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that it has been successful, has deprived this virtue of any spiritual significance. From the point of view of this type of ecumenical mentality, to speak approvingly of the differences between religions, or of the different orthodox schools within a single religion, is tantamount to betraying man and his hope for salvation and peace. A secular and humanistic ecumenism of this kind fails to see that real peace or salvation lies in Unity through this divinely ordained diversity and not in its rejection, and that the diversity of religions and also of the orthodox schools within each religion are signs of the Divine compassion, which seeks to convey the message of heaven to men possessing different spiritual and psychological qualities. True ecumenism would be a search in depth after Unity, essential and Transcendent Unity, and not the quest after a uniformity which would destroy all qualitative distinctions. It would accept and honor not only the sublime doctrines but even the minute details of every tradition, and yet see the Unity which shines through these very outward differences. And within each religion true ecumenism would respect the other orthodox schools and yet remain faithful to every facet of the traditional background of the school in question. It would be less harmful to oppose other religions, as has been done by so many religious authorities throughout history, than to be willing to destroy essential aspects of one's own religion in order to reach a common denominator with another group of men who are asked to undergo the same losses. To say the least, a league of religions could not guarantee religious peace, any more than the League of Nations guaranteed political peace. Different religions have been necessary in the long history of
mankind because there have been different "humanities" or
human collectivities on earth. There having been different recipients of the Divine message, there has been more than one echo
of the Divine Word. God has said "I" to each of these "humanities"
or communities; hence the plurality of religions.[1] Within each
religion as well, especially within those that have been destined
for many ethnic groups, different orthodox interpretations of the
tradition, of the one heavenly message, have been necessary in
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order to guarantee the integration of the different psychological and ethnic groupings into a single spiritual perspective. It is difficult to imagine how the Far Eastern peoples could have become Buddhist without the Mahayana school, or some of the Eastern peoples Muslim without Shi'ism. The presence of such divisions within the religious tradition in question does not contradict its inner unity and transcendence. Rather it has been the way of ensuring spiritual unity in a world of diverse cultural and ethnic backgrounds. Of course, since the exoteric religious perspective relies on outward forms, it always tends in every religion to make its own interpretation the only interpretation. That is why a particular school in any religion chooses a single aspect of the religion and attaches itself so intensely to that one aspect that it forgets and even negates all other aspects. Only on the esoteric level of religious experience can there be understanding of the inherent limitation of being bound to only one aspect of the total Truth; only on the esoteric level can each religious assertion be properly placed so as not to destroy the Transcendent Unity which is beyond and yet dwells within the outward forms and determinations of a particular religion or religious school. Shi'ism in Islam should be studied in this light: as an affirmation of a particular dimension of Islam which is made central and in fact taken by Shi'ites to be Islam as such. It was not a movement that in any way destroyed the Unity of Islam, but one that added to the richness of the historical deployment and spread of the Quranic message. And despite its exclusiveness, it contains within its forms the Unity which binds all aspects of Islam together. Like Sunnism, Sufism and everything else that is genuinely Islamic, Shi'ism was already contained as a seed in the Holy Quran and in the earliest manifestations of the revelation, and belongs to the totality of Islamic orthodoxy.[2] Moreover, in seeking to draw closer together in the spirit of a
true ecumenism in the above sense, as is advocated today by both
the Sunni and Shi'ite religious authorities, Shi'ism and Sunnism
must not cease to be what they are and what they have always
been. Shi'ism, therefore, must be presented in all its fullness, even
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line of the Imams and the Prophet's Household to the exclusion of, and finally in opposition to, another aspect which is contained in Sunnism; (3) and finally, that the Shi'ite-Sunni polemics can be put aside and the position of each of these schools explained only on the level of esotericism, which transcends their differences and yet unites them inwardly. Fundamental Elements of Shi'ismAlthough in Islam no political or social movement has ever
been separated from religion, which from the point of view of
Islam necessarily embraces all things, Shi'ism was not brought
into existence only by the question of the political succession to
the Prophet of Islam-upon whom be blessings and peace-as so
many Western works claim (although this question was of course
of great importance). The problem of political succession may be
said to be the element that crystallized the Shi'ites into a distinct
group, and political suppression in later periods, especially the
martyrdom of Imam Husayn-upon whom be peace-only accen |
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Shi'ism. Hence the question which arose was not so much who should be the successor of the Holy Prophet as what the function and qualifications of such a person would be. The distinctive institution of Shi'ism is the Imamate and the question of the Imamate is inseparable from that of walayat, or the esoteric function of interpreting the inner mysteries of the Holy Quran and the Shari'ah.[3] According to the Shi'ite view the successor of the Prophet of Islam must be one who not only rules over the community in justice but also is able to interpret the Divine Law and its esoteric meaning. Hence he must be free from error and sin (ma'sum) and he must be chosen from on high by divine decree (nass) through the Prophet. The whole ethos of Shi'ism revolves around the basic notion of walayat, which is intimately connected with the notion of sancitity (wilayah) in Sufism. At the same time walayat contains certain implications on the level of the Shari'ah inasmuch as the Imam, or he who administers the function of walayat, is also the interpreter of religion for the religious community and its guide and legitimate ruler. It can be argued quite convincingly that the very demand of
'Ali for allegiance (bay'ah) from the whole Islamic community at
the moment that he became caliph implies that he accepted the
method of selecting the caliph by the voice of the majority which
had been followed in the case of the three khulafa' rashidun or
"rightly-guided caliphs" before him, and that thereby he accepted
the previous caliphs insofar as they were rulers and administrators of the Islamic community. What is also certain from the
Shi'ite point of view, however, is that he did not accept their
function as Imams in the Shi'ite sense of possessing the power and
function of giving the esoteric interpretations of the inner mysteries of the Holy Quran and the Shari'ah, as is seen by his insistence from |
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its inner mysteries. The very life of Ali and his actions show that he accepted the previous caliphs as understood in the Sunni sense of khalifah (the ruler and the administrator of the Shari'ah), but confined the function of walayat, after the Prophet, to himself. That is why it is perfectly possible to respect him as a caliph in the Sunni sense and as an Imam in the Shi'ite sense, each in its own perspective. The five principles of religion (usul al-din) as stated by Shi'ism include: tawhid or belief in Divine Unity; nubuwwah or prophecy; ma'ad or ressurrection; imamah or the Imamate, belief in the Imams as successors of the Prophet; and 'adl or Divine Justice. In the three basic principles-Unity, prophecy, and resurrectionSunnism and Shi'ism agree. It is only in the other two that they differ. In the question of the Imamate, it is the insistence on the esoteric function of the Imam that distinguishes the Shi'ite perspective from the Sunni; in the question of justice it is the emphasis placed upon this attribute as an intrinsic quality of the Divine Nature that is particular to Shi'ism. We might say that in the exoteric formulation of Sunni theology, especially as contained in Ash'arism, there is an emphasis upon the will of God. Whatever God wills is just, precisely because it is willed by God; and intelligence ('aql) is in a sense subordinated to this will and to the "voluntarism" which characterizes this form of theology.[4] In Shi'ism, however, the quality of justice is considered as innate to the Divine Nature. God cannot act in an unjust manner because it is His Nature to be just. For Him to be unjust would violate His own Nature, which is impossible. Intelligence can judge the justness or unjustness of an act and this judgment is not completely suspended in favor of a pure voluntarism on the part of God. Hence, there is a greater emphasis upon intelligence ('aql) in Shi'ite theology and a greater emphasis upon will (iradah) in Sunni kalam, or theology, at least in the predominant Ash'arite school. The secret of the greater affinity of Shi'ite theology for the "intellectual sciences" (al-'ulum al-'aqliyah) lies in part in this manner of viewing Divine Justice.[5] Shi'ism also differs from Sunnism in its consideration of the
means whereby the original message of the Quranic revelation
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reached the Islamic community, and thereby in certain aspects of the sacred history of Islam. There is no disagreement on the Quran and the Prophet, that is, on what constitutes the origin of the Islamic religion. The difference in view begins with the period immediately following the death of the Prophet. One might say that the personality of the Prophet contained two dimensions which were later to become crystallized into Sunnism and Shi'ism. Each of these two schools was later to reflect back upon the life and personality of the Prophet solely from its own point of view, thus leaving aside and forgetting or misconstruing the other dimension excluded from its own perspective. For Shi'ism the "dry" (in the alchemical sense) and "austere" aspect of the Prophet's personality as reflected in his successors in the Sunni world was equated with worldliness, while his "warm" and "compassionate" dimension was emphasized as his whole personality and as the essence of the nature of the Imams, who were considered to be a continuation of him.[6]
For the vast majority of the Islamic community, which supported the original caliphate, the companions (sahabah) of the
Prophet represent the Prophet's heritage and the channel through
which his message was transmitted to later generations. Within
the early community the companions occupied a favored position
and among them the first four caliphs stood out as a distinct
group. It is through the companions that the sayings (hadith) and
manner of living (sunnah) of the Prophet were transmitted to the
second generation of Muslims. Shi'ism, however, concentrating
on the question of walayat and insisting on the esoteric content |
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actions represent a supplement to the prophetic hadith and sunnah. From a purely religious and spiritual point of view the Imams may be said to be for Shi'ism an extension of the personality of the Prophet during the succeeding centuries. Such collections of the sayings of the Imams as the Nahj al-balaghah of Ali and the Usul al-kafi, containing sayings of all the Imams, are for the Shi'ites a continuation of the hadith collections concerned with the sayings of the Prophet himself. In many Shi'ite collections of hadith, the sayings of the Prophet and of the Imams are combined. The grace (barakah) [7] of the Quran, as conveyed to the world by the Prophet, reached the Sunni community through the companions (foremost among them were Abu Bakr, 'Umar, 'Uthman, Ali, and a few others such as Anas and Salman), and during succeeding generations through the ulama and the Sufis, each in his own world. This barakah, however, reached the Shi'ite community especially through Ali and the Household of the Prophet-in its particular Shi'ite sense as referred to above and not simply in the sense of any Alid.
It is the intense love for Ali and his progeny through Fatimah
that compensates for the lack of attention towards, and even
neglect of, the other companions in Shi'ism. It might be said that
the light of Ali and the Imams was so intense that it blinded the
Shi'ites to the presence of the other companions, many of whom
were saintly men and also had remarkable human qualities. Were it not |
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would have had no meaning. Sunnism and its very success in the world must therefore be assumed as a necessary background for an understanding of Shi'ism, whose minority role, sense ofmartyrdom and esoteric qualities could only have been realized in the presence of the order which had previously been established by the Sunni majority and especially by the early companions and their entourage. This fact itself points to the inner bond relating Sunnism and Shi'ism to their common Quranic basis despite the outward polemics. The barakah present in both Sunnism and Shi'ism has the same origin and quality, especially if we take into consideration Sufism, which exists in both segments of the Islamic community. The barakah is everywhere that which has issued from the Quran and the Prophet, and it is often referred to as the "Muhammadan barakah" (al-barakat al-muhammadiyah). Shi'ism and the general esoteric teachings of Islam which are
usually identified with the essential teachings of Sufism have a |
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above, esotericism, especially in the form of love, has always occupied what might be called a privileged position within Shi'ism, so that even the Shi'ite theology and creed contain formulations that are properly speaking more mystical than strictly theological. In addition to its law and the esoteric aspect contained in Sufism and gnosis, Shi'ism contained from the beginning a type of Divine Wisdom, inherited from the Prophet and the Imams, which became the basis for the hikmah or sophia that later developed extensively in the Muslim world and incorporated into its structure suitable elements of the Graeco-Alexandrian, the Indian, and the Persian intellectual heritages. It is often said that Islamic philosophy came into being as a result of the translation of Greek texts and that after a few centuries Greek philosophy died out in the Muslim world and found a new home in the Latin West. This partially true account leaves out other basic aspects of the story, such as the central role of the Quran as the source of knowledge and truth for the Muslims; the fundamental role of the spiritual hermeneutics (ta'wil) practiced by Sufis and Shi'ites alike, through which all knowledge became related to the inner levels of meaning of the Sacred Book; and the more than one thousand years of traditional Islamic philosophy and theosophy which has continued to our day in Shi'ite Persia and in adjacent areas.[11] When we think of Shi'ism we must remember that, in addition to the law and the strictly esoteric teachings, Shi'ism possesses a "theosophy" or hikmah which made possible the vast development of later Islamic philosophy and the intellectual sciences from the beginning, enabling it to have a role in the intellectual life of Islam far outweighing its numerical size. The respect accorded to the intellect as the ladder to Divine
Unity, an element that is characteristic of all of Islam and especially emphasized by Shi'ism, helped create a traditional educational system in which rigorous training in logic went hand in |
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of logic itself a ladder to reach the suprarational. Logical demonstration, especially burhan-or demonstration in its technical sense, which has played a role in Islamic logic that differs from its use in Western logic-came to be regarded as a reflection of the Divine Intellect itself, and with the help of its certainties the Shi'ite metaphysicians and theologians have sought to demonstrate with rigor the most metaphysical teachings of the religion. We see many examples of this method in the present book, which is itself the result of such a traditional madrasah education. It may present certain difficulties to the Western reader who is accustomed to the total divorce of mysticism and logic and for whom the certainty of logic has been used, or rather misused, for so long as a tool to destroy all other certainties, both religious and metaphysical. But the method itself has its root in a fundamental aspect of Islam-in which the arguments of religion are based not primarily on the miraculous but on the intellectually evident[12]-an aspect which has been strongly emphasized in Shi'ism and is reflected in both the content and the form of its traditional expositions.
Historical factors, such as the fact that the West never had the
same direct political contact with Shi'ite Islam that it did with
Sunni Islam, have caused the Occident to be less aware until now
of Shi'ite Islam than of Sunnism. And Sunni Islam also has not
always been understood properly or interpreted sympathetically
by all Western scholars. The West came into direct contact with
Islam in Spain, Sicily, and Palestine in the Middle Ages and in the
Balkans during the Ottoman period. These encounters were all |
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this lack of familiarity many of the early Western orientalists brought the most fantastic charges against Shi'ism, such as that its views were forged by Jews disguised as Muslims. One of the reasons for this kind of attack, which can also be seen in the case of Sufism, is that this type of orientalist did not want to see in Islam any metaphysical or eschatological doctrines of an intellectual content, which would make of it something more than the famous "simple religion of the desert." Such writers therefore had to reject as spurious any metaphysical and spiritual doctrines found within the teachings of Shi'ism or Sufism. One or two works written during this period and dealing with Shi'ism were composed by missionaries who were particularly famous for their hatred of Islam.[14] It is only during the last generation that a very limited number of Western scholars have sought to make a more serious study of Shi'ism. Chief among them are L. Massignon, who devoted a few major studies to early Arab Shi'ism, and H. Corbin, who has devoted a lifetime to the study of the whole of Shi'ism and its later intellectual development especially as centered in Persia, and who has made known to the Western world for the first time some of the metaphysical and theosophical richness of this as yet relatively unknown aspect of Islam.[15] Yet, despite the efforts of these and a few other scholars, much of Shi'ism remains to this day a closed book, and there has not appeared as yet an introductory work in English to present the whole of Shi'ism to one who is just beginning to delve into the subject. The Present BookIt was to overcome this deficiency that in 1962 Professor
Kenneth Morgan of Colgate University, who pursues the laudable
goal of presenting Oriental religions to the West from the point of
view of the authentic representatives of these religions, approached me with the suggestion that I supervise a series of three
volumes dealing with Shi'ism and written from the Shi'ite point
of view. Aware of the difficulty of such an undertaking, I accepted
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because of the realization of the importance which the completion of such a project might have upon the future of Islamic studies and even of comparative religion as a whole. The present work is the first in that series; the others will be a volume dealing with the Shi'ite view of the Quran, written also by 'Allamah[16] Tabataba'i, and an anthology of the sayings of the Shi'ite Imams.
During the summer of 1963 when Professor Morgan was
in Tehran we visited 'Allamah Sayyid Muhammad Husayn
Tabataba'i in Darakah, a small village by the mountains near
Tehran, where the venerable Shi'ite authority was spending the
summer months away from the heat of Qum where he usually
resides. The meeting was dominated by the humble presence of a
man who has devoted his whole life to the study of religion, in
whom humility and the power of intellectual analysis are combined. As we walked back from the house through the winding
and narrow roads of the village, which still belongs to a calm and
peaceful traditional world not as yet perturbed by the sound and
fury of modernism, Professor Morgan proposed that 'Allamah
Tabataba'i write the general volume on Shi'ism in the series and
also the volume on the Quran. Later I was able to gain the consent
of this celebrated Shi'ite authority that he put aside his monumental Quranic commentary, al-Mizan, to devote some of his
time to these volumes. Having studied for years with him in the
fields of traditional philosophy and theosophy, I knew that of the
traditional Shi'ite authorities he was the one most qualified to
write such a work, a work which would be completely authentic
from the Shi'ite point of view and at the same time based upon an
intellectual foundation. I realized of course the innate difficulty
of finding a person who would be a reputable religious authority,
respected by the Shi'ite community and untainted by the influence
of Western modes of thought, and at the same time well enough
conversant with the Western world and the mentality of the
Western reader to be able to address his arguments to them. Unfortunately, no ideal solution could be found to this problem, for in
Persia, as elsewhere in the Muslim world, there are today usually
two types of men concerned with religious questions: (1) the
traditional authorities, who are as a rule completely unaware
of the nature of the psychological and mental structure of modern
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Six years of collaboration with 'Allamah Tabataba'i and many journeys to Qum and even Mashhad, which he often visits in the summer, helped me to prepare the work gradually for translation into English-a task which requires a translation of meaning from one world to another, to a world that begins without the general background of knowledge and faith which the usual audience of 'Allamah Tabataba'i possesses. In editing the text so that it would make possible a thorough and profound under standing of the structure of Islam, I have sought to take into full consideration the differences existing between traditional and modern scholarship, and also the particular demands of the audience to which this work is addressed.[17] But putting aside the demands made by these two conditions, I have tried to remain as faithful to the original as possible so as to enable the non-Muslim reader to study not only the message but also the form and intellectual style of a traditional Muslim authority. The reader must therefore always remember that the arguments
presented in this book are not addressed by 'Allamah Tabataba'i
to a mind that begins with doubt but to one that is grounded in
certainty and is moreover immersed in the world of faith and
religious dedication. The depth of the doubt and nihilism of
certain types of modern man would be inconceivable to him. His
arguments, therefore, may at times be difficult to grasp or unconvincing to some Western readers; they are only so, however,
because he is addressing an audience whose demand for causality
and whose conception of the levels of reality is not identical with
that of the Western reader. Also there may be explanations in
which too much is taken for granted, or repetitions which appear
to insult the intelligence of the perspicacious Western
reader in whom the analytical powers of the mind are
usually more developed than among most
Orientals.[18] In these cases, the characteristic
manner of his presentation and the only world known to
him, that of contemporary Islam in its traditional aspect, must be |
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a sacred and rehigious knowledge made possible by the continuity of the Islamic tradition itself. The Author'Allamah Sayyid Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i [19] was born in Tabriz in A.H. (lunar) 1321 or A.H. (solar) 1282, (A.D. 1903) [20] in a family of descendants of the Holy Prophet which for fourteen generations has produced outstanding Islamic scholars. [21] He received his earliest education in his native city, mastering the elements of Arabic and the religious sciences, and at about the age of twenty set out for the great Shi'ite University of Najaf to continue more advanced studies. Most students in the madrasahs follow the branch of "transmitted sciences" (al-'ulum al-naqliyah), especially the sciences dealing with the Divine Law, fiqh or jurisprudence, and usul al-fiqh or the principles of jurisprudence. 'Allamah Tabataba'i, however, sought to master both branches of the traditional sciences: the transmitted and the intellectual. He studied Divine Law and the principles of jurisprudence with two of the great masters of that day, Mirza Muhammad Husayn Na'ini and Shaykh Muhammad Husayn Isfahani. He became such a master in this domain that had he kept completely to these fields he would have become one of the foremost mujtahids or authorities on Divine Law and would have been able to wield much political and social influence. But such was not his destiny. He was more attracted to the intellectual sciences, and he studied assiduously the whole cycle of traditional mathematics with Sayyid Abu'l-Qasim Khwansari, and traditional Islamic philosophy, including the standard texts of the Shifa' of Ibn Sina, the Asfar of Sadr al-Din Shirazi and the Tamhid al-qawa'id of Ibn Turkah, with Sayyid Husayn Badkuba'i, himself a student of two of the most famous masters of the school of Tehran, Sayyid Abu'l-Hasan Jilwah and Aqa 'Ali Mudarris Zunuzi. [22] In addition to formal learning, or what the traditional Muslim
sources call "acquired science" ('ilm-i husuli), 'Allamah Taba-
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fluence in both the traditional and modern circles in Persia. He has tried to create a new intellectual elite among the modern educated classes who wish to be acquainted with Islamic intellectuality as well as with the modern world. Many among his traditional students who belong to the class of ulama have tried to follow his example in this important endeavor. Some of his students, such as Sayyid Jalal al-Din Ashtiyani of Mashhad University and Murtada Mutahhari of Tehran University, are themselves scholars of considerable reputation. 'Allamah Tabataba'i often speaks of others among his students who possess great spiritual qualities but do not manifest themselves outwardly. In addition to a heavy program of teaching and guidance, 'Allamah Tabataba'i has occupied himself with writing many books and articles which attest to his remarkable intellectual powers and breadth of learning within the world of the traditional Islamic sciences. [23] Today at his home in Qum the venerable authority devotes nearly all of his time to his Quranic commentary and the direction of some of his best students. He stands as a symbol of what is most permanent in the long tradition of Islamic scholarship and science, and his presence carries a fragrance which can only come from one who has tasted the fruit of Divine Knowledge. He exemplifies in his person the nobility, humility and quest after truth which have characterized the finest Muslim scholars over the ages. His knowledge and its exposition are a testimony to what real Islamic learning is, how profound and how metaphysical, and how different from so many of the shallow expositions of some of the orientalists or the distorted caricatures of so many Muslim modernists. Of course he does not have the awareness of the modern mentality and the nature of the modern world that might be desired, but that could hardly be expected in one whose life experience has been confined to the traditional circles in Persia and Iraq. A word must be added about the system of transliteration of
Arabic and Persian words and the manner in which reference is
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NOTESPREFAC
1. See F. Schuon, Light on the Ancient Worlds, translated by Lord Northbourne,
Londan, 1965, especially Ch. IX, "Religio Perennis." |
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size of the country this contact never gave rise to serious scholarly concern with
Shi'ite sources as it did in India. |