Restatement of the History of Islam and Muslims [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Restatement of the History of Islam and Muslims [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Sayed Ali Asghar Rizwy

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Ali
and the Ideals of Freedom and Liberty


IF IN THE UMMA OF MUHAMMAD, THE PROPHET OF ISLAM,
Ali was the greatest apostle of peace, he was, without a doubt, also the greatest defender
in it of the freedom and liberty of the individual.

In the selection of a leader for the Muslims, Ali
had been bypassed thrice but by a supreme irony, it was with him that they found the
privilege, for the first time and for the last time in their entire history, to freely
choose their own leader, and they chose him. In choosing Ali, they were unconsciously
choosing the guarantor of their own freedom.

As noted before, when the Muhajireen and the Ansar
in Medina insisted that Ali should take charge of the government, and he agreed to do so,
he declared that no one was under any obligation or under any pressure to take the oath of
loyalty to him. Therefore, all those men who took the oath of loyalty to him, did so
voluntarily.

But there were many people in Medina who not only
withheld their pledge of loyalty to Ali but also began to leave Medina. Ali made no
attempt to stop them. When his attention was drawn to their departure, he said that under
his rule everyone was free to live in Medina or to leave it, and that he was not going to
force anyone to live or to leave. His enemies wanted to leave Medina and he let them
leave, and he did not ask them any questions.

Most of the companions of the Prophet who were in
Medina, had taken the oath of allegiance to Ali. Among them were Talha and Zubayr. They
had hoped that Ali would make them governors of Kufa and Basra. But Ali selected other men
for those two positions whereupon both of them left Medina with the intent of breaking
their solemn pledge. Ali let them go.

This policy of "laissez-faire" is in sharp
contrast with the policy of Umar bin al-Khattab, the second khalifa, who had forbidden the
principal companions of the Prophet, especially the Muhajireen, to accompany his armies
into Persia or Syria or Egypt, and had ordered them to stay in Medina, much to their
chagrin. He had done so ostensibly because of his fear that they would exploit their
influence and prestige which they enjoyed as companions of the Prophet, if they were
allowed to go into the newly-conquered provinces. The companions, as yet, had not done
anything to exploit their influence. But Umar presumed that they would, and on grounds of
this presumption, restricted their freedom of movement.

Ali did not detain Talha and Zubayr in Medina on
grounds of his presumption that they nursed treason in their hearts against the state,
which both of them did.

A few months later, Ayesha, Talha and Zubayr, rose
in rebellion against Ali, and marched on Basra. But Ali still did not use any
"strong-arm" methods to bring them into line. He had to take up their challenge
but he preferred to do so without using his powers of state.

In the first place, Ali did not conscript anyone. He
went into the Great Mosque of Medina, and told the Muslims about the insurrection of
Ayesha, Talha and Zubayr. He appealed to them to support him in maintaining peace in
Dar-ul-Islam, and in protecting the integrity of the state. He also reminded them that
they had given him their pledge to obey him in peace and in war. But there was no answer.
He renewed his appeal on the second day and the third and the fourth.

After many days, only seven hundred men responded to
Ali's appeal, and it was with this tiny force that he left Medina. At no time did he try
to dragoon anyone into his army. All those men who fought on his side were volunteers.

In the second place, Ali gave amnesty to the
citizens of Basra though they had merited the penalty for treason. He, in fact, did not
even make them prisoners when they were defeated in battle. He thus allowed his friends as
well as his foes to enjoy the blessing of freedom.

Ali's refusal to arrest those men in Medina who did
not give him their pledge of loyalty, his permission to Talha and to Zubayr to leave
Medina, and his amnesty to the rebels of Basra, are an eloquent testimony to his resolve
to uphold the ideals of freedom and liberty.

Ali proved that in the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth,
freedom and liberty were not some remote and shadowy ideals to be cherished by the Muslims
but were their right, and that they were not to live like prisoners in any sense of the
term. Curtailed freedom is incompatible with the privilege of citizenship of the Kingdom
of Heaven. Whoever was admitted to the Kingdom of Heaven was emancipated; he became free
and remained free.

When Ali took charge of the government, the Muslim
umma was in a state of anomie. Its ruling classes had reached a state of undreamed-of
affluence, and the ultimate arrogance of power. He realized that the social, economic and
political order of the state called for a restructuring of government and society. But his
attempt to restructure government and society was resented by the rich and the powerful,
and their resentment erupted in the battles of Basra and Siffin, as noted before.

A third group which declared its opposition to Ali's
policy of reform, was made up of the Kharjis. They wished to achieve their aims through
violent revolution and upheaval. They made it obvious that they would not let Ali restore
efficiency, integrity and strength to the government through peaceful and systematic
means.

The Kharjis abused the freedoms that Ali gave to the
Muslims. They not only criticized his policies but also questioned his faith itself. But
he did not try to stifle them. He tolerated their most intemperate and stinging criticism
as long as they did not disrupt peace, and did not imperil the security of other Muslims.

Ali left error of opinion to be tolerated if reason
was left free to fight it. But the Kharjis took every advantage of their freedoms, and
began to spread anarchy, lawlessness and terror in the land. It was only when they passed
beyond the threats of killing law-abiding citizens, and actually killed many of them, that
Ali was compelled to move against them to check their excesses.

The city of Kufa, Ali's capital, was open to the
Kharjis and to his other enemies. They enjoyed as much freedom as his friends did. They
lived in Kufa, or they came in and went out as they pleased. Ali never placed any of them
under surveillance.

All subjects of the Islamic State - men, women and
children – were paid a stipend from the State Treasury. The Khawarij collected their
share same as other citizens. Ali and his officers never made any attempt to make them
affable, docile and pliant through economic pressure. They remained hard-boiled enemies of
state and society committed to subvert both. Eventually one of them killed him.

Yet through it all, even in the darkest moments, Ali
never allowed adverse fortunes to obliterate the ideals of freedom and liberty from the
psyche of the umma of Muhammad. Freedom and liberty remained for him sacrosanct,
indestructible, and indomitable, like his own faith in the ultimate and inevitable triumph
of Justice and Truth.

Perhaps nothing is easier than to sing the praises
of freedom and liberty but Ali is the only statesman in the whole world who paid his
tributes to them, not in rhetoric, but in palpable deeds. No ruler in world history ever
gave more freedom to his subjects – friends and foes alike – than Ali! The
freedom which he gave to his subjects first cost him victory in the battle of Siffin, and
then cost him his own life. But it appears that in his opinion, their freedom was a most
precious entity, and he did not begrudge the price he had to pay to preserve it.

Ali's reign was a new dispensation for the human
race, and a new hope for humanity. Never again, in their history, the Muslims and the
non-Muslims were ever to enjoy such freedom and liberty as they did during the caliphate
of Ali ibn Abi Talib!

Ali and his Legacy

Ali had contempt for wealth and ostentation; he had
respect for the individual; and he had faith in the ultimate power of reason if left
unfettered by myth or privilege. He was an enemy of privilege, and he fought against it
all his life.

As the true guardian of Islam, Ali kept his eye only
on the interests of Islam. If he had to sacrifice his life to protect the interests of
Islam, he did so gladly. On the night of the Migration of his master, Muhammad, from
Makkah to Medina, he slept in the jaws of death. From that day, his life was consecrated
to the service of Muhammad and the defense of Islam.

In studying Ali and his career, three principal
components become obvious. The first is his character, which is almost universally
acknowledged to be one of the loftiest. In person and in office, he stood behind the
ideals and the principles that are codified in the Qur’an. The record of his
caliphate shows that his ideals and principles are a challenge to every generation of the
Muslims: equality for all people; freedom, inviolable even in times of war and
"national" emergency; peaceful human progress, through personal opportunity and
the help of the institutions of the government. He, thus, represented the ultimate triumph
of character and ideology.

The second is Ali's achievements as a military
leader. He was an inspired general whose humanity astonished everyone. He led the Muslims
in battle with superb skill, intuition, forbearance and clemency. He alone succeeded,
among all the sovereigns, in blending the idealism and the philosophy of Islam with the
strategy and tactics of politics and war.

The third is the extent to which Ali's conduct and
moral influence made a contribution to the welfare and greatness of the Muslims. He taught
them that the means to achieve an end were just as sacrosanct as the ends themselves, and
that the means no less than the ends, had to be beyond any question. He clearly was
concerned with the most fundamental things.

The ideal Islamic society is the one in which the
people and their rulers obey the law of God. Ali's aim, therefore, was to induct the
masses into the ranks of those people who obey that law. By doing so, he extended the
range of the ethos of Islam, and strengthened its bases.

Ali presented to the Muslim umma the same symmetry
of character as his master and leader, Muhammad, had done before him; and both of them
demonstrated the same ability and the same moral fortitude of successfully meeting the
most cruel tests and challenges with which victory and adversity alike confronted them.

The spirit of making sacrifice for duty and
principle, is the heritage of all the apostles of God. The same spirit is the
"legacy" of Ali ibn Abi Talib to the umma of Muhammad Mustafa. May God bless
both of them and their families.

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