The Shi‘ite ‘ulama’, ‘Heresy,’ and the Ottoman State
The relationship of Ottoman state officials to the Shi’ite ‘ulama’ of Jabal ‘Amil developed significantly over time but the full picture for the sixteenth century remains unclear. The period extending from 1516 until the 1570sis poorly documented
. Data about Ottoman appointments of qadis in the ‘Amili regions and the administrative procedures relating to questions of heresy and apostasy in the Syrian districts is sporadic. Ottoman archival sources for the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century are largely unexamined. What we do know is that the role of émigré ‘Amili jurists in establishing Twelver Shi‘ism as the state religion of Safavid Iran, the new adversary of the Ottomans in the sixteenth century, did not go unnoticed by the Ottoman state and its chief jurists.In his recent book The Shiites of Lebanon under Ottoman Rule, Stefan Winter illuminated the particular links which the Ottoman state drew between the jurists of Jabal ‘Amil and the public defamation of the first two Caliphs, Abu Bakr and ‘Umar, who represented Sunnite ‘orthodoxy’ and political legitimacy.
In Safavid Iran, leading ‘Amili jurists such as al-Muhaqqiq al-Karaki (d. 940/1534) encouraged the public denunciation of these Caliphs as the enemies of ahl albayt (the Prophet’s family) and the Imamis.
In earlier studies, I discussed the significance of the polemical treatises which the ‘Amili jurists in Iran produced to prove the blasphemy of the first two Caliphs and justify public cursing of them.
These treatises aimed to challenge the discourse of legal- doctrinal ‘orthodoxy’ underlying Sunnite rule, as well as draw sharper lines between an urban legalistic Shi‘ism on the one hand, and various forms of Sunnism and heterodox Shi‘ism in Iran, on the other.
The case of Zayn al-Din al-‘Amili (d. 965/1558), an outstanding Shi‘ite mujtahid (jurist) from Jabal ‘Amil executed by the Ottomans, deserves a close look. It reveals that an Ottoman legal-doctrinal framework for heresy was applied to Shi‘ite jurists under particular historical circumstances.Based on new sources examined by Richard Blackburn and Stefan Winter these circumstances can now be sought in state legitimacy, provincial Ottoman politics, and local social events.
Known as al-Shahid al-Thani or “the Second Martyr,” Zayn al-Din was captured in Mecca and executed in Istanbul in 965/1558 at the hands of Rüstem Pasha, the Grand Vizier of Ottoman Sultan Süleyman (r. 926/1520-974/1566).
The main account of al-Shahid al-Thani’s life provided by his student Muhammad b. ‘Ali b. Hasan al-‘Awdi al-Jizzini reads as a biographical entry at times and at other times as a hagiography that emphasizes al-Shahid al-Thani’s karamat (miracles).
This valuable account mentions that al-Shahid al-Thani had a conflict with “the qadi Ma‘ruf” in Sidon before he took his trip to Istanbul in 952/1545.
Al-Shahid al-Thani avoided asking this qadi for an ‘ard, a letter which confirms a scholar’s credentials and integrity as the basis for obtaining an endowed teaching post.
Al-Shahid al-Thani did not trust the qadi to present him in the best light; he thought that he may in fact jeopardize his professional aims.
In this particular reference, the conflict between the qadi and al-Shahid al-Thani seems unrelated to the latter’s activity as a Shi‘ite mujtahid. The information about the ‘ard is somewhat detailed and historically accurate. Normally, the district’s qadi writes such an ‘ard for a scholar who then presents it to the officials in Istanbul. Ibn al-‘Awdi’s account states also that the qadi and al-Shahid al-Thani were friends for some time (kanat baynahu wa baynahu suhbatan wa mudakhala) and does not show that al-Shahid al-Thani’s Shi‘ite identity was the reason for the conflict between them. This is the more significant given that Ibn al-‘Awdi identified another person in the account as “extremely hostile to the Shi‘ites.”
In any case, al-Shahid al-Thani’s favorable relations with one or more Sunnite ‘ulama’ in Istanbul allowed him to get a teaching post at an important madrasa, namely, al-Nuriyya in Ba‘labak without recourse to the ‘ard of the qadi of Sidon.
Al-Shahid al-Thani was proficient in Shi‘ite and Sunnite law and jurisprudence.
He was well-integrated in Sunnite learning circles and drew vital connections to influential scholars which enhanced his career opportunities.
Ironically, the same process which allowed al-Shahid al-Thani to gain respect and intellectual recognition in Syria led also to his demise. His practice of ijtihad (rational legal inference) on the basis of the Ja‘fari madhhab (school of law) became publicly known and hence treated by Ottoman officials as a threat to the ‘orthodoxy’ as defined at that time.
Knowledge about al-Shahid al-Thani’s ijtihad must have surfaced in connection to one or more of the following activities. The first was al-Shahid al-Thani’s private teaching of Shi‘ite law and jurisprudence to a small group of presumably Shi‘ite students at al-Nuriyya school in Ba‘labak.
The second activity which could have established his practice of ijtihad was his issuing of legal opinions to Shi‘ite believers or his private adjudication of legal cases. A third source of knowledge about the practice of ijtihad was al-Shahid al-Thani’s juridical and legal writings which circulated among Shi‘ite scholars and their madrasas but were accessible to Sunnite scholars.
We
will delineate which of these activities led to the disclosure of al-Shahid al-Thani’s ijtihad. The recently found travel account of Qutb al-Din al-Nahrawali (d. 990/1582) gives a brief description of al-Shahid al-Thani’s execution and the role played by Hasan Beg Efendi, the judge of Damascus (and later Cairo and Mecca). It leaves much untold, however, about the persons who brought al-Shahid al-Thani to the attention of Hasan Beg and their relationship to al-Shahid al-Thani.
Al-Nahrawali was clearly uninformed about Jabal ‘Amil which he erroneously refers to as “‘Amiri.”
He has scanty information about al-Shahid al-Thani’s contacts and activities prior to his interrogation at the hands of Hasan Beg.
On the accusations directed against al-Shahid al-Thani, al-Nahrawali wrote that one or more ‘ulama’ told Hasan Beg about al-Shahid al-Thani’s activity as a Shi‘ite mujtahid. These ‘ulama’ described him in the following manner: “min kibar ‘ulama’ al-rafida wa huwa mujtahidu madhhabihim” (among the major scholars of the recusants (Shi‘ites) and the mujtahid of their legal school).
As
such, al-Shahid al-Thani was considered to have been deriving the law on the basis of ijtihad; a factor wellarticulated in Ibn al-‘Awdi’s account.
When Hasan Beg first interrogated al-Shahid al-Thani, he had no actual proof that al-Shahid al-Thani was a Shi‘ite mujtahid. There was no mention of any of al-Shahid al-Thani’s books or writings during the interrogation.This leads one to believe that the ‘ulama’ who insisted he was a Shi‘ite mujtahid were drawing upon information about his legal activities in Ba‘labak or Jabal ‘Amil.
On the other hand, there is evidence that a large number of Shi‘ite works reached Damascus (even if they did not circulate widely) including more than 100 works possibly handwritten by al-Shahid al-Thani.
Damascus is an additional locale where al-Shahid al-Thani’s scholarship could have been known.
Facing the threat of death, al-Shahid al-Thani pretended in front of Hasan Beg to be a Shafi‘ite Sunnite scholar.
It was some time after Hasan Beg accepted al-Shahid al-Thani’s explanations and allowed him to leave his court unscathed that a group of Sunnite ‘ulama’ brought al-Shahid al-Thani’s books to Hasan Beg to prove that the former was actually a mujtahid of the “rafidites” or recusants, the Twelver Shi‘ites who rejected the caliphate of Abu Bakr and ‘Umar.
On this basis, Hasan Beg furnished the ground for al-Shahid al-Thani’s ‘heresy’ and resented being outwitted by al-Shahid al-Thani in front of other ‘ulama’.
Within Shi‘ite circles al-Shahid al-Thani was already known to practice ijtihad at the age of 33, that is, around 948/1541-42.
Al-Shahid al-Thani realized the gravity of practicing ijtihad under the Ottomans. When he was writing Sharh al-Irshad he did not show parts of it to anyone at first.
Meanwhile
, among Sunnite scholars, Sunnite-based ijtihad was increasingly suppressed which adds a further complexity to al-Shahid al-Thani’s case.Wael Hallaq argued that it was actually in the early sixteenth century, that a strong resistance to the claims of a Sunnite scholar to practice ijtihad emerged.
The Hanafi and Maliki ‘ulama’ insisted that mujtahids in the Sunnite schools of law were no longer to be found.
The tendency to reject ijtihad under the Ottoman Hanafi ‘ulama’, and the association which Ottoman officials made between Jabal ‘Amil and Safavid Shi‘ism during the sixteenth and seventeenth century played a significant role in al-Shahid al-Thani’s execution in Istanbul.
Accusing al-Shahid al-Thani of heresy meant in this context that he violated the doctrinal-legal foundations of Sunnism as defined during the mid-sixteenth century and had thus challenged Ottoman political legitimacy.
During this period, ‘Amili jurists suspected of practicing ijtihad and deriving legal rulings on the basis of theJa‘fari
legal school, were considered by state officials to have violated Ottoman Sunnite legal-doctrinal ‘orthodoxy.’ Which public ritual, idea, legal practice, or political alliancewas rendered “heretical” by Ottoman officials
at a particular time is not always clear. Meanwhile, Shi‘ite jurists like al-Shahid al-Thani have challenged the foundations of this ‘orthodoxy’ or manipulated elements of it to enhance their social power. Winter noted that the legal framework of heresy did not prevent the Ottomans from readily reinstating a tax farmer or emir from the Shi’ite Hamadas or Harfushes of Ba‘labak-al-Hirmil for practical reasons.
Shi‘ite subjectswere expected
to mediate their needs and resolve their grievances through Sunnite legal courts. Privately, however, Shi‘ite believers turned to their own ‘ulama’ for answers to a wide array of legal questions dealing with worship and social contracts. The ‘Amili ‘ulama’ for the most part were able to manage their own local socioreligious affairs and maintain a sophisticated tradition of Islamic law and jurisprudence.
There is evidence for a spectrum of taqiyya practices among Ottoman Shi‘ite ‘ulama’ which involves dissimulating one’s Shi’ite affiliation in certain contexts.In scholarly circles, taqiyya meant at times that a Shi‘ite scholar avoided public defense of Twelver Shi‘ite positions against Sunnism even where the identity of the Shi‘ite scholar in question was suspected by his Sunnite colleagues.
At other times, taqiyya was demanded from Shi‘ite subjects by Ottoman officials themselves as was the case when the state required that Shi‘ites avoid public defamation of Sunnite figures during ‘Ashura’ in the late Ottoman period.
It was clearly understood that Shi‘ites carried out such a defamation and could not possibly be censored in their private homes and locales by the Ottomans or any other system of governance for that matter.
Taqiyya was also practiced and legitimized when a Shi‘ite jurist faced accusations of heresy by the Ottoman authorities and whose life was in real jeopardy.
To add but another dimension to the manifestation of taqiyya, Muhammad Amin Astarabadi (d.1036/1626-7), an Iranian Shi‘ite jurist used the term taqiyya to describe how he was censored by his co-religionists, the powerful ‘Amili mujtahids in Iran and prevented from challenging their legal methods.
The Shi‘ite and Sunnite ‘ulama’ were part of the same discursive Islamic traditions such as jurisprudence, theology, and science formed within and around the madrasas.For instance, during the sixteenth century the ‘Amili jurists were keen on discursing upon Shafi’ite juridical practices in order to find new ways to harmonize and systematize the sources of Shi’ite law.
It is easy to ignore the inexorable connections between Shi‘ite and Sunnite scholars when relying on anti-Shi‘ite polemics and fatwas.
Shared experiences of civil life and scholarly activity allowed Shi‘ite scholars agency and some measure of control.
To complicate the picture even further, some Sunnite scholars seemed to have been described in Shi‘ite sources as sympathetic to the Shi‘ites or loyal to ahl al-bayt despite belonging to a Sunnite legal school. The example of Abu al-Ma‘ali
al-Taluwi (d.1014/1605), a Damascene mufti and poet is noteworthy. Shi‘ite sources note that he believed in the Imamate of ‘Ali b. Abi Talib and that he was a Shi‘ite who nonetheless followed the Hanafi legal school in positive law.