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Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr

SHAFAQNA-

Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr (آية الله العظمى السيد محمد باقر الصدر) (March 1, 1935 – April 9, 1980) was an Iraqi Shia cleric, philosopher, and ideological founder of the Islamic Dawa Party, born in al-KazimiyaIraq. He is the father-in-law of Muqtada al-Sadr and also a cousin of his father Muhammad Sadeq al-Sadr and Imam Musa as-Sadr. His father Haydar al-Sadr was a well-respected high-ranking Shi’a cleric. His lineage goes back to Muhammad, through the seventh Shia Imam, Musa al-Kazim. (See Sadrfamily for more details.) Muhammad Baqir Al-Sadr was executed in 1980 during the Saddam Hussein regime.

Biography

He was born in al-KazimiyaIraq into the prominent Sadr family which originates from Jabal Amel in Lebanon. His father died in 1937, leaving the family penniless. In 1945 the family moved to the holy city of Najaf, where al-Sadr would spend the rest of his life. He was a child prodigy who, at ten, was delivering lectures on Islamic history, and at eleven, he studied logic. At 24 he wrote a book to refute materialistic philosophy.[1] Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr completed his religious studies at religious seminaries under al-Khoei and Muhsin al-Hakim at the age of 25 and began teaching.

His first works were detailed critiques of Marxism that presented early ideas of an alternative Islamic form of government. Perhaps his most important work was Iqtisaduna on Islamic economics and “Our Philosophy”. These works were critiques of both socialism and capitalism. He was subsequently commissioned by the government of Kuwait to assess how that country’s oil wealth could be managed in keeping with Islamic principles. This led to a major work on Islamic banking that still forms the basis for modern Islamic banks.

This attracted the attention of the Baath Party, which resulted in numerous imprisonments for the Ayatollah. He was often subjugated to torture during his imprisonments, but continued his work after being released. One of the founders of modern Islamist thought he is credited with first developing the notion, later put in operation in Iran, of having democratic elections, but with a body of Muslim scholars to ensure all laws corresponded with Islamic teachings.

In 1977, he was arrested following the uprisings in Najaf, but was released later due to his immense popularity. Upon his release however, he was put under house arrest. In 1980, after writing in the defence of the Islamic Revolution, Sadr was once again imprisoned, tortured, and executed by the regime of Saddam Hussein. He was forced to watch his sister’s, Amina Sadr bint al-Huda, torture and murder.[2] It has been alleged that Sadr was killed by having an iron nail hammered into his head[3]and then being set on fire. Baqir al-Sadr is buried in Wadi-us-SalaamNajaf.

Using his mastery of the Quran and his innovative subject-based approach to Quranic exegesis, Al-Sadr extracted two concepts from the Holy text in relation to governance: khilafat al-insan (Man as heir or trustee of God) and shahadat al-anbiya (Prophets as witnesses). Al-Sadr explained that throughout history there have been ‘…two lines. Man’s line and the Prophet’s line. The former is the khalifa (trustee) who inherits the earth from God; the latter is the shahid (witness).’.[4]

Al-Sadr demonstrated that khilafa (governance) is ‘a right given to the whole of humanity’ and explained it to be an obligation given from God to the human race to ‘tend the globe and administer human affairs’. This was a major advancement of Islamic political theory.

While Al-Sadr identified khilafa as the obligation and right of the people, he used a broad-based exegesis of a Quranic verse[5] to identify who held the responsibility of shahada in an Islamic state: First, the Prophets (anbiya’); second, the Imams, who are considered a divine (rabbani) continuation of the Prophets in this line; and lastly the marja’iyya (see Marja).[6]

While the two functions of khilafa (governance) and shahada (witness; supervision) were united during the times of the Prophets, the two diverged during the occultation so that khilafa returned to the people (umma) and shahada to the scholars.[7]

Al-Sadr also presented a practical application of khilafa, in the absence of the twelfth Imam. He argued the practical application of the khilafa (governance) required the establishment of a democratic system whereby the people regularly elect their representatives in government:

‘Islamic theory rejects monarchy as well as the various forms of dictatorial government; it also rejects the aristocratic regimes and proposes a form of government, which contains all the positive aspects of the democratic system.’ [8]

He continued to champion this point until his final days:

‘Lastly, I demand, in the name of all of you and in the name of the values you uphold, to allow the people the opportunity truly to exercise their right in running the affairs of the country by holding elections in which a council representing the ummah (people) could truly emerge.’ [9]

Al-Sadr was executed by Saddam Hussein in 1980 before he was able to provide any details of the mechanism for the practical application of the shahada (witness) concept in an Islamic state. A few elaborations of shahada can be found in Al-Sadr’s works.

In his text ‘Role of the Shiah Imams in the reconstruction of Islamic society’, Al-Sadr illustrates the scope and limitations of shahada by using the example of the third Shi’i Imam, Hussein ibn Ali (the grandson of the Prophet), who stood up to Yazid, the ruler at the time. Al-Sadr explains Yazid was not simply going against Islamic teachings, as many rulers before and after him had done, but he was distorting the teachings and traditions of Islam and presenting his deviated ideas as Islam itself. This, therefore, is what led Imam Hussein to intervene to challenge Yazid in order to restore the true teachings of Islam, and as a consequence laid down his own life. In Al-Sadr’s own words, the shahid’s (witness – person performing shahada or supervision) duties are ‘to protect the correct doctrines and to see that deviations do not grow to the extent of threatening the ideology itself’.

Al-Sadr has one son, Jaafar, who finished his Islamic studies in Qum but decided to serve his country Iraq as a politician. Jaafar does not believe in religious states, he believes that a “civil state” in Iraq should not contradict with religions but on the contrary “a fair and just regime should be able to earn the blessing of religions”. He does not believe in taking revenge for his father’s brutal assassination, stating, “Re-building a unified, democratic and stable Iraq is the only way for taking that revenge.”

Opinions

Muhammad Baqir Sadr has an especial attitude about the Quran and its relation to human life and reality. According to political theory of Baqir Sadr, there are foundations like oneness world view and being divinity of Existents on which the political theory established. He believed that The Quran must be relevant to present day and only in such a way that Quran could be related to reality. According to him, Tafsir begins with reality and ended with Quran. This approach has been followed by him in al-Madrasa al-Qur’aniyya, an in uncompleted text by him. His methodology, therefore, is to dialectic among reality and Quran. On the basis of the methodology, we must begin from the reality of life to the Quran and from the Quran back to the reality of life. He attempted to reach a universal Quranic theory and apply this theory in all dimensions, namely prophecy and economic, attempting to extend them in books like Iqtisadona (our economy) and al-Bank al-li Ribawi fi-Islam. He concerned himself with historical laws in Al Madrasat Al qura’anyyah, believing that the Quran as a spiritual energy could lead human beings on the basis of their talents and potentiality. The Quran was considered by him as a book of guidance, not discovery, in relation to historical laws. Also, the Quran could be considered both as guidance and change. He explains historical law on the basis of characteristics such as being scientific and consistent, and also these laws are historicized namely at the same time they are originate from God, they are historical contexts.[10]

Political thought

He believes that there is a political theory in terms of thought of general succession if human being. According to unitary universal view, the universe is a collection of elements, forces and laws not as casual but rather as related and consistent elements which are of ultimate aims and harmonies. In that universe, there is a relation between god and universe such a way that god monitoring the whole universe. Also universe worships the god and there is a relation as worship between them.therefore human being as a particular element is dominated by the determinate and wisdom laws and human is not an existence without any aim and ultimate. Besides human being is of volition and freedom. According to Sadr, Innate characters make human beings able to determine his destiny.in other word human being could choose his destiny and fate himself. Sadr called this power of choosing as the leadership and succession of human being.according to Sadr, the relation between human and god determined as succession and leadership.in other words, human counted as the successor of god. therefore the relation between human and nature determined as trustee and safekeeper or Amin and Amanat[11]

Economic thought

Sadr believes that the system of Islamic economy has a clear conflict with the system of capitalism. Progressing the technical phenomena and facilities of production, natural commenwealth is at a disposal of capitalists and determines peoples and private associations controlled the system of global economy. In contrary, the economical system of Islam doesn’t permit to determinate people to have disposal the facilities and natural sources.[12]

Social philosophy

His approach to social and historical subjects was philosophically religious.[13]

List of works

He engaged western philosophical ideas to challenge when it seems fit and incorporate them into his own system when appropriate. His ultimate goal was to show that religious knowledge was not the antithesis of scientific knowledge.[14]Following is the list of his work:[15]

Jurisprudence
  • Buhuth fi Sharh al- ‘Urwah al’ Wuthqa (Discourses on the Commentary of al- ‘Urwah al-Wuthqa), 4 volumes.
  • Al-Ta’liqah ‘ala Minhaj al-Salihin (Annotation of Ayatullah Hakim’s Minhaj al-Salihin), 2 volumes.
  • Al-Fatawa al-Wadhihah (Clear Decrees).
  • Mujaz Ahkam al-Hajj (Summarized Rules of Hajj)
  • Al-Ta’liqah ‘ala Manasik al-Hajj (Annotation of Ayatullah Khui’s Hajj Rites).
  • Al-Ta’liqah ‘ala Salah al-Jumu’ah (Annotation on Friday Prayer)
Fundamentals of the law
  • Durus fi Ilm al-Usul (Lessons in the Science of Jurisprudence), 3 Parts.[16]
  • Al-Ma’alim al-Jadidah lil-Usul (The New Signposts of Jurisprudence).
  • Ghayat al-Fikr (The Highest Degree of Thought)
Philosophy
Logic
  • Al-Usus al-Mantiqiyyah lil-Istiqra’ (Logical Foundations of Induction)

In this ground breaking work, the author proposes a new formulation of the theory of human knowledge on the basis of an alternative foundation for the induction process. He introduces a new school of thought, Autogenousism, standing in contrast to both rationalism and empiricism, in which induction delivers certainty as its outcome. The current book, translated for the first time into English in its entirety, shows Al-Sadr’s impressive mastery of the philosophical traditions, both Western and Islamic. This work fills, in Sadr’s own words, a 2000-year gap in logic and philosophy and promises to usher in a new era of debate over the long-standing problem of induction.

Theology
Economics
  • Iqtisaduna (Our Economy).
  • Al-Bank al-la Ribawi fi al-Islam (Usury-free Banking in Islam).
  • Maqalat Iqtisadiyyah (Essays in Economy).
Qur’anic commentaries
  • Al-Tafair al-Mawzu’i lil-Qur’an al-Karim – al-Madrasah al-Qur’aniyyah (The Thematic exegesis of the Holy Qur’an).
  • 1Buhuth fi ‘Ulum al-Qur’an (Discourses on Qur’anic Sciences).
  • Maqalat Qur’aniyyah (Essays on Qur’an).
History
  • Ahl al-Bayt Tanawwu’ Ahdaf wa Wahdah Hadaf (Ahl al- Bayt, Variety of Objectives Towards a Single Goal).
  • Fadak fi al-Tarikh (Fadak in History).
Islamic culture
  • Al-Islam Yaqud al-Hayah (Islam Directive to Life).
  • Al-Madrasah al-Islamiyyah (Islamic School)
  • Risalatuna (Our Mission).
  • Nazrah Ammah fi al-Ibadat (General View on Rites of Worship).
  • Maqalat wa Muhazrat (Essays and Lectures)
Articles
  • “Al-‘Amal wa al-Ahdaf” (The Deeds and the Goals): Min Fikr al- Da’wah. no. 13. Islamic Da’wah Party, central propagation, place and date of publication unknown.
  • “Al-‘Amal al-Salih fi al-Quran” (The Proper Deeds According to Qur’an): Ikhtrna Lak. Beirut: Dar al-Zahra’, 1982.
  • Ahl al-Bayt: Tanawu’ Adwar wa-Wihdat Hadaf (The House Hold of the Prophet: Diversity of roles but unified goal). Beirut: Dar al-Ta’ruf, 1985.
  • Bahth Hawla al-Mahdi (Thesis on Messiah). Beirut: Dar al- Ta’ruf, 1983.
  • Bahth Hawla al-Wilayah (Thesis on Rulership). Kuwait: Dar al- Tawhid, 1977.
  • “Da’watana il al-Islam Yajeb an Takun Enqilabiyah,” (Our Call for Islam Must be a Revolutionary): Fikr al-Da’wah, no. 13. Islamic Da’wah Party, central propagation, place and date of publication unknown.
  • “Dawr al-A’imah fi al-Hayat al-Islamiyah” (The Role of Imams in Muslims’ Life): Ikhtarna Lak. Beirut: Dar al-Zahra’, 1982.
  • “al-Dawlah al-Islamiyah” (The Islamic State), al-Jihad (14 March 1983): 5.
  • “Hawla al-Marhala al-Ula min ‘Amal al-Da’wah” (On the First Stage of Da’wah Political Program): Min Fikr al-Da’wah. no. 13. Islamic Da’wah Party, central propagation, place and date of publishing unknown.
  • “Hawla al-Ism wa-al-Shakl al-Tanzimi li-Hizb al-Da’wah al- Islamiyah” (On the Name and the Structural Organization of Islamic Da’wah Party): Min Fikr al-Da’wah. no. 13. Islamic Da’wah Party, central propagation, place and date of publication unknown.
  • “al-Huriyah fi al-Quran” (Freedom according to Quran): Ikhtarna Lak. Beirut: Dar al-Zahra’, 1982.
  • “al-Itijahat al-Mustaqbaliyah li-Harakat al-Ijtihad” (The Future Trends of the Process of Ijtihad): Ikhtarna Lak. Beirut: Dar al-Zahra’, 1980.
  • al-Insan al-Mu’asir wa-al-Mushkilah al-Ijtima’yah (The contemporary man and the Social Problem).
  • “al-Janib al-Iqtisadi Min al-Nizam al-Islami” (The Economic Perspective of Islamic System): Ikhtarna Lak. Beirut: Dar al-Zahra’, 1982.
  • Khalafat al-Insan wa-Shahadat al-Anbia’ (Victory role of man, and Witness role of Prophets): al-Islam Yaqwod al-Hayat. Iran: Islamic Ministry of Guidance, n.d.
  • Khatut Tafsiliyah ‘An Iqtisad al-Mujtama’ al-Islami (General Basis of Economics of Islamic Society): al-Islam Yaqud al-Hayah. Iran: Islamic Ministry of Guidance, n.d.
  • Lamha fiqhiyah Hawla Dustur al-Jumhuriyah al-Islamiyah (A preliminary jurisprudence basis of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic): al-Islam Yaqwod al-Hayat Iran: Islamic Ministry of Guidance, n.d.
  • Madha Ta’ruf ‘an al-Iqtisad al-Islami (What do you know about Islamic Economics). al-Islam Yaqwod al-Hayat Iran: Islamic Ministry of Guidance, n.d.
  • Manabi’ al-Qudra fi al-Dawlah al-Islamiyah (The Sources of Power in an Islamic State). al-Islam Yaqwod al-Hayat Iran: Islamic Ministry of Guidance, n.d.
  • “al-Mihna” (The Ordeal). Sawt al-Wihdah, no. 5, 6, 7. (n.d).
  • Minhaj al-Salihin (The Path of the Righteous). Beirut: Dar al- Ta’aruf, 1980.
  • Muqaddimat fi al-Tafsir al-Mawdu’i Lil-Quran (Introductions in Thematic Exegesis of Quran). Kuwait: Dar al- Tawjyyh al-Islami, 1980.
  • “Nazarah ‘Amah fi al-‘Ibadat” (General Outlook on Worship): al-Fatawa al-Wadhiha. Beirut: Dar al-Ta’aruf, 1981.
  • “al-Nazriyah al-Islamiyah li-Tawzi’ al-Masadr al-Tabi’iyah” (Islamic Theory of Distribution of Natural Resources): Ikhtarna Lak. Beirut: Dar al-Zahra’, 1982.
  • “al-Nizam al-Islami Muqaranan bil-Nizam al-Ra’smali wa-al- Markisi” (The Islamic System Compared with The Capitalist and The Marxist Systems). Ikhtarna Lak. Beirut: Dar-al Zahra’, 1982.
  • “Risalatuna wa-al-Da’wah” (Our Message and Our Sermon). Risalatuna. Beirut: al-Dar al-Islamiyah, 1981.
  • “Al-Shakhsiyah al-Islamiyah” (Muslim Personality): Min Fikr al-Da’wah al-Islamiyah (Of the Thoughts of Islamic Da’wah). no. 13. Islamic Da’wah Party, central propagation, place and date of publication unknown.
  • Surah ‘An Iqtisad al-Mujtama’ al-Islami (A Perspective on the Economy of Muslim Society). al-Islam Yaqwod al-Hayat Iran: Islamic Ministry of Guidance, n.d.
  • “al-Usus al-Amah li-al-Bank fi al-Mujtam al-Islami” (The General Basis of Banks in Islamic Society). in al-Islam Yaqwod al-Hayat Iran: Islamic Ministry of Guidance, n.d.
  • “Utruhat al-Marja’iyah al-Salihah” (Thesis on Suitable Marja’iyah). In Kazim al-Ha’iri, Mabahith fi ‘Ilm al-Usul.Qum, Iran: n.p., 1988.
  • “al-Yaqin al-Riyadi wa-al-Mantiq al-Waz’i” (The Mathematic Certainty and the Phenomenal Logic): Ikhtrna Lak. Beirut: Dar al-Zahra’, 1982.
  • “Preface to al-Sahifah al-Sajadiyah” (of Imam Ali ibn Hussein al-Sajad) Tehran: al-Maktabah al-Islamiyah al-Kubra, n.d.
References
  1. Baqir Al-Sadr, Our Philosophy, Taylor and Francis, 1987, p. xiii
  2. Augustus R. Norton (19 January 2009). Hezbollah: A Short History. Princeton University Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-691-14107-7. Retrieved 9 August 2013.
  3. Anthony Shadid, Night Draws Near: Iraq’s People in the Shadow of America’s War, (Holt, 2005), p.164
  4. Muhammed Baqir Al-Sadr, Al-Islam yaqud al-hayat, Qum, 1979, p.132
  5. Quran 5:44
  6. Baqir Al-Sadr, Al-Islam yaqud al-hayat, Qum, 1979, p.24
  7. Faleh A Jabar, The Shi’ite Movement in Iraq, London: Saqi Books, 2003, p.286
  8. Muhammed Baqir Al-Sadr, Lamha fiqhiya, p.20
  9. Muhammed Baqir Al-Sadr, Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence, London: ICAS, 2003, p.15
  10. Chibli Mallat, Readings of the Qur’ān in London and Najaf: John Wansbrough and Muḥammad Bāqir al-Ṣadr, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Vol.57, No. 1, In Honour of J. E. Wansbrough (1994), pp. 159-173
  11. theory of general succession in political thought of Muhammad Baqir Sadr,Hosein Jamshidi,Islamic state magazine,spring 1387 solar,number 11
  12. Shahid Sadr as first theoretician of Islamic movement of Iraq,Jihad magazine,Farvardin 1361 solar,number 30
  13. inquiry on social philosophy of Shahid Sadr,Mahmoud Taghi zadeh Davari,fall 1387 solar,number 23
  14. Walbridge, Linda S. (2001). The Most Learned of the Shi`a: The Institution of the Marja Taqlid. USA: Oxford University Press. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-19-513799-6. Retrieved Jan 7, 2012.
  15. The Super Genius Personality of Islam
  16. This has been translated into English twice: by Roy Mottahedeh as “Lessons in Islamic Jurisprudence” (2005) ISBN 978-1-85168-393-2 (Part 1 only) and anonymously as “The Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence according to Shi’i Law” (2003) ISBN 978-1-904063-12-4.
Sources
  • Mallat, Chibli. “Muhammad Baqir as-Sadr.” Pioneers of Islamic Revival. ed. Ali Rahnema. London: Zed Books, 1994

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