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Sahaba means the prophet's companions
Introduction to "And
Once again Abu Dharr"
Taken from
And Once again Abu Dharr
By Dr. Ali Shariati
Introduction, page (s) 5- 15
Introduction
From that day when Muhammad (pbuh&hf) left
Makkah after thirteen years of anguish and continuous struggle
and went to Madinah, he knew that the period of weakness and
concealment of Islam has terminated and that he must, with the
help of his loyal and valiant followers, build the foundation of
a structure of the glory of an Islamic organization and build the
basis of his political regime in the way which God so desired.
At this time, to the east of the peninsula, the
King of Iran had a splendid palace and sumptuous court in which
thousands of female slaves, thousands of enslaved persons and
servants had been appointed in order to perform the ceremonious
duties there and the product of the labor of the miserable and
hard-working people was spent in order to manage that system.
To the north of Arabia, also, Heraclitus was
looming with his frightful regime and sumptuous empire .It could
be said that which showed itself off in these two large countries
were these palaces which reached towards the sky, exclusive to
the rulers and art, literature, war, collection of taxes, taste
and invention were all undertaken so that the monarchial and
imperial ceremonies could be held with the greatest splendor
possible.
But as to the Prophet of Islam, the moment he
entered Madinah, he built a mosque and his humble house beside
it. The door to it opened from inside the mosque. Until the end
of his life when Islamic rule was established throughout Arabia,
he did not change his life-style.
He was the absolute ruler of a country and he
ate barley bread . He would sit with the poor upon the dust at
their spread just like a humiliated slave. He would ride a donkey
bare-backed and, most often, he would sit another person behind
him.
This method of rule of the ruler was to show
the difference between his regime and the monarchial regime of
Iran and the Roman Empire. The people could see with their own
eyes that a new regime and a young organization had come into
being between two aristocratic bases in which there is no
difference between ruler and ruled, com- mander and commanded,
master and slave and that all stand in one rank upon the
threshold of God and justice.
The founder of this regime passed away and with
the deprivation of 'Ali and political positioning, the first
brick of the wall of the caliphate was laid crooked. Abu Bakr,
then, designated 'Umar as his successor and the second blow comes
to the Islamic regirne.
Even though 'Umar and Abu Bakr were themselves
the cause for this deviation, yet the political organization of
Islam was established upon the very bases which the Prophet had
structured: simplicity, equality, fair distribution of wealth,
and prevention of its centralization, just as could be seen.
'Umar also left and 'Uthman, this incapable,
pseudo-religious old man took over the reins of rulership and
instability which had come into being in the foundation of
Islamic rule had become so strong that the structure of Muhammad
(pbuh&hf) all at once was destroyed. During his rule, the
caliphate was changed into a monarchy and the mud homes of the
Islamic rulers were changed into monarchial palaces, simplicity
into splendid ceremony of the court of Mu'awiyah and the
extravagant organization of 'Uthman.
Abu Dharr,who was the [fourth or] fifth person
who joined Islam and whose sword was most effective in the pro
gress of the Islamic movement, saw this deviation. 'Ali, the
image of piety and truth, became isolated and the enemies of
Islam had found their way into the caliphate organization and
like termites, they were eating away Islam.
The liberated truth-seekers were each one
driven away into a corner and made silent. The day when Abu Bakr
pushed 'Ali aside from the political scene, and he himself sat
upon the throne of the caliphate, Abu Dharr be- came anxious and
terrified. The future of Islam darkened in his mind and appeared
frightful but he still saw that, at any rate, the caravan of
Islam still moved forward upon its main way and even though a
great right was disregarded, the Islamic system had not been rend
apart. Even though he was incensed and boiling with indignation,
he imprinted the seal of silence upon his lips. When the regime
of 'Uthman dominated Islam, the abased, working masses and the
help- less were suppressed under the steps of usurers, slave mer-
chants, the wealthy and aristocrats who were 'coming and going'
in the courts of 'Uthman and Mu'awiyah. Class differences and the
concentration of wealth were revived; Islam, threatened with a
great danger, was changed from the position of the Prophet and
the simplicity and unpreten- tiousness of Abu Bakr and 'Umar, who
were living like average people and even poor and indigent.
Thousands of dinars were spent to build a Green Palace for an
Islamic governor [Mu'awiyah] and a regime was established like
the monarchial court.
Abu Bakr, in order to earn his livelihood, had
milked the goats of a Jewish woman yet, now, a necklace of the
wife of 'Uthman, the Prophet's caliph! was worth a third of the
taxes of Africa!
'Umar, for one horse, sent a boy, who misused
his father's position and his father, who was one of his leading
commanders, to court because they tried to take a horse with
coercion whereas 'Uthman had made Marwan Hakam- that is, a person
who the Prophet had exiled-his consultant and had given Khaybar
and the taxes (kharaj) of the north of Africa, part and parcel,
to him!
Abu Dharr was watching these shameful scenes
and because he could no longer bear it, could no longer remain
silent, he rose up, a manly and wonderous arising; an arising
which caused rebellion in all of the Islamic lands against 'Uthman;
an arising, the waves of enthusiasm of which can be seen at the
very present moment in the scenes of human societies.
Abu Dharr was trying to develop the economic
and political unity of Islam and the regime of 'Uthman was
reviving aristocracy. Abu Dharr believed Islam to be the refuge
of the helpless, the oppressed and the abased people and 'Uthman,
the tool of capitalism,was the trench to preserve the interests
of the usurers, wealthy and aristocrats.
This struggle between Abu Dharr and 'Uthman
began and Abu Dharr, in the end, lost his lifc upon this way. Abu
Dharr would cry out, "This capital, wealth, gold and silver which
you have hoarded must be equally divided among all Muslims.
Everyone must share in the others' benefits in the economic and
ethical system of Islam, in all blessings of life." But 'Uthman
saw Islam in ceremonies, external show and pretense at piety and
sanctity. He did not believe that religion should 'interfer' in
the poverty of the majority and the opulence of the minority. Abu
Dharr, who had begun the struggle for the development of Islamic
equality, would not be soothed and would not let the enemy be
soothed, either...
Whenever I think about the wonderous life of
Abu Dharr and I see his worship of God, I recall Pascal. Pascal
says, "The heart has a reason which the intellect does not
attain. The heart bears witness to God's existence, not the
intellect; faith comes in this way."
Abu Dharr says, "In this shoreless existence, I
have found signs by which I have been guided to God. There is no
hope that the intellect will reach His Essence through discussion
and analysis because He is greater than any of that and there is
no possibility of encompassing Him."
Abu Dharr, just as Pascal believed, knew God
through the heart and three years before he met the Prophet, he
had worshipped [God].
When he was speaking of capitalism and the
hoarding of wealth and he was strongly defending the wretched and
when he was turning against aristocrats and the palace dwellers
of Damascus and Madinah, he recalls an extreme socialist like
Proudhon [1] but the truth is that Abu Dharr is one thing and
Pascal and Proudhon are something else. Abu Dharr knew God; from
that day, he never stopped upon His Way; not for a moment did he
weaken in thought or action. Neither does Proudhon have the
purity, devotion and worship of Abu Dharr nor does Pascal have
his activity and ardency. Abu Dharr had become a 'complete human
being' in the school of Islam and this commentary is sufficient
to show his greatness.
It is possible for this question to arise for
many of the persons who are studying Islamic history: What was
the glorious result of this movement, other than a few move-
ments of armies, victories and the creation of a great empire
which dispersed after a few centuries? What is the difference
between the Islamic movement and other political and mili- tary
movements of history which attained similar victories and even
greater triumphs, particularly when we see that the Islamic
movement, from the very first phase, was faced with political
differences, was made to deviate from its main line and the real
leaders of Islam were also aware of this point?
Then what did Islam do? What results were
attained from all of those sacrifices and struggles of the
Prophet and his God-worshipping, brave followers? If it had
victories, they are not deserving of importance in the way we
look at religion, in particular since these victories were gained
through the Bani Umayyid and Bani 'Abbas sultans and people like
them, not having a real and direct relation with the truths of
Islam.
This judgment to this point is somewhat correct
and we must not conceive that this expansionism,these military
victories and the Islamic empire's power to be the goal of Islam
nor believe them to be among the great results of this movement.
If we look at Islam with the view in which we must look at
religion, this problem will not only be solved but rather we will
wonder at the glorious results, progress and victories of Islam,
as well.
Religion is the only factor which has a duty
towards the universal elevation of creation obliging humanity to
progress and ascend and just as some causes made the inanimate
into the plant and the plant into an animal and an animal into a
human being and they find completion, religion is also a cause
which is the continuation of this amazing story of creation and
carries the human being, as well, to the final station which he
or she must reach, allows the human spirit to fly to the highest
summits of the loftiness of gnosis and humanness, even elevates
one beyond that desert and puts one above time and place. Thus
one can use this commentary that religion is the instigator,
stimulant and impetus for the human being to move up the ladder
of transformation . In other words, religion is a factory in
which the real human being is built and we should expect nothing
other than this from religion.
Now it must be seen whether or not Islam has
been able to attain success upon this way and offer examples or
models of its product to the market of humanity.
To study this perplexing issue, one must seek
out, in the margins of history, some of the men and women who
arose from among the nameless masses, oppressed slaves and the
exhausted. That is, one must search out the names of those very
people who history has always been too ashamed to register.
History has most often been kneeling before the splendid palaces
of the sultans, in the battlefields and on the threshold of the
gods of gold and coercion. But this time we see that this very
aristocracy-worshipper history is going to the old tents, to the
destroyed mud houses of the African slaves, to the nameless,
bare-footed of the Arabian desert, to unknown and unimportant
people like Abu Dharr, a man from the Ghifar tribe, Salman,
homeless, from Iran and Bilal, a cheap slave. History, one by
one, records their lives with great greed and covetousness. With
the highest of honors, it offers them to the future generations
of humanity. And it must also be studied why and as of when this
pharaoh-seeker, royal court dweller history became so humble.
Thus, in order to attain the results which the
Islamic movement has achieved, one must not look at the victories
in Asia and Africa and the lands in southern Europe. Rather, one
must become attentive to the progress that this movement had in
the depths of the thoughts, brains, hearts and souls of a limited
group of its followers.
The victories which Islam had in the twists and
turns of the spirits of these people appear more splendid, more
extensive and more wonderous to those people who place greater
value on truth and humanness than on power and external military
domination.
The Islamic victories in the history of
countries like Rome, Iran and in the fate of expansionists like
Ghengis Khan, Dara, Napoleon and others like them, these 'famous
brainless' are not exceptional but structuring a nameless, desert
dweller and half-savage like Jundab ibn Junadah into an Abu Dharr
Ghifari is unique in every ideology or movement. If the result of
Islam was no more than educating these four or five human beings
like Abu Dharr, Salman, 'Ammar Yasir and Bilal, it would suffice
for the intellect to be amazed at the victories of Islam.
But unfortunately the rights of great men who
are considered to be an honor to the history of Islam have been
wasted: because the followers of that very religion, who were
nurtured by the power of thought and swords of these people in
the world, do not know them, have not understood the highest
levels which these models of humanness attained in the chain of
transformation and are uninformed about even a brief biography
about them.
With this indifference and nonchalance in the
destroying of a right of these rightful pioneers and images of
piety and courage, we have struck blows to the truth and to
humanity, which are difficult to make up for and all Muslims
share in this fault.
More amazing than this is that, in general,
persons who were considered to be leaders of the Islamic
Revolution, continue to support truth and even sacrifice
themselves for it, during the time of the rule of Abu Bakr and
his successor, when 'Ali, the leader of the Shi'ites, is abased
and his right was disregarded. It can be said with certainty that
because of their struggles with the regime and because of their
efforts, the pure Islam was given into the hands of history. They
helped humanity attain the source of truths and wisdom, inspite
of the desires of the hypocrites and the ambitious, and because
of their struggles and brave resistances in the changes of the
Islamic regime.
Abu Dharr is one of these few persons, one of
those leaders and liberated saviors who humanity today desires.
From the time when the machine created a severe crisis in the
world of economics, making economics the most sensitive issue of
life and the basis of all things, his opinions have found greater
importance and today, once again they recreate those scenes in
Damascus and Madinah. He who gathered the abased and the needy
around him, instigating them against usury, money-worshippers,
gold gatherers and aristocrats, has now caused Muslims of the
world to listen to his heart warming words, opinions, his fiery
points. It is as if they see him in the distant history with
their own eyes; he who gathered the oppressed and wretched in the
mosque, truly instigating them against the dwellers of the Green
Palace and regime of 'Uthman, cries out, "And there are those who
treasure up gold and silver and spend it not in the Way of God...
"(9:34)
"O Mu'awiyyah! If you are building this palace
with your own money, it is extravagance and if with the money of
the people, it is treason."
"O 'Uthman! You have made the poor, poor and
the wealthy, wealthy."
Mashhad, 1334 AH (1955 AD)
Ali Shariati Mazinani
Footnotes:
[1]. Proudhon is the author of a bokk entitled
'What is Ownership?' the most famous sentence of which is
'ownership is to steal' and as a result of which he has become a
leader of the radical socialists.
Contributed by
Br. Ali Abbas
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