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Islamic Mission: Ashura Awareness Week |
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and Articles > We Cry for Hussain (as)...So did the Prophet (saws) |
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We Cry for Hussain (as)...So did the Prophet (saws)
By Yasser Madani
Every year, Muslims
around the world commemorate the tragedy of Karbala. They attend
mourning meetings and processions in which the story of Karbala is
retold, lamentations are held and special poetic readers using dramatic
techniques and symbolism recite eulogies to mark the events of the day
of Ashura. All these commemorative meetings not only serve to convey the
events and message of Karbala but also provide opportunities for us to
learn about Islam in general.
We commemorate Ashura to symbolise and
express our grief and emotions towards the martyrdom of Imam al-Hussain
(AS), to keep Imam al-Hussain’s (AS) cause alive in our hearts and to be
committed to his cause. Also, we want to extract lessons from the
tragedy of Karbala and apply them to our daily lives. We want to pay our
condolences to the Holy Prophet (SAW) and the Ahlul Bayt. You might then
ask why we don’t commemorate the death of the Holy Prophet (SAW)
who has a much higher rank than Imam al-Hussain (AS). The answer to this
is that although we do
commemorate and mourn the death of the Holy Prophet (SAW), it is
the way and circumstance in which Imam al-Hussain (AS) was martyred
which makes all the difference, the fact that he was martyred for
refusing a government headed by the wretched Yazid, who drank, gambled
and indulged in many corrupt practices, the fact that those who savagely
slaughtered Imam al-Hussain (AS) called themselves Muslims is what makes
us mourn and lament his martyrdom the way we do.
Imagine this, it is
afternoon on the day of Ashura. Imam al-Hussain (AS) is standing on the
blood-drenched soil of Karbala in the heat of the scorching sun waiting
to meet his beloved. His head is wounded and blood is streaming slowly
down his holy face soaking his blessed beard. He looks around, searching
for members of his family and his companions, only to find them brutally
slaughtered and slain like sacrificial lambs, lying there on the ground
soaked in blood. He hears the innocent crying and wailing of the
children and the women. Tears flow down his holy face. He takes a piece
of cloth to wipe the blood from his face, whereupon an archer from the
army of Yazid (may Allah’s curse be upon him) shoots a triple-headed
arrow, which lodges into Imam al-Hussain’s (AS) heart. He pulls out the
arrow causing blood to gush out. The Holy Imam is thirsty, he cries: “O
God, I am thirsty”, in the meantime another man approaches and shoots an
arrow which thrusts into Imam al-Hussain’s (AS) throat quenching his
thirst. Hilal bin Nafi’ was reported as saying: “By God I never saw a
person getting killed with his own blood all over his body in a better
state than al-Hussain. I was so overwhelmed by the radiance of his face
that I refrained from contemplating killing him”. Even when the accursed
Shimr approached Imam al-Hussain (AS) to severe his blessed head,
he said: “When I approached Hussain ibn Ali and my eyes fell on him, the
light of his face so gripped me that I forgot my intention to kill him”.
It is reported that when Imam al-Hussain was killed, the sky rained down
blood.[1]
It has been recorded that Imam Ja’far as-Sadiq (AS) has said:
“…For no one the heavens
wept for forty days save Yahya and Hussain…”
[2]
Show me such a spectacle of
human greatness in an event other than
Karbala
and I will commemorate its memory instead of Karbala! How can someone
hear all this and not cry and mourn, even those who are not Muslims shed
tears when they hear this tragedy. Even the heavens wept for Imam al-Hussain
(AS).[3]
Let me ask you a question, if a Muslim cries over the passing away of
their own relatives, then how can they not cry over the grandson of the
Messenger of Allah (SAW)?
Furthermore, crying for Imam al-Hussain (AS) is considered seeking
nearness to Allah (SWT) for the tragedy of Karbala is bound to the great
sacrifice which Imam al-Hussain (AS) endured for the sake of Allah (SWT)
and for Islam. It is only when your heart is
soft and absorbable that
you feel the sense of closeness to Allah (SWT). The Holy Qur’an praises
crying and those who cry for a legitimate cause. The Holy Qur’an
describes many of the Prophets and their followers when they cried,
"When the verses of the Most Gracious were recited unto them, they fell
down prostrating and weeping"[4]
Furthermore we cry over the martyrdom of Imam al-Hussain (AS) for the
Holy Prophet (SAW) wept for Imam al-Hussain (AS) as recorded in many
traditions (ahadith):
Ahmed and
Ibn al-Dhahhak narrated from Ali (AS): “I entered on the prophet
(SAW) and his eyes were flooded, I said: Oh! Prophet of Allah, anyone
made you angry? Why are your eyes flooded? He said: Gabriel just left me
telling me that al-Hussain will be killed by the river
Euphrates.
He (the Prophet) said: So he (Gabriel) said: Do you want me to let you
smell his dirt (from his burial pot)? I said: Yes! He reached with his
hand and grabbed and handful of dirt and gave it to me. So I could not
help it and my eyes were flooded.”
[5]
Ummul Fadhl
the daughter of al-Harith said that she entered on the Messenger of
Allah (SAW) and she said: “Oh! Messenger of Allah, I saw a strange
dream last night. He said: And what is it? She said: It was difficult.
He said: And what is it? She said: I saw, as if, a piece of your body
was severed and was put in my lap! The Messenger of Allah (SAW) said:
You saw well -
Fatima will
give birth, God willing, a boy so he will be in your lap. Then Fatima
gave birth to al-Hussain and he was in my lap - just as the Messenger of
Allah (SAW) said. So I entered one day on the Messenger of Allah (SAW)
and put him in his lap, but I noticed that the eyes of the Messenger of
Allah (SAW) pouring tears! So I said: Oh! Prophet of Allah, my parents
are your ransom, what is with you? He said: Gabriel (AS) came to me and
informed me that my nation (ummah) will kill this son of mine.”
[6]
Umm Salamah
has said:
"al-Hussain entered on the Prophet (SAW),
while I was sitting at the door, so I saw in the hand of the Prophet
(SAW) something he turned over while (Hussain) sleeping on his stomach.
I said: Oh messenger of Allah, I looked and saw you turning something
over in your hand when the kid was sleeping on your stomach and your
tears were pouring? He said: Gabriel came to me with the sand upon which
he (Hussain) will be killed. And he informed me that my nation (umma)
will kill him."
[7]
Ibn Saad,
Ali bin Muhammad, Yahya bin Zakariya, a man heard it from 'Amir al-Sha'bi
say:
"When Ali (as) passed by Karbalaa in his
march to Siffien and lined up with Nainawa - a village on the Euphrates
- he stopped and called one of them men: Tell aba 'Abdullah (al-Hussain
) what this land is called? He said:
Karbala.
Then he cried until the earth was wet from his tears. He then said: I
entered on the messenger of Allah (s) and he was crying. So I said: What
makes you cry? He said: Gabriel was with me, just now, and informed me:
that my son al-Hussain will be killed at the banks of Furat in a
location called Karbala. Then Gabriel grabbed a handful of dirt and let
me smell it. So I could not help it, my eyes overflowed."
[8]
From this tradition (hadith) we can see that Imam al-Ali (AS)
also wept for Imam al-Hussain (AS). There are more
traditions showing that the Holy Prophet (SAW) wept for Imam al-Hussain
(AS).
[9]
Umm Salamah,
the wife of the Holy Prophet (SAW) also wept for Imam al-Hussain (AS).[10]
Even the
Jinns mourned Imam al-Hussain (AS)'s death, it has been reported that
after Imam al-Hussain (AS)'s martyrdom, Umm Salamah said: "I heard the
Jinns mourning for al-Hussain.”
[11]
Yet
unfortunately there are some Muslims who have claimed that mourning and
lamenting the death of Imam al-Hussain (AS) is impermissible and a wrong
practice. Ask yourselves this question - if this is so, then why did the
Holy Prophet (SAW) mourn the death of Imam al-Hussain (AS)? Some Muslims
have even gone to the extent of criticizing the Muslims who commemorate
Ashura[12]
whilst others have even claimed that this practice is polytheism (shirk)
and an innovation (bid'ah). Maybe there are some Muslims who hate
to see the remembrance of the Ahlul Bayt. |
-
Nadra al-Azdiya, a woman who was contemporary with Imam
al –Hussain (AS), is said to have reported: “When al-Hussain b. 'Ali
was killed, the sky rained down blood, so that next morning we found
our wells and water jugs filled with it.” This hadith is narrated by
Ibn Hajar.
-
The
Holy Qur'an,
Aqa Mirza Mahdi Puya, p. 681, pub. Peermohammed Trust (Pakistan).
This hadith is recorded under the tafsir of the verse (19:12-15).
Aqa Mahdi Puya says that what is meant by “the heavens wept” (in the
hadith of Imam as-Sadiq) is that the sun became extraordinarily red.
-
al-Suyuti reports in his commentary on the verse (19:13)
describing Allah's compassion towards the ancient martyr John son of
Zachariah that “The heavens did not weep for the death of anyone
except John son of Zachariah and al-Hussain b. Ali. Its redness [at
sunset] is the sign of its weeping”.
-
The
Holy Qur'an,
(19:58); also refer to (17:109).
-
Thakhaer al-Uqba,
Muhibbuldeen al-Tabari, p. 148.
-
al-Mustadrak al-Sahih,
al-Hafidh al-Hakim al-Nisapouri, v. 3, p. 176, (al-Hakim said: “This
is an authentic hadith (Sahih) on the conditions of Bukhari
and Muslim but they did not print it”); Dalael al-Nubouwa,
al-Hafidh al-Bayhaqi under the subject of al-Hussain (AS); Cf. Ibn
al-A'tham IV, (Hyderabad, 1971), p. 211-2, the author narrates this
hadith using a different chain of narration.
-
al-Musannaf,
al-Hafidh abu Bakr bin abi Shaibah, v. 12.
-
al-Tabaqat al-Kubra,
Ibn Saad; al-Musannaf, Ibn Abi Shaibeh, v. 12 (with "Patience
aba 'Abdullah, patience aba 'Abdullah"); al-Moejam al-Kabeer,
al-Tabarani, v. 1; Tareekh al-Shamm, Ibn 'Asakir.
-
al-Musnad,
Ahmad bin Hanbal, v. 2, p. 60-61; al-Taba'qat al-Kubra, Ibn
Saad; al-Moejam al-Kabeer, al-Hafidh al-Tabarani (on subject
of al-Hussain); A'lam al-Nubuwwah, al-Mawardi al-Shafi 'I;
Kanz al-Ummal, al-Muttaqi al-Hindi.
-
al-Khasa'is,
al-Suyuti al-Shafi'I, 2:125; al-Manaqib, al-Magazili, p. 313;
al-Musnad, Ahmad bin Hanbal, 6:294; Tarikh al-Islam,
al-Dimishqi, 3:11; al-Bidayah wal-Nihayah, 6:230; al-'Aqd
al-Farid, ibn 'Abd Rabbah, 2:219; Kanz al-Ummal,
al-Muttaqi al-Hindi; Cf. Ibn al-A'tham IV, 212-4; Sahih al-
Tirmidhi; Mishkat al-Masabih, an-Nawawi, English Version,
Tradition # 6157.
-
Tarikh al-Kabir,
al-Bukhari (author of the famous Sahih), v. 4, Part 1, p. 26;
Fadha'il al-Sahaba, Amhmad Ibn Hanbal, v. 2, p. 776,
tradition # 1373; Tabarani, v. 3, p.130-1; Tahdhib, v. 7,
p.404.
-
Kitab al-Lata'if,
Ibn Rajab.
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