Lessons from Nahjul Balagha [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Lessons from Nahjul Balagha [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Sayyid Ali Khamenei

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Sermons
Sermon
19


Amir al-mu'minin was delivering
a lecture from the pulpit of (the mosque of) Kufah when al-Ashath
ibn Qays (1) objected and said,
"O' Amir al-mu'minin this thing is not in your favour but
against you." (2) Amir
al-mu'minin looked at him with anger and said:


How do you know what
is for me and what is against me? ! Curse of Allah and others be
on you. You are a weaver and son of a weaver. You are the son of
an unbeliever and yourself a hypocrite. You were arrested once by
the Unbelievers and once by the Muslims, but your wealth and birth
could not save you from either. The man who contrives for his own
people to be put to sword and invites death and destruction for
them does deserve that the near ones should hate him and the
remote ones should not trust him.

as-Sayyid ar-Radi
says: This man was arrested once when an unbeliever and once in
days of Islam. As for Amir al-mu'minin's words that the man
contrived for his own people to be put to sword, the reference
herein is to the incident which occurred to al-Ashath ibn Qays in
confrontation with Khalid ibn Walid at Yamamah, where he deceived
his people and contrived a trick till Khalid attacked them. After
this incident his people nicknamed him "Urf an-Nar"
which in the parlance stood for traitor.

AL-ASHATH IBN QAYS
AL-KINDI

(1).
His original name was Madi Karib and surname Abu Muhammad but
because of his dishevelled hair he is better known as al-Ashath
(one having dishevelled hair). When after Proclamation (of
Prophethood) he came to Mecca along with his tribe, the Prophet
invited him and his tribe to accept Islam. But all of them turned
back without anyone accepting Islam. When after hijrah
(immigration of the Holy Prophet) Islam became established and in
full swing and deputations began to come to Medina in large
numbers he also came to the Prophet's audience with Banu Kindah
and accepted Islam. The author of al-Istiab writes that after
the Prophet this man again turned unbeliever but when during the
Caliphate of Abu Bakr he was brought to Medina as prisoner he
again accepted Islam, though this time too his Islam was a show.
Thus, ash-Shaykh Muhammad Abduh writes in his annotations on Nahj
al-balaghah:


Just as Abdullah ibn
Ubay ibn Salul was a companion of the Prophet, al-Ashath was a
companion of Ali and both were high ranking hypocrites.

He lost one of his
eyes in the battle of Yarmuk. Ibn Qutaybah has included him in the
list of the one-eyed. Abu Bakr's sister Umm Farwah bint Abi
Quhafah, who was once the wife of an al-Azdi and then of Tamim
ad-Darimi, was on the third occasion married to this al-Ashath.
Three sons were born of her viz. Muhammad, Ismail and Is'haq.
Books on biography show that she was blind. Ibn Abi'l-Hadid has
quoted the following statement of Abu'l-Faraj wherefrom it appears
that this man was equally involved in the assassination of Ali
(p.b.u.h.):

On the night of the
assassination Ibn Muljam came to al-Ashath ibn Qays and both
retired to a corner of the mosque and sat there when Hujr ibn
Adi passed by that side and he heard al-Ashath saying to Ibn
Muljam, "Be quick now or else dawn's light would disgrace
you." On hearing this Hujr said to al-Ashath, "O'
one-eyed man, you are preparing to kill 'Ali" and hastened
towards Ali ibn Abi Talib, but Ibn Muljam had preceded him and
struck 'Ali with sword when Hujr turned back people were crying,
"Ali has been killed."

It was his daughter
who killed Imam Hasan (p.b.u.h.) by poisoning him. Masudi has
written that:

His (Hasan's) wife
Jadah bint al-Ashath poisoned him while Muawiyah had
conspired with her that if she could contrive to poison Hasan he
would pay her one hundred thousand Dirhams and marry her to
Yazid. (Muruj adh-dhahab, vol. 2, p. 650)

His son Muhammad ibn
al-Ashath was active in playing fraud with Hadrat Muslim ibn
Aqil in Kufah and in shedding Imam Husayn's blood in Karbala. But
despite all these points he is among those from whom al-Bukhari,
Muslim, Abu Dawud, at-Tirmidhi, an-Nasa'i and Ibn Majah have
related traditions.

(2).
After the battle of Nahrawan, Amir al-mu'minin was delivering a
sermon in the mosque of Kufah about ill effects of
"Arbitration" when a man stood up and said "O' Amir
al-mu'minin, first you desisted us from this Arbitration but
thereafter you allowed it. We cannot understand which of these two
was more correct and proper." On hearing this Amir
al-mu'minin clapped his one hand over the other and said,
"This is the reward of one who gives up firm view" that
is, this is the outcome of your actions as you had abandoned
firmness and caution and insisted on "Arbitration" but
al-Ashath mistook it to mean as though Amir al mu'minin implied
that "my worry was due to having accepted Arbitration,"
so he spoke out, "O' Amir al-mu'minin this brings blame on
your own self" whereupon Amir al-mu'minin said harshly:


What do you know what I
am saying, and what do you understand what is for me or against
me. You are a weaver and the son of a weaver brought up by
unbelievers and a hypocrite. Curse of Allah and all the world be
upon you.

Commentators have
written several reasons for Amir al-mu'minin calling Ashath a
weaver. First reason is, because he and his father like most of
the people of his native place pursued the industry of weaving
cloth. So, in order to refer to the lowliness of his occupation he
has been called 'weaver'. Yamanese had other occupations also but
mostly this profession was followed among them. Describing their
occupations Khalid ibn Safwan has mentioned this one first of all.

What can I say about a
people among whom there are only weavers, leather dyers, monkey
keepers and donkey riders. The hoopoe found them out, the mouse
flooded them and a woman ruled over them. (al-Bayan wa't-tabyin,
vol. 1, p. 130)

The second reason is
that "hiyakah" means walking by bending on either side,
and since out of pride and conceit this man used to walk shrugging
his shoulders and making bends in his body, he has been called
"hayik".

The third reason is
--- and it is more conspicuous and clear --- that he has been
called a weaver to denote his foolishness and lowliness because
every low person is proverbially known as a weaver. Their wisdom
and sagacity can be well gauged by the fact that their follies had
become proverbial, while nothing attains proverbial status without
peculiar characteristics. Now, that Amir al-mu'minin has also
confirmed it no further argument or reasoning is needed.

The fourth reason is
that by this is meant the person who conspires against Allah and
the Holy Prophet and prepares webs of which is the peculiarity of
hypocrites. Thus, in Wasa'il ash-Shiah (vol. 12, p. 101) it is
stated:

It was mentioned before
Imam Jafar as-Sadiq (p.b.u.h.) that the weaver is accursed when
he explained that the weaver implies the person who concocts
against Allah and the Prophet.

After the word weaver
Amir al-mu'minin has used the word hypocrite, and there is no
conjunction in between them in order to emphasise the nearness of
meaning thereof. Then, on the basis of this hypocrisy and
concealment of truth he declared him deserving of the curse of
Allah and all others, as Allah the Glorified says:

Verily, those that
conceal what we have sent of (Our) manifest evidences and
guidance, after what we have (so) clearly shown for mankind in
the Book (they are), those that Allah doth curse them and (also)
curse them all those who curse (such ones). (Qur'an, 2:159)

After this Amir
al-mu'minin says that "You could not avoid the degradation of
being prisoner when you were unbeliever, nor did these ignominies
spare you after acceptance of Islam, and you were taken
prisoner." When an unbeliever the event of his being taken
prisoner occurred in this way that when the tribe of Banu Murad
killed his father Qays, he (al-Ashath) collected the warriors of
Banu Kindah and divided them in three groups. Over one group he
himself took the command, and on the others he placed Kabs ibn
Hani' and al-Qasham ibn Yazid al-Arqam as chiefs, and set off to
deal with Banu Murad. But as misfortune would have it instead of
Banu Murad he attacked Banu al-Harith ibn Kab. The result was
that Kabs ibn Hani' and al-Qasham ibn Yazid al-Arqam were killed
and this man was taken prisoner alive. Eventually he got a release
by paying three thousand camels as ransom. In Amir al-mu'minin's
words, "Your wealth or birth could not save you from
either," the reference is not to real 'fidyah' (release
money) because he was actually released on payment of release
money but the intention is that neither plenty of wealth nor his
high position and prestige in his tribe could save him from this
ignominy, and he could not protect himself from being a prisoner .

The event of his
second imprisonment is that when the Holy Prophet of Islam passed
away from this world a rebellion occurred in the region of
Hadramawt for repelling which Caliph Abu Bakr wrote to the
governor of the place Ziyad ibn Labid al-Bayadi. al-Ansari that he
should secure allegiance and collect zakat and charities from
those people. When Ziyad ibn Labid went to the tribe of Banu Amr
ibn Muawiyah for collection of zakat he took keen fancy for a
she-camel of Shaytan ibn Hujr which was very handsome and of huge
body. He jumped over it and took possession of it. Shaytan ibn
Hujr did not agree to spare it and said to him to take over some
other she-camel in its place but Ziyad would not agree. Shaytan
sent for his brother al-Adda' ibn Hujr for his support. On coming
he too had a talk but Ziyad insisted on his point and did not, by
any means, consent to keep off his hand from that she-camel. At
last both these brothers appealed to Masruq ibn Madi Karib for
help. Consequently, Masruq also used his influence so that Ziyad
might leave the she-camel but he refused categorically, whereupon
Masruq became enthusiastic and untying the she-camel handed it
over to Shaytan. On this Ziyad was infuriated and collecting his
men became ready to fight. On the other side Banu Waliah also
assembled to face them, but could not defeat Ziyad and were badly
beaten at his hands. Their women were taken away and property was
looted. Eventually those who had survived were obliged to take
refuge under the protection of al-Ashath. Al-Ashath promised
assistance on the condition that he should be acknowledged ruler
of the area. Those people agreed to this condition and his
coronation was also formally solemnised. After having his
authority acknowledged he arranged an army and set out to fight
Ziyad. On the other side Abu Bakr had written to the chief of
Yemen, al-Muhajir ibn Abi Umayyah to go for the help of Ziyad with
a contingent. Al-Muhajir was coming with his contingent when they
came face to face. Seeing each other they drew swords and
commenced fighting at ad-Zurqan. In the end al-Ashath fled from
the battle-field and taking his remaining men closed himself in
the fort of an-Nujayr. The enemy was such as to let them alone.
They laid siege around the fort. Al-Ashath thought how long could
he remain shut up in the fort with this lack of equipment and men,
and that he should think out some way of escape. So one night he
stealthily came out of the fort and met Ziyad and al-Muhajir and
conspired with them that if they gave asylum to nine members of
his family he would get the fort gate opened. They accepted this
term and asked him to write for them the names of those nine
persons. He wrote down the nine names and made them over to them,
but acting on his traditional wisdom forgot to write his own name
in that list. After settling this he told his people that he has
secured protection for them and the gate of the fort should be
opened. When the gate was opened Ziyad forces pounced upon them.
They said they had been promised protection whereupon Ziyad's army
said that this was wrong and that al-Ashath had asked protection
only for nine members of his house, whose names preserved with
them. In short eight hundred persons were put to sword and hands
of several women were chopped off, while according to the
settlement nine men were left off, but the case of al-Ashath
became complicated. Eventually it was decided he should be sent to
Abu Bakr and he should decided about him. At last he was sent to
Medina in chains along with a thousand women prisoners. On the way
relations and others, men and women, all hurled curses at him and
the women were calling him traitor and one who got his own people
put to sword. Who else can be a greater traitor? However, when he
reached Medina Abu Bakr released him and on that occasion he was
married to Umm Farwah.

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