Ali the Magnificent [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Ali the Magnificent [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Yousuf N. Lalljee

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ALI, THE MAGNIFICENT



The life of Hazrat Ali stands out as a
beacon, radiating its light into the darkness of this world. A
world torn asunder by strife, struggle and wan, a world in which
the value of human life is regarded as next to nothing.

It must be borne in mind that it was
Ali who gave a distinctive outlook to the intellectual, social,
cultural and political concepts of his times. Ho was the
Warrior-Saint of Islam, who spent his entire life fighting the
holy wars and who in spite of his multifarious activities lit the
torch of knowledge that gave unprecedented impetus to learning-a
marvel of the times in which he lived. The wonderful personality
he possessed has made him the greatest hero of all times.) In the
world of today, his many-sided spiritual precepts might help to
solve some of the problems with which the world is faced today.
His ideas were conciliatory and his message was always one of
peace. He lived for justice and was very firm in his belief that
every one should have a right to live in security, that there
should be food, shelter and clothing for all. Humanity he
considered as one family where there should be tolerance for all
irrespective of race, creed and color and irrespective of wealth
or adversity.

Nowhere was his humane attitude more
apparent than when he was dispensing justice. He had the strictest
ideas of duty and responsibility and even the poorest and most
insignificant of suitors always found him ready to give his case a
fair and prompt hearing. He was quick to forgive an offender as he
was slow to resent an injury, a human attitude which too many of
his contemporaries were prone to interpret wrongly as a weakness;
it was this humane attitude which above all stamped Ali as the
ideal man.

In order to keep his finger on the
pulse of the people, Ali often disguised himself as a traveler,
perambulating the lanes of the city at night to find out for
himself the condition of the poor and the needy, and to lend
succor to them and at the same time to bring the delinquents to
book. His tremendous physical energy thus found an outlet in the
performance of many a philanthropic deed, but even so, his sense
of responsibility to his people was so great that he was
frequently struck with remorse for what he had left undone. Hence
the bitter tears of self-deprecation which he so often shed at his
prayers.

He sought always to prevent those
civil wars in which blood would be shed in vain, but in his fight
against the forces of evil and barbarity he showed extraordinary
determination, unwavering purpose and an iron will. He was at once
a recluse and a warrior, a thinker contemplating in the wastes of
the desert and a commander fighting the Lord's battle against
heretical foes. In his personality he combined a pious resignation
to God with the greatest heroism in combat.

In his attempts to establish God's
kingdom on earth, he was constantly beset by enemies who wanted to
extinguish the torch of Islam, and whose activities were the more
resented as they were carried out in the name of God and religion.
Pitched as he was against envy, hatred and malice, he never
permitted himself to falter or to stray from the path of right,
even though this singleness of purpose was to coat him his life.

In the words of Gibbon, "The birth,
the alliance, the character of Ali which exalted him above the
rest of his countrymen, might justify his claim to the vacant
throne ci Arabia. The son of Abu TaIib was in his own right, the
chief of Bani Hashim and the hereditary prince or guardian of the
city and temple of Mecca. Hazrat Ali had the qualification of a
poet, a soldier and a saint; his wisdom stilt breathes in a
collection of moral and religious sayings; and every antagonist,
in combats of the tongue or of the sword was subdued by his
eloquence and velour. From the first hour of his mission to the
last rites of his funeral, the Apostle Muhammad were never
forsaken by a generous friend, whom he delighted to name his
brother, his vicegerent, and a faithful Aaron of a second Moses."

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