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Ashura

Ashura (Arabic: عَاشُورَاء, ʿĀshūrāʾ, [ʕaːʃuːˈraːʔ]) is a day of commemoration in Islam. It occurs annually on the 10th of Muharram, the first month of the Islamic calendar. Among Shia Muslims, Ashura is observed through large demonstrations of high-scale mourning as it marks the death of Husayn ibn Ali (a grandson of Muhammad), who was beheaded during the Battle of Karbala in 680 CE.[4] Among Sunni Muslims, Ashura is observed through celebratory fasting as it marks the day of salvation for Moses and the Israelites, who successfully escaped from Biblical Egypt (where they were enslaved and persecuted) after Moses called upon God's power to part the Red Sea.[5] While Husayn's death is also regarded as a great tragedy by Sunnis, open displays of mourning are either discouraged or outright prohibited, depending on the specific act.[6]

Ashura
عَاشُورَاء
Procession for Ashura at Imam Hossein Square in Tehran, Iran (2016)
TypeIslamic (Shia and Sunni)
SignificanceIn Shia Islam:
Mourning the death of Husayn ibn Ali during the Battle of Karbala in 680 CE
In Sunni Islam:
Celebrating the salvation of Moses and the Israelites from their enslavement in Biblical Egypt
Observances
Date10 Muharram
2022 date8 August[1]
2023 date28 July
FrequencyAnnual (Islamic calendar)

In Shia communities, Ashura observances are typically carried out in group processions and are accompanied by a variety of rituals ranging from weeping and shrine pilgrimages to the more controversial acts of self-flagellation and chest-beating.[7] In Sunni communities, there are three rounds of fasting, based on Muhammad's hadith: on the day before Ashura, on the day of Ashura, and on the day after Ashura; while fasting for Ashura is not obligatory, it is strongly encouraged.[8][9] In folk traditions across countries such as Morocco and Algeria, the day of Ashura is variously celebrated with special foods, bonfires, or carnivals, though these practices are not supported by religious authorities.[10] Due to the drastically differing methods of observance between Sunnis and Shias, the day of Ashura has come to acquire a political dimension in some Islamic countries, and particularly in Iran, where Shia Islam is the official state religion. Additionally, it has also served as a trigger for controversy as well as violent incidents between the two communities in countries such as Iraq and Pakistan.

Etymology

The root of the word Ashura means tenth in Semitic languages; hence the name, literally translated, means "the tenth day". According to the Islamicist A. J. Wensinck, the name is derived from the Hebrew ʿāsōr, with the Aramaic determinative ending.[11]

Origin

Sunni Islam

Fasting on Ashura, the tenth day of the Islamic month of Muharram was a practice established by Muhammad in the early days of Islam that commemorates the parting of the Red Sea by Moses.[12][13] Its beginning is recounted in a sahih hadith recorded through Ibn Abbas by al-Bukhari:

When the Prophet (ﷺ) came to Medina, he found (the Jews) fasting on the day of 'Ashura' (i.e. 10th of Muharram). They used to say: "This is a great day on which Allah saved Moses and drowned the folk of Pharaoh. Moses observed the fast on this day, as a sign of gratitude to Allah." The Prophet (ﷺ) said, "I am closer to Moses than they." So, he observed the fast (on that day) and ordered the Muslims to fast on it.[14]

This has been analysed as reflecting an encounter between Muhammad and some Jews fasting for Yom Kippur, on the tenth day of Tishri, in commemoration of Moses, upon which he began to fast on that day and instruct fellow Muslims to fast.[15][16] The practice would thus have been established at a time when the Islamic and Jewish calendars were synced.[17] However, Muhammad later received a revelation to adjust the Islamic calendar, in the verse of Nasi', and with this Ramadan, the ninth month, became the month of fasting, and the obligation to fast on Ashura was dropped, as Ashura became distinct from its Jewish predecessor of Yōm Kippur.[12][17] According to a sahih hadith narrated through Aisha:

During the Pre-lslamic Period of ignorance the Quraish used to observe fasting on the day of 'Ashura', and the Prophet (ﷺ) himself used to observe fasting on it too. But when he came to Medina, he fasted on that day and ordered the Muslims to fast on it. When (the order of compulsory fasting in) Ramadan was revealed, fasting in Ramadan became an obligation, and fasting on 'Ashura' was given up, and who ever wished to fast (on it) did so, and whoever did not wish to fast on it, did not fast.[18]

It is still widely considered desirable (mustahab) to fast on Ashura (10th day), and also on Tasua (9th day).[19] With hadith in Jami At-Tirmidhi signifying that God forgives the sins of the year prior for people fasting Ashura.[20]

Shia Islam

Martyrdom of Ḥusayn

 
Millions of Shia Muslims gather around the Husayn Mosque in Karbala after making the pilgrimage on foot during Arba'een, which is a Shia religious observation that occurs 40 days after the Day of Ashura.

The Battle of Karbala took place during the period of decay resulting from the succession of Yazid I.[21][22] Immediately after his succession, Yazid instructed the governor of Medina to compel Ḥusayn and a few other prominent figures to pledge their allegiance (Bay'ah).[23] However, Ḥusayn refused to do this, believing that Yazid was going against the teachings of Islam and changing the sunnah of Muhammad.[citation needed] So, accompanied by his household, his sons, brothers, and the sons of Hasan, he left Medina to seek asylum in Mecca.[23]

In Mecca, Ḥusayn learned that Yazid had sent assassins to kill him during the Hajj. To preserve the sanctity of the city and of the Kaaba, Husayn abandoned his Hajj and encouraged his companions to follow him to Kufa without realising that the situation there had taken an adverse turn.[23]

On the way there, Ḥusayn found that his messenger, Muslim ibn Aqeel, had been killed in Kufa and encountered the vanguard of the army of Ubaydullah ibn Ziyad. Ḥe addressed the Kufan army, reminding them that they had invited him to come there because they were without an Imam, and told them that he intended to proceed to Kufa with their support; however, if they were now opposed to his coming, he would return to Mecca. When the army urged him to take another route, he turned to the left and reached Karbala, where the army forced him to stop at a location with little water.[23]

Governor Ubaydullah ibn Ziyad instructed Umar ibn Sa'ad, the head of the Kufan army, to again offer Ḥusayn and his supporters the opportunity to swear allegiance to Yazid. He also ordered Umar ibn Sa'ad to cut Ḥusayn and his followers off from access to the water of the Euphrates.[23] The next morning, Umar ibn Sa'ad arranged the Kufan army in battle formation.[23]

The Battle of Karbala lasted from sunrise to sunset on 10 October 680 (Muharram 10, 61 AH). Husayn's small group of companions and family members (around 72 men plus women and children)[note 1][25][26] fought against Umar ibn Sa'ad's army and were killed near the Euphrates, from which they were not allowed to drink. The renowned historian Abū Rayḥān al-Bīrūnī states:

… [T]hen fire was set to their camp and the bodies were trampled by the hoofs of the horses; nobody in the history of the human kind has seen such atrocities.[27]

Once the Umayyad troops had murdered Ḥusayn and his male followers, they looted the tents, stripped the women of their jewellery, and took the skin upon which Zain al-Abidin was prostrate. Ḥusayn's sister Zaynab was taken along with the enslaved women to the king in Damascus where she was imprisoned before being allowed to return to Medina after a year.[28][29]

Significance

The first assembly (majlis) of the Commemoration of Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī is said to have been held by Zaynab in prison. In Damascus she is also reported to have delivered a poignant oration. The prison sentence ended when Husayn's four-year-old daughter, Ruqayyah bint Husayn, who would often cry to be allowed to see her father, died in captivity, probably after seeing his mutilated head. Her death caused an uproar in the city, and, fearing an uprising, Yazid freed the captives.[30]

According to Ignác Goldziher,

Ever since the black day of Karbala, the history of this family … has been a continuous series of sufferings and persecutions. These are narrated in poetry and prose, in a richly cultivated literature of martyrologies … 'More touching than the tears of the Shi'is' has even become an Arabic proverb.[31]

Imam Zayn Al Abidin said the following:

It is said that for forty years whenever food was placed before him, he would weep. One day a servant said to him, 'O son of Allah's Messenger! Is it not time for your sorrow to come to an end?' He replied, 'Woe upon you! Jacob the prophet had twelve sons, and Allah made one of them disappear. His eyes turned white from constant weeping, his head turned grey out of sorrow, and his back became bent in gloom,[note 2] though his son was alive in this world. But I watched while my father, my brother, my uncle, and seventeen members of my family were slaughtered all around me. How should my sorrow come to an end?'[note 3][32][33]

Husayn's grave became a pilgrimage site for Shia Muslims within a few years of his death. A tradition of pilgrimage to the shrine of Imam Husayn and the other Karbala martyrs, known as Ziarat ashura, quickly developed.[34] The Umayyad and Abbasid caliphs tried to prevent construction of the shrines and discouraged pilgrimage.[35] The tomb and its annexes were destroyed by the Abbasid caliph Al-Mutawakkil in 850–851 and Shia pilgrimage was prohibited, but shrines in Karbala and Najaf were built by the Buwayhid emir 'Adud al-Daula in 979–80.[36]

Public rites of remembrance for Husayn's martyrdom developed from the early pilgrimages.[37] Under the Buyid dynasty, Mu'izz ad-Dawla officiated at a public commemoration of Ashura in Baghdad.[38] These commemorations were also encouraged in Egypt by the Fatimid caliph al-'Aziz.[39] With the recognition of the Twelvers as the official religion by the Safavids, the Mourning of Muharram extended throughout the first ten days of Muharram.[34]

 
Remembrance by Jafaris, Qizilbash Alevi-Turks and Bektashis together in Ottoman Empire[40]

Ashura was remembered by Jafaris, Qizilbash Alevi-Turks, and Bektashis during the period of the Ottoman Empire.[41] It is of particular significance to Twelver Shias and Alawites, who consider Husayn (the grandson of Muhammad) Ahl al-Bayt, the third Imam to be the rightful successor of Muhammad.[citation needed]

According to Kamran Scot Aghaie, "The symbols and rituals of Ashura have evolved over time and have meant different things to different people. However, at the core of the symbolism of Ashura is the moral dichotomy between worldly injustice and corruption on the one hand and God-centered justice, piety, sacrifice and perseverance on the other. Also, Shiite Muslims consider the remembrance of the tragic events of Ashura to be an important way of worshipping God in a spiritual or mystical way."[42]

Shia Muslims make pilgrimages on Ashura, as they do forty days later on ʾArbaʿīn, to the Mashhad al-Husayn, the shrine in Karbala, Iraq, that is traditionally held to be Husayn's tomb. This is a day of remembrance, and mourning attire is worn. This is a time for sorrow and for showing respect for the person's passing, and it is also a time for self-reflection when a believer commits themself completely to the mourning of Husayn. Shia Muslims refrain from listening to or playing music since Arabic culture generally considers playing music during death rituals to be impolite. Nor do they plan weddings or parties on this date. Instead they mourn by crying and listening to recollections of the tragedy and sermons on how Husayn and his family were martyred. This is intended to connect them with Husayn's suffering and martyrdom, and the sacrifices he made to keep Islam alive. Husayn's martyrdom is widely interpreted by Shia Muslims as a symbol of the struggle against injustice, tyranny, and oppression.[43] Shia Muslims believe the Battle of Karbala was between the forces of good and evil, with Husayn representing good and Yazid representing evil.[44]

Shia imams insist that Ashura should not be celebrated as a day of joy and festivity. According to the Eighth Shia Imam Ali al-Rida, it must be observed as a day of rest, sorrow, and total disregard of worldly matters.[45]

Some of the events associated with Ashura are held in special congregation halls known as "Imambargah" and Hussainia.[46]

The World Sunni Movement celebrates this day as the National Martyrs' Day of the Muslim nation under the direction of Syed Imam Hayat.[47]

Remembrance

Azadari (mourning) rituals

The words Azadari (Persian: عزاداری), which means mourning and lamentation, and Majalis-e Aza are used exclusively in connection with the remembrance ceremonies for the martyrdom of Imam Hussain. Majalis-e Aza, also known as Aza-e Husayn, includes mourning congregations, lamentations, matam and all acts which express the grief and, above all, repulsion against what Yazid stood for.[48]

 
Ritual scourge for use in the Ashura procession. Syria, before 1974

These customs show solidarity with Husayn and his family. Through them, people mourn Husayn's death and express regret for the fact that they were not present at the battle to save Husayn and his family.[49][50]

Tuwairij run

The Tuwairij run is the name of an Ashura ceremony in which millions of people from around Tuwairij in 22 km run and mourning on side of the Imam Husayn Shrine.[51] this ceremony is considered as the biggest observance of religious activities in the world.[52][53] Its importance has grown since Moḥammad Mahdī Baḥr al-ʿUlūm was quoted as saying that Hujjat bin Hasan was present at this ceremony.[54]

History

The Tuwairij was first run on Ashura 1855 when people who were at the house of Seyyed Saleh Qazvini after the mourning ceremony and the recitation of the murder of Husain bin ‘Ali cried so much from grief and sorrow that they asked Seyyed Saleh to run to the imam's shrine to offer his condolences. Seyyed Saleh accepted their request and went to the shrine with all the mourners.[55][56][57][58]

Prohibition of the march

The march was banned by Saddam Hussein’s Ba‘athist regime between 1991 and 2003.[59][60] However, despite the ban, Tuwairij still continued and the regime executed many participants.[citation needed] The event was permitted again after 2003, and participation from outside Iraq has steadily increased.[61]

Popular customs

After almost 12 centuries, five main types of rituals were developed around the story of the battle of Karbala. These rituals include memorial services (majalis al-ta'ziya); visits to Husayn's tomb in Karbala particularly on Ashura and on the fortieth day after the battle (Ziyarat Ashura and Ziyarat al-Arba'in); public mourning processions (al-mawakib al-husayniyya); representation of the battle as a play (the shabih); and personal flagellation (tatbir).[62] Some Shia Muslims believe that taking part in Ashura washes away their sins.[63] A popular Shia saying has it that "a single tear shed for Husayn washes away a hundred sins".[64]

For Shia Muslims, the commemoration of Ashura is an event of intense grief and mourning. Mourners congregate at a mosque for sorrowful, poetic recitations such as marsiya, noha, latmiya, and soaz performed in memory of the martyrdom of Husayn, lamenting and grieving to the tune of beating drums and chants of "Ya Hussain". Ulamas also give sermons on the themes of Husayn's personality and position in Islam, and the history of his uprising. The Sheikh of the mosque retells the story of the Battle of Karbala to allow his listeners to relive the pain and sorrow endured by Husayn and his family and they read Maqtal Al-Husayn.[62][65] In some places, such as Iran, Iraq, and the Arab states of the Persian Gulf, passion plays known as Ta'zieh[66] are performed, reenacting the Battle of Karbala and the suffering and martyrdom of Husayn at the hands of Yazid.

 
A tadjah at Hosay in Port of Spain during the 1950s

In the Caribbean islands of Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica, Ashura, known locally as 'Hussay' or Hosay, may commemorate the grandson of Muhammad, but the celebration has taken on influences from other religions including Roman Catholicism, Hinduism, and the Baptist movement, so that it has become a mixture of different cultures and religion. The event is attended by both Muslims and non-Muslims in an environment of mutual respect and tolerance.[67][68] For the duration of the memorial events, it is customary for mosques and individuals to provide free meals (Nazri or Votive Food) for everyone on certain nights.[69]

Certain traditional flagellation rituals such as Talwar zani (talwar ka matam or sometimes tatbir) use a sword. Other rituals, such as zanjeer zani or zanjeer matam, use a zanjeer (a chain with blades).[70] This can be controversial and some Shia clerics have denounced the practice saying "it creates a backward and negative image of their community." Instead believers are encouraged to donate blood for those in need.[71] A few Shia Muslims observe the event by donating blood ("Qame Zani"), and flagellating themselves[72]

Socio-political aspects

 
Sham Ghariban (the first night in mourn of Husayn) in Imam Reza Shrine, Mashhad, Iran

Commemoration of Ashura is of great socio-political value to the Shia, who have been a minority throughout their history. According to the prevailing conditions at the time of the commemoration, such reminiscences may become the basis for implicit dissent or even explicit protest. This is what happened, for instance, during the Islamic Revolution in Iran, the Lebanese Civil War, the Lebanese resistance against the Israeli military presence and in the 1990s Uprising in Bahrain. Sometimes Ashura commemorations overtly associate the memory of Al-Husayn's martyrdom with the conditions of modern Islam and Muslims in reference to Husayn's famous quote on the day of Ashura: "Every day is Ashura, every land is Karbala".[73]

From the period of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution (1905–1911) onward, mourning gatherings increasingly took on a political aspect, with preachers comparing the oppressors of the time with Imam Husayn's enemies, the Umayyads.[74]

The political function of the commemorations was very marked in the years leading up to the Islamic Revolution of 1978–79, as well as during the revolution itself. In addition, the implicit self-identification of the Muslim revolutionaries with Imam Husayn led to a blossoming of the cult of the martyr, expressed most vividly, perhaps, in the vast cemetery of Behesht-e Zahra, to the south of Tehran, where the martyrs of the revolution and the war against Iraq are buried.[74]

On the other hand, some governments have banned this commemoration. In the 1930s Reza Shah forbade it in Iran. The regime of Saddam Hussein saw it as a potential threat and banned Ashura commemorations for many years.[75] During the 1884 Hosay massacre, 22 people were killed in Trinidad and Tobago when civilians attempted to carry out the Ashura rites, locally known as Hosay, in defiance of the British colonial authorities.[76]

Terrorist attacks during Ashura

Terrorist attacks against Shia Muslims have occurred in several countries on the day of Ashura, which has produced an "interesting" feedback effect in Shia history.[77]

  • 1818–1820: Syed Ahmad Barelvi and Shah Ismail Dihlavi took up arms to stop the Ashura commemoration in North India. They were the pioneers of anti-Shia terrorism in the subcontinent. Barbara Metcalf noted:

A second group of abuses Syed Ahmad held were those that originated from Shi’i influence. He particularly urged Muslims to give up the keeping of ta’ziyahs, the replicas of the tombs of the martyrs of Karbala taken in procession during the mourning ceremony of Muharram. Muhammad Isma’il wrote, "a true believer should regard the breaking of a tazia by force to be as virtuous an action as destroying idols. If he cannot break them himself, let him order others to do so. If this even be out of his power, let him at least detest and abhor them with his whole heart and soul". Sayyid Ahmad himself is said, no doubt with considerable exaggeration, to have torn down thousands of imambaras, the building that house the taziyahs.[78]

  • 1940: Bomb thrown on Ashura Procession in Delhi, 21 February[79]
  • 1994: explosion of a bomb at the Imam Reza shrine, 20 June, in Mashhad, Iran, 20 people killed[80]
  • 2004: bomb attacks, during Shia pilgrimage to Karbala, 2 March, Karbala, Iraq, 178 people killed and 5000 injured[81]
  • 2008: clashes, between Iraqi troops and members of a Shia cult, 19 January, Basra and Nasiriya, Iraq, 263 people killed[82]
  • 2009: explosion of a bomb, during the Ashura procession, 28 December, Karachi, Pakistan, dozens of people killed and hundreds injured[83]
  • 2010: detention of 200 Shia Muslims, at a shop house in Sri Gombak known as Hauzah Imam Ali ar-Ridha (Hauzah ArRidha), 15 December, Selangor, Malaysia[84]
  • 2011: explosion of a bomb, during the Ashura procession, 28 December, Hilla and Baghdad, Iraq, 5 December 30 people killed[85]
  • 2011: suicide attack, during the Ashura procession, Kabul, Afghanistan, 6 December 63 people killed[86]
  • 2015: three explosions, during the Ashura procession, mosque in Dhaka, Bangladesh, 24 October, one person killed and 80 people injured[87]

In the Gregorian calendar

While Ashura always takes place on the same day of the Islamic calendar, the date on the Gregorian calendar varies from year to year due to differences between the two calendars, since the Islamic calendar is a lunar calendar and the Gregorian calendar is a solar calendar. Furthermore, the appearance of the crescent moon used to determine when each Islamic month begins varies from country to country due to their different geographic locations.[citation needed]

AH Gregorian date
1444 2022 August 8
1445 2023 July 28
1446 2024 July 16

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Except his young son, Ali, who was severely ill during that battle.[24]
  2. ^ Quran, 12:84
  3. ^ From Shaykh as-Sadooq, al-Khisal; quoted in al-Ameen, A’yan, IV, 195. The same is quoted from Bin Shahraashoob's Manaqib in Bih’ar al-Anwar, XLVI, 108; cf. similar accounts, Ibid, pp. 108–10

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Sources

  • Litvak, Meir (1998). Shi'i Scholars of Nineteenth-Century Iraq: The Ulama of Najaf and Karbala. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-89296-1
  • al Musawi, Muhsin (2006). Reading Iraq: Culture and Power and Conflict. I. B. Tauris. ISBN 1-84511-070-6
  • al Mufid, al-Shaykh Muhammad (December 1982 (1st ed.)). Kitab Al-Irshad. Tahrike Tarsile Quran. ISBN 0-940368-12-9, 978-0-940368-12-5

Further reading

  • Sivan, Emmanuel (1989). "Sunni Radicalism in the Middle East and the Iranian Revolution". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 21 (1): 16–20. doi:10.1017/S0020743800032086. JSTOR 163637. S2CID 162459682.

External links

  • Gordon B. Coutts (Scottish/American, 1868–1937) A Large Oil on Canvas Depicting "The Ashura Rituals, Tangier" (Arabic: عاشوراء ʻĀshūrā’ – Urdu: عاشورا – Persian: عاشورا – Turkish: Aşure Günü). Signed and inscribed: 'Gordon Coutts/TANGIER (lower right). c. 1920
  • Is Aashura a day of mourning or rejoicing?
  • on Islam Freedom
  • Events on the day of Ashura
  • "Ashura" An article in Encyclopædia Britannica Online
  • What is Ashura? (BBC News)
  • What Is Ashura? – by Abdul-Ilah As-Saadi on Al Jazeera
  • Ashura Australia – Official website of the Annual Ashura Procession in Sydney

ashura, this, article, about, islamic, holy, traditional, dessert, ashure, other, uses, disambiguation, arabic, اش, ور, اء, ʿĀshūrāʾ, ʕaːʃuːˈraːʔ, commemoration, islam, occurs, annually, 10th, muharram, first, month, islamic, calendar, among, shia, muslims, ob. This article is about the Islamic holy day For the traditional dessert see Ashure For other uses see Ashura disambiguation Ashura Arabic ع اش ور اء ʿAshuraʾ ʕaːʃuːˈraːʔ is a day of commemoration in Islam It occurs annually on the 10th of Muharram the first month of the Islamic calendar Among Shia Muslims Ashura is observed through large demonstrations of high scale mourning as it marks the death of Husayn ibn Ali a grandson of Muhammad who was beheaded during the Battle of Karbala in 680 CE 4 Among Sunni Muslims Ashura is observed through celebratory fasting as it marks the day of salvation for Moses and the Israelites who successfully escaped from Biblical Egypt where they were enslaved and persecuted after Moses called upon God s power to part the Red Sea 5 While Husayn s death is also regarded as a great tragedy by Sunnis open displays of mourning are either discouraged or outright prohibited depending on the specific act 6 Ashuraع اش ور اء Procession for Ashura at Imam Hossein Square in Tehran Iran 2016 TypeIslamic Shia and Sunni SignificanceIn Shia Islam Mourning the death of Husayn ibn Ali during the Battle of Karbala in 680 CEIn Sunni Islam Celebrating the salvation of Moses and the Israelites from their enslavement in Biblical EgyptObservancesOne day mourning rituals Shias Two day fasting Sunnis Date10 Muharram2022 date8 August 1 2023 date28 JulyFrequencyAnnual Islamic calendar In Shia communities Ashura observances are typically carried out in group processions and are accompanied by a variety of rituals ranging from weeping and shrine pilgrimages to the more controversial acts of self flagellation and chest beating 7 In Sunni communities there are three rounds of fasting based on Muhammad s hadith on the day before Ashura on the day of Ashura and on the day after Ashura while fasting for Ashura is not obligatory it is strongly encouraged 8 9 In folk traditions across countries such as Morocco and Algeria the day of Ashura is variously celebrated with special foods bonfires or carnivals though these practices are not supported by religious authorities 10 Due to the drastically differing methods of observance between Sunnis and Shias the day of Ashura has come to acquire a political dimension in some Islamic countries and particularly in Iran where Shia Islam is the official state religion Additionally it has also served as a trigger for controversy as well as violent incidents between the two communities in countries such as Iraq and Pakistan Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origin 2 1 Sunni Islam 2 2 Shia Islam 2 2 1 Martyrdom of Ḥusayn 3 Significance 4 Remembrance 4 1 Azadari mourning rituals 4 2 Tuwairij run 4 2 1 History 4 2 2 Prohibition of the march 4 3 Popular customs 5 Socio political aspects 6 Terrorist attacks during Ashura 7 In the Gregorian calendar 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksEtymology EditThe root of the word Ashura means tenth in Semitic languages hence the name literally translated means the tenth day According to the Islamicist A J Wensinck the name is derived from the Hebrew ʿasōr with the Aramaic determinative ending 11 Origin EditSunni Islam Edit Fasting on Ashura the tenth day of the Islamic month of Muharram was a practice established by Muhammad in the early days of Islam that commemorates the parting of the Red Sea by Moses 12 13 Its beginning is recounted in a sahih hadith recorded through Ibn Abbas by al Bukhari When the Prophet ﷺ came to Medina he found the Jews fasting on the day of Ashura i e 10th of Muharram They used to say This is a great day on which Allah saved Moses and drowned the folk of Pharaoh Moses observed the fast on this day as a sign of gratitude to Allah The Prophet ﷺ said I am closer to Moses than they So he observed the fast on that day and ordered the Muslims to fast on it 14 This has been analysed as reflecting an encounter between Muhammad and some Jews fasting for Yom Kippur on the tenth day of Tishri in commemoration of Moses upon which he began to fast on that day and instruct fellow Muslims to fast 15 16 The practice would thus have been established at a time when the Islamic and Jewish calendars were synced 17 However Muhammad later received a revelation to adjust the Islamic calendar in the verse of Nasi and with this Ramadan the ninth month became the month of fasting and the obligation to fast on Ashura was dropped as Ashura became distinct from its Jewish predecessor of Yōm Kippur 12 17 According to a sahih hadith narrated through Aisha During the Pre lslamic Period of ignorance the Quraish used to observe fasting on the day of Ashura and the Prophet ﷺ himself used to observe fasting on it too But when he came to Medina he fasted on that day and ordered the Muslims to fast on it When the order of compulsory fasting in Ramadan was revealed fasting in Ramadan became an obligation and fasting on Ashura was given up and who ever wished to fast on it did so and whoever did not wish to fast on it did not fast 18 It is still widely considered desirable mustahab to fast on Ashura 10th day and also on Tasua 9th day 19 With hadith in Jami At Tirmidhi signifying that God forgives the sins of the year prior for people fasting Ashura 20 Shia Islam Edit Main article Commemoration of Husayn ibn Ali Martyrdom of Ḥusayn Edit Millions of Shia Muslims gather around the Husayn Mosque in Karbala after making the pilgrimage on foot during Arba een which is a Shia religious observation that occurs 40 days after the Day of Ashura Main article Battle of Karbala The Battle of Karbala took place during the period of decay resulting from the succession of Yazid I 21 22 Immediately after his succession Yazid instructed the governor of Medina to compel Ḥusayn and a few other prominent figures to pledge their allegiance Bay ah 23 However Ḥusayn refused to do this believing that Yazid was going against the teachings of Islam and changing the sunnah of Muhammad citation needed So accompanied by his household his sons brothers and the sons of Hasan he left Medina to seek asylum in Mecca 23 In Mecca Ḥusayn learned that Yazid had sent assassins to kill him during the Hajj To preserve the sanctity of the city and of the Kaaba Husayn abandoned his Hajj and encouraged his companions to follow him to Kufa without realising that the situation there had taken an adverse turn 23 On the way there Ḥusayn found that his messenger Muslim ibn Aqeel had been killed in Kufa and encountered the vanguard of the army of Ubaydullah ibn Ziyad Ḥe addressed the Kufan army reminding them that they had invited him to come there because they were without an Imam and told them that he intended to proceed to Kufa with their support however if they were now opposed to his coming he would return to Mecca When the army urged him to take another route he turned to the left and reached Karbala where the army forced him to stop at a location with little water 23 Governor Ubaydullah ibn Ziyad instructed Umar ibn Sa ad the head of the Kufan army to again offer Ḥusayn and his supporters the opportunity to swear allegiance to Yazid He also ordered Umar ibn Sa ad to cut Ḥusayn and his followers off from access to the water of the Euphrates 23 The next morning Umar ibn Sa ad arranged the Kufan army in battle formation 23 The Battle of Karbala lasted from sunrise to sunset on 10 October 680 Muharram 10 61 AH Husayn s small group of companions and family members around 72 men plus women and children note 1 25 26 fought against Umar ibn Sa ad s army and were killed near the Euphrates from which they were not allowed to drink The renowned historian Abu Rayḥan al Biruni states T hen fire was set to their camp and the bodies were trampled by the hoofs of the horses nobody in the history of the human kind has seen such atrocities 27 Once the Umayyad troops had murdered Ḥusayn and his male followers they looted the tents stripped the women of their jewellery and took the skin upon which Zain al Abidin was prostrate Ḥusayn s sister Zaynab was taken along with the enslaved women to the king in Damascus where she was imprisoned before being allowed to return to Medina after a year 28 29 Significance EditThe first assembly majlis of the Commemoration of Ḥusayn ibn ʿAli is said to have been held by Zaynab in prison In Damascus she is also reported to have delivered a poignant oration The prison sentence ended when Husayn s four year old daughter Ruqayyah bint Husayn who would often cry to be allowed to see her father died in captivity probably after seeing his mutilated head Her death caused an uproar in the city and fearing an uprising Yazid freed the captives 30 According to Ignac Goldziher Ever since the black day of Karbala the history of this family has been a continuous series of sufferings and persecutions These are narrated in poetry and prose in a richly cultivated literature of martyrologies More touching than the tears of the Shi is has even become an Arabic proverb 31 Imam Zayn Al Abidin said the following It is said that for forty years whenever food was placed before him he would weep One day a servant said to him O son of Allah s Messenger Is it not time for your sorrow to come to an end He replied Woe upon you Jacob the prophet had twelve sons and Allah made one of them disappear His eyes turned white from constant weeping his head turned grey out of sorrow and his back became bent in gloom note 2 though his son was alive in this world But I watched while my father my brother my uncle and seventeen members of my family were slaughtered all around me How should my sorrow come to an end note 3 32 33 Husayn s grave became a pilgrimage site for Shia Muslims within a few years of his death A tradition of pilgrimage to the shrine of Imam Husayn and the other Karbala martyrs known as Ziarat ashura quickly developed 34 The Umayyad and Abbasid caliphs tried to prevent construction of the shrines and discouraged pilgrimage 35 The tomb and its annexes were destroyed by the Abbasid caliph Al Mutawakkil in 850 851 and Shia pilgrimage was prohibited but shrines in Karbala and Najaf were built by the Buwayhid emir Adud al Daula in 979 80 36 Public rites of remembrance for Husayn s martyrdom developed from the early pilgrimages 37 Under the Buyid dynasty Mu izz ad Dawla officiated at a public commemoration of Ashura in Baghdad 38 These commemorations were also encouraged in Egypt by the Fatimid caliph al Aziz 39 With the recognition of the Twelvers as the official religion by the Safavids the Mourning of Muharram extended throughout the first ten days of Muharram 34 Remembrance by Jafaris Qizilbash Alevi Turks and Bektashis together in Ottoman Empire 40 Ashura was remembered by Jafaris Qizilbash Alevi Turks and Bektashis during the period of the Ottoman Empire 41 It is of particular significance to Twelver Shias and Alawites who consider Husayn the grandson of Muhammad Ahl al Bayt the third Imam to be the rightful successor of Muhammad citation needed According to Kamran Scot Aghaie The symbols and rituals of Ashura have evolved over time and have meant different things to different people However at the core of the symbolism of Ashura is the moral dichotomy between worldly injustice and corruption on the one hand and God centered justice piety sacrifice and perseverance on the other Also Shiite Muslims consider the remembrance of the tragic events of Ashura to be an important way of worshipping God in a spiritual or mystical way 42 Shia Muslims make pilgrimages on Ashura as they do forty days later on ʾArbaʿin to the Mashhad al Husayn the shrine in Karbala Iraq that is traditionally held to be Husayn s tomb This is a day of remembrance and mourning attire is worn This is a time for sorrow and for showing respect for the person s passing and it is also a time for self reflection when a believer commits themself completely to the mourning of Husayn Shia Muslims refrain from listening to or playing music since Arabic culture generally considers playing music during death rituals to be impolite Nor do they plan weddings or parties on this date Instead they mourn by crying and listening to recollections of the tragedy and sermons on how Husayn and his family were martyred This is intended to connect them with Husayn s suffering and martyrdom and the sacrifices he made to keep Islam alive Husayn s martyrdom is widely interpreted by Shia Muslims as a symbol of the struggle against injustice tyranny and oppression 43 Shia Muslims believe the Battle of Karbala was between the forces of good and evil with Husayn representing good and Yazid representing evil 44 Shia imams insist that Ashura should not be celebrated as a day of joy and festivity According to the Eighth Shia Imam Ali al Rida it must be observed as a day of rest sorrow and total disregard of worldly matters 45 Some of the events associated with Ashura are held in special congregation halls known as Imambargah and Hussainia 46 The World Sunni Movement celebrates this day as the National Martyrs Day of the Muslim nation under the direction of Syed Imam Hayat 47 Remembrance EditAzadari mourning rituals EditThe words Azadari Persian عزاداری which means mourning and lamentation and Majalis e Aza are used exclusively in connection with the remembrance ceremonies for the martyrdom of Imam Hussain Majalis e Aza also known as Aza e Husayn includes mourning congregations lamentations matam and all acts which express the grief and above all repulsion against what Yazid stood for 48 Ritual scourge for use in the Ashura procession Syria before 1974 These customs show solidarity with Husayn and his family Through them people mourn Husayn s death and express regret for the fact that they were not present at the battle to save Husayn and his family 49 50 Tuwairij run Edit The Tuwairij run is the name of an Ashura ceremony in which millions of people from around Tuwairij in 22 km run and mourning on side of the Imam Husayn Shrine 51 this ceremony is considered as the biggest observance of religious activities in the world 52 53 Its importance has grown since Moḥammad Mahdi Baḥr al ʿUlum was quoted as saying that Hujjat bin Hasan was present at this ceremony 54 History Edit The Tuwairij was first run on Ashura 1855 when people who were at the house of Seyyed Saleh Qazvini after the mourning ceremony and the recitation of the murder of Husain bin Ali cried so much from grief and sorrow that they asked Seyyed Saleh to run to the imam s shrine to offer his condolences Seyyed Saleh accepted their request and went to the shrine with all the mourners 55 56 57 58 Prohibition of the march EditThe march was banned by Saddam Hussein s Ba athist regime between 1991 and 2003 59 60 However despite the ban Tuwairij still continued and the regime executed many participants citation needed The event was permitted again after 2003 and participation from outside Iraq has steadily increased 61 Popular customs Edit See also Nakhl Gardani and Rawda Khwani After almost 12 centuries five main types of rituals were developed around the story of the battle of Karbala These rituals include memorial services majalis al ta ziya visits to Husayn s tomb in Karbala particularly on Ashura and on the fortieth day after the battle Ziyarat Ashura and Ziyarat al Arba in public mourning processions al mawakib al husayniyya representation of the battle as a play the shabih and personal flagellation tatbir 62 Some Shia Muslims believe that taking part in Ashura washes away their sins 63 A popular Shia saying has it that a single tear shed for Husayn washes away a hundred sins 64 For Shia Muslims the commemoration of Ashura is an event of intense grief and mourning Mourners congregate at a mosque for sorrowful poetic recitations such as marsiya noha latmiya and soaz performed in memory of the martyrdom of Husayn lamenting and grieving to the tune of beating drums and chants of Ya Hussain Ulamas also give sermons on the themes of Husayn s personality and position in Islam and the history of his uprising The Sheikh of the mosque retells the story of the Battle of Karbala to allow his listeners to relive the pain and sorrow endured by Husayn and his family and they read Maqtal Al Husayn 62 65 In some places such as Iran Iraq and the Arab states of the Persian Gulf passion plays known as Ta zieh 66 are performed reenacting the Battle of Karbala and the suffering and martyrdom of Husayn at the hands of Yazid A tadjah at Hosay in Port of Spain during the 1950s In the Caribbean islands of Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica Ashura known locally as Hussay or Hosay may commemorate the grandson of Muhammad but the celebration has taken on influences from other religions including Roman Catholicism Hinduism and the Baptist movement so that it has become a mixture of different cultures and religion The event is attended by both Muslims and non Muslims in an environment of mutual respect and tolerance 67 68 For the duration of the memorial events it is customary for mosques and individuals to provide free meals Nazri or Votive Food for everyone on certain nights 69 Certain traditional flagellation rituals such as Talwar zani talwar ka matam or sometimes tatbir use a sword Other rituals such as zanjeer zani or zanjeer matam use a zanjeer a chain with blades 70 This can be controversial and some Shia clerics have denounced the practice saying it creates a backward and negative image of their community Instead believers are encouraged to donate blood for those in need 71 A few Shia Muslims observe the event by donating blood Qame Zani and flagellating themselves 72 Indian Shia Muslims carry out a Ta ziya procession on day of Ashura in Barabanki India January 2009 A historic Ashura celebration in Jamaica which is known locally as Hussay or Hosay Shia Muslims carry out an Al am procession on the day of Ashura in Barabanki India January 2009 Nakhl gardani in cities and villages of IranSocio political aspects Edit Sham Ghariban the first night in mourn of Husayn in Imam Reza Shrine Mashhad Iran Commemoration of Ashura is of great socio political value to the Shia who have been a minority throughout their history According to the prevailing conditions at the time of the commemoration such reminiscences may become the basis for implicit dissent or even explicit protest This is what happened for instance during the Islamic Revolution in Iran the Lebanese Civil War the Lebanese resistance against the Israeli military presence and in the 1990s Uprising in Bahrain Sometimes Ashura commemorations overtly associate the memory of Al Husayn s martyrdom with the conditions of modern Islam and Muslims in reference to Husayn s famous quote on the day of Ashura Every day is Ashura every land is Karbala 73 From the period of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution 1905 1911 onward mourning gatherings increasingly took on a political aspect with preachers comparing the oppressors of the time with Imam Husayn s enemies the Umayyads 74 The political function of the commemorations was very marked in the years leading up to the Islamic Revolution of 1978 79 as well as during the revolution itself In addition the implicit self identification of the Muslim revolutionaries with Imam Husayn led to a blossoming of the cult of the martyr expressed most vividly perhaps in the vast cemetery of Behesht e Zahra to the south of Tehran where the martyrs of the revolution and the war against Iraq are buried 74 On the other hand some governments have banned this commemoration In the 1930s Reza Shah forbade it in Iran The regime of Saddam Hussein saw it as a potential threat and banned Ashura commemorations for many years 75 During the 1884 Hosay massacre 22 people were killed in Trinidad and Tobago when civilians attempted to carry out the Ashura rites locally known as Hosay in defiance of the British colonial authorities 76 Terrorist attacks during Ashura EditTerrorist attacks against Shia Muslims have occurred in several countries on the day of Ashura which has produced an interesting feedback effect in Shia history 77 1818 1820 Syed Ahmad Barelvi and Shah Ismail Dihlavi took up arms to stop the Ashura commemoration in North India They were the pioneers of anti Shia terrorism in the subcontinent Barbara Metcalf noted A second group of abuses Syed Ahmad held were those that originated from Shi i influence He particularly urged Muslims to give up the keeping of ta ziyahs the replicas of the tombs of the martyrs of Karbala taken in procession during the mourning ceremony of Muharram Muhammad Isma il wrote a true believer should regard the breaking of a tazia by force to be as virtuous an action as destroying idols If he cannot break them himself let him order others to do so If this even be out of his power let him at least detest and abhor them with his whole heart and soul Sayyid Ahmad himself is said no doubt with considerable exaggeration to have torn down thousands of imambaras the building that house the taziyahs 78 1940 Bomb thrown on Ashura Procession in Delhi 21 February 79 1994 explosion of a bomb at the Imam Reza shrine 20 June in Mashhad Iran 20 people killed 80 2004 bomb attacks during Shia pilgrimage to Karbala 2 March Karbala Iraq 178 people killed and 5000 injured 81 2008 clashes between Iraqi troops and members of a Shia cult 19 January Basra and Nasiriya Iraq 263 people killed 82 2009 explosion of a bomb during the Ashura procession 28 December Karachi Pakistan dozens of people killed and hundreds injured 83 2010 detention of 200 Shia Muslims at a shop house in Sri Gombak known as Hauzah Imam Ali ar Ridha Hauzah ArRidha 15 December Selangor Malaysia 84 2011 explosion of a bomb during the Ashura procession 28 December Hilla and Baghdad Iraq 5 December 30 people killed 85 2011 suicide attack during the Ashura procession Kabul Afghanistan 6 December 63 people killed 86 2015 three explosions during the Ashura procession mosque in Dhaka Bangladesh 24 October one person killed and 80 people injured 87 In the Gregorian calendar EditMain article Islamic calendar While Ashura always takes place on the same day of the Islamic calendar the date on the Gregorian calendar varies from year to year due to differences between the two calendars since the Islamic calendar is a lunar calendar and the Gregorian calendar is a solar calendar Furthermore the appearance of the crescent moon used to determine when each Islamic month begins varies from country to country due to their different geographic locations citation needed AH Gregorian date1444 2022 August 81445 2023 July 281446 2024 July 16Gallery Edit Shias mourning in Iran Shias procession in Tehran Shias mourning in Chiniot Shia s Tuwairij Run in Karbala Iraq Tabuiks being lowered in Pariaman Indonesia Shias congregating outside the Sydney Opera House in Australia Shias mourning in Qatif Saudi Arabia Shias Muslims observing Ashura in Syria Ashura Demonstration in Tehran in 1978 2016 Ashura mourning in Imam Husayn Square Ashura in AMU Aligarh IndiaSee also Edit Shia Islam portal Islam portalAl Tall Al Zaynabiyya Ashoura missile Ashura in Algeria Ashure Battle of Karbala Bibi Ka Alam Day of Tasu a Hobson Jobson Hosay List of casualties in Husayn s army at the Battle of Karbala Mourning of Muharram Passover Persecution of Shia Muslims Sebiba Yom Kippur Ziyarat AshuraNotes Edit Except his young son Ali who was severely ill during that battle 24 Quran 12 84 From Shaykh as Sadooq al Khisal quoted in al Ameen A yan IV 195 The same is quoted from Bin Shahraashoob s Manaqib in Bih ar al Anwar XLVI 108 cf similar accounts Ibid pp 108 10References EditCitations Edit a b c d When is Ashura Day Worldwide 30 September 2017 Archived from the original on 28 September 2019 Retrieved 21 August 2018 Holidays and observances in Iraq in 2022 www timeanddate com Islamic Calendar islamicfinder Morrow John Andrew Islamic Images and Ideas Essays on Sacred Symbolism McFarland amp Co 2013 pp 234 36 ISBN 978 0786458486 What is Ashura and how do Shia and Sunni Muslims observe it Middle East Eye Retrieved 13 September 2022 Lipka Michael Ghani Fatima Muslim holiday of Ashura brings into focus Shia Sunni differences Pew Research Center Retrieved 13 September 2022 Dramatic photos show how Shiite Muslims mark Ashura one of the most emotional events in Islam The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 13 September 2022 Ashura Definition History amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 13 September 2022 Fasting in Muharram Penny Appeal Retrieved 13 September 2022 M Maarouf 2010 Ashura and the Ritual Emancipation of Women in Morocco CESNUR 2010 A J Wensinck Ashura Encyclopaedia of Islam 2 Retrieved 8 June 2011 a b ʿAshuraʾ Islamic holy day Britannica Ashura fasting in Muharram 2022 Date history significance of Shia and Sunni Muslims fast in Muharram Hindustan Times 2 August 2022 Retrieved 21 August 2022 Sahih al Bukhari Book 60 Hadith 70 Morrow John Andrew Islamic Images and 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the Middle East and the Iranian Revolution International Journal of Middle East Studies 21 1 16 20 doi 10 1017 S0020743800032086 JSTOR 163637 S2CID 162459682 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ashura Gordon B Coutts Scottish American 1868 1937 A Large Oil on Canvas Depicting The Ashura Rituals Tangier Arabic عاشوراء ʻAshura Urdu عاشورا Persian عاشورا Turkish Asure Gunu Signed and inscribed Gordon Coutts TANGIER lower right c 1920 Is Aashura a day of mourning or rejoicing Ashura The Historical Significance and Rewards on Islam Freedom Events on the day of Ashura Ashura An article in Encyclopaedia Britannica Online What is Ashura BBC News What Is Ashura by Abdul Ilah As Saadi on Al Jazeera Ashura Australia Official website of the Annual Ashura Procession in Sydney Portals Religion Islam Education Psychology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ashura amp oldid 1154767827, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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