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Auspicsius Birth On Imam Hasan Asgari's
The eleventh imam: Imam Hasan al-asgari (a.s.)
Name and
Parentage
His name is
al-Hasan, Abu Muhammad. Being a resident of 'Asgar a suburb of Samarra', he is
titled al-Asgari. His father was Imam 'Ali An-Naqi (A.S.) and his mother was
Salil Khatun, an ideal woman in piety, worship, chastity and generosity. He was
born in Medina on the tenth of Rabi' al-Akhir, 232 A.H. (December 4, 846 AD).
Upbringing and
Instruction
He lived under
the care of his respected father upto the age of 11. When his father had to
leave for Samarra' he was to accompany him and thus share the hardships of the
journey with the family. At Samarra', he passed his time with his father either
in imprisonment or in partial freedom. He had, however, the chance to benefit
from his father's teaching and instruction.
Imamate
His father
died in 254. A.H. (868 AD) when he was twenty-two. Four months before his death,
the father declared his son to be his successor and executor of his will, asking
his followers to bear witness to the fact. Thus the responsibilities of Imamate
were vested upon him which he fulfilled even in the face of great difficulties
and hostile environment.
In the early days
of his lmamate, Al-Mu'tassam Al-'Abbasi was the caliph. When
the latter was deposed, he was succeeded by al-Muhtadi.
After his brief reign of only eleven months and one week,
al-Mu'tamad came to the throne. During their regimes, Imam
Hasan al-Asgari (A.S.) did not enjoy peace at all. Although
the Abbaside dynasty was involved in constant complications
and disorders, each and every king thought it necessary to
keep the Imam (A.S.) imprisoned.
One of the
Holy Prophet's traditions ran that the Prophet (S.A.W) would be succeeded by
twelve soccessors, the last of whom would be the Mahdi, Qa'im 'Al-Muhammad (A.S.).
The 'Abbasides knew well that the true successors of the Prophet (S.A.W) were
these very Imams. AI-Hasan (A.S.) being the eleventh, his son would surely be
the 12th or the last. They, tried to put an end to his life in such a way, that
it would ensure there would be nobody to succeed him. As the simple confinement
inflicted on Imam 'Ali an-Naqi (A.S.) was considered inadequate for Imam Hasan
al-'Asgari (A.S.), so he was imprisoned, away from his family. No doubt the
revolutionary intervals between two regimes gave him brief periods of freedom.
Yet as soon as the new king came to the throne, he followed his predecessor's
policy and imprisoned the Imam again. The Imam's brief life therefore was mostly
spent inside dungeon cells.
Appointement of Deputies
nder all
circumstances, the Imams carried out their duties of guiding
the people. Imam Hasan Al-'Asgari was subjected to numerous restrictions,and those who sought to
learn the teachings of AhI al-Bayt (A.S.) and their Shi'ah point of view could
not reach him. In order to solve this problem, the Imam appointed certain
confidants as his deputies in view of their knowledge of jurisprudence. These
persons satisfied the curiosity of inquirers as much as they could. But if they
could not solve certain theological problems, they would keep them pending the
acquisition of their solutions from the Imam (A.S.) whenever they got the
opportunity to see him. Of course the visit to the Imam (A.S.) by a few
individuals could be allowed by the government but certainly not by groups who
wished to see the Imam (A.S.) on a regular basis.
The Khums (1/5 of
total savings), which was being paid to the Imams (A.S.) by
the believers who cherished these Imams and regarded them as
representatives of the Divine Law was spent by these sacred
saints on religious matters, and to sustain the Prophet's
descendants. This Khums was secretly collected by these
deputies, who spent it according to the directives of the
Imam. They accordingly were in constant danger of being
identified as such by the governments’ secret intelligence
service. In order to divert this danger, Uthman ibn Sa'id
and his son Abu Ja'far Muhammad, two prominent deputies of
the Imam (A.S.) in the capital Baghdad, ran a big shop
trading in oils. This provided them with free contact with
the concerned people. It was thus that even under the very
thumb of the tyrant regime that those devotees managed to
run the system of the Divine law unsuspected.
Character and
Virtues
Imam Hasan
Al-'Asgari (A.S.) was one of that illustrious series of the immaculate
infallible each member of whom displayed the moral excellence of human
perfection. He was peerless in knowledge, forbearance, forgiveness, generosity,
sacrifice and piety. Whenever Al-Mu'tamad asked anybody about his captive Imam
Hasan al-'Asgari (A.S.), he was told that the Imam fasted during the day and
worshipped during the night, and that his tongue uttered no word but remembrance
of his creator. During the brief periods of freedom and stay at home, people
approached him hoping to avail from his benevolence, and they went back well
rewarded. Once when the 'Abbaside caliph asked Ahmed ibn 'Abd Allah ibn khaqan,
his Minister for Charities (awqaf), about the descendants of Imam 'Ali (A.S.),
he reported: "I do not know anybody among them who is more distinguished than
Hasan al-'Asgari. None can surpass him in dignity, knowledge, piety and
abstinence, nor can anybody match him in the point of nobleness majestic
grandeur, modesty and honesty".
As Center of
Learning
Imam Hasan
al-'Asgari (A.S.) had a brief span of life, only twenty-eight years, but even in
this short period, which was furled by a chain of troubles and tribulations,
several high ranking scholars benefited from his ocean of knowledge. He also
stemmed the flood of atheism and disbelief, which ensued, from the philosophers
of that age, winning conspicuous success over them. One of those was Ishaq al-Kindi.
He was writing a book on what he called "self-contradictions" in the Holy Qur'an.
When the news reached the Imam (A.S.), he waited for an opportunity to refute
and rebut him. By chance, some of Ishaq's students came to him. The Imam asked
them: "Is there anyone among you who can stop Ishaq from wasting his time in
this useless effort fighting the Holy Qur'an?" The students said: "Sir, we are
his students: how can we object to his teaching?" The Imam urged that they could
at least convey to their teacher what he had to tell them. They replied that
they would be ready to cooperate as much as they could in that respect.
The Imam (A.S.)
then recited a few verses from the Holy Qur'an, which the philosopher thought as
contradictory of one another. He then explained to them thus: "Your teacher
thinks that some of the words in these verses have only one meaning. But
according to the Arabic language, these words have other meanings too which,
when taken into consideration, indicate no contradiction in he overall meaning.
Thus, your teacher is not justified for basing his objections and claim of
contradictions on the premises of the 'wrong meaning' he himself selects for
such verses". He then put up some examples of such words before them so clearly
that the students conceived the whole discussion and the precedents of more than
one meaning.
When these
students visited Ishaq al-Kindi and after routine talk, reproduced the disputed
points, he was surprised. He was a fair-minded scholar and he listened to his
students' explanations. Then he said: "What you have argued is beyond your
capacity: tell me truly who has taught you these points?" The students said that
it was their own reflection, but when he insisted that they could never have
conceived those points, they admitted that, it was explained to them by Abu
Muhammad Imam Hasan al-Asgari (A.S.). The instructor said: "Yes: this level of
knowledge is the heritage of that House and only that House". Then he asked the
students to set fire to all such works of his.
Imam Hasan al-Asgari
(A.S.) was a reliable authority for traditionalists who had recorded several
traditions in their collections on his authority. One tradition about drinking
runs thus: "The wine drinking is like an idolater". It has been recorded by Ibn
al-Jawzi in his book "Tahrim al-Khamr" (prohibition of wine drinking) with
continuous chain of references tracing its narrators. Abu Na'im Fadl ibn Waki
states that the tradition is true as it has been narrated by his companions such
as Ibn 'Abbas, Abu Hyrayra, Anas, AbdAllah ibn Awf al-Aslami and others.
Unfortunately,
these storehouses of knowledge are not available.
Imam Al-Hasan al-'Asgari, peace be on him, said:
Generosity has a
limit, when crossed becomes extravagance; caution has a
limit when crossed becomes cowardice; thriftiness has a
limit, when crossed becomes miserliness; courage has a
limit, when crossed becomes fool-hardiness. Let this moral
lesson suffice: refrain from doing anything which you would
disapprove of if done by someone else.
A Part of Imam Hasan Al-Asgari’s Commandments to His Shia
Let piety be
your provision, patience be your garment, and buy hardship in the path of Allah.
Be true in your speech, trustworthy in performing your deeds, prolong your
sajdah (prostration), deal with others with best behavior, and treat your
neighbor amicably. Perform your prayers even with those whom you think to be
your opposition; attend their funeral ceremonies, visit their sick, and give
them their rights. Verily I tell you that whosoever is honest and has good
behavior in the eyes of others, he is the pious Shia whom I will be proud of.
Therefore, fear Allah, be as adornment on behalf of us and be not as shame that
defames our name. This is the only way by which others shall be attracted toward
us (the Ahlul Bayt of the Holy Prophet s.w.).
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