2.Wila
', In A PositiveSence
, With A General Meaning
Islam wishes Muslims to live as a single, independent form, to always have order, inter- communication and sociality, every individual aware of himself as being a member of one body which is Islamic society itself, so that this Islamic society becomes strong and powerful, in the way that the Qur'an wants the society of Muslims to be superior to other societies. And be not infirm, and be not grieving, and you shall have the upper hand if you are believers (3 :
139).
Wila
', in a Positive tense
Faith is the supreme support, but what does faith do? Faith is the support, the force and the pillar of the character, the maintainer of the independence and the motor of the movement of Islamic society. Elsewhere the Qur'an says:
And do not quarrel together, for then you will be weak in heart and your power will depart (8:46). Quarrelling and disputation destroy the being and character of Islamic society. Faith is the foundation of the friendship, love and fraternitywila
' of the believers. The Qur'an says And the believers, the men and the women, are friends (wali
) one to the other; they bid to good and forbid evil (9:71) .
Believers are close to each other, and the cause of their being close to each other is that they are the protectors, friends and helpers of each other; they are concerned with eachothers
future; in fact, they cultivate concern in their own future in which they form one unity, and therefore they "bid to good " and dissuade each other from evil and wickedness.
These two activities - bidding to good and forbidding evil - result from the friendship of faith, and so together these two are situated immediately after the explanation of thewila
' of faith. A feeling for the future of individuals springs from affection for them in themselves. A father who has affection for his children naturally feels concern for their future. But perhaps he has no feelings towards otherpeo
-ple's
children in themselves. Therefore, he will have no affection towards them in themselves until he has also a concern for their future, and their doing good awakens in him a positive feeling, and their doing bad a negative feeling. Bidding to good is a consequence of this positive feeling, and forbidding evil is aconse
-quence
of the negative feeling, and, until love and friendship exist, these feelings do not bring joy to a man's heart.
If a man is without affection forindivid
-uals
, he is indifferent when faced with their actions andbehaviour
, but when he is concerned, his loves and friendships will not leave him in peace. Thus, in thenoble(
verse) bidding to good and forbidding evil are connected in a particular way to the question ofwila
'.
aayah
And the believers, the men and women, arewali
one to the other, they bid to good and forbid evil (9:71). Afterwards, under the subject of the fruits of bidding to good and forbidding evil, two subjects are mentioned: They perform prayer, and payzakat
(9: 71).
Prayer is an example of the relationship of the created with the Creator. Andzakat
is an example of the benefit of relations between Muslims themselves, who support each other as a result of being compassionate and merciful within Islam. And afterwards, it branches out from this Wilayah - The Station of the Master These, Allah will show mercy to them. . (9:71) ;
. and these it is who shall besuccesful
(ibid., 88).
It is then that various Divine mercies and joys come down on this society, and thus they become a people who deserve to be called free. Later we shall give some explanations of this ayah, showing that it, and some other (verses) which mentionwila
' in its ordinary affirmative sense, are not only witnesses to love and friendship, but that they affirm a kind of obligation and responsibility for Muslims, as far as the virtue of the relationship of Muslims with each other is concerned. The Prophet - may Allah bless and grant him and his family peace - said in a famous and establishedhadith
:
Believers, in loving one another and being merciful towards each other, are like the bodywho
, when a part of it complains, the other parts rally to it by fever and sleeplessness. The noble Qur'an says, regarding theProph
-et
and those who follow him and have received Islamic education Muhammad is the messenger of Allah, and those with him are firm of heart against the unbelievers, compassionate among themselves (48:29). Inthisallusion
is made towila
' in the negative sense andwila
' in the positive sense. Just as we said earlier that thedydt
of the Qur'an draw our attention towards the fact that the enemies of Islam, in every age, try to substitute negativewila
' for positivewila
', and vice versa; or in other words, they direct all their efforts to the end that relations between Muslims and non-Muslims should be cordial, and that relations between Muslims themselves, for various reasons, through all the disputes of the sects, should be hostile.aayah
, In our own time, a great number of actions have been carried out by outsiders, enormous budgets deployed, and regretfully they have introduced elements who have no other work than to trans- formwila
' in the negative Islamic sense into awila
' in an affirmative sense, and affirmative Islamicwila
' into a negativewila
'. This is the greatest blow which these wicked people have dealt against the Prophet.
Today, if we should weep over one disaster from among those assailing Islam, and if we should shed tears over one tragedy from among those befalling Islam, it is this disaster and this tragedy.Amiru'l-mu'minin
, `Ali (a.s
.)* said: How strange it is! By Allah, it mortifies the heart and draws forth grief that these people * (a.s
.) :
is the abbreviation of the Arabic phrase `alay
-hi/-ha/-himu
's-salam
(peace be upon him/ her/them).
agreed
about their falsehood and you disagree about your truth. (Nahju
'l-balaghah
) O Allah, protect and guard Islam and the Muslims from the evil of these evil-doers through the truth of Muhammad and his Pure Household! O Allah, we complain toYou
over the loss of our Prophet - Your blessings on him and his family - and on the absence of ourwali
, the abundance of our enemy and the paucity of our number, over the strain of afflictions on us and time's turning against us. So, bless Muhammad and his family, and help us in this by a victory which You will hasten, and a help which You will strengthen, and anauth
-ority
of truth which You will manifest, and a compassion You will envelop us in, and a well-being You will clothe us in.
Wila
' in its positive, special sense is thewila
' ofAhlu
'l-bayt
, the Household of the Prophet. There can be no room for debate over the fact that the noble Prophet has called and directed the Muslims to a kind ofwila
' in con-nection
with his pure, sinless family; that is to say that even scholars from the Sunni sect make no controversy over this.Theof
the pure relatives:
Say: "I do not ask of you any reward for it but love of my near relatives" (42: 23),Wila
, in a Positive Sense sets down the matter ofwila
' in its special mean-ing
. And it is also present in the famous and un- contestedhadith
ofGhadiri
, where it is said: For whomsoever I am hismawla
, `Ali is hismawla
. This itself is mention of a kind ofwila
' which will be explained later. A noble ayah says: Only Allah is yourWali
, and His Messenger and those who believe, who keep up prayer and payzakat
while they bow in prayer (5:55).
The different schools are of one opinion, that this was revealed concerning `Ali (a.s
.) .
at-Tabari
cites manyahadith
in this connection
, andaz-Zamakhshari
, who was one of the greatest scholars of the Sunni school, said in a definitive manner "This ayah was revealed concerning `Ali, Wilayah - The Station of the Master and the reason for the plural being used (i.e., those), although that about which it was re-vealed
was not more than one person, is that it is exhorting people to behave like this; and it explains that believers should acquire character and qualities like this, and should be eager and fervent in this way in doing good and ingener
-osity
and in helping the poor, and that even in prayer they should not procrastinate."' (i.e., although they may be in prayer when the mat-ter
ofzakat
arises, they should not delay, and should perform their obligation during the time of prayer.) AlsoFakhru'd
-Dinar-Razi
, who, likeaz
-Zamakhshari
, is one of the great men of the Sunni school and of the whole community, said: "This ayah was revealed concerning `Ali, and scholars are all in agreement that the pay-ment
ofzakat
in the time ofruku
` (the position of bowing down in prayer) did not take place except in the case of 'Ali."'
Towards the end he makes someconten
-tion
about the interpretation of the wordwali
, and later on we will discuss the meaning of this ayah. `Aliibn
Hammad
al-`Adwi
al-Basri
al-Bagh
-dadi
, known asIbn
Hammad
, one of theShi'ah
Wila
', in a Positive sense poets of the fourth century of the hegira (10th/ 11th century A.D.) points to the present mean-ing
in the following poem God brought thewila
' of Ali and Hiswila
', Because Ali, in the time ofruku
,
gavezakat
. The Lord of the Throne gave him the name of `the soul of Muhammad'On
the day of cursing. And this is an in- disputable fact.
&
As we said before, a kind ofwila
' has been prescribed in Islam that is positive and has an ordinary meaning, and the noble ayah; And the believers, the men and the women, arewali
one to the other (9:71) .
Wilayah - The Station of the Master is a witness to this kind ofwila
'. Now we wish to say that the noble ayah; Only Allah is yourWali
. .
(5:55). states the matter in such a way that it does not carry universality. In no way is it possible that this ayah was designed as a statement ofwila
' with its ordinary, positive meaning, because the Qur'an here is not aiming to state auni
-versal
law; it does not seek to set down the desirability or the necessity of payingzakat
at the time ofruku
`, and lay it down as a duty, something recommended legally in the Islamic sense as a kind of law of the shad `ah .
Rather, it is a reference to an action that took place when someone did something in the external world, and now the Qur'an established that action to indicate the person, and in an indirect way affirms its decree which is this verywila
' in its special meaning.
This way of saying something, when a par-ticular
event pertaining to a specific individual is expressed using a plural, is not uncommon in the Qur'an. For example:
They say: "If we return to Medina the mightier ones of it will surely drive out the more abasedtherefrom
" (63 :
8). Here also, the Qur'an is referring to a story which actually took place, and itsay
yaquluna
(they say) although the speaker was not more than one person - `Abdullahibn
Ubayy
ibn
Salul
. The giving ofzakat
duringruku
` was not something commonplace among the Muslims, as a result of which we might say that the Qur'an praises them all and affirmswilayah
- in whatever sense we say it - for everyone. This very matter is a living witness that the reference of the ayah is individual and specific, in other words that there was someone who, while inruku
` and while in worship, was still not inattentive to the slaves of Allah and thus did something, and now the Qur'an tells us: "He, also, like Allah and His Prophet, is yourwali
. "
Therefore, a particular person is being discussed, and he, like Allah and the Messenger, is also thewali
of the believers, and the believers must accept hiswila
'.
However, what is the purpose of thiswila
'? Is it only a specific love and devotion which people should have towards that respected person, or is it higher than that? It is this matter that we shall be discussing before long. For the time being, let it suffice to say that contrary to the fancy of some of the scholars of the Sunni school, the sense of this ayah iswila
' with a special meaning, notwila
' in its ordinary sense.