Ghurabiya

The Ghurabiyya Shi‘a were a ghulāt sect of Shi‘a Islam. They were the best known of a few extremist Shi‘a sects from the Middle Ages who adopted the belief that the angel Jibra’il (Gabriel) was mistaken when passing on the prophecy to Muhammad instead of Ali.[1]

Etymology

The name of the Ghurabiyya sect comes from the Arabic غراب ghurāb, meaning "Ravens".[2] They received this name because of their belief that Muhammad resembled Ali very much, as much or more than one raven resembles another raven.[3]

History

While passing through Syria at the turn of the 13th century, the Andalusian traveler Ibn Jubayr noted that the Ghurabiyya Shi‘a were among the Shi‘a sects represented in Syria at that time.[4]

Furthermore, a document written around 1200 C.E. called “al-Maqama al Kilwiyya” discovered in Oman, gives details of a mission to reconvert Kilwa (an island in Tanzania) to Ibadism, as it had recently been affected by the Ghurabiyya doctrine from southern Iraq. The document also mentions an apostate from Ibadism called al-Munghirah. Another reference to the influence of the Ghurabiyya Shi‘a comes from the Syrian biographer and geographer Yaqut, who, writing before 1224 C.E., reported that the Sultan of Pemba (another island in Tanzania) was an Arab who had recently emigrated from Kufa, suggesting that the doctrines of the Ghurabiyya, strongly present in Kufa, had also spread to Pemba.[5]

Beliefs

The Ghurabiyya Shi‘a had the following beliefs:

See also

References

Sources

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