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 `Ali 
 ibn Abi Talib `Abd 
 Manaf ibn `Abd al-Muttalib ibn Hashim ibn `Abd Manaf, Abu al-Hasan al-Qurashi 
 al-Hashimi (d. 40), Amîr al-Mu’minîn, the first male believer in Islam, 
 the Prophet’s standard-bearer in battle, the Door of the City of Knowledge, 
 the most judicious of the Companions, and the "Possessor of a wise heart and 
 enquiring tongue." The Prophet nicknamed him Abu Turâb or Father of 
 Dust. His mother was Fatima bint Asad, whom the Prophet called his own mother 
 and at whose grave he made a remarkable intercession. He accepted Islam when 
 he was eight, or nine, or fourteen, depending on the narrations, but it is 
 established from Ibn `Abbas that he was the first male Muslim after the 
 Prophet, Khadija being the first Muslim. He was killed at age fifty-eight. 
 From him narrated Abu Bakr, `Umar, his sons al-Hasan and al-Husayn, Ibn `Abbas, 
 `Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr, and countless others.
 `Ali was a 
 skilled and fearless fighter, and the Prophet gave him his standard to carry 
 on the day of Badr and in subsequent battles. At the same time he was the 
 repository of Prophetic wisdom among the Companions. The latter, when asked 
 about difficult legal rulings, deferred to others the responsibility of 
 answering, while `Ali, alone among them, used to say: "Ask me." `Umar said: "I 
 seek refuge in Allah from a problem which Abu al-Hasan cannot solve." 
 Similarly `A’isha said: "He is the most knowledgeable about the Sunna among 
 those who remain," and Ibn `Abbas: "If a trustworthy source tells us of a 
 fatwa by `Ali, we do not seek any further concerning it." Sulayman al-Ahmusi 
 narrated from his father that `Ali said: "By Allah! No verse was ever revealed 
 except I knew the reason for which it was revealed and in what place and 
 concerning whom. Verily my Lord has bestowed upon me a wise heart and a 
 speaking tongue." At the same time `Ali humbly declared: "What cools my liver 
 most, if I am asked something I know not, is to say: ‘Allah knows best’."
 Imam Ahmad 
 said: "There is no Companion concerning whom are reported as many merits as 
 `Ali ibn Abi Talib." Following are some of the hadiths to that effect.
 
   
     On the 
     eve of the campaign of Khaybar, the Prophet said: "I shall give the 
     standard to a man who loves Allah and His Messenger, and whom Allah loves 
     and also His Messenger." `Umar said: "I never liked to be entrusted 
     leadership before that day." The next day the Prophet summoned `Ali and 
     gave him the flag.
     Salama 
     ibn `Amr narrated that the day of Khaybar, the Prophet summoned `Ali who 
     came led by the hand, as he was suffering from inflammation of the eyes. 
     The Prophet then blew on his eyes and gave him the flag. Another version 
     states that Ibn Abi Layla told his father to ask `Ali why he wore summer 
     clothes in winter and winter clothes in summer. `Ali said: "The day of 
     Khaybar the Prophet summoned me when my eyes were sore. I said to him: ‘O 
     Messenger of Allah! I have ophtalmia.’ He blew on my eyes and said: ‘O 
     Allah! remove from him hot and cold.’ I never felt hot nor cold after that 
     day."
     The 
     Prophet left `Ali behind in the campaign of Tabuk. The latter said: "O 
     Messenger of Allah! Are you leaving me behind with the women and 
     children?" The Prophet replied: "Are you not happy to stand next to me 
     like Harun next to Musa, save that there is no Prophet after me?"
     The 
     Prophet said: "I am the city of knowledge and `Ali is its gate." Another 
     version states: "I am the house of wisdom and `Ali is its gate."
     When 
     Allah revealed the verse: "Come! We will summon our sons and your sons, 
     and our women and your women, and ourselves and yourselves, then we will 
     pray humbly and invoke the curse of Allah upon those who lie" (3:61), 
     the Prophet summoned `Ali, Fatima, Hasan, and Husayn, and said: "O Allah! 
     These are my Family."
     The 
     Prophet said: "Anyone whose protecting friend (mawla) I am, `Ali is 
     his protecting friend." `Umar said: "Congratulations, O `Ali! You have 
     become the protecting friend of every single believer."
     The 
     Prophet said: "`Ali is part of me and I am part of `Ali! No-one conveys 
     something on my behalf except I or he." The context of this hadith was the 
     conveyance of Sura Bara’a to the Quraysh and the rescinding of the 
     Prophet’s pact with them. The scholars have explained that the Prophet’s 
     phrase "X is part of me and I am part of X" is a hyperbole signifying 
     oneness of path and agreement in obeying Allah. The Prophet said that 
     phrase also about the following: the Companion Julaybib who was found dead 
     after a battle next to seven enemies killed by him; the Ash`aris; and the 
     Banu Najya.
     Some 
     people complained to the Prophet about `Ali, whereupon he stood and said: 
     "Do not accuse `Ali of anything! By Allah, he is truly a little rough (la’ukhayshan) 
     in Allah’s cause."
     When the 
     Prophet sent `Ali to Yemen the latter said: "O Messenger of Allah, you are 
     sending me to people who are older than me so that I judge between them!" 
     The Prophet said: "Go, for verily Allah shall empower your tongue and 
     guide your heart." `Ali said: "After that I never felt doubt as to what 
     judgment I should pass between two parties."
     The 
     Prophet said: "The most compassionate of my Community towards my Community 
     is Abu Bakr; the staunchest in Allah’s Religion is `Umar; the most 
     truthful in his modesty is `Uthman, and the best in judgment is `Ali." `Umar 
     said: "`Ali is the best in judgment among us, and Ubayy is the most 
     proficient at the Qur’anic readings." Ibn Mas`ud similarly said: "We used 
     to say that the best in judgment among the people of Madina was `Ali." It 
     is a measure of al-Hasan al-Basri’s greatness that `Ali once followed his 
     recommendation in a judicial case.
     `Amr ibn 
     Sha’s al-Aslami complained about `Ali upon returning from Yemen where he 
     had accompanied him. News of it reached the Prophet who said: "O `Amr! By 
     Allah, you have done me harm." `Amr said: "I seek refuge in Allah from 
     harming you, O Messenger of Allah!" He said: "But you did. Whoever harms 
     `Ali harms me." The Prophet also used the terms "Whoever harms X has 
     harmed me" about his uncle al-`Abbas.
     Umm 
     Salama said to Abu `Abd Allah al-Jadali: "Is Allah’s Messenger being 
     insulted among you?! [in Kufa]" He said: "Allah forbid!" She said: "I 
     heard Allah’s Messenger say: ‘Whoso insults `Ali, insults me.’"
     `Ali 
     said: "In truth the Prophet has made a covenant with me saying: ‘None 
     loves you except a believer, and none hates you except a hypocrite." Abu 
     Sa`id al-Khudri subsequently said: "In truth we recognized the hypocrites 
     by their hatred for `Ali." Jabir said: "We did not know the hypocrites of 
     this Community except by their hatred for `Ali."
   
 
 The 
 innovations of those who bore excessive love and admiration for `Ali appeared 
 in his own lifetime and he himself fought them in word and deed. To those that 
 claimed that the Prophet had appointed him as successor after him he said: "In 
 truth, Allah’s Messenger did not appoint any successor" and: "The Prophet was 
 taken from us, then Abu Bakr was made the successor, so he did as the Prophet 
 had done and according to his path until Allah took him from us; then `Umar 
 was made the successor, so he did as the Prophet had done and according to his 
 path until Allah took him from us." To those that claimed that he deserved the 
 Caliphate better than Abu Bakr and `Umar he said: "The best of this Community 
 after its Prophet are Abu Bakr and `Umar." To those that either hated him or 
 overly loved him `Ali said: "Two types of people shall perish concerning me: a 
 hater who forges lies about me, and a lover who over-praises me." To those 
 that claimed that he or his family possessed other than the Qur’an which all 
 Muslims had he said: "Whoever claims that we have something which we read 
 other than the Qur’an has lied." Finally, when a group of people came to him 
 saying: "You are He, you are our Lord! (anta Hû anta Rabbuna)" he had 
 them executed and then ordered the bodies burnt.
 When `Ali was 
 given allegiance as Caliph he moved from Madina to Kufa in Iraq and made it 
 his capital. His tenure lasted five years (35-40) marred by three great 
 dissensions which tore apart the fabric of the Muslim Community: the battle of 
 the Camel (year 36) against the party of `A’isha the Mother of the Believers, 
 the battle of Siffin (year 37) aganst the party of Mu`awiya ibn Abi Sufyan, 
 and the campaign against the Khawârij in the following two years, until 
 he was assassinated by one of them in Kufa as he came out for the dawn prayer. 
 The pretext for the meeting of the armies on the day of the Camel and the day 
 of Siffin was the demand for `Uthman’s killers on the part of `A’isha and 
 Mu`awiya, but the winds of war were fanned by sowers of discord from inside 
 all three camps until events escaped the control of the Companions. It is 
 related that `Ali often expressed astonishment at the dissension and 
 opposition that surrounded him. The Prophet had predicted these events, 
 notably the battle of the Camel with the words: "One of you women shall come 
 out riding a long-haired camel, and the dogs of Haw’ab [between Mecca and 
 Basra] will bark at her. Many shall be killed to her right and her left, and 
 she shall escape after near death." At any rate, Ahl al-Sunna adopted 
 as theirs the position taken by one of the Salaf who said: "Those from 
 whose blood Allah has kept our swords pure, we shall not soil our tongues with 
 their slander." The most reliable book written on the divergences of the 
 Companions is Abu Bakr ibn al-`Arabi’s (d. 543) 
 al-`Awasim min al-Qawasim fi 
 Tahqiq Mawaqif al-Sahaba Ba`da Wafati al-Nabi Sallallahu `Alayhi wa Sallam.
 
 Another 
 innovation fought by `Ali was that of the Khawârij or "Seceders," also 
 known as Hurûriyya after the village of Hurur, near Kufa, where they 
 set up military quarters. They were originally a group of up to twenty 
 thousand pious worshippers and memorizers of the Qur’an (`ubbâd wa qurrâ’) 
 who were part of `Ali’s army but walked out on him after he accepted 
 arbitration in the crises with Mu`awiya ibn Abi Sufyan and `A’isha the Mother 
 of the Believers. Their strict position was on the basis of the verse "The 
 decision rests with Allah only" (6:57, 12:40, 12:67). `Ali said: "A word 
 of truth by which falsehood is sought!" He sent them the expert interpreter of 
 the Qur’an among the Companions, Ibn `Abbas, who recited to them the verses 
 "The judge is to be two men among you known for justice" (5:95) and 
 "Appoint an arbiter from his folk and an arbiter from her folk" (4:35) 
 then said: "Allah has thereby entrusted arbitration to men, although if He had 
 wished to decide He would have decided. And is the sanctity of the Community 
 of Muhammad not greater than that of a man and a woman?" Hearing this, four 
 thousand of the Khawârij came back with him while the rest either left 
 the field or persisted in their enmity and were killed in the battles of 
 Nahrawan (year 38) and al-Nukhayla (year 39).
 The Prophet 
 had predicted that `Ali would fight the Khawârij with the words: "In 
 truth there will be, among you, one who shall fight over the interpretation of 
 the Qur’an just as I fought over its revelation." Abu Bakr and `Umar asked: 
 "Am I he?" The Prophet said: "No, it is the one who is mending the shoes." He 
 had given his shoes to `Ali to mend. The Prophet also predicted `Ali’s 
 martyrdom with the words: "This shall be dyed red from this" and he pointed to 
 `Ali’s beard and head respectively.
 The 
 Khawârij are the first doctrinal innovators in Islam. They considered all 
 sinners apostates, as well as all those who opposed them. By this takfîr, 
 they justified to themselves the killing and spoliation of Muslims including 
 women and children. Muslims who joined them were forced to first declare 
 themseves disbelievers then enter Islam again. They distinguished themselves 
 by shaving their heads out of austerity, a practice which they innovated and 
 which the Prophet had foretold. Yet the Khawârij deemed themselves 
 scrupulously pious and the only true Muslims on earth. When `Ali’s murderer, `Abd 
 al-Rahman ibn Muljam al-Muradi, was dismembered and blinded he remained 
 impassive and recited the Sura "Recite! In the Name of Thy Lord" (96:1) 
 in its entirety, but when they moved to pull out his tongue he resisted; asked 
 for the reason he said: "I hate to spend a single moment on earth not 
 mentioning Allah." He was then executed and burnt. His forehead bore the trace 
 of frequent prostration.
 The 
 Khawârij pre-dated the Rawâfid in their vilification of Abu Bakr 
 and `Umar. `Ali declared it licit to fight them because they had killed the 
 Companion Khabbab ibn al-Arathth and his wife for praising the four Caliphs. 
 The Prophet had predicted their appearance in many hadiths. Among them:
 
   `Ali sent 
   the Prophet a treasure which the latter proceeded to distribute. The Quraysh 
   became angry and said: "He is giving to the nobility of Najd and leaving us 
   out!" The Prophet said: "I am only trying to win their hearts over to us." 
   Then a man came with sunken eyes, protruding cheeks, big forehead, profuse 
   beard, and shaven head. He said: "Fear Allah, O Muhammad!" The Prophet 
   replied: "And who shall obey Allah if I disobey him? Does Allah trust me 
   with the people of the earth, so that you should not trust me?" One of the 
   Companions û Khalid ibn Walid û asked permission to kill the man but the 
   Prophet did not give it. He said: "Out of that man’s seed shall come a 
   people who will recite the Qur’an but it will not go past their throats. 
   They will pass through religion the way an arrow passes through its quarry. 
   They shall kill the Muslims and leave the idolaters alone. If I live to see 
   them, verily I shall kill them the way the tribe of `Ad was killed." Ibn 
   Taymiyya cited this hadith as proof that the Khawârij shaved their 
   heads.
   "The 
   Khawârij are the dogs of Hell-fire."
 
 `Ali was 
 described as having white hair which he parted in the middle, a very large 
 white beard, and large, heavy eyes. He was heavyset and his height was medium 
 to short. He was blunt in his renunciation of the world even in his own dress. 
 When Ibn al-Nabbah came to him with the news that the treasury-house was 
 filled with gold and silver `Ali summoned the people of Kufa and distributed 
 everything to them with the words: "O Yellow, O White! Go fool other than me." 
 Then he ordered the treasury-house swept, and he prayed two rak`a in 
 it. Jurmuz said: "I saw `Ali coming out of his palace wearing a waist-cloth 
 that reached to the middle of his shank and an outer garment tucked up at the 
 sleeves, walking in the marketplace while hitting a small drum (dirra) 
 and enjoining upon people Godwariness and honesty in transactions. He would 
 say: ‘Observe good measure and do not bloat up the meat.’" When one of the 
 Khawârij criticized him for what he was wearing, he said: "What do you 
 want with my clothing? This is farther from arrogance and more suitable for me 
 as I am imitated by Muslims."
 Al-Hasan ibn 
 `Ali narrated that the morning of his murder `Ali said: "Last night I woke up 
 my family [to pray] because it was the night before Jum`a and the 
 morning of Badr û the seventeenth of Ramadan û then I dozed off and the 
 Prophet came before me. I said: ‘O Messenger of Allah! What crookedness and 
 contention have I found coming from your Community!’ He said: ‘Supplicate 
 against them.’ I said: ‘O Allah! Substitute them with something that will be 
 better for me, and substitute me with something that will be worse for them.’" 
 Then `Ali went out to pray preceded by the mu’adhdhin Ibn al-Nabbah and 
 followed by al-Hasan. `Ali came out of the gateway calling the people to 
 prayer and was faced by two men armed with swords. Ibn Muljam struck him on 
 the head with a poisoned sword and was caught, while the other hit the arch of 
 the gate and fled. `Ali said: "Feed the prisoner and give him water, if I live 
 I shall decide about him, and if I die, kill him as I was killed without 
 further enmity. ‘Lo! Allah loves not aggressors’ (2:190, 5:87, 7:55)."
 It was 
 decided to make `Ali’s grave a secret lest the Khawârij dig it up. 
 After his son al-Hasan prayed the funeral prayer over him, he was buried at 
 the Caliphal palace in Kufa, then all traces of his grave were effaced. It is 
 also narrated that al-Hasan conveyed the body in a coffin to Madina and that 
 on the way the camel that carried the coffin got lost by night and was found 
 by members of the Tayyi’ tribe who buried the body and slaughtered the camel.
 Among `Ali’s 
 sayings narrated by Abu Nu`aym with his chains:
 
   
     From al-Husayn 
     ibn `Ali: "The most sincere of people in their actions and the most 
     knowledgeable of Allah are those who are strongest in their love and awe 
     for the sanctity of the people of lâ ilâha illallâh."
     From `Abd 
     Khayr: "Goodness does not consist in having much property and children, 
     but in doing many good deeds, increasing your gentle character, and 
     adorning yourself before people with the worship of your Lord. Then, if 
     you do well, glorify Allah; if you do ill, ask forgiveness of Him. There 
     is no good in the world except for two types of people: someone who sins 
     and then follows up with repentence, and someone who races to do good 
     deeds. What is done in Godwariness is never little, and how can something 
     be little if accepted by Allah?"
     From Abu 
     al-Zaghl: "Remember five instructions from me in following which you shall 
     sooner exhaust your camels than run out of their benefit: let no servant 
     hope for anything except from his Lord; let him not fear anything except 
     his own sin; let no ignorant person feel ashamed to ask about what he 
     knows not; let no knowledgeable person, if asked about what he knows not, 
     feel ashamed to say Allah knows best; and patience is in relation to 
     belief like the head to the body, one has no belief if he has no 
     patience."
     From 
     Muhajir ibn `Umayr: "What I fear most is the hankering after idle desires 
     and long hopes. The former blocks one from the truth and the latter causes 
     forgetfulness of the hereafter. In truth the world has gone its way out, 
     in truth the hereafter has come journeying to us û and each of the two has 
     its own sons. Therefore be a son of the hereafter and do not be a son of 
     the world! Today there are deeds without accounts, and tomorrow, accounts 
     without deeds."
     From Abu 
     Araka: "I have seen a remnant of the Companions of Allah’s Messenger. I 
     see no-one that resembles them. By Allah! They used to rise in the morning 
     disheveled, dust-covered, pale, with something between their eyes like 
     goat’s knees, as they had spent the night chanting Allah’s Book, turning 
     from their feet to their foreheads. If Allah was mentioned they swayed the 
     way trees sway on a windy day, then their eyes poured out tears until û by 
     Allah! û they soaked their clothes. By Allah! It is as if folks today 
     sleep in indifference."
     From al-Hasan 
     ibn `Ali: "Blessed is the servant that cries constantly to Allah, who has 
     known people while they have not known him, and Allah has marked him with 
     His contentment. These are the true beacons of guidance. Allah repels from 
     them every wrongful dissension and shall enter them into His own mercy. 
     They are not the wasteful tale-bearers nor the ill-mannered 
     self-displayers."
     From `Asim 
     ibn Damura: "The true, the real faqîh is he who does not push 
     people to despair from Allah’s mercy, nor lulls them into a false sense of 
     safety from His Punishment, nor gives them licenses to disobey Allah, nor 
     leaves the Qur’an for something else. There is no good in worship devoid 
     of knowledge, nor in knowledge devoid of understanding, nor in inattentive 
     recitation." This is comparable to al-Hasan al-Basri’s own definition: 
     "Have you ever seen a faqîh? The faqîh is he who has 
     renounced the world, longs for the hereafter, possesses insight in his 
     Religion, and worships his Lord without cease."
     From `Amr 
     ibn Murra: "Be wellsprings of the Science and beacons in the night, 
     wearing old clothes but possessing new hearts for which you shall be known 
     in the heaven and remembered on the earth."
     "This 
     world lasts for an hour: Spend it in obedience."
     "Thus 
     does Knowledge die: when those who possess it die. By Allah, I do swear 
     it! The earth will never be empty of one who establishes the proofs of 
     Allah so that His proofs ans signs never cease. They are the fewest in 
     number, but the greatest in rank before Allah. Through them Allah 
     preserves His proofs until they bequeath it to those like them (before 
     passing on) and plant it firmly in their hearts. By them knowledge has 
     taken by assault the reality of things, so that they found easy what those 
     given to comfort found hard, and found intimacy in what the ignorant found 
     desolate. They accompanied the world with bodies whose spirits were 
     attached to the highest regard. Ah, ah! How one yearns to see them!"
   
 
 Imam al-Nawawi 
 narrated a remarkable patrolinear chain for a hadith going back to `Ali: 
 "Among the best of the narrations of the type ‘sons from fathers’ is that of 
 al-Khatib with a chain going back to `Abd al-Wahhab ibn `Abd al-`Aziz ibn al-Harith 
 ibn Asad ibn al-Layth ibn Sulayman ibn al-Aswad ibn Sufyan ibn Yazid ibn Akina 
 al-Tamimi who said: I heard my father (Yazid) say: I heard my father (Sufyan) 
 say: I heard my father (al-Aswad) say: I heard my father (Sulayman) say: I 
 heard my father (al-Layth) say: I heard my father (Asad) say: I heard my 
 father (al-Harith) say: I heard my father (`Abd al-`Aziz) say: I heard my 
 father (`Abd al-Wahhab) say: I heard `Ali ibn Abi Talib say: ‘The 
 compassionate (al-hannân) is he who comes to the one who shunned him. 
 The granter of favor (al-mannân) is he who extends the favor before he 
 is asked for it."
 
 Main sources: Abu Nu`aym, Hilya al-Awliya’ 1:100-128 
 #4; al-Dhahabi, Siyar A`lam al-Nubala’ 1/2:615-660 #5.
 


The Rightly-Guided Caliphs & The Four Imams by Gabriel Fouad Haddad, Damascus,1998

© copyright ASFA, 1998

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