Indeed it required a great skill to
show the indignation and to criticize the existing
conditions in a way that gives the words a meaning of life
and a chance of eternality to make the words as the soldiers
of the revolution and its eternal support in the history of
the faith. It is the faith and the death defiance for the
sake of the truth that make the weak souls great and give
power to the frustrated spirits without any hesitation or
feebleness.
Hence this revolutionary lady chose
this way, which fitted her great soul and her determined
personality towards reserving the truth and striving for its
sake.
She was surrounded by her maids and
fellow-women like the scattered stars gathering in disorder.
They were all together with the same zeal and the same
anxiety. Their leader was among them reviewing what a noble
rising she would attempt to do. She was trying to prepare
the equipments and the supply for that. As she went further
in her review, she became more steadfast and the power of
her right became stronger and stronger. She became bolder in
her movement and in her rush to defend the robbed rights.
She became more active in her advance and more courageous in
her great situation as if she had borrowed her great
husband’s heart to face her difficult circumstances and what
the fate brought to her with. Rather it was what Allah had
decided to try her with that terrible tragedy that could
shake the great mountains.
She was, at that terrible moment when she played the role of
the defensive soldier, like a ghost
under a cloud of bitter sorrow. She was
pale, frowning, broken hearted, depressed, faint, weak,
exhausted but in her soul and mind there was a glimpse of
happiness and remnant of comfort. Neither this nor that were
for enjoying a smiling hope or calmness with a sweet dream
or expecting a good result. That glimpse was a glimpse of
content with the thought of revolution and that comfort was
confidence of success. In the instantaneous failure there
might be a later great success. Exactly it was. A nation
rose to sanctify this revolution and to imitate this great
lady’s stability and courageousness.
Her thoughts in that situation took her
to the near past, to the happy life where her father was
still breathing and her house was the centre of the state
and the steady pole of glory that the world obeyed and
submitted to.
And perhaps her
thoughts led her to remember her father hugging her,
surrounding her with his sympathy and showering her his
kisses, which she was accustomed to and were her sustenance
every morning and evening.
Then she came to be faced with a different time. Her house
that was the lantern of light, the symbol of prophethood and
the shining ray soaring towards the Heaven was threatened
from time to time. Her cousin, the second man in Islam, the
gate of the prophet’s knowledge, [2]
his loyal vizier[3]
and his
promising Aaron, [4]
who would not separate with his pure beginning[5]
from the blessed beginning of the Prophet and who was the
Prophet’s supporter at the beginning and his great hope at
the end, finally would lose the caliphate after the Prophet
(s). His morale, which the Heaven and the earth confessed,
was demolished and his great deeds became irrespective
according to some criteria fabricated at that time.
Here she cried bitterly. Her crying was
not of that sort that appeared on the lineaments. It was the
agony of the conscience, the suffering of the soul and the
tremor of the regrets in the bottom of the heart. Tears
flowed from her gloomy eyes.
Her stop did not last long. She rushed
like a flaming spark surrounded by her companions until she
reached the struggle field. She stopped her eternal stop and
declared her war, in which she used whatever she was allowed
to use as a Muslim woman. Her fresh revolution was about to
devour the caliphate but the circumstances were against her
and the obstacles increased in front of her.
That was the veracious Fatima, the daughter of the Prophet,
the delight of his eye, the example of infallibility, the radiant halo and
the remainder of the Prophet among the Muslims, on her
way to the mosque. She lost the father, who was the best
at all in the history of mankind, the most sympathetic,
the most compassionate and the most blessed.
This was a calamity that could make
the one, afflicted with, taste the bitterness of dying
and find dying sweet and delightful hope.
Thus was Fatima when her father
left to the better world and his soul flew to Paradise
pleased (with Allah) and (Allah)
well-pleased (with him).
The bitter events did not cease.
She faced another calamity, which had a great effect on
her pure soul and it moved her sorrow and grief. It was
not less than the first calamity. It was the lost of the
glory, which the Heaven had granted to the Prophet’s
family along history. That glory was the leadership of
the umma. The Heaven had decided that Muhammad’s family
was to rule his umma and his Shia because they
(Muhammad’s descendents) were his examples and
derivatives. But the opposite account turned the
leadership and the rule away from the real possessors
and appointed caliphs and emirs instead.
[6]
With this and that Fatima (s) lost the
holiest prophet and father and the most eternal chiefdom and
leadership in an overnight. So her grief-stricken soul sent
her to the war and its fields and made her undertake the
revolution and keep on it.
Undoubtedly, anyone else who had the
same principles and beliefs could not have done what she did
or striven in jihad like her without being an easy prey for
the ruling authority that had reached at that time the peak
of subdual and severity. There was blame for waving,
accusation for saying and punishment for doing. [7]
It was not different from what we nowadays might refer to as
martial laws. That was necessary for the rulers in those
days to support their base and to fix their structure.
But since the defending rebel was the
daughter of Muhammad (s), a piece of his soul[8]
and his flourishing image, she would be kept safe
undoubtedly because of the holy prophethood of her father
and also the respect and other aspects of woman in Islam
that safeguarded her from harm.
The tools of the revolution
Fatima (s) flew by the wings of her sacred thoughts to the
horizons of her past and the world of her great father,
which turned, after her father joined his Lord, to a shining
memory in her soul. It supplied her every moment with
feelings, sympathy and education. It roused in her joy and
ease. Even if she was late after her father in the account
of time, she did not separate from him in
the account of soul and memory.
So she had inside her an
inexhaustible power, a motive for a sweeping revolution,
which never went out, lights from the prophethood of
Muhammad and the soul of Muhammad lighting her way and
guiding her to the right path.
Fatima (s) deserted the worldly
life when the revolution of her soul ripened and turned
with her feelings towards the memory that still lived
inside her soul to take from it a torch of light for her
difficult situation. She began calling:
Come back to me O scenes of
happiness, from which I woke up to find unhappiness that
I cannot tolerate….
Come back to me O you the dearest
and the most beloved one to me. Talk to me and shed on
me some of your divine light as you used to do with me
before.
Come back to me, my father. Let me
converse with you if that will relieve you. Let me
reveal to you my griefs as I always used to do. Let me
tell you about those shades, which preserved me from the
flame of this world. Now I no longer have any.
She said after the death of her
father:
There were after you conflicting
news and misfortunes,
If you were here, no misfortune
would happen. [9]
Come back to me O memories of my dear past to tell me
your attractive speech and make me hear every thing to
announce my war with no leniency against those, who
ascended-or the people made them ascend- the minbar and
the position of my father and they did not pay any
attention to the rights of the Prophet’s family or to
the sanctity of the holy house to prevent it from burning[10]
and from being destroyed. Remind me of my father’s scenes
and battles. Did not he tell me of the kinds of heroism and
jihad[11]
of his brother and son-in-law (Ali), his superiority on all
his opponents and his steadfastness beside the Prophet (s)
in the most difficult hours and the most violent fights,
from which so and so had fled and the brave desisted[12]
to break into? Was it right after that to put Abu Bakr on
the minbar of the Prophet and to bring down Ali from what he
deserved?!
O my father’s memories, tell me about Abu Bakr. Is not he
the one, whom the divine inspiration did not entrust with
the announcing of a verse to the polytheists[13]
and chose Ali for the task? Did that mean but that Ali was the natural
representative of Islam, who was to undertake every task
that the Prophet might not be free from his many duties to
do himself?
I remember well that critical day where
the agitators agitated when my father appointed Ali as emir
of Medina and he went out for war. They put for that emirate[14]
whatever interpretations they liked. But Ali was steadfast
like a mountain. The riots of the rioters did not shake him.
I tried to make him follow my father to tell him what people
fabricated. At last he followed the Prophet. Then he came
back beaming brightly and smiling broadly. Happiness carried
him to his beloved spouse to bring good news to her not in
the worldly meaning but in a meaning of the Heaven. Ali told
how the Prophet received him, welcomed him and said to him:
“You are to me as Aaron was to Moses but there will be no
prophet after me.”[15]
Moses’ Aaron was his partner in the rule, the imam of his
umma and was prepared to be his successor. And so Muhammad’s
Aaron had to be the wali of the Muslims and the caliph after
Muhammad (s).
When she arrived at this point of her flowing thoughts, she
cried out that this was the reversal, of which Allah had
warned in His saying:
(And
Muhammad is no more than an apostle; the apostles have
already passed away before him; if then he dies or is killed
will you turn back on your heels? 3:144)
Soon the people turned back on their heels and were overcome
by the pre-Islamic thinking, which the two parties (the
Muhajireen and the Ansar) exchanged in the Saqeefa[16]
when one of them said: “We are the people of glory and
strength and more in number.” The other replied: “Who will
dispute with us about the rule of Muhammad while we are his
assistants and family?”[17]
The holy book and the Sunna failed in front of those
criteria. She began to say:
O principles of Muhammad, which flowed
in my veins since I was born, like the blood in the veins.
Omar, who attacked you (principles) in your house in Mecca,
which the Prophet had made as a centre for his mission,
attacked the family of Muhammad in their house (in Medina)
and set fire to it or was about to do so…[18]
O my great mother’s soul, you have
taught me an eternal lesson in the life of the Islamic
struggle by your great jihad beside the master of the
prophets. I will make myself as another Khadeeja for Ali in
his present ordeal. [19]
Here I am, my mother. I hear your voice in the
depth of my soul prompting me to
stand against the rulers.
I will go to Abu Bakr to say to
him: “You have done a monstrous thing. Here it is before
you. Take it as if it is prepared for you. It will
dispute with you on the Day of Resurrection. What a fair
judge Allah is on that day and the master is Muhammad
and the appointment is the Day of Punishment”[20]
and to draw the attention of the Muslims to the bad ends
of their doing and the dark future they built with their
own hands and to say to them: “It was impregnated so
wait until it bears then milk its blood…then they will
perish who say false things and the successors will know
what bad the earlier ones have established.”[21]
Then she rushed into the field of
action having in her soul the principles of Muhammad,
the spirit of Khadeeja, the heroism of Ali and great
pity for the umma that it might face a dark future.
The route of the revolution
The way, which the revolutionary lady took, was not long
because the house, from which the spark and the flame of
the revolution were emitted, was the house of Ali. It
was called, according to the Prophet (s), the house of
the prophethood. It was attached to the mosque. [22]
Nothing separated them except one wall. So she might
enter the mosque from the door, which was between them
(the mosque and the house) and leading to the mosque
directly or she might enter from the
general gate of the mosque. It is not so important for us
which way she passed, whereas I think it was the general
gate of the mosque because the historical description of her
revolutionary movement feels of that. Her entering from her
special door did not let her walk in the mosque or to pass a
way between her house and the mosque so how could the
narrator describe her gait that it was exactly like the gait[23]
of the Prophet? If we supposed that she had walked in the
mosque itself, so her walk would not lead her to the caliph
but it would begin from there because if some one came into
the mosque, it would be said that he came in to those, who
were in the mosque even if he walked in the mosque, while
the narrator considered her coming in to the caliph after
her walking. This confirmed what we thought.
The women
The narration showed that Fatima was
accompanied by her maids and some of her fellow women. [24]
She came with the women in order to draw the attention of
people and to make them notice her passing that way with
that number of women to gather in the mosque and to crowd
where her destination was to be to know what she wanted to
say or to do. Hence the trial would be open in front of the
public in that disturbed milieu.
A phenomenon
It was mentioned that the gait of
Fatima (s) was exactly the same as her father’s gait.
We have the opportunity to philosophize this accurate
imitation. It might be her nature without any affectation or a special
intent. It was not unlikely for she accustomed to
imitating her father in sayings and doings. Or she might
do that on purpose when she imitated the exact gait of
her father to provoke the feelings of people and the
sentiments of the public to get their minds back to the
near past, to the holy reign of the Prophet and the
smiling days, which they spent under the shadow of their
great Prophet. By that she tried to soften their
feelings and to pave the way for their hearts to accept
her glaring invitation and to give some success to her
desperate or semi-desperate try.
Hence you see that the narrator
himself was moved by this case knowingly or unknowingly
and that his affection prompted him to record accurately
the gait of Fatima (s).
It was a blessed cry by Fatima that
was looked after by the Heaven. It was, at its
beginning, the point at which the slaughtered right was
focused and the desperate try around which smiles of
hope spread and then turned, after its end, to bitter
gloom, rigid despair and surrender imposed by the
people’s lives in those days.
Unlike the other revolutions, it was a revolution that
the rebel did not want an immediate result for as much
as to be recorded as a revolution by itself and to be
mentioned by history in prominent lines. And it was! It
expressed the intent completely with no defect. Indeed
this was what happened that we think it succeeded even
apparently it failed as we will explain later in one of
the chapters of this book.
Footnotes:
1. Fatima (s).
2. According to the famous prophetic tradition (I am the city of knowledge and
Ali is its gate). Refer to Abu Na’eem’s Hilyatul-Awliya’, vol.1, p.64,
As-Sayouti’s Jami’ul-Jawami’, At-Tarmithi’s Sahih and refer to at-Taj aj-Jami’
lil-Usool fee Ahadeeth ar-Rasool of Sheikh Mansour Ali Nassif, ol.3 p.337.
3. With reference to the tradition (This-referring to Ali-is my brother, my
vizier and my successor among you…). Refer to the full tradition in at-Tabari’s
Tareekh, vol.3 p.218-219 and Tafseer
al-Khazin, vol.3 p.371.
4. Regarding the true tradition (O Ali, are you not pleased to be for me as
Aaron was to Moses, except that there is no a prophet after me). Refer to
al-Bukari’s Sahih, vol.5 p.81, Muslim’s Sahih, vol.4 p.1873 and at-Taj aj-Jami’
of Sheikh Mansour Ali Nassif, vol.3 p.333.
5. Refer to Nahjul Balagha, sermon no.192 p.300-302, checked by Dr. Subhi
as-Salih. Imam Ali said: (You have known my position to the Prophet in close
relation and special rank. He put me in his lab when I was a child…where there
was no a single house having Muslims except that house, which gathered the
Prophet, Khadeeja (the Prophet’s first wife) and me. I saw the light of the
angel and smelt the scent of the prophethood…)
6. The heaven had decided that Ali and the other pure members of the Prophet’s
family were to have the leadership and the imamate of the umma. There was a big
step of educational and intellectual preparation for such leadership and
caliphate. In fact there was a clear method that its steps succeeded in this
way. It was confirmed by the holy Quran and the Sunna that did not let any way
of doubt. Refer to The origin of the Shiism and the Shia by Imam as-Sadr and
edited by Abdul Jabbar Sharara. We proved by numbers, evidences and texts this
fact with reference to the reliable sources and true traditions of our Sunni
brothers.
Also refer (for example) to at-Tabari’s Tareekh vol.3 p.218-219, as-Sayooti’s
Tareekh al-Khulafa’ (History of the caliphs), p.171, ibn Hajar’s as-Sawa’iq
al-Muhriqa, p.127 and the Summary of Ibn Assakir’s Tareekh by ibn Mandhour,
vol.17.p.356 and following pages.
7. Refer to the event of al-Saqeefa in al-Tabari’s Tareekh vol.2 p.244 and see
what had happened on that day. One was the saying of the second caliph (Omar):
“Kill Sa’d bin Obada…”
8. The Prophet said: “Fatima is a part of me. Whoever hurts her, surely hurts
me…” Refer to at-Taj al-Jami’ lil-Ossool vol.3 p.353, al-Bukhari’s Sahih vol.5
p.83 tradition no. 232 and Muslim’s Sahih vol.4 p.p/.1902 tradition no.2493.
9. Sharh Nahjul Balagha of ibn Abul Hadeed, vol.16 p.312.
10. With reference to the threat of burning the house of Fatima (s). Refer to
al-Imama wes-Siyasa by ibn Qutayba p.12, at-Tabari’s Tareekh vol.2 p.233 and
Sharh Nahjul Balagha by ibn Abul Hadeed vol.6 p.47-48. They mentioned that Omar
bin al-Khattab came to the house of Fatima with a group of Ansar (the people of
Medina, who believed and assisted the Prophet in his mission when he and his
companions emigrated from Mecca to Medina) and Muhajireen (the Prophet’s
companions, who emigrated from Mecca to Medina) and said: “I swear by Him, in
Whose hand my soul is, either you come out to pay homage (to Abu Bakr) or I will
set fire to the house with whoever inside it”.
11. Refer to at-Tabari’s Tareekh vol.2 p.25 and65-66, when Imam Ali (s) killed
Talha bin Othman the bearer of the polytheists’ banner…and killed all the
bearers of the banner. The prophet (s) saw a group of polytheists. He said to
Ali: “Attack them!” Ali attacked them, scattered them and killed Amr aj-Jumahi.
The Prophet saw another group of polytheists. He said to Ali: “Attack them” Ali
attacked them, scattered them and killed Shayba bin Malik. Gabriel said to the
Prophet: “O messenger of Allah, it is this the real assistance.” The prophet
said: “He is from me and I am from him”. Gabriel said: “And I am from you both…”
12. Refer to the tradition narrated by Sa’d bin Abu Waqqas mentioned in Muslim’s
Sahih, vol.4 p.1873, at-Tarmithi’s Sahih vol.5 p.596 and ibn Hajar’s as-Sawa’iq
al-Muhriqa. They all confirmed this meaning.
13. With reference to the story of sura of Bara’a. Refer to Imam Ahmad’s Musnad
vol.1 p.3 and az-Zamakhshari’s Kashshaf vol.2 p.243. It was mentioned that:
“While Abu Bakr was on his way (towards Mecca) in order to inform of the sura of
Bara’a, Gabriel came down and said to the Prophet: “O Muhammad, no one is to
inform of your mission but a man of your family. So you send Ali…”Also refer to
at-Tarmithi’s Sahih vol.5 p.594.
14. At-Tabari’s Tareekh vol.2 p.182-183 and al-Bidayeh wen Nihayeh of ibn
Katheer ad-Damaski vol.7 p.340 for more details.
15. At-Taj aj-Jami’ lil-Ossool of sheikh Mansour Ali Nassif vol.3 p.332,
Muslim’s Sahih vol.4 p.1873 and an-Nassa’ei’s Khassa’iss p.48-50.
16. A big shed, in which the Muhajireen and the Ansar gathered in after the
death of the Prophet (s) to decide who would be the caliph after the Prophet.
17. Refer to at-Tabari’s Tareekh vol.2 p.234 and the following pages and Sharh
Nahjul Balagha by ibn Abul Hadeed vol.6 p.6-9.
18. Refer to at-Tabari’s Tareekh vol.2 p.233. He mentioned that ibn Hameed had
said: “Omar bin al-Khattab came to Ali’s house and there were some men of
Muhajireen inside it and said: “I swear by Allah that I will burn the house with
you or you come out to pay homage…”
19. Relating to the situation of Khadeeja (the Prophet’s wife), in which Allah
had glorified her when she assisted the Prophet in his ordeal with Quraysh when
they considered him as liar.
20. Sharh Nahjul Balagha vol.16 p.212.
21. Sharh Nahjul Balagha vol.16 p.212.
22. As it was mentioned by Ahmad bin Hanbal in his Musnad vol.4 p.369 and ibn
Katheer in his Tarekh vol.3 p.355 that some of the Prophet’s companions had
doors (of their houses) opened to the mosque. The Prophet ordered to be closed
except the door of Ali’s house.
23. Sharh Nahjul Balagha vol.16 p.211.
24. Sharh Nahjul Balagha vol.16 p.211.
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