betrayal and deviation.

The Single Nation

The Shia believe that the Muslims - despite differences in schools of thought and their many different factions - are a single nation and that they are brothers in faith. Almighty Allah has said in the Quran: “uou are the best nation brought out for the people”182 He has also said: “And you became, by the blessing of Allah, brothers”183 And he has said: “Indeed the believers are brothers, so make peace between your two brothers”184 Any attempt to bring about disunity between them in the name of minorities, nationalisms or sectarianism and the like is not permissible either religiously or rationally. The Shia believe that differences in the ‘branches’ of religion between Islamic sects which arise out of differences in legal opinion, providing that the jurist-consult observes and adheres to the Quran and the traditions, are no cause for disunity amongst the Islamic nation.

They also believe that it is incumbent to exert all efforts to unite Muslims under the banner of the Holy Quran and the purified sunnah (or traditions) and that any legal ruling which is not derived from these two sources is false and should be rejected. It is also necessary to consolidate all energies to propagate Islam in the east and the west, and to raise it to the level of implementation. In this regard, as a prelude to that, it is necessary to:

1. Educate Muslims comprehensively in matters of religion and worldly affairs until they have a general awareness which leads in turn to a general opinion.

2. Cultivate Islamic intellectuals which move towards ongoing constructive action for the Islamic nation.

3. Co-ordinate efforts on various levels to move towards a common goal in the light of a single system.

4. Found Islamic institutions on the widest possible scale whether these be cultural, social, educational etc. These should be places for spreading light and coming together.

5. Industrialisation of Islamic lands with light and heavy industry so that they can be self-sufficient. Almighty Allah has said: “And to Allah belongs honour and to His Messenger and to the believers”185 The Prophet (S) said: ‘Islam should be above all and nothing should be above it.’186

Cleaning up Society

The Shia believe that it is necessary to cleanse society from the evil and harmful things which have been prohibited by Islam such as intoxicants, singing, gambling, adultery, usury, hoarding, fraud, theft, murder and other things which have been prohibited in the Quran and the traditions. They believe that rulers and people should combine their efforts to do away with these things, as Allah has said: “uou are the best nation brought out for the people, you enjoin the good and forbid the evil”187

Restoring the Glory of Islam

The Shia believe that it is necessary, and possible, to restore the glory of Islam in society. Indeed Allah has promised this: “Allah has promised those who have faith amongst ye and do good works that He will surely make them successors in the land as he made those before them successors and he will establish for them their religion which He has chosen for them and He will replace their fear with security. They will worship Me and not associate anything with Me”188 However, this is conditional upon true faith and good works and among these good works is amiability, and avoiding disunity, and struggling in the way of Allah with one’s wealth and by word and deed. Whenever these conditions are fulfilled - faith and good deeds - the result promised by Allah will surely come about.

Invitation to Islam

The Shiah believe that it is necessary to invite the people of the east and the west to Islam as Almighty Allah has said: “And let there be amongst you a nation who invites to the good and enjoins what is proper and forbids what is reprehensible. They are indeed the successful ones”189 The guidance of a single person to Islam is better in the sight of Allah than what is in the entire world as the Prophet of Islam has said.190

It is necessary then to form institutions, collect donations, send out missionaries, distribute books, and counter the attacks of the enemies of Islam both within and outside Islamic lands.


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