(a) Longevity Is it possible for any human being to continue
to live for many centuries, as is presumed in the case of this Awaited Saviour
who has already lived for more than 1145 years? This long life is about 14
times the life of an ordinary man who passes through all stages of life from
infancy to old age. The impossibility of such a long life is the
objection. Let us have a close look at the objection. The word impossibility
here (like any other truth) is relative. It has meaning only in relation to
some person, place and time. What is impossible for one person need not be
so for the others. Then what is impossible in one place may be quite possible
in another place. Again what is not possible at one time may be quite possible
at another. There is no dearth of illustrations to prove how impossibility is a
relative term. In other words, the possibility of a thing may
be of three categories viz. factual possibility, scientific possibility and
logical possibility. To journey across the ocean, to reach the bottom of the
sea and to travel to the moon are practical possibilities. There are people who
have accomplished these tasks in one way or another. By a scientific possibility we mean that there
may be certain things which may not be practicable in the present circumstances
but there exists no scientific reason to justify the denial of their
practicability in favourable circumstances and the scientific trends indicate
that they will be feasible sooner or later. For example, there exists no scientific
reason to deny the possibility of man's travelling to Venus. Although, it has
not been possible for anyone to go to that planet so far, yet we know that
there is only a difference of degree between man's landing on the moon and his
landing on Venus. It is only a question of surmounting additional
difficulties because of the greater distance. Hence, it is scientifically
possible to go to Venus, though practically it is still impossible. In
contrast, it is scientifically impossible to go to the sun in the sense that
science does not hope that it will ever be possible to manufacture a protective
shield against the heat of the sun which is virtually a huge furnace blazing at
the highest imaginable degree of temperature. By a logical possibility we mean that, on the
basis of self-evident laws, reason does not regard a thing impossible. For
example, it is logically impossible to divide three oranges into two equal
parts without cutting anyone of them. It is self-evident that, three being an
odd number, it is not divisible into two whole numbers. Only an even number can be so divided and the
same number cannot be both odd and even simultaneously, because that will mean
self-contradiction which is impossible. But a man's entering into fire without
being hurt or going to the sun without being affected by its heat is not
logically impossible, for it is not self-contradictory to suppose that heat
does not pass. from a body having a higher temperature to a body having a lower
temperature. Only experience has proved that if two bodies are mixed or put
together, heat passes from a body having higher temperature to a body having
lower temperature, till the temperature of both the bodies is at par. Thus, we know that the scope of the logical
possibility is wider than that of the scientific possibility and the scope of
the scientific possibility is wider than that of the practical possibility. There is no doubt that a person's remaining
alive for thousands of years is not logically impossible, for there is nothing irrational
or self-contradictory about it. Life itself does not imply the sense of quick
death. Admittedly, such a long life is not as
practical as descending to the bottom of the sea or ascending to the moon.
Notwithstanding the present scientific facilities it has not so far been
possible to prolong human life to hundreds of years. Even those who have all
the modern facilities at their disposal and are the keenest to continue to live
cannot have more than the normal span of life. As for the scientific possibility there exists
nothing to justify its denial from a theoretical point of view. In fact this
question is related to the physiological explanation of senility. The question
is, whether there exists a natural law according to which human tissues and cells,
after attaining the stage of full development, automatically begin to stiffen
and degenerate, till they cease functioning at a particular moment or the
senile degeneration is caused by some external factors, such as microbes and
poisons infiltrating into the body through polluted food, unhealthy jobs or
some other causes. It is a question with which science is
grappling at present and is earnestly trying to find an answer to it. For the
present there is more than one scientific explanation of senility. Anyhow, if
we accept the view that senile degeneration is caused by external influences,
it means that if the tissues of the human body are secluded from these
particular influences it is theoretically possible to prolong life, to delay
senility and even to control it eventually. The other view tends to suppose that living
cells and tissues are governed by a natural law according to which they carry
within themselves the seeds of their complete exhaustion. They, in their
natural course, pass through the stages of old age and senility and eventually
cease to function. Even if we accept this view it does not mean
that this natural law is not flexible. In fact it is supposed to be a flexible
law, for we see in our ordinary life, and it has been confirmed by scientific
laboratory observations also, that senility is an untimely physiological
phenomenon in the sense that sometimes it appears early and sometimes very
late. It is a
common experience which has also been confirmed by the observations of the physicians,
that many a man of advanced age still possess a supple body and do not suffer
from any old age ailments. It is because of the flexibility of this natural law
that the scientists have already succeeded in prolonging the life of certain
animals, hundreds of times beyond their normal span of life by artificially
creating conditions conducive to the delay of senility.[5]
They have falsified the law of natural senility
by acquiring brilliant successes and have made it clear scientifically that to
postpone senility or to provide opportunities and specified factors therefore
is possible and if present day science is not able to enforce this programme in
the case of phenomena like human beings it is on account of the fact that more
difficulties are involved in the matter with regard to man as compared with
other animals. In a nutshell, it is logically and
scientifically possible to prolong life, though it is still practically
impossible to do so. Anyhow, science is endeavouring to make it practical also. If we consider the question of the Mahdi's age
in this light there appears to be nothing strange or surprising about it, for
it has been proved that such a long life is logically and scientifically
possible and the scientists are working to turn its possibility into a reality.
All that appears to be surprising is that the Mahdi has attained such a long
life before the scientists have been able to turn its theoretical possibility
into a practical one. This phenomenon can be compared to the discovery of a cure
for cancer or brain haemorrhage before science can make such a discovery. If the question is how Islam, which planned the
age of the Awaited Saviour, could anticipate science in this field the answer
is simple. This is not the only field wherein Islam has anticipated science.
The Islamic Shari'ah as a whole anticipated the scientific movement and
the natural development of human thinking by several centuries. Islam had
already presented, for practical application, the laws which science has taken
hundreds of years to discover. It has propounded doctrines, the wisdom of
which has been corroborated by science only recently. It disclosed such secrets
of the universe which none could think of at that time and the truth of which
was later confirmed by science. If we believe in this, then it is not too much
for Allah, the Exalted, to anticipate science in planning the age of the Mahdi.
We have talked of only those aspects of anticipation which we can see directly.
We can add other instances about which Qur'an has told us. Here we have talked of only those aspects of
anticipation by Islam vis-à-vis science which we can observe directly. It is,
however, possible for us to add some other instances of anticipation about
matters which it has not been possible for science to comprehend so far. For
example, Qur'an tells us that the holy Prophet was carried one night from
Masjid al-Haram (at If we try to perceive the quality of this
journey within the framework of natural laws it points to the application of
laws which govern nature in this sense that science has not yet been able to
understand them and it will take it hundreds of years more to specify their
quality. The same Divine Knowledge, which granted the holy Prophet this high
speed long before science could consider it to be possible, also granted long
life to his last Divinely appointed successor, long before it could be achieved
by science. (b) Suspension of laws It is true, as far as common experience and the
experiments carried out so far by the scientists are concerned, this long life
granted by Allah to the Awaited Saviour appears to be very unusual. But his
role of revolutionizing the world order and rebuilding the entire system on the
basis of justice and truth is also so extraordinary that neither are the people
familiar with it nor has it ever been experienced in history. So it should not
be surprising if at the preparatory stage also his role is preceded by some
unusual and extraordinary events, like his long life. Howsoever, unfamiliar these events may be,
they are not more unusual than the great role to be performed by the Mahdi on
the appointed day. If we can relish that role, having no precedent throughout
history, there is no reason why we should not relish his long life
unprecedented in our ordinary life. We wonder if it is a mere chance that each of
the only two persons who undertook to purify the human civilization of all its
impurities and to reconstruct the world should have had a very long life span,
several times that of a usual one. One of them played his role in the past. He
was Noah, about whom the holy Qur'an has expressly said that he lived among his
people for 950 years. He reconstructed the world after the Deluge. The
other is to play his role in the future. He is the Mahdi who has already lived
among his people for more than a thousand years and is destined to play his
role on the appointed day and build the world anew. How is it then that we accept the longevity of
Noah who lived at least for about a thousand years and deny that of the Mahdi. We have learnt that a long life is
scientifically possible but let us suppose that it is not so and the law of
senility is inexorable and cannot be defied either today or in future. Then
what does this mean? It means only this that to live for centuries, as is the
case with Noah and the Mahdi, is contrary to the natural laws established by
science through modern methods of experimentation and investigation. In this case a long life may be accepted as a
miracle which suspends a natural law in particular circumstances to preserve
the life of a particular person entrusted with a celestial mission. This
miracle is not unique in its kind, nor is it alien to the Muslim belief derived
from the text of the Qur'an and the Sunnah. The law of senility is not any the more
relentless than the law of the exchange of heat, according to which heat passes
from a body having a higher temperature to a body having a lower temperature.
This law was suspended to protect Abraham when he was thrown into the burning
fire, for this was the only way to preserve his life. The holy Qur'an says: "We said: O fire, be coolness and peace
for Abraham". (Surah al-Anbia’, 21:69). Accordingly, he came out of the fire unscathed. In many other cases also natural laws were
suspended to protect the prophets and other Divinely appointed people. The sea was parted for Moses. It appeared to
the Romans that they had captured Jesus whereas they had not. Muhammad got out
of his house while it was surrounded by a mob of the tribe of Quraish, waiting
for an opportunity to assassinate him. Allah concealed him, so that the
Quraishites could not see him when he walked out through their midst. In all
these cases natural laws were suspended for the protection of the people whose
lives the Divine Wisdom wanted to preserve. The law of senility too, can be
bracketed with these cases of suspension. From the above discussion we can arrive at a
general conclusion and say: Whenever it is necessary to preserve the life of
one of the chosen servants of Allah to enable him to accomplish his mission,
the Divine Grace intervenes to protect him and one of the natural laws is
suspended. On the contrary if the period of his appointment comes to an end and
the task entrusted to him by the Almighty is accomplished he meets death in
accordance with the natural laws related to life or is martyred. In this connection we are usually confronted
with the following questions. How can a natural law be suspended and the
compulsory relationship existing between the various phenomena be severed? Will such a suspension not be in contradiction
with science which has discovered that law determines the compulsory
relationship on the basis of experimentation and investigations? Science itself has provided an answer to this
question. It has already given up the idea of compulsion in respect of natural
laws. It only says that these laws are discovered on the basis of systematic
observation and experiment. When it is observed that one phenomenon invariably
follows another, this invariability is treated as a natural law. But science does not claim that there exists a
binding and compulsory relationship between any two phenomena, because
compulsion is a factor which cannot be proved by experiment and scientific
methods of investigation. Modern science confirms that a natural law as defined
by it, speaks only of an invariable association between two phenomena and is
not concerned with any compulsory relationship between them.[6]
Hence, if a miracle takes place and the natural
relationship between two phenomena breaks down it does not amount to the
breaking down of a compulsory relationship. In fact, a miracle in its religious sense has
become more comprehensive in the light of modern scientific theory than it was
when the classical view of casual nexus prevailed. According to the old theory
it was presumed that the phenomena invariably associated with each other must
have an inevitable relationship between them and this inevitability meant that
their separation from each other was inconceivable. According to modern
scientific thinking, however, this relationship has been transformed into a law
of association or invariable succession. Thus, a miracle need not come into clash with
inevitability any longer. It is only on exceptional state of the invariability
of association and succession. We agree with the scientific view that modern
scientific methods cannot prove the existence of an inevitable relationship between
any two phenomena. Anyhow, we are of the view that there must still be some
explanation of the invariability of association and succession. As it can be
explained on the basis of the theory of intrinsic inevitability, it can also be
explained if we assume that it is the Wisdom of the Organizer of the universe
which requires a particular phenomenon to be invariably related to some other
phenomenon and that in certain cases the same wisdom may require that there
should be an exception. Such exceptional cases are called miracles. Now let us take up the question as to why Allah
is so keen to prolong the Mahdi's life that, even natural laws are suspended
for his sake. Is it not advisable to leave the leadership of the appointed day
to a person to be born in the future and brought up according to the needs of
that time? In other words, what is the justification for this long occultation? Most of the people who ask this question do not
want an answer simply based on belief. It is not enough to say that we believe
it to be so. What the interrogators really want is a social explanation of the
position in the light of the tangible requirements of the great change expected
to be brought about by the Mahdi. Hence, we leave aside for the time being the
qualifications we believe the infallible Imams to have possessed and take up
instead the following question: Is it likely, in the light of the past
experience, that such a long life of the leader-designate will contribute to
his success and will enable him to play his role better? Our reply to this question is in the
affirmative. Some of the reasons are given below: The proposed great revolutionary change
requires that its leader should possess a unique mental calibre. He should be
conscious of his own superiority and the insignificance of the knotty system he
has to overthrow. The more conscious he is of the insignificance of the corrupt
society he has to fight against, the more prepared he will be psychologically
to wage a war till victory is won. It is evident that the size of his mental
calibre should be proportionate to the size of the proposed change and the size
of the social system required to be eliminated. The more extensive and
deep-seated this system is, the greater should be the psychological push required. The mission being to revolutionize the world,
full of injustice and oppression, and to bring about a radical change in all
its cultural values and diverse systems, it is but natural that it should be
entrusted to a person whose mental calibre is higher than that of anyone in the
whole of the existing world and who may not have been born and brought up under
the influence of the society required to be demolished and replaced by another
culture of justice and righteousness. One brought up under the shadow of a
deep-seated and world-dominating culture is naturally impressed and overawed by
it, that being the only culture which he has seen and by which he has been
influenced from a tender age. But the case should be different with a person
who has a long historical background, who has witnessed several great cultures
successively grow and decline, who has seen the big historical changes with his
own eyes and has not read about them in books, who has been a contemporary of
all the stages of the development of that culture which happens to be the last
chapter of the human history before the appointed day and who has seen all its
ups and downs. Such a person, who himself has lived through all these stages
very carefully and attentively, is competent to look at the culture he has to
grapple with in its historical perspective and is not daunted by its magnitude.
He does not regard it as an unalterable destiny. His attitude to it will not be
like that of Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) to the French monarchy. It is reported that Rousseau, in spite of being
a great champion of political revolution from an intellectual and a
philosophical point of view, shuddered at the very thought of there being a
France without a king, the reason being that he was born and brought up and had
always lived under the shadow of monarchy. But the man having a long historical
background and being fully aware of the historical factors knows perfectly well
how and when the prevailing culture and the prevailing system came into being
and developed. He knows that the historical age of the cultures and systems,
howsoever long, is very limited. Have you read the Surah al-Kahf (Chapter 18 of
the holy Qur'an) and have you gone through the story of the youths who believed
in Allah and were virtuous, but had to face an idolatrous system which was
dominant at that time and which ruthlessly crushed every idea of Monotheism?
They felt greatly distressed and lost all hope. In utter despair they took
refuge in a cave, for they were at their wits' end and did not know what to do.
They prayed to Allah to resolve their difficulty. They thought that the then existing unjust
system would continue to prevail for ever and would liquidate all those whose
hearts throbbed for the truth. Do you know what Allah did? He sent them to
sleep in the cave for 309 years. Then He awakened them and sent them back to
the scene of life. By then the unjust regime, the power and tyranny which had
dazzled them, had completely collapsed and become a part of past history. This arrangement was made to enable those young
men to see themselves the downfall of falsehood, the power and grandeur which
had overawed them. The people of the cave achieved moral uplift and sublimation
through this unique experience which extended their lives for three hundred
years. The same privilege will be enjoyed by the Awaited Saviour through his
long life which will enable him to see the giant dwindling into a dwarf, a
lofty tree shrinking to become a mere seed leaf and a tornado turning into a
mere whiff of the wind. Furthermore, the experience gained through the
direct and close study of so many successive cultures will widen the mental
horizon of the person designated to lead the revolution and will prepare him
better for the accomplishment of his mission. He will have benefited by the
experience of others, knowing their strong and weak points, and will be in a
better position to assess social developments correctly in their true
historical context. As the revolution to be brought about by the
Awaited Saviour is to be ideological and based on the message of Islam, the
very nature of his mission requires him to be close to the early Islamic
sources and to have a personality built independently of and detached from the
influences of the culture he is destined to fight. A person born and brought up
under the shadow of a particular culture cannot in all probability, escape its
effects totally, even if he leads a campaign against it. To ensure that the
leader-designate is not himself influenced by the culture he is expected to
change, his personality must be built fully at a cultural stage closer in its
general spirit to the system he wants to establish. (c) His training for
the mission Now we come to the third question as to how the
preparation of the Awaited Saviour for his mission was completed, as he was
only about five years old when his father, Imam Hasan al-Askari died. This age
is the time of early childhood and the child is not old enough for the
development of the personality of a leader. Then how did his personality
develop? The answer is that several of his forefathers
also assumed the Imamate at an early age. Imam Muhammad ibn Ah al-Jawad assumed
it when he was only eight years old and Imam Ali ibn Muhammad al-Hadi when he
was only nine. It should be observed that the phenomenon of
the early Imamate reached its zenith in the case of the Imam Mahdi. We call it
a phenomenon, because it assumed a tangible and practical form as in the case
of Imam Mahdi's forefathers. It was felt and experienced by the Muslims coming
into contact with the Imam concerned. Experience of the people being the best
proof of a phenomenon, we cannot be asked to give a more tangible or a more
convincing proof of it. The following points will elucidate what we mean: (i) The Imamate of an Imam belonging to the
Holy House was not a centre of hereditary power and influence, nor did it have
the backing of any ruling regime, as was the case with the Imamate of the
Fatimid caliphs and the caliphate of the Abbasid caliphs. The extensive popular
support and allegiance which the Imams enjoyed was due only to their spiritual
influence and the conviction of their followers that they alone deserved the
leadership of Islam on spiritual and intellectual grounds. (ii) The popular bases supporting the Imamate
had existed since the early days of the Islamic era. They expanded further
during the time of the Imam Baqir and Imam Sadiq. The school set up by them
assumed the form of an extensive intellectual movement which included among its
ranks hundreds of legists, scholastic theologians, exegetes and others learned
in various fields of Islamic scholarship and the humanities known at that time.
Hasan ibn Ali Washsha, when visiting the Masjid of Kufah, found there 900
scholars all repeating the traditions narrated to them by Imam Ja'far ibn
Muhammad al-Sadiq.[7] (iii) The qualifications which an Imam
possessed, as believed in by this school and the popular bases represented by
it, were very high. The Imam was judged by the standard of these qualifications
to find out whether he was really fit to be an Imam. They believed that the
Imam must be the most learned and wise man of his time. (iv) The school and the popular bases had to
make great sacrifices for the sake of their belief in the Imamate which the
contemporary governments regarded as a hostile line, at least from the
ideological angle. This attitude led the then authorities to the persecution of
the followers of the Imams. Many people were killed. Many others were thrown
into dungeons. Hundreds died while in detention. Their belief in the Imamate of
the Prophet's House used to cost them dear. The only attraction was their
conviction of gaining the favour of Allah. (v) The Imams, whose Imamate these popular
bases acknowledged, were not living like the kings in high towers isolated from
their followers. They never segregated themselves, except when imprisoned,
exiled or forcibly kept aloof by the ruling juntas. This we know for certain on
the authority of a large number of reporters who have narrated the sayings 'and
deeds of each of the first eleven Imams. Similarly, we have a record of the
correspondence exchanged between the Imams and their contemporaries. The Imams used to make journeys to various places
and appointed their deputies in different parts of the Muslim world. Their
supporters also, while visiting the holy places during Hajj, made it a point to
call on them at Madina. All this meant a continuous contact between the Imams
and their followers scattered all over the Muslim world. (vi) The contemporary caliphs always regarded
the Imams and their spiritual leadership as a threat to themselves and their
dynasty. For this reason, they did all they could to disrupt this leadership
and in pursuance of their nefarious ends, they resorted to many mean and
arbitrary actions. Occasionally their behaviour was too harsh and despotic. The
Imams themselves were continuously chased and kept in detention. Such actions
were painful and disgusting to all the Muslims, especially to the supporters of
the Imams. These six points comprise historical facts. If
we take them into consideration, we can easily come to the conclusion that the
early Imamate was a real fact and not a fiction. It is certain that an Imam who
appeared on the scene at a very early age, who proclaimed himself to be the
spiritual and intellectual leader of the Muslims and who was acknowledged to be
so by a vast cross-section of the people must have had great knowledge,
competence and mastery over all branches of theology. Otherwise, the popular
bases could not be convinced of his Imamate. We have already said that these bases had
continuous contact with the Imams and were in a position to judge their
personalities. It is not conceivable that so many people should have accepted a
boy to be their Imam and should have made sacrifices for his sake without
ascertaining his real worth and assessing his competence. Even if it is
presumed that the people made no immediate efforts to ascertain the position,
still the truth could not remain unknown for years in spite of the continuous
contact between the child Imam and the people. Had he been childish in his
knowledge and thinking, he would certainly have been exposed. Even if it is supposed that the popular bases
of the Imamate could not discover the truth, it was easy for the government of
the day to expose the child, if he had been really childish in his thinking and
cultural attainments like all other children. It certainly would have been in
the interest of the government of the day to bring him before his supporters
and others to prove that he was not fit to be an Imam and a spiritual and
intellectual leader. It might
have been difficult to prove the incompetence of a man of 40 to 50, but
it would have been quite easy to prove the incompetence of an ordinary child,
howsoever intelligent he might have been. Evidently this would have been much
simpler and easier than the complex and risky policy of suppression adopted by
those in power at that time. The only explanation for why the government kept
quiet and did not play this card is that it had realized that the early Imamate
was a real phenomenon and not a concoction. The fact is that the government did attempt to
play that card but did not succeed. History tells us of such attempts and their
failures, but it does not report any occasion on which the child Imam
vacillated or showed signs of such embarrassment as could shake the confidence
of the people believing in his early Imamate. That is what we meant when we said that the
early Imamate was really a phenomenon and not a mere presumption. This
phenomenon has deep roots, for there exist parallel cases throughout the
history of the heavenly mission and Divine leadership. We cite just one
instance. We commanded John; Zachariah's son, to follow
the guidance of the Lord with due steadfastness. To John We gave knowledge and
wisdom during his childhood', (Surah Maryam, 19.12) After it has been proved that the early Imamate
had been a real phenomenon already existing in the life of the people of the
Prophet's House, no exception can be taken to the Imamate of the Mahdi and his
succession to his father while he was still a child. (d) Reasons for his
continued existence Now we come to the fourth question. Even if it
is presumed that theoretically the existence of the Mahdi, with all its
implication including the long life, the early Imamate and the complete
occultation is possible, how can we believe that he actually exists, for a mere
possibility is not enough to prove that. As the concept of the Mahdi is unusual
and extraordinary, the existence of a few sayings of the holy Prophet, which
are enshrined in the books, is not enough to prove that the existence of the Mahdi
is a historical fact and not a mere presumption which has seized the
imagination of a large number of people for certain psychological reasons. The answer to this question is this that the
concept of the Mahdi as the Awaited Saviour who is to change the world for the
better has been mentioned in the traditions of the holy Prophet generally and
in the sayings of the Imams particularly. It has been emphasized in so many
passages that there is no reason to doubt it. The number of the reports on this
subject found in the books of our Sunni brethren comes to 400,[8]
and the total number of the reports found in both the Shi'ah and the Sunni
sources comes to more than 6,000.[9]
This is a colossal figure, unparalleled in the case of most of those Islamic
issues which are not usually doubted by any Muslim. As for the embodiment of this concept in the
person of the twelfth Imam, there exists enough justification to believe that.
This justification can be summarized in two arguments, one being Islamic and
the other scientific. By the Islamic argument we prove the existence
of the Awaited Saviour and by the scientific argument we prove that the Mahdi
is not a mere myth but his existence is a fact proved by historical experience. As for the Islamic argument, it is represented
by hundreds of traditions which have come down from the holy Prophet and the
Imams of his House. They specify that the Mahdi will belong to the Prophet's
House, will be descended from his daughter Fatimah-tuz-Zehra and will be the
descendant of Imam Husayn in the ninth generation. The traditions also say that the total number
of the caliphs will be twelve. Thus, the traditions give a specific shape to
the general idea of the Mahdi and determine that he is none other than the
twelfth Imam of the Prophet's House. The number of these traditions is very
large in spite of the fact that the Imams were very reserved on this subject,
for fear of an attempt on the life of the Mahdi. It is not only because of their number that we
have to accept these traditions, but there are also other indications of their
authenticity. According to the different versions of a tradition of the holy
Prophet, he has to be succeeded by twelve caliphs, by twelve Imams, or by
twelve commanders. The total number of reports about this saying
as counted by some writers exceeds 270 and they are found in the most
celebrated Shi'ah and Sunni books, such as Sahih Bukhari, Sahih Muslim, Sahih
Tirmizy, Sunan Abu Dawud, Ahmad's Musnad and Hakim's Mustadrak. It may be noted
that Bukhari, who has quoted this tradition, was a contemporary of Imam
Muhammad bin Ali al-Jawad, Imam Ali bin Muhammad al-Hadi and Imam Hasan
al-Askari. This fact has great significance, for it proves
that the tradition was recorded before its contents could materialize. Hence,
it cannot be suspected that it is a possible reflection on the actual number of
the Imam, as believed by the Twelver Shi 'ah to reinforce their belief in the
twelve Imams. This is because the spurious sayings attributed to the holy
Prophet refer to the events which take place earlier and the saying comes
afterwards. Such sayings do not precede the events nor are they recorded in the
books of tradition earlier. So long as we possess material evidence of the
fact that the tradition was recorded before the number of the Imams was
actually completed we can safely say that it is not a reflection on an
accomplished fact. It is only an expression of a divine truth, expressed by him
who never spoke whimsically, and a prophecy which was subsequently fulfilled by
the actual number of the Imams beginning with Imam Ali and ending with Imam
Mahdi. As for the scientific argument, we have to
state that it consists of the experience of a large number of people for a
period covering about seventy years. This period is known as that of minor
occultation. To elucidate the point we propose to explain minor occultation
briefly. The minor occultation represents the first
stage of the Imamate of the Awaited Saviour who was destined to keep himself
physically absent from the public scene, from the very inception of his
Imamate, though he still continues to take an intelligent interest in what
happens around him. Had this occultation come suddenly it would have been a
great shock to his supporters, for they had been accustomed to be always in
contact with the Imam and to consult him on their divergent problems. His sudden disappearance would have caused a
big vacuum which might have absorbed and even destroyed the whole organisation,
for his supporters would have felt that they had been cut off from their
spiritual and intellectual leadership. In order to familiarize them with the
idea of occultation and to. enable them to adapt themselves to the new
situation it was felt necessary that a preparatory stage should precede the
final occultation. This stage was that of minor occultation during which the Imam disappeared from the public scene, but maintained his contact with his followers through certain representatives who formed a connecting link between him and those who believed in his role as an Imam. During this period four persons, whose piety and impeccability was recognized by all, occupied the position of the vicegerents of the Imam. They are as under: 1. Uthman ibn Sa'id al-'Amravi 2. Muhammad ibn Uthman 'Amravi 3. Abu'l Qasim Husayn ibn Ruh Nawbakhti 4. Abu'l Hasan Ali ibn Muhammad al-Simmari These four persons performed the duties of his
vicegerent in the above order. As and when one of them died, another was duly
appointed by the Mahdi to succeed him. The vicegerent was in contact with: the Shi'ah.
He carried their questions to the Imam and submitted their problems to him. He
also conveyed the Imam's replies to his followers. The replies used to be
mostly in writing and were occasionally verbal. The people who missed the sight
of the Imam, found consolation in correspondence and indirect contact. All the
letters received from the Imam during the tenure of his four vicegerents, which
lasted for about seventy years, Were in the same hand-writing and in the same
style and bore the same signature. Al-Simmari was the last vicegerent. He
announced the end of the stage of the minor occultation, the distinctive
feature of which was the appointment of the particular vicegerent. It was
turned into the major occultation after its object had been achieved and the
Shi 'ah had gradually adapted themselves to the absence of the Imam. They had been immunized against the shock and
the vacuum. Following the major occultation, instead of being represented by a
specially appointed vicegerent, the Imam is now represented in a general way by
the qualified mujtahids (eminent legists, capable of arriving at an
independent decision on issues of religious law) having a keen insight into
both the spiritual and temporal affairs. Now, in the light of the foregoing, it
can easily be inferred that the existence of the Mahdi is a. fact which was
experienced by a larger number of the people. He was represented by his vicegerents for
seventy long years during. which they dealt with so many people but no one
observed any inconsistency in what they said, nor discovered any signs of
deception in their conduct. Is it conceivable that a fraud could be continued
for seventy years by four persons, one after the other, without giving rise to
the least suspicion? These four persons had no special link with each other and
no collusion between them could be suspected. Their conduct was above reproach.
They gained the confidence of all and everyone believed in the genuineness of
their claim and the reality of their experience. An old proverb says that truth will always come
but. Events of practical life also prove that a fraud has no chance to last for
such a long time in such a way. It is not possible to deal with so many people
fraudulently and at the same time to gain their confidence. Thus we know that the minor occultation is
tantamount to a scientific experiment to prove the facts about the Awaited
Saviour including his birth, life and occultation and the general proclamation
of his major occultation, according to which be retired from the scene of life
and does not now disclose his identity to anyone. (e) Reasons for his
delay in appearance Why did the Saviour not appear during all this
period when he had already prepared himself for the intended task? What
prevented him from reappearing on the scene of life during the period of the
minor occultation or immediately thereafter, instead of converting it into the
major occultation? At the time it was simpler and easier to bring about the
required change. He had a good opportunity at that time to
mobilize his forces and to start his work forcefully because he already had
contact with the people through the organization which existed during the
period of the minor occultation. Moreover, at that time the ruling powers were
not so powerful as they subsequently. became as a result of the scientific and
industrial development. The successful execution of a revolutionary
order depends on certain pre-requisites and on the existence of a particular
atmosphere. Unless these conditions are fulfilled and that atmosphere is
created, it cannot achieve its object. As regards the Divinely ordained shape of
things it has two aspects. As far as its missionary aspect is concerned it,
being Divinely ordained, does not depend on any congenial atmosphere, but, as
far as its operational side is concerned, its timing and success is linked with
the conducive circumstances. The same was the reason why the pre-Islamic
period of five centuries had to elapse before the Last Divine Message came to
Prophet Muhammad, though the world had been in dire need of it since a far
earlier time. It was delayed only because its successful completion was linked
with certain suitable circumstances. The conducive circumstances, which affect the
accomplishment of the change, include those which create a suitable atmosphere
for it and those which determine the right moment for the beginning of the
operation. For example, the revolution which was successfully led by Lenin in It has been the unalterable practice, decreed
by Allah, that the actual implementing of a Divine revolution is linked up with
such objective circumstances as create the right climate and general atmosphere
for its success. That is why there was a long gap of a several hundred of years
before the appearance of Islam during which period no prophet was raised. No doubt Allah is All-powerful. He can
miraculously remove in advance all difficulties and obstacles impeding a Divine
Mission. But He does not do so, because the tests, trials and tribulations
through which man gains perfection require that a Divine revolution should come
about in a natural and normal manner. This does not mean that occasionally
Allah does not intervene in arranging certain details not related to the
creation of the right atmosphere but which tend to give an impetus to the revolution.
The Divine help rendered by Allah to his friends at critical junctures for the
purpose of protecting their mission was of this nature. The fire set alight by On this basis, when we study the position of
the Imam Mahdi, we find that the revolutionary task which has been entrusted to
him like any other process of a social change is linked with certain
circumstances which will provide the right climate for its success. Hence, it
is natural that is should be timed accordingly. It is known that the great
task, for which Imam Mahdi has prepared himself, is not of a limited nature nor
is it confined to any particular region. His mission in fact is to revolutionize the
world order in its entirety. It is to rescue mankind from the darkness of vice
and to usher in an era of light and guidance. For such a gigantic revolution
the mere existence of a task and a leader is not enough, otherwise it would
have been accomplished during the period of the holy Prophet himself. Such a
revolution requires specific climate and a general atmosphere conducive to the
fulfilment of all the prerequisites. From man's viewpoint the frustration and
disillusionment of a man of culture may be considered to be the basic factor in
creating the right climate. This feeling stems from the failure of diverse
cultural experiments. Only then does a man of culture feel that he is in need of
help and turns to the unknown. From the material angle the modern conditions of
life may be regarded as more suitable for the fulfilment of a mission on world
level than the conditions which prevailed at the time of occultation, for now
the distances have been shortened, the chances of contact between various
people of the world have been improved and better facilities for a central
organisation to enlighten mankind on the basis of the new message have become
available. It is true, as pointed out in the question,
that the military power and the war equipment which the Awaited Leader would
have to face have enormously grown, but it is to be remembered that material
power is of no consequence when man is moralized and is determined to fight
against injustice. Many a lofty civilization in history has
collapsed at the first touch of an invader, because it was already dilapidated
and lacked the power of resistance. (f) His superhuman
role Now we come to another question of the above-mentioned
series. The question is whether a single individual, howsoever great he may be,
can accomplish such a great task, when it is known that a great man is only he
whom the circumstances bring forward to be in the forefront of the events. This question is based on a particular
viewpoint about history which explains historical developments on the basis
that man is only a secondary factor, whereas the main factor consists of the
forces which work around him. Man at the most can be described as an intelligent
interpreter of the inter-play of these forces. It is evident that history has two poles, one
of them being man and the other the material forces around him. Just as the
material forces influence man like the conditions of production similarly man
also influences the material forces around him. There is no justification for
supposing that action always begins with matter and ends at man. The opposite
can also be as true. In history, man and matter have always been interacting.
If the interacting force of man is celestial then his role in life will also
assume the celestial hue. Then it is the Divine force which directs the course
of history. This is a fact which is abundantly proved by
the history of the mission of the Prophets and especially by the life history
of the last Divine Messenger, for Muhammad (P) assumed the control of the
course of history and created a culture which could not be created by the
external circumstances around him.[10]
Hence, what was possible to be accomplished by the greatest of the Prophets can
also be accomplished at the hands of the Awaited Saviour of his Family - The
Leader whose appearance has been predicted by the holy Prophet and about whose
great role he has already informed mankind. (g) His modus operandi Now we come to the last question which is about
the method which the Mahdi is likely to adopt to achieve his objective of the
final victory of justice and of the complete eradication of injustice. A definite answer to this question depends not
only on the knowledge of the timing and the stage at which the Mahdi will
reappear but also on the possibility of imagining what particular circumstances
will be prevailing at that time. It is only in the light of these circumstances
that a picture of his possible strategy can be drawn. So long as we do not know
at what stage the Mahdi will reappear and what will be the prevailing
circumstances at that time, it is not possible to make any prediction on
scientific lines. Any presumptions made in this connection will be based mostly
on fiction and not on facts. Anyhow, there is one basic presumption which can
be accepted in the light of the traditions and the historical experience of the
great changes. This much can in any case be predicted safely
that the Awaited Saviour - will appear when the stage for his appearance is
set, neither earlier nor later. Let us be clear as to the meaning - of this
stage for his appearance. This stage means the conditions prevailing in the
world and in the human society. It means the decline in man's moral life, when
oppression and tyranny will be rampant and when mankind will have fallen into
the abyss of crime and immorality. In addition, this stage for his appearance
means that the conditions then prevailing would create the necessary
psychological atmosphere for the reception of a saviour. Mankind would be dead
tired and fed up with the shape of things and would quite naturally look
forward to a saviour for its liberation. This will happen when wickedness will reach
its climax. There will be a great upheaval, a great conflagration, that will
send this universe to its doom. In the darkness that will then prevail, there
will dawn a new Sun in the form of the Mahdi, spreading light and lustre.
Having liberated mankind from its misery and curse, the Mahdi will then bring
about a transformation of life in which justice, peace, virtue and
righteousness will abound. Thus will the Awaited Imam accomplish his mission. Certain Islamic traditions speak of a
government of the virtuous which is to continue until the appearance of the
Mahdi (May Allah hasten his advent) and, as we know, some Shi'ah scholars who
held a high opinion about a certain number of their contemporary rulers have
hinted at the possibility of the continuance of their dynasties until the
appearance of the Mahdi. On the whole, it is derived from the Qur'anic
verses and the Islamic traditions that the rising of the Mahdi will be the last
in the series of fights between the good and the evil which have continued from
the very inception of the world. It will be the Mahdi who will give a concrete
shape to the ideal of all the Prophets, the saints and the fighters in the way
of Allah. During the period of the occultation it is our
duty to be expecting the Awaited Imam. We must devise a sound and judicious
system of social development based on the holy Qur'an and present it to the
world. We must prove the excellence and efficacy of Divine laws to the people
and attract their attention to the Divine system we must fight superstitions
and false beliefs and pave the way for the establishment of Islamic world
government. In the light of the teachings of the holy Qur'an and traditions of
the holy Prophet we must chalk out a programme for solving the world problems
and put it at the disposal of world reformers. We must enlighten the thoughts
of the people of the world and at the same time, prepare ourselves to receive
the Awaited Imam and the emergence of a just world government.
Notes: [5] For thousands of years man has been aspiring
to delay death which is a predestined phenomenon. During the past centuries the
efforts of the alchemists to find out an elixir of life ended in fiasco. At the
end of the nineteenth century scientific advancement revived the hope for a
long life and it is possible that in the near future this sweet dream may turn
into a reality. In this connection the scientists have resorted in the first
instance to experiments on the animals. For
example, McKee, a distinguished expert of the This scientist and his associate
Akeep arrived at the conclusion that the use of Methyl aminoethynol during the
period of the experiment increased the life of the mice between 6 to 49 per
cent. The experiment conducted on the mosquitoes increased their life upto 300
per cent. [6] It is not possible to ascertain directly that
one phenomenon is the cause of the appearance of another phenomenon (like the
rising of the sun being the cause of the earth becoming hot). We understand
only this that one phenomenon (rising of the sun) is continually followed by
another viz. the surface of the earth becoming hot. It has also been observed that some
events always taking place in succession to others is not limited to a special
relationship of the phenomena but is a special feature of nature. However,
neither the relationship of one single cause with its effect nor the generality
of this relationship throughout nature is visible automatically and does not
form an essential part of our thinking. (David Hume). [7] The number of Imam Sadiq's pupils has been reported upto four thousand,
some of the well-known among them are: Abu Hanifah al-Nu'man b. Thabit, Abu
Basir Yahya b. al-Qasim, Aban b. Taghlab, Ali b. Yaqteen, Abu Ja'far alias
Mu'min al-Taq, Hisham b. Hakam, Harith b. Mughira, Hatim b. Isma'il, Jabir b.
Hayyan, Malik b. Anas, Mufazzal b. Umar al-Kufi, (For details see: Al-Imam
al-Sadiq wa'l mazahibul arba'ah, Asad Haydar, (Darul Kitab al-Arabia Beirut). |