Socio-political Circumstances
The events after Ashura include the decline of the Umayyad rule, the end of the Sufyani
rule, and the rise of the Marwanis. The next phase of the period of Imam al-Sajjad deals with the governorship of Hajjaj ibn Yusuf
and the overthrow of ‘Abdullah ibn Zubayr
in Mecca until the beginning of the ‘Abbasid movement.
Imam Sajjad (a) was appointed the Imam when the community was experiencing a momentous time where deviousness, injustice, and worldliness were rampant. The oppressive rule of the Umayyads took significant advantage of these conditions in order to spread its political authority. Thus, the 'period strangulation' is the best description for the period in which Imam Sajjad (a) was living.
People observed how Yazid, in order to preserve his power, did not hesitate to commit any crime: he plundered the possession of the people of Medina, destroyed the Ka‘bah, and was determined to kill even the son of the holy Prophet (s). The intense fear created by the Umayyads led to a period when people lost all hope in gaining victory through armed movements.
The assemblages of the Shi‘a in Iraq and Hijaz weakened as they lost cohesiveness and production. Imam Sajjad (a) spoke of the people’s depravity: “There are not so much as twenty men in Medina and Mecca who love us.”
One of the important differences between the period of Imam Sajjad (a) and the period of other Imams was that the caliphs of his time fearlessly neglected all Islamic principles by destroying the holiness of Islamic teachings. Moreover, no one dared to protest. Cruel people like Hajjaj ruled in that period. Slaughtering 120 thousand Muslims and imprisoning 80 thousand of them in terrible conditions are facts that confirm this statement.
Regarding the cultural conditions in the period of Imam Sajjad (a), the Umayyad rulers were particularly interested in Hijaz
for various reasons. Mecca and Medina, especially Medina, was the centre of religion and piety and where the lights of Islam radiated from there to the faraway lands across the world. The people of Mecca and Medina had closely observed the Prophet (s), his companions, the Imams (a). They were also familiar with the conduct of the first Caliphs. Hijaz would be dangerous for the Umayyad rulers since uprisings could take place in Mecca and Medina.
It was the Umayyads' policy to stop Mecca and Medina from being the centre of religion and holiness. They found the only effective way was distracting people through prohibited entertainment to turn cities into centres of corruption and immorality. The prevalence of entertainment in the community was achieved through creating and spreading pleasure by including dance clubs that included music and singing.
Men and women participated in courses for dancing and singing. Gambling and prostitution were also prevalent.
The large number of these entertainers sent by the order of the Umayyad caliphs to these cities prevented people from revolting against the system, and this resulted in refraining from politics. Yazid ibn Mu‘awiyah was the forerunner of the corruption in Islamic history and after him Yazid ibn Abd al-Malik and Walid ibn Yazid also played a role in the failure of the Muslims.
The Umayyad rulers also encouraged poets with luxurious gifts in order to modify their poetry and encourage them to deliver eulogies about the rulers and courtiers' merits. Of course, there were some Shi‘a poets who protested against the government and defended the Ahlul Bayt (a) through their poetry and writing, though they were exposed to disfavour and rage.
Furthermore, the issue of prohibition of narrating hadiths can be counted as another cultural and ideological issue in the period of Imam Sajjad (a). The severity of rulers in prohibiting narrating and writing hadiths was to the extent that the entire Prophetic Sunnah had been forgotten.
Another factor causing alterations in Islam and Prophetic Sunnah was the presence of officially appointed storytellers who spread false ideas in their stories.
In such condition, which was one of the crucial stages in the history of Islam, Imam Sajjad (a) considered it his duty to rescue the people from the moral decline that had corrupted the society.
The Umayyad caliphate laid down indecent innovations (bid‘ah) and traditions through non-acceptable practices by corrupt rulers. The outcomes of these innovations drove people to experience difficulties which finally led to the caliphate’s demise. A few examples of these innovations and traditions are mentioned in the following:
Lawlessness
A prominent feature of the oppressors’ authority was that they lacked a fair judicial system as they set laws and reigned the society in favour of their own benefits. Such actions included 1) terrorizing their subjects, 2) exerting severe punishments for oppositions, 3) issuing orders to cut pension and salary, 4) destroying homes, capitals, and properties of Imam Ali’s followers, 5) limiting freedom of thought and expression, especially with respect to the leadership of the Ahlul Bayt (a), 6) the execution of great scholars and Islamic thinkers who were Imam Ali’s supporters in Kufah's squares, 7) inciting disputes, 8) inciting disputes between the tribes Mudir and Rabi'ah and 9) employing poets to speak against those who opposed the ruling party.
Illustrating his disregard for social justice, Mu'awiyah told some of his agents, “Because the non-Arabs (Iranians and slaves) are increasing, I have decided to kill some of them and to dispatch some of them for revamping the roads between the cities so as to banish them from the city and the society overall.”
Preventing the spread of Islam
The ruling power crossed many of the divine limits. One way in which they did so was to eliminate Islamic socio-political rulings (ahkam). The Umayyads distorted and denied Islamic orders, creating innovation and fabricating traditions by rejection of Islamic laws (sharz‘ah) in order to reach their ominous governmental goals.
Fabricating hadiths
Mu'awiyah encouraged some people to fabricate hadiths against Imam Ali (a). Abu Hurayrah, ‘Amr ‘As and Mughayrah were among them. Forged hadiths were created to sanctify certain personalities and to distort the prestigious position of the Ahlul Bayt (a).
Forged hadiths were an excuse to justify the oppression of the Umayyad rulers. The following hadith is an instance:
Anyone who observes an indecent act of an agent must remain patient. And if he does not remain patient and puts a distance between himself and the people only for a period and dies in that condition, he has died in the state of Jahiliyyah [pre-Islamic ignorance].
Determinism
One of the distinctive innovations of Mu'awiyah was to promote and spread the idea of 'determinism' so that they could legally justify their massacres. This idea could give some kind of legitimacy to Umayyad rule and repress the opposition to them.
Mu'awiyah and his son, Yazid, took advantage of this belief to hide their own crimes.
Social Manipulation
The ruling class kept people in a mental, ideological, and political vacuum while spreading propaganda through activities such as 1) preventing the spread of knowledge, both academic and Islamic, 2) limiting and canalizing scholars, 3) fabricating hadiths and offering them to the people, 4) preventing people from meeting the Ahlul Bayt (a), and 5) exiling moral intellectuals from the realm of knowledge, and replacing them with the People of the Book, thus introducing them as the people of knowledge, wisdom, and culture. The imamate of Imam Sajjad (a) began in such dreadful conditions.
Moreover, the Umayyads' policy on lowering the status of Imam Ali (a) and other Imams of the Ahlul Bayt (a) were fulfilled through the following procedures:
1 - Frightening the Shi‘ites so that they would only think about rescuing themselves and avoid propagating the virtues of Ahlul Bayt (a). These threats continued until the martyrdom of Imam Hasan (a). Afterwards the calamities and seditions increased so much so that everyone could face exile and destitution.
After the martyrdom of Imam Husayn (a), these problems reached its peak especially in the time of Hajjaj Thaqafi whose reign coincided the imamate of Imam Sajjad (a).
2 - Concealing the virtues of Imam Ali (a) and punishing those who narrated them.
3 - Creating a gap between the people and the Imam.
4 - Setting an economic policy for weakening the Alawids and the followers of Ahlul Bayt (a).
Imam Sajjad (a) observed the period of Imam Hasan (a) and Imam Husayn (a) and witnessed the time in which some people sometimes took the side of Ahlul Bayt (a) and some other times they sided with their enemies. The Imam also observed the increasing mental and political decline of the people. If we add the intense strangulation to those conditions, then we will understand why the Imam did not rise against the Umayyads.
• Indicators of deviation in the society
• Ban on narrating and writing hadiths;
• Spread of false stories and politically motivated poems;
• Inattentiveness to the Qur'an and abandoning it;
• The belief in superiority of hadiths over the Qur'an;
• The belief in authority of Companions and giving them the right of legislation and changing Islam laws;
• Promoting certain people as chief judges or chief jurists in order to supress independent scholars;
• Spreading the idea of determinism and justifying acts of rulers, which were contrary to the Islamic law;
• Giving the absolute right of obedience to the rulers, even the oppressive ones;
• Spread of corruptions in community such as drinking alcohol, singing, music, and dancing.
As a result of the deviation in the society, many people did not follow religion, and if some did, they used to refer to the incompetent authorities and royal jurists who had been introduced as high level scholars and jurists. Their rulings, judgments, and judicial opinions were sometimes against the scriptures and sometimes they were heretics.
To sum up the people lived in severe cultural, scientific, religious, and moral poverty. This is similar to what Imam Ali (a) said describing the political, social and cultural circumstances of Islamic society in the year 40 A.H.:
لم يبقى من الإسلام إلا أسمه ومن الدين رسمه
Nothing is remaining from Islam except its name and from religion except its customs.
This was said 30 years after the demise of the holy Prophet (s) when many of Imam Ali’s companions were alive. However, in the time of Imam Sajjad (a), more than 50 years after the demise of the holy Prophet (s), many of the companions had passed away and many of the Shi‘a were martyred, making the conditions even worse. One of the economic policies of the Umayyads was to weaken the Alawids and the Shi‘a by cutting off their pension and salary, and seize and occupy their properties, putting many of them into poverty.