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As
a statesman, Muhammad ranks among the greatest in
the whole world. He was endowed with amazing
perspicacity, vision and political genius. During
the last ten years of his life, he was called upon
to make the most momentous decisions in the history
of Islam. Those decisions affected not only the
Muslims or the Arabs but all mankind. He was also
aware that his actions and decisions would affect
the actions and decisions of every generation of the
Muslims to the end of time itself.
Muhammad,
the Messenger of God, therefore, did not make any
decision, no matter how trivial, on an ad hoc
basis; nor did he make decisions by a "trial
and error" method. His decisions were all
inspired. They were precedents for the Muslim umma
(nation or community) for all time. It was with this
knowledge and understanding that he said or did
anything and everything.
Muhammad
had succeeded, after a long and sanguinary struggle
against the idolaters and polytheists of Arabia, in
establishing the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth so that
his umma (people) may live in it in peace and
security, admired and envied by the rest of mankind.
The
Kingdom of Heaven on Earth was the lifework of
Muhammad. He knew that he was a mortal, and would
die some day, but his work, as embodied in the
"Kingdom" would live. He knew that after
his death, someone else would have to carry on the
work begun by him. He also knew that orderly
succession is the anchor of stability. He knew all
this and much else besides. No Muslim would ever
presume to imagine that Muhammad, the Messenger of
God, did not know all this better than anyone else.
The
succession of Muhammad was also a subject of much
speculation among many Muslims. One question that
had been uppermost in the minds of many of them,
especially since the conquest of Makkah, was, who
would succeed him as the new head of the State of
Medina, after his death.
This
question admits of only one answer, viz., the best
Muslim! The successor of Muhammad ought to be, not a
second rate person, but the finest product of Islam;
someone that Islam itself might uphold with pride as
its "masterpiece."
Such
a "masterpiece" was Ali ibn Abi Talib.
Muhammad had "discovered" him early in
life; he had groomed him and designated him as his
successor, thus assuring peaceful and orderly
transfer of sovereignty. He was most anxious to
avert a struggle for power among his companions
after his own death.
But,
unfortunately, this arrangement did not work out,
and the succession, after the death of the Prophet,
was not peaceful and orderly. There was a grim
struggle for power among his companions in which
some new candidates for power succeeded in capturing
the government of Medina. Their success signaled an
abrupt end of the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth, and
signaled, at the same time, the birth of the Muslim
State – a State run by people who were Muslims.
The Kingdom of Heaven on Earth or the Islamic State
did not survive the death of its Founder.
This
demise of the Islamic State, while still in its
infancy, may arouse the curiosity of the student of
history. He may wonder why it was so short-lived,
and how it was possible for these new candidates to
subvert the arrangement made by the Prophet himself
for a peaceful and orderly transfer of power, and to
foist an arrangement of their own upon the Muslim umma.
Following
is an attempt to answer this question.
The
new candidates for power had not endorsed the
arrangement made by the Prophet for transfer of
sovereignty. They and their supporters had many
reservations about it, and they were resolved to
capture the government of Medina for themselves. For
this purpose, they had mapped out a grand strategy
and they had gone to work at implementing it even
before the death of the Prophet.
The
principal ploy in the strategy of these candidates
for power was to put into circulation the canard
that neither the Book of God had expressed any views
on the subject of the leadership of the Muslim umma
nor the Messenger of God had designated anyone as
his successor. They figured that if the Muslims
believed such a claim to be true, then they (the
Muslims) would assume that the Prophet left the job
of finding the future head of his government to the umma
itself, and in the umma, of course, everyone
was free to enter the "lists" and to grab
power for himself, if he could.
Dr.
Hamid-ud-Deen
Al-Qur’an
al-Majid has not mentioned anything about the manner
of selecting a khalifa. The reliable traditions (Hadith)
of the Prophet are also silent in this regard. From
this, one can make the deduction that the Shari'ah
(Holy Law) left this matter to the discretion of the
Umma itself so that it may select its leaders
according to its own needs, and according to the
conditions prevailing at the time. (History of
Islam by Dr. Hamid-ud-Deen, M.A. (Honors), Punjab;
M.A. (Delhi); Ph.D. {Harvard University, U.S.A.},
published by Ferozesons Limited, Publishers,
Karachi, Pakistan, page 188, 4th edition, 4th
printing, 1971)
This
ploy had a most astonishing success, and it has
amazing longevity. It was used then and it is being
used today. In the past it was used only in the
East; now it is used in both East and West. Few in
the East and none in the West have challenged it.
Its success is attested by the testimony of the
following historians:
Marshall
G.S. Hodgson
Qur'an
had, typically, provided for no political
contingencies on the Prophet's death. (The
Venture of Islam, Vol. I, 1974)
Dr.
Muhamed Hamidullah
The
fact that there have been differences of opinion, at
the death of the Prophet, shows that he had not left
positive and precise instructions regarding his
succession. (Introduction to Islam,
Kuwait, 1977)
Francesco
Gabrieli
Mohammed
died, after a brief illness, on June 8, 632. He did
not or he could not make a political testament and
he did not designate the one most worthy to succeed
him. (The Arabs, A Compact History, New York,
1963)
G.E.
Von Grunebaum
The
Prophet died on June 8, 632. He had made no
provision for a successor. (Classical Islam –
A History 600-1258)
John
B. Christopher
The
most urgent political problem faced by the young
Islamic commonwealth was the succession to the
leadership of the umma when Mohammed died;
this problem was met by the institution of the
caliphate. Because Mohammed made no provision for
the succession, the stricken Muslim community turned
back to tribal precedents of electing a new sheikh
as soon as the Prophet died. (The Islamic
Tradition, Introduction, New York)
Bernard
Lewis
In
its origins, the great Islamic institution of the
Caliphate was an improvisation. The death of the
Prophet, with no succession arranged, precipitated a
crisis in the infant Muslim community. (The
Legacy of Islam – Politics and War –
1974)
George
Stewart
Reviewing
the history, one pauses to wonder how the Caliphate
came into being. Mohammed left no will; he nominated
no one to follow in his steps, he delegated no
spiritual power, and he did not deliver the keys of
the Kingdom of Heaven to an apostle... (George
Stewart in his article, Is the Caliph a Pope?
published in the book, The Traditional Near East,
edited by Stewart Robinson, published by
Prentice-Hall, Inc., N.J., 1966)
Robert
Frost once said: "A theory, if you hold it hard
enough and long enough, gets rated as a creed."
This statement may be modified slightly to read as
follows: "A falsehood, if you hold it hard
enough and long enough, gets rated as a creed."
An
overwhelming majority of the historians of Islam
have claimed that the Prophet did not specify anyone
as the future head of the State of Medina after his
own death. For them, and for many others, this claim
has become a creed now.
But
not for the Shia Muslims. They maintain that
Muhammad, the Messenger of God, declared repeatedly
and unequivocally that Ali was his vicegerent and
the sovereign of all Muslims.
Muhammad
charted a course for his umma, and warned it
not to deviate from it after his death. But the umma
deviated nevertheless, and this deviation led it,
knowingly or unknowingly, into reviving a pagan
tradition.
After
the death of the Prophet, some of his companions
gathered in an outhouse of Medina called Saqifa, and
elected Abu Bakr as the leader of the Muslims. There
was no precedent in Islam for such an election but
there was a precedent for it in the political
institutions of the pre-Islamic times.
Three
contemporary Pakistani historians write in their History
of the Islamic Caliphate as follows:
"After
the death of Muhammad (S), the most important and
the most complex problem which the Muslims had to
face, was that of electing a khalifa. Qur’an is
silent on this subject, and the Prophet also did not
say anything about it. In pre-Islamic times, the
custom of the Arabs was to elect their chiefs by a
majority vote. (Unable to find any other precedent)
the same principle was adopted in the election of
Abu Bakr." (History of the Islamic Caliphate
(Urdu), Lahore, Pakistan. Professor M. Iqbal, M.A.,
L.L.B.; Dr. Peer Muhammad Hasan, M.S., Ph.D.;
Professor M. Ikram Butt, M.S).
According
to the three historians quoted above, the most
important task before the Muslims at the death of
their Prophet was to find a leader, since the latter
had left them leaderless. Lacking precedent in Islam
itself for finding a leader, they were compelled to
adopt a pagan tradition, and they elected Abu Bakr
as their new leader.
This
mode of finding a leader for Muslims was alien to
the genius of Islam. It was, therefore, a deviation,
as already mentioned. This deviation has been noted
by many Orientalists, among them:
R.
A. Nicholson
That
Mohammed left no son was perhaps of less moment than
his neglect or refusal to nominate a successor. The
Arabs were unfamiliar with the hereditary descent of
kingly power, while the idea had not yet dawned of a
Divine right resident in the Prophet's family. It
was thoroughly in accord with Arabian practice that
the Muslim community should elect its own leader, just
as in heathen days the tribe chose its own chief. (A
Literary History of the Arabs)
Professor
Nicholson says that the Arabs were unfamiliar with
the hereditary descent of kingly power. He may be
right. The Arabs, however, were unfamiliar with many
other things such as belief in the Oneness of God,
and they had great familiarity with their idols of
stone and wood; they clung to them tenaciously, and
many of them died for them.
Nevertheless,
the "unfamiliarity" of the Arabs with
hereditary descent of kingly power did not last
long; it proved to be very short-lived. In fact,
their "unfamiliarity" lasted less than
thirty years (from 632 to 661). After those first
thirty years of unfamiliarity with the principle of
hereditary descent of kingly power, they became very
much familiar with it, and their new familiarity has
lasted down to our own times.
Being
"unfamiliar" with the principle of
hereditary descent of kingly power, the Arabs were
groping in darkness, when suddenly they stumbled
upon a precedent from their own pre-Islamic past,
from the days when they were idolaters, and they
grabbed it. They were thrilled that they had found
"salvation."
Francesco
Gabrieli
With
the election of Abu Bakr the principle was
established that the Caliphate or Imamate (Imam in
this case is a synonym of caliph) had to remain in
the Meccan clan of the Quraysh from which Mohammed
came. But at the same time the elective character of
the post was sanctioned, as that of the sayyid or chief
of the tribe had been in the pagan society, by
rejecting the legitimist claims of the family of the
Prophet (Ahl-al-Bayt), personified by Ali. (The
Arabs, A Compact History, 1963)
Franceso
Gabrieli says that with the election of Abu Bakr the
principle was established that the Caliphate would
remain in the Meccan clan of the Quraysh. But he
does not say who established this
"principle." Does it have the authority of
the Qur’an or the traditions of the Prophet to
support it? It doesn't have. Actually, it was an ad
hoc "principle" invoked by those men
who wanted to appropriate the Caliphate or Imamate
for themselves. They found this
"principle" very profitable because it
enabled them to seize the government of Muhammad,
and to hang on to it while precluding his children
from it. But as pragmatic as this
"principle" is, it has its sanction, not
in Qur’an but in "the pagan society," as
pointed out by the historian himself.
Bernard
Lewis
The
first crisis in Islam came at the death of the
Prophet in 632. Muhammad had never claimed to be
more than a mortal man - distinguished above others
because he was God's messenger and the bearer of
God's word, but himself neither divine nor immortal.
He had, however, left no clear instructions on who
was to succeed him as leader of the Islamic
Community and ruler of the nascent Islamic state,
and the Muslims had only the meager political
experience of pre-Islamic Arabia to guide them.
After some arguments and a moment of dangerous
tension, they agreed to appoint Abu Bakr, one of the
earliest and most respected converts, as khalifa,
deputy, of the Prophet – thus creating, almost
incidentally, the great historical institution of
the Caliphate. (The Assassins, 1968)
As
stated earlier, the canard that Muhammad, the
Messenger of God, did not leave any instructions on
who was to succeed him as leader of the Islamic
community, has become an Article of Faith with most
historians, both ancient and modern, Muslim and
non-Muslim. One may perhaps condone the Sunni
historians for clinging to this "article of
faith" but it is incredible that scholars of
such range and distinction as Nicholson and Bernard
Lewis have done nothing more in their works on Islam
than to recast a stereotype of history which was
"handed down" to them by the court
historians of Damascus and Baghdad of earlier
centuries. Bernard Lewis, however, has conceded,
like Nicholson and Franceso Gabrieli, that those
Muslims who appointed Abu Bakr as their khalifa, had
only the meager political experience of pre-Islamic
Arabia to guide them.
Bernard
Lewis further says that the great historical
institution of the Caliphate was born "almost
incidentally."
The
most important political institution of Islam –
the Caliphate – was thus born "almost
incidentally!"
George
Stewart
The
office of the Caliphate came into being not from
deliberate plan or foresight, but almost from
accident ... the Caliphate was molded by the
turbulent accidents of the age that gave it birth. (The
Traditional Near East, 1966)
Writing
about the pre-Islamic Arab society, Professor John
Esposito, says:
"A
grouping of several related families comprised a
clan. A cluster of several clans constituted a
tribe. Tribes were led by a chief (shaykh) who
was selected by a consensus of his peers – that
is, the heads of leading clans or families."
Islam – the Straight Path, 1991, page 5)
In
the same book (and the same chapter), Professor
Esposito further says – on page 16:
"...A
society based on tribal affiliation and man-made
tribal law or custom was replaced by a religiously
bonded community (the Muslim umma) governed by God's
law."
(Abu
Bakr was selected chief (shaykh) by "a
consensus of peers – that is, the heads of
leading clans or families." It was the
"man-made tribal law or custom"
which invested him with power. One thing that was
not invoked in his selection, was the "God's
law.")
All
the historians quoted above, are unanimous in
stating that:
1.
Muhammad, the Messenger of God, gave no instructions
to his umma regarding the character of the
future government of Islam, and he did not designate
any person to be its head after his own death. In
the matter of succession, he had no clear line of
policy; and;
2.
When Muhammad died, the Muslims had to find a new
leader for the community. Lacking guidance and
precedent, they had no choice but to fall back upon
the political institutions or traditions of the
Times of Ignorance to find a leader, and Abu Bakr
was their choice.
If
these historians are right, then it was a most
egregious omission on the part both of Al-Qur’an
al-Majid and its Interpreter and Promulgator,
Muhammad, not to enlighten the Muslims in the matter
of selecting their leaders.
But
there was not and could not be such an egregious
omission on the part either of Qur’an or of
Muhammad. Qur’an has stated, in luminous and
incisive words what are the qualifications of a
leader appointed by God, and Muhammad has told the umma,
in luminous and incisive words, who possesses those
qualifications. (This subject has been dealt with in
another chapter).
At
the moment, however, Abu Bakr was elected khalifa of
the Muslims. God's Law was not invoked in his
election. His election, therefore, raises some
fundamental questions, such as:
1.
The wishes of God and His Apostle did not figure
anywhere in Abu Bakr's election. Since he was
elected by some companions of the Apostle, he was
their representative or the representative of the
Muslims. The Apostle alone could select his
successor, and he did not select Abu Bakr. Can Abu
Bakr still be called the successor of the Apostle of
God?
2.
The most important role in any social organization
is played by the government or rather, by the head
of the government. Qur’an asserts that it is
comprehensive and has not omitted anything of
importance. But the partisans of Abu Bakr say that
Qur’an has not told the Muslims how to find the
head of their government. If they are right, then
can we claim before the non-Muslims that Qur’an is
a complete and a perfect code, and has not
overlooked any important detail of man's life from
consideration?
3.
If Muhammad Mustafa himself did not guide the
Muslims in both the theory and the practice of
government, then can we claim before the non-Muslims
that he is the perfect model for all mankind in
everything?
4.
Were the teachings of Muhammad so imperfect and
inconclusive that as soon as he died, his followers
were compelled to invoke pagan customs, precedents
and traditions? Since they did, doesn't he leave his
own conduct open to question?
The
truth is that Al-Qur’an al-Majid is a
comprehensive and a perfect code of life. But only
those people will find enlightenment in it who will
seek it. There is no evidence that enlightenment
from Qur’an was sought in the election of Abu Bakr.
The "principle" invoked in his election
was lifted out of the political experience of pagan
Arabia. His leadership rested on a custom grounded
in pre-Islamic tribal mandate.
Just
as Qur’an is the perfect code of life, Muhammad
Mustafa, its Bringer and Interpreter, is the perfect
model for mankind. He knew that he was subject to
the same laws of life and death as were the other
mortals. He was also endowed with a sense of
history, and knew what happened when great leaders
died. One thing he could not do, was to let his
people became mavericks once again as they were in
the Times of Ignorance. One thing that could not
escape and did not escape his attention, was the
principle of succession in the Kingdom of Heaven on
Earth.
Abu
Bakr was elected in the outhouse of Saqifa as the
head of the government of the Muslims with the
support of Umar bin al-Khattab. Therefore, his
government, as well as the governments of his two
successors – Umar and Uthman – all three, were
the "products" of Saqifa. I shall identify
their governments as the governments of Saqifa to
distinguish them from the government of Ali ibn Abi
Talib which was not a product of Saqifa.
Ali's government was the (restored) Kingdom of
Heaven on Earth.
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