Islam
Ali ibn Abi Talib (علي بن أبي طالب)
(c. 600 -
661), the fourth of the
caliphs or successors of
Muhammad, was born at
Mecca. His father,
Abu Talib, was an uncle of the
Prophet, and Ali himself was adopted by Muhammad and educated under his care.
While a boy, he distinguished himself by being one of the first to declare his adherence to the cause of Muhammad, who some
years afterwards gave him his daughter
Fatima Zahra in marriage. Ali proved
himself to be a brave and faithful soldier, and when Muhammad died without male issue, a few emigrants thought Ali to have the
best claim to succeed Muhammad. However, the first
caliph would be
Abu Bakr, followed by
Umar and
Uthman. It was not until
656, after the murder of Uthman, that Ali assumed the title of caliph. Certain conspirators
later claimed that he took no steps to prevent this murder, and use this story as perhaps the only blot upon his character.
However, some stories also claim that Ali sent his sons
Hussein and
Hasan to defend Uthman, and was angered when they were unable to protect
him.
Almost the first act of his reign was the suppression of a rebellion under Talha and Zobair (two eminent companions of
Muhammad), who were instigated by
Aisha, Muhammad's widow, a bitter enemy of Ali, and one
of the chief hindrances to his advancement to the caliphate. The rebel army was defeated at the
Battle of Basra also known as the
Battle of the Camel, the two generals being killed, and Ayisha taken prisoner, although she was released and given a pension.
Ali soon afterwards made
Kufa his capital. His next care was to get rid of the
opposition of
Muawiyah, the governor of
Syria, who had established himself at the head of a renegade army. A prolonged battle took place in July
657 in the plain of Siffin (Suffein), near the
Euphrates; the fighting was at first, in favour of Ali, when suddenly a number of the enemy, fixing copies of the
Quran to the points of their spears, exclaimed that "the matter ought to be settled by
reference to this book, which forbids Muslims to shed each other's blood." The superstitious soldiers of Ali refused to fight any
longer, and demanded that the issue be referred to arbitration. Abu Musa was appointed umpire on the part of Ali, and
`Amr-ibn-al-As, a veteran diplomatist, on the part of Muawiyah. It is said that `Amr persuaded Abu Musa that it would be for the
advantage of Islam that neither candidate should reign, and asked him to give his decision first. Abu Musa having proclaimed that
he deposed both Ali and Muawiya, `Amr declared that he also deposed Ali, and announced further that he invested Moawiya with the
caliphate. This treacherous decision greatly injured the cause of Ali, which was still further weakened by the loss of
Egypt.
It chanced, however--according to a legend, the details of which are quite uncertain--that three of the sect of the
Kharijites had made an agreement to assassinate Ali, Muawiyah and `Amr, as the authors
of disastrous feuds among the faithful. The only victim of this plot was Ali, who died at Kufa in 661, of the wound inflicted by
a poisoned weapon. A splendid mosque called
Meshed Ali was afterwards erected
near the city at Najaf, the place of his burial. He had eight wives after Fatima's death,
and in all, it is said, thirty-three children, one of whom,
Hasan, a son
of Fatima, is said by the Sunni tradition to have stepped aside to prevent furhter bloodshed among Muslims.
Muawiyah, who founded the
Umayyad dynasty
of caliphs thus became the caliph. Ali's descendants by Fatima are known as the
Fatimids.
The question of Ali's right to succeed to the caliphate is an article of faith which divided the Muslim world into two great
sects, the Sunni and the
Shia. The Sunnis
believe that the prophet chose
Abu Bakr to be the first caliph, while the Shia
believe that he chose Ali and announced it in public in
Ghadir Khom. Whatever
the case, Ali did not challenge Abu Bakr or any of the later caliphs, rather he served as an advisor to them.
Ali is greatly respected by all Muslims, both Sunni and Shia. The
Shia, venerate him
especially as second only to the prophet, call him among several titles the "Leader of the Faithful" (Amir-ul-mumineen) and the
"Lion of God" (Sher-i-Khuda), and celebrate the anniversary of his martyrdom. Ali is described as a bold, noble and generous man,
"the last and worthiest of the primitive Muslims, who imbibed his religious enthusiasm from companionship with the prophet
himself, and who followed to the last the simplicity of his example." (See further
Caliphate.)
In the eyes of the later Muslims he was remarkable for learning and wisdom, and there are extant collections of proverbs and
verses which bear his name: the Sentences of Ali. The most famous collection of Ali's speeches and letters is the
Nahj ul Balagha meaning "The peak of eloquence".
He is entombed in the grand shrine at
Najaf in modern
Iraq, although some believe he is buried at
Mazar-e Sharif
in Afghanistan.
His sons
Hasan and
Husayn are also revered by
Muslims, especially the
Shia.
See also Shiites --
Ismailis --
Fatimids --
Hashemites --
Shia Imams --
Wali