Ali

ALI, in full, ‘ALI BEN ABU TALIB (c. 600-661), the fourth of
the caliphs or successors of Mahomet, was born at Mecca about the year
A.D. 600. His father, Abu Talib, was an uncle of the prophet, and Ali
himself was adopted by Mahomet and educated under his care. As a mere
boy he distinguished himself by being one of the first to declare his
adhesion to the cause of Mahomet, who some years afterwards gave him his
daughter Fatima in marriage. Ali proved himself to be a brave and
faithful soldier, and when Mahomet died without male issue, a few
emigrants thought him to have the best claim to succeed him. Abu Bekr,
Omar and Othman, however, occupied this position before him, and it was
not until 656, after the murder of Othman, that he assumed the title of
caliph. The fact that he took no steps to prevent this murder is,
perhaps, the only real blot upon his character. Almost the first act of
his reign was the suppression of a rebellion under Talha and Zobair, who
were instigated by Ayesha, Mahomet’s widow, a bitter enemy of Ali, and
one of the chief hindrances to his advancement to the caliphate. The
rebel army was defeated at the “Battle of the Camel,” near Bassorah
(Basra), the two generals being killed, and Ayesha taken prisoner.
Ali soon afterwards made Kufa his capital. His next care was to get
rid of the opposition of Moawiya, who had established himself in Syria
at the head of a numerous army. A prolonged battle took place in July
657 in the plain of Siffin (Suffein), near the Euphrates; the fighting
was at first, it is said, in favor of Ali, when suddenly a number of the
enemy, fixing copies of the Koran to the points of their spears,
exclaimed that “the matter ought to be settled by reference to this
book, which forbids Moslems to shed each other’s blood.” The
superstitious soldiers of Ali refused to fight any longer, and demanded
that the issue be referred to arbitration. Abu Musa was appointed umpire
on the part of Ali, and ‘Amr-ibn-el-Ass, a veteran diplomatist, on the
part of Moawiya. It is said that ‘Amr persuaded Abu Musa that it would
be for the advantage of Islam that neither candidate should reign, and
asked him to give his decision first. Abu Musa having proclaimed that
he deposed both Ali and Moawiya, ‘Amr declared that he also deposed Ali,
and announced further that he invested Moawiya with the caliphate. This
treacherous decision greatly injured the cause of Ali, which was still
further weakened by the loss of Egypt.
After much indecisive fighting, Ali found his position so
unsatisfactory that according to some historians he made an agreement
with Moawiya by which each retained his own dominions unmolested. It
chanced, however—according to a legend, the details of which are quite
uncertain—that three of the fanatic sect of the Kharijites had made an
agreement to assassinate Ali, Moawiya and ‘Amr, as the authors of
disastrous feuds among the faithful. The only victim of this plot was
Ali, who died at Kufa in 661, of the wound inflicted by a poisoned
weapon. A splendid mosque called Meshed Ali was afterwards erected near
the city, but the place of his burial is unknown. He had eight wives
after Fatima’s death, and in all, it is said, thirty-three children, one
of whom, Hassan, a son of Fatima, succeeded him in the caliphate. His
descendants by Fatima are known as the Fatimites. The question of Ali’s
right to succeed to the caliphate is an article of faith which divided
the Mohammedan world into two great sects, the Sunnites and the Shiites,
the former denying, and the latter affirming, his right. The Turks,
consequently, hold his memory in abhorrence; whereas the Persians, who
are generally Shi‘as, venerate him as second only to the prophet, call
him the “Lion of God” (Sher-i-Khuda), and celebrate the anniversary of
his martyrdom. Ali is described as a bold, noble and generous man, “the
last and worthiest of the primitive Moslems, who imbibed his religious
enthusiasm from companionship with the prophet himself, and who followed
to the last the simplicity of his example.” It is maintained, on the
other hand, that his motives were throughout those of ambition rather
than piety, and that, apart from the tragedy of his death, he would have
been an insignificant figure in history.
In the eyes of the later Moslems he was remarkable for learning and
wisdom, and there are extant collections (almost all certainly spurious)
of proverbs and verses which bear his name: the Sentences of Ali (Eng.
trans., William Yule, Edinburgh, 1832); H. L. Fleischer, Alis hundert
Spruche (Leipz. 1837); the Divan, by G. Kuypert (Leiden, 1745, and at
Bulak, 1835); C. Brockelmann, Gesch. d. arabisch. Lit. (vol. i.,
Weimar, 1899).
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