(143)
unscruent narrators who report such stories without reflecting upon them.
The story also defames Ali (A.S.) by showing him as someone
who angered both Fatima (A.S.) and her father and defames Fatima for refusing
to practice Allah's commands, which He revealed to her father.
I shall not verify the discredibility of the authority
on which the narration was based, for it-within itself-proves its own discredibility.
Yet, it is inevitable to ask: Why have the narrators, who fabricated this
story, insisted on saying that he (A.S.) wanted to marry Abu Jahl's daughter,
and not any other woman?! How come they did not claim that Ali (A.S.) attempted
to marry another woman? Surely, Abu Jahl's daughter did not enjoy beauty
and perfection, which no other Arab girl enjoyed!
The fact is that they wanted their defamation of Ali
(A.S.) to be graver and more effective; for in their story, Ali (A.S.) specifically
chose the daughter of the chief of the enemies of Islam.
This plot exposed itself and those who perpetuated
it, when they praised themselves while discrediting Muhammad, his daughter,
and his cousin. They claimed in the same story that he mentioned his other
son-in-law, who is a young man from Bani Abd Shams, and praised him as
"a noble son-in-law"; they claim that the Prophet said:
"He, the young man from Bani Abd Shams was truthful
in his speech and executed his promises to me."
They want us to believe that the Prophet praised his
Umayyad son-in-law (the Umayyads belong to the tribe of Bani Abd Shams),
which in turn means that he was trying to discredit his first son-in-law
[Ali (A.S.)] who, according to the story, lied to the Prophet and violated
his promises to him by being an unfaithful husband to his daughter!!