History of Islam An encyclopedia of Islamic history
Karbala
Contributed by Prof. Dr. Nazeer Ahmed, PhD
Karbala was the last breath of the age of
faith. Very few historical events have shaped the language, culture,
music, politics and sociology of Muslim peoples, as has Karbala.
Languages such as Swahili and Urdu that were born a thousand years after
the event relate to it as if it happened yesterday. A laborer in Kuala
Lumpur reacts to it with the same immediacy as a qawwal in
Lahore or a professor in Chicago. Karbala is a noun, an adjective and a
verb all at once. Indeed, Karbala marks a benchmark in Islamic history
and a central hinge around which the internal dialectic among Muslims
revolves.
Until the assassination of Ali ibn Abu
Talib (r) the issue of succession to the Prophet had been decided
through mutual consultation. Abu Bakr (r), Omar (r), Uthman (r) and Ali
(r) (the Khulfa e Rashidoon as Muslims generally refer to them)
drew their legitimacy from the consent of the people. The process was
inherently democratic. Abu Bakr-as-Siddiq (r) specifically forbade the
nomination of his own son as the Caliph after him, thereby avoiding
dynastic rule. Omar ibn al Khattab (r), in his last will, nominated a
council of six of the most respected Companions to choose his successor.
The Companions were cognizant of the pitfalls of dynastic succession
and the excellence of rule by consultation and consent. Theirs was the
age of faith. The mission of the first four Caliphs was the creation of a
just society, enjoining what is noble, forbidding what is evil and
believing in God. In this struggle, they took extraordinary pains to
ensure that their immediate families did not profit from their
privileged positions.
Muawiya bin Abu Sufyan changed this
process. Upon the advice of Mogheera bin Shoba, he nominated his eldest
son Yazid as his successor. This was an historical benchmark. Rule by
consent requires accountability. Rule by a strongman requires force
without accountability. The nomination of Yazid destroyed the
requirement for accountability. After Muawiya, Muslim history would
produce sultans and emperors, some benevolent, others despotic. Some
would declare themselves Caliphs, others would hobnob with Caliphs,
marrying their daughters and offering them exorbitant treasures as
gifts, but their rule was always the rule of a soldier. The
transcendence of the rule of Tawhid and the accountability that went with it came to an end with the assassination of Ali (r).
Muawiya had wasted no time in extending
his hold on the territories formerly held by Ali ibn Abu Talib (r) and
Hassan ibn Ali. Iraq was in the juggernaut of Muawiya’s police force, so
the Iraqis had no choice but to accept the imposition of Yazid. The
province of Hejaz (which is a part of Saudi Arabia today and includes
the cities of Mecca and Madina) was another matter. Respected personages
such as Hussain ibn Ali, Abdullah bin Zubair, Abdullah bin Omar,
Abdullah bin Abbas and Abdur Rahman bin Abu Bakr opposed the idea of a
dynasty as contrary to the Sunnah of the Prophet and the tradition of
the first Caliphs. To convince them, Muawiya himself traveled to Madina.
A meeting was held but there was no meeting of the minds. Not to be
deterred by this defiant rejection, Muawiya came out of the meeting and
declared that the five had agreed to take their oath of allegiance to
Yazid. According to Tabari and Ibn Aseer, Muawiya openly threatened to
use force if his proposition was not agreed to. The ammah (general population) gave in. Only later was it discovered that the rumor of allegiance of the “pious five” was a ruse.
Muawiya died soon thereafter (680) at the
age of seventy-eight and Yazid ascended the Umayyad throne. One of his
first acts was to order the governor of Madina, Waleed bin Uthba, to
force an oath of allegiance from Abdullah bin Zubair and Hussain ibn
Ali. Sensing the imminent danger to his life, Abdullah bin Zubair left
Madina for Mecca under cover of darkness and took refuge in the Ka’ba,
where he would presumably be safe from Yazid’s troops. Hussain ibn Ali
consulted with his half-brother Muhammad bin Hanafia and moved to Mecca
as well.
Those Companions of the Prophet and other
Muslims, who believed that Ali (r) was the rightful Caliph after the
Prophet were called Shi’ Aan e Ali (the party of Ali (r), which
explains the origin of the term Shi’a. The term Sunni is of later
historical origin). As is recorded by Ibn Kathir and Ibn Khaldun, these
Companions were not entirely satisfied when Abu Bakr (r) was elected the
Caliph. However, to maintain the unity of the community they supported
and served Abu Bakr (r), Omar (r) and Uthman (r). When Hassan(r)
abdicated in favor of Muawiya, many amongst Shi’ Aan e Ali
withdrew from politics. While maintaining no animosity against the power
structure, which was almost always hostile to them, they accepted the
spiritual leadership of Ali’s (r) lineage.
Kufa had been the capital during the Caliphate of Ali ibn Abu Talib (r) and members of Shi’ Aan e Ali
were numerous in Iraq. Hussain ibn Ali received insistent letters from
the notables of Kufa inviting him to Iraq and to accept their allegiance
to him as the Caliph. As a first step, Hussain sent his cousin Muslim
bin Aqeel on a fact finding mission. Muslim bin Aqeel arrived in Kufa
and set up residence in the house of a well-wisher, Hani. The supporters
of Hussain thronged this residence, so Muslim sent word to Hussain
encouraging him to migrate to Kufa.
Meanwhile, Yazid dispatched Ubaidullah
bin Ziyad, commonly known as Ibn Ziyad, the butcher of Karbala, to
apprehend Muslim bin Aqeel and stop the incipient uprising. Ibn Ziyad
arrived in Iraq and promptly declared that those who would support Yazid
would be rewarded and those who opposed him would have their heads cut
off. Greed and fear of reprisals did their trick. The Kufans made an
about-turn and abandoned Muslim. He was attacked and executed by forces
of Ibn Ziyad. Before his death, Muslim sent word to Hussain that the
situation in Kufa had changed and that he should abandon the idea of
migrating there. By this time, Ibn Ziyad’s forces had cut the
communications of Hussain’s supporters, so the second message from
Muslim never reached Hussain.
Unaware of the ground situation in Kufa,
Hussain started his move from Mecca to Kufa in 680 with his supporters
and well-wishers. On the way, news arrived that Muslim had been killed.
According to Ibn Kathir, Hussain wanted to turn back but the demand for qisas
(equitable retribution) from Muslim’s brothers prevented him. He did
inform his entourage of the developments and urged those who wanted to
return to do so. All but the very faithful, mostly members of the
Prophet’s family, left him.
Undaunted, Hussain ibn Ali moved forward
and was stopped by a regiment of troops under Amr bin Sa’ad at Karbala
on the banks of the River Euphrates. A standoff ensued, negotiations
took place and Amr bin Sa’ad communicated this to Ibn Ziyad in Kufa. But
Ibn Ziyad would accept nothing short of capitulation and Hussain’s
explicit baiyah (oath of allegiance) to Yazid. Sensing that Amr
bin Sa’ad was reluctant to commence hostilities against the Prophet’s
family, Ibn Ziyad recalled him and replaced him with Shimr Zil Jowhan.
Shimr, a man without moral compunctions, surrounded the Hussaini camp
and cut off the supply of water. The final confrontation came on the 10th of Muharram. (Muharram is the first month of the Islamic calendar and the date is mentioned here because the 10th
of Muharram has come to occupy a special place in Muslim history).
Hussain, the soldier of God, who had drunk from the lips of the Prophet
and who would not submit to the tyranny of Yazid, arranged his seventy
two men in battle formation, advanced and met the forces of darkness.
Each of the men was cut down and at last, the grandson of the Prophet
also fell. His head was cut off and sent to Kufa where Ibn Ziyad
mistreated it in the most abominable manner and paraded it through the
streets. The ladies and surviving children in Hussain’s entourage were
safely escorted back to Madina by some well-wishers. It was the year
680.
More Muslim tears have been shed for the
blood of Hussain ibn Ali than any other martyr in Islamic history.
Hussain’s martyrdom provided Islam with a paradigm for selfless struggle
and sacrifice. For hundreds of years, generations would rise, invoking
the name of Hussain ibn Ali, to uphold justice and to fight against
tyranny. For some Muslims, it was the defining moment in Islamic
history.
Hussain stood for faith and principle in
the face of tyranny and coercion. In the person of Hussain, faith held
its head high against the sharpness of the tyrant’s blade. Hussain was
the embodiment of the Qur’anic teaching that humankind is born into
freedom and is to bow only before the Divine majesty. Freedom is a trust
bestowed upon all men and women by the Creator; it is not to be
surrendered before the oppression of a mere mortal.
Karbala imparted a new meaning to the
term struggle. Humankind must strive with patience and constancy in the
face of extreme adversity. Comfort and safety are not to be impediments
in the higher struggle for the rewards of the hereafter. Hussain did not
give up his struggle even though he was abandoned by the multitudes
that had offered him support. He did not surrender while facing
insurmountable odds.
History is a jealous and demanding
consumer. Time and again, it demands the ultimate sacrifice from the
faithful, so that faith may renew itself. Karbala was a renewal of
faith. Islam received an eternal boost from the sacrifice of Hussain ibn
Ali. Faith had triumphed even while the sword had conquered.
Before Karbala, Shi’ Aan e Ali
was a religious movement. After Karbala, it became both a religious and
political movement. As we shall see in later chapters, the echoes of
Karbala were heard again and again throughout Islamic history and
imparting to it a directional momentum that persists even in
contemporary affairs.
So great was the shock from Hussain’s
martyrdom, that even Yazid sought to distance himself from the tragedy.
Ibn Kathir reports that when he heard of the events of Karbala, Yazid
wept bitterly and cursed the actions of Ibn Ziyad. But when we view the
sum total of Yazid’s actions and his personal character, these were
nothing but crocodile tears of a tyrant.
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