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Ghadir Khumm

The Ghadīr Khumm (Arabic: غَدِير خُم) refers to a gathering of Muslims to attend a sermon delivered by the Islamic prophet Muhammad on 16 March 632 CE (18 Dhu al-Hijjah 10 AH). The gathering is said to have taken place at the Ghadir Khumm, located near the then settlement of al-Juhfa on the path between Mecca and Medina, where Muhammad halted the caravan of Muslims returning from the Farewell Pilgrimage.

Ghadir Khumm
Date10/16 March 632 (18 Dhu al-Hijjah)
LocationAl-Juhfa, Hejaz, Arabia
TypeIslamic sermon
ThemeThe importance of the Qur'an and ahl al-bayt, Muhammad's esteem for Ali ibn Abi Talib – claimed by the Shia as evidence of the appointment of Ali as Muhammad's successor and as the completion of the message of Islam
OutcomeThe commemorative Eid al-Ghadir involving prayers, gift-giving, festive meals, recitation of the Du'a Nudba

In the sermon, made shortly before his death in June 632 CE (11 AH), Muhammad made a declaration in favor of Ali ibn Abi Talib, his cousin and son-in-law, uttering the words, "He whose mawla I am, Ali is his mawla." Shia Muslims believe this to be a clear indication that Ali was designated to lead the Muslim community after Muhammad and celebrate the anniversary of the event as Eid al-Ghadir. The Sunni community meanwhile regards the declaration as a simple affirmation of Muhammad's esteem for Ali.

Etymology

Ghadir Khumm refers both to the gathering of Muslims for Muhammad's sermon and its location, which was a pond (ghadir) fed by a nearby spring in a wadi known as Khumm, situated between Mecca and Medina.[1] The valley is believed to have been located near the settlement of al-Juhfa,[2] a strategic trijunction where routes from Medina, Egypt, and Iraq intersected.[3]

Some sources give the etymology that Khumm means 'deceiver', and the valley was so named because the water of the pond was saline and unfit for consumption.[4] At the time of the event, the original inhabitants of the region, namely, the Banu Khuza'a and Banu Kinana tribes, had already abandoned the area due to its poor pasturage and harsh climate.[1] Before Muhammad's address, the location was likely never used as a caravan stop.[5] In Shia sources, the harsh environment of Khumm may signify that Muhammad was tasked with an urgent announcement there, or that he wanted to brand the moment in the memories, or that he wanted many witnesses before the pilgrims parted their ways.[6]

Background

Ten years after Muhammad's migration to Medina and on the last days of Dhu al-Qadah, Muhammad performed the Hajj rituals in Mecca shortly before his death.[7] This Hajj ceremony has become known as the Farewell Pilgrimage.[7] In his sermon in Mecca (at Arafat)[8] and again later at the Ghadir Khumm by some accounts,[1][9][10] Muhammad alerted Muslims about his impending death. After the Hajj, he set off on the return journey from Mecca to Medina, accompanied by an entourage of Muslims. The announcement at the Ghadir Khumm took place during the return journey among a congregation of these Muslims,[2] possibly numbering in the tens of thousands.[11]

The sermon

At the Ghadir Khumm, Muhammad called the Muslim caravan to a halt ahead of the noon congregational prayer, before the pilgrims parted to go their separate ways,[2] asking for a dais to be raised, shaded by palm branches.[1] After the prayer,[12] Muhammad delivered a sermon to a large number of Muslims in which, as related in the Hadith al-Thaqalayn, he emphasized the importance of two things: the Qur'an, and his ahl al-bayt (lit.'people of the house', his family).[9][13][14][1][10] This hadith is widely reported by Sunni and Shia authorities. The version that appears in Musnad Ibn Hanbal, a canonical Sunni source, is as follows:

I left among you two treasures which, if you cling to them, you shall not be led into error after me. One of them is greater than the other: The book of God, which is a rope stretched from Heaven to Earth, and my progeny, my ahl al-bayt. These two shall not be parted until they return to the pool [of paradise, kawthar].[13]

Muhammad might have repeated this statement on multiple occasions,[13][15] and there are several slightly different versions of this hadith in Sunni sources.[13] For instance, the version that appears in as-Sunan al-kubra, another canonical Sunni source, also includes the warning, "Be careful how you treat the two [treasures] after me."[16] Then, taking Ali by the hand, Muhammad asked if he was not closer (awla) to the believers than they were to themselves,[1] possibly a reference to verse 33:6 of the Qur'an.[17][18] When they affirmed,[1] the prophet declared,

"He whose mawla I am, Ali is his mawla," (Arabic: من كنت مولاه فعلي مولاه)[2][19][12][1]

which is known as the Hadith of Walaya in Shia.[9] Muhammad might have repeated this sentence three or four more times, as reported in Musnad Ibn Hanbal.[14][16] He then continued, "O God, befriend the friend of Ali and be the enemy of his enemy," according to some sources,[9] including the Sunni Shawahid al-tanzil and the Shia Nahj al-haqq.[20] The Sunni Ibn Kathir (d. 774/1373) and also Ahmad ibn Hanbal (d. 241/855) in his musnad relate that Muhammad's companion Umar congratulated Ali after the sermon and told him, "You have now become mawla of every faithful man and woman."[21][1][22]

Historical accounts

 
The Investiture of Ali at Ghadir Khumm in the 14th-century Ilkhanid copy of al-Biruni's Chronology of Ancient Nations, illustrated by Ibn al-Kutbi

The historicity of the Ghadir Khumm is rarely disputed within the Muslim community,[1][23][24][25] as its recorded tradition is "among the most extensively acknowledged and substantiated" in classical Islamic sources, even as the statements made at the event remain open to interpretation.[2] Several variations exist in the classical sources,[2] and there is a significant weight of different accounts.[1] The narrative of the Ghadir Khumm is for instance preserved in Chronology of Ancient Nations by the Sunni al-Biruni (d.c. 1050), which survives in an early fourteenth-century Ilkhanid copy by Ibn al-Kutbi.[26] The Shia inclinations of those responsible for this copy are evident from its illustrations of Ali, including one entitled The Investiture of Ali at Ghadir Khumm.[27]

Accounts of the Ghadir Khumm appear elsewhere in both Sunni and Shia canonical works of hadith, and these accounts have at times been used interchangeably without sectarian prejudice. The Shia scholar Amini (d. 1970), for instance, relied on Sunni sources to list over a hundred companions and eighty-four tabi'un who had recounted the event,[28] most of whom are now counted as Sunnis.[29] Similar efforts were made by the Shia authors Musavi (d. 1888) and Mahfouz (d. 2006).[30] Some of the best accounts of the event include those by the historian Ya'qubi (d. 284/897-8), a sympathizer to the Alid cause,[1] and by the Sunni historian Ibn Asakir (d. 571/1176),[9][1] and also the accounts preserved in the collections of hadith, such as the canonical one by Ibn Hanbal.[1] A great number of related hadiths about the Ghadir Khumm were also collected together with their isnads by the Sunni Ibn Kathir.[1] To this list of Sunni sources, Jafri (d. 2019) adds the sunans of al-Tirmidhi (d. 892), al-Nasa'i (d. 915), Ibn Maja (d. 887), Abu Dawud (d. 889), and the works of Ibn al-Athir (d. 1232-3), Ibn Abd al-Barr (d. 1071), Ibn Abd Rabbih (d. 940), and Jahiz (d. 869).[31]

Some authors, such as al-Tabari (d. 310/923), Ibn Hisham (d. 218/833), and Ibn Sa'd (d. 168/784-5) nevertheless made little or no mention of the Ghadir Khumm,[1] perhaps because the story seem to justify the Shia claims.[9][32] Alternatively, it is probable that these writers abstained from commenting on the event to avoid angering their Sunni rulers by supporting the Shia claims about Ali's right to succession.[1][9][33] Western authors, whose works were based on these authors, consequently make little reference to the Ghadir Khumm.[1] Even though the Ghadir Khumm is absent from Tarikh al-Tabari, its Sunni author narrates that Muhammad publicly dismissed some complaints about the conduct of Ali in Yemen in the same "chronological slot" as the Ghadir Khumm and from an authority about the event. Maria M. Dakake suggests that the author deliberately replaced the Ghadir Khumm hadith with another one in praise of Ali but without any spiritual and legitimist implications in favor of Shia.[34] Similarly, as a senior employee of the Shia Buyids, al-Sharif al-Radi (d. 406/1016) does not mention the Ghadir Khumm in his Nahj al-Balagha, possibly to avoid the ire of the Sunni Abbasids.[9] Shah-Kazemi writes that some among the Ahl al-Hadith in the third-century (ninth-century) Baghdad denied the event,[17] which al-Tabari attempted to refute in his nonextant al-Walaya,[17][34] or his unfinished Kitab al-Fada'il.[1][29][9]

Links to the Qur'an

In Shia and some Sunni sources,[17] two verses of the Qur'an are associated with the Ghadir Khumm: verse 5:3, which announces the perfection of Islam, and verse 5:67, which urges Muhammad to fulfill his divine instructions.[35][9] The latter is sometimes known as the Verse of Tabligh, linked to the Ghadir Khumm by the Sunni al-Suyuti (d. 911/1505) and al-Razi (d. 606/1210)[36] and the Shia al-Qumi (d. 328/939),[37] among others.[35][9][1] The verse warns Muhammad,

O Messenger! Convey that which has been sent down unto thee from thy Lord, and if thou dost not, thou wilt not have conveyed His message. And God will protect thee from mankind. Surely God guides not disbelieving people.[38]

Verse 5:3 of the Qur'an, known as the Verse of Ikmal al-Din, is similarly linked to the Ghadir Khumm by the Sunni al-Tabari (d. 310/923) and al-Baghdadi (d. 463/1071)[39] and the Shia al-Tusi (d. 460/1067),[40] among others.[35][9] In contrast, Ya'qubi[41] and most Sunni commentators associate this verse with the Farewell Pilgrimage.[42] This verse includes the passage:

This day those who disbelieve have despaired of your religion. So fear them not, but fear Me! This day I have perfected for you your religion, and completed My Blessing upon you, and have approved for you as religion, Submission (Islam).[42]

Other literary references

The narrative of the Ghadir Khumm has also been preserved in the Arabic literature.[1][43][9] The earliest instance, according to Veccia Vaglieri (d. 1989) and Jafri, is a disputed poem attributed to Hassan ibn Thabit (d. 674),[1][29] who accompanied Muhammad during the pilgrimage.[29] According to Jafri, this poem has been preserved by Shia and some Sunni sources.[43] It includes the verse, "Stand up, O Ali, for I find only you to be an Imam and a guide after I [Muhammad] depart."[17][22][44] In regards to its authenticity, Amir-Moezzi does not find the attribution problematic,[9] while Jafri considers it highly improbable that these events would have passed unrecorded by Ibn Thabit, who was the "official poet-reporter of Muhammad."[43] The Shia al-Kumayt ibn Zayd (d. 126/743) is another early poet who composed verses on the same theme.[9]

Interpretation

While the authenticity of the Ghadir Khumm is not contested, its interpretation is a source of controversy between Sunni and Shia.[45] Mawla is a polysemous Arabic word, the meanings of which have varied in different periods and contexts.[46] Before the Islamic era, the term originally applied to any form of tribal association.[47] Later, the word was used in the Qur'an and the hadith literature with different meanings, including 'Lord', 'trustee', and 'helper'.[46] In the context of the Ghadir Khumm, however, the interpretation of the word mawla tends to be split along sectarian lines. Shia sources interpret this word as meaning 'leader', 'master', and 'patron', [29] while Sunni accounts of this sermon tend to offer little explanation,[1] or interpret the walaya in the hadith as love or support,[48] or substitute mawla with the word wali (of God, lit.'friend of God').[1][9][49] As such, Shias view the Ghadir Khumm as the investiture of Ali with Muhammad's religious and political authority,[50][51][17] while Sunnis regard it as a statement about the rapport between the two men,[52][9][53] or that Ali should execute Muhammad's will.[52]

On one occasion during his caliphate, Ali is known to have asked Muslims to come forward with their testimonies about the Ghadir Khumm.[54][55][56] In doing so, McHugo suggests, Ali publicly claimed to have been entrusted by Muhammad with a spiritual and political authority greater than others, particularly his predecessors.[54] The views of Madelung and Shah-Kazemi are similar.[56][57] According to Lesley Hazleton, an author on religion and politics, Muhammad's statement at the Ghadir Khumm, "O God, befriend the friend of Ali and be the enemy of his enemy," was the standard formula for pledging allegiance in the Middle East at that time.[58] Ali and his son Hasan both demanded a similar pledge of their supporters during their caliphates.[59]

Shia view

 
Modern Shia artwork depicting Ghadir Khum and the appointment of Ali, sourced from the website of Iran's leader, Ayatollah Khamenei

For Shia Muslims, the Ghadir Khumm signifies the investiture of Ali with the guardianship (walayat) of the Muslim community after Muhammad.[60] In particular, for them this was his most public announcement about the succession of Ali.[61][62] Shia accounts describe how Umar and other companions visited Ali after the sermon to congratulate and pledge their allegiance to him, even addressing him as amir al-mu'minin (lit.'leader of the believers').[1][63]

For Shias, the dramatic announcement at the Ghadir Khumm to thousands of Muslims in the heat of day hardly support its Sunni interpretation of love (muhabba) and support (nusra) for Ali.[48] These two are the obligations of every Muslim towards other Muslims, not just Ali, thus weakening the Sunni interpretation again.[48] Alternatively, the Sunni Ibn Kathir (d. 1373) considers the Ghadir Khumm a response to the complaints about Ali during his expedition to Yemen,[1] while the Shia Ibn Shahrashub (d. 1192) counters that Muhammad had already dismissed those objections, "Do not complain about Ali, for he is sternly scrupulous only for the sake of God."[17] The standard practice in Shia theology is to eliminate possible meanings of mawla in the hadith one by one until only the meaning of authority remains.[41]

About the linked Qu'ranic verses, Tabatabai (d. 1981), the author of the seminal Shia exegesis al-Mizan, attempts to prove in his work that "today" in the Verse of Ikmal (5:3) is the day of the Ghadir Khumm. Noting the despair of unbelievers and the enemies of Islam in this verse,[64] he argues that this despair must have followed the appointment of Ali to rightly guide the nascent Muslim community after the prophet. He adds that the perfection of religion in the verse is the guardianship (wilaya) of Ali and the fulfillment of an earlier divine promise in verse 24:55 of the Qur'an.[65] Similar views are given by other Shia theologians.[66][67]

Regarding the Verse of Tabligh (5:67), Shia exegeses suggest that Muhammad was concerned about implementing his divine instructions to announce Ali as his successor, fearing the reaction of some of his companions. It was only after the revelation of this verse that Muhammad gave his sermon at the Ghadir Khumm, according to these sources.[37] Hossein Nasr and his coauthors view as "most plausible" a link between the Verse of Tabligh and the events that followed the Farewell Pilgrimage, including the Ghadir Khumm. Their justification is that chapter (sura) five of the Qur'an is often associated with Muhammad's final years in Medina.[68]

Sunni view

Among Sunni Muslims, the Ghadir Khumm is not associated with the succession to Muhammad.[69] Instead, the event is often connected with Ali's campaign in Yemen, from which he had just returned prior to the Farewell Pilgrimage. Ali is said to have strictly imposed the Islamic guidelines for a fair distribution of booty which reportedly angered some soldiers. The Sunni historian Ibn Kathir, for instance, sides with Ali in his account of the episode but also suggests that the Ghadir Khumm sermon was simply intended as a public declaration of Muhammad's love and esteem for Ali in light of the earlier events.[1] Accepting this explanation as such, that Muhammad equated Ali with himself in an extraordinary announcement at the Ghadir Khumm still provides a strong basis for the Shia claims, suggests Jafri.[53]

For Sunnis, it is also unimaginable that most companions would act wrongly and ignore a clear appointment of Ali at the Ghadir Khumm.[50] Shaban and Poonawala suggest that the Muslim community did not act as if they had heard about it,[70][71] and Shaban and Lewis (d. 2018) thus consider this designation improbable.[70][72] In contrast, Amir-Moezzi writes that the Shia Amini has compiled volumes of Sunni and Shia historical evidence,[9] in support of the Shia interpretation of the Ghadir Khumm.[35] Noting that Abu Bakr (r. 632–634) designated Umar (r. 634–644) to succeed him, Lalani also suggests that Muhammad did appoint a successor but his choice was ignored by the community.[73] The view of Abbas is similar,[74] and the Shia view is also that the community ignored the designation of Ali.[75] They add that numerical strength cannot be a factor in a tribal community where decisions are made by tribal leaders,[50] and that majority does not imply legitimacy in the Qur'an.[76] Some have instead argued that Muhammad would have made such an important announcement earlier at Hajj, while Abbas views this as criticizing Muhammad's judgement.[22]

Sunni commentators also argue that the Verse of Ikmal (5:3) refers to either the establishment of the rites for Hajj during the Farewell Pilgrimage or the closure of Islamic legislation with the revelation of dietary instructions in the remainder of this verse. A criticism of this view, voiced by Tabatabai, is that it ignores the additional injunctions about riba which were revealed after the Verse of Ikmal by some accounts.[77][40] Most Sunni scholars meanwhile link the Verse of Tabligh (6:67) to Muhammad's precarious position in Mecca during the early years of Islam,[37] or his interactions with the People of the Book (adherents of earlier monotheistic faiths),[38] while Nasr et al. consider it more likely that this verse is associated with the Farewell Pilgrimage or the Ghadir Khumm.[68]

Eid al-Ghadir

While 18 Dhu al-Hijjah is not a significant day on the Sunni calendar, Shia Muslims celebrate this day as the Eid al-Ghadir, the day on which Islam was completed as a religion by the appointment of Ali as Muhammad's successor.[1][9] Shias honor the holiday by making pilgrimages to Karbala.[1][69]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Veccia Vaglieri 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Lalani 2011.
  3. ^ Eliash 1966, p. 144.
  4. ^ Williams 1994, p. 171.
  5. ^ Donaldson 1933, p. 5.
  6. ^ Haider 2014, p. 60.
  7. ^ a b Stewart 2002.
  8. ^ Abbas 2021, p. 79.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Amir-Moezzi 2022.
  10. ^ a b Campo 2009, p. 257.
  11. ^ Shah-Kazemi 2014.
  12. ^ a b Mavani 2013, p. 79.
  13. ^ a b c d Momen 1985, p. 16.
  14. ^ a b Mavani 2013, p. 80.
  15. ^ Abbas 2021, pp. 81, 209.
  16. ^ a b Abbas 2021, p. 81.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g Shah-Kazemi 2015.
  18. ^ Dakake 2008, p. 34.
  19. ^ Jafri 1979, p. 18.
  20. ^ Mavani 2013, pp. 70, 98n11.
  21. ^ Momen 1985, p. 15.
  22. ^ a b c Abbas 2021, p. 82.
  23. ^ Jafri 1979, pp. 18–20.
  24. ^ Mavani 2013, p. 20.
  25. ^ Dakake 2008, p. 35.
  26. ^ Soucek 1975, p. 156.
  27. ^ Robinson 2000, p. 129–146.
  28. ^ Najafabadi 2010.
  29. ^ a b c d e Jafri 1979, p. 20.
  30. ^ Jafri 1979, pp. 20, 231.
  31. ^ Jafri 1979, pp. 19–20.
  32. ^ Dakake 2008, p. 36.
  33. ^ Dakake 2008, p. 38.
  34. ^ a b Dakake 2008, p. 39.
  35. ^ a b c d Mavani 2013, p. 70.
  36. ^ Abbas 2021, pp. 80, 209n27.
  37. ^ a b c Nasr et al. 2015, p. 718.
  38. ^ a b Nasr et al. 2015, p. 717.
  39. ^ Abbas 2021, pp. 83, 210n38.
  40. ^ a b Nasr et al. 2015, p. 650.
  41. ^ a b Dakake 2008, p. 46.
  42. ^ a b Nasr et al. 2015, p. 648.
  43. ^ a b c Jafri 1979, p. 19.
  44. ^ Haider 2014, p. 61.
  45. ^ Al-Shahrastani, Gimaret & Monnot 1986, p. 479.
  46. ^ a b Wensinck & Crone 2022.
  47. ^ Goldziher 1889, p. 105.
  48. ^ a b c Dakake 2008, p. 45.
  49. ^ Afsaruddin 2006.
  50. ^ a b c Mavani 2013, p. 2.
  51. ^ Dakake 2008, p. 47.
  52. ^ a b Afsaruddin & Nasr 2022.
  53. ^ a b Jafri 1979, p. 21.
  54. ^ a b McHugo 2018, §2.IV.
  55. ^ Lalani 2006, p. 590.
  56. ^ a b Madelung 1997, p. 253.
  57. ^ Shah-Kazemi 2022, p. 79.
  58. ^ Hazleton 2009, p. 77.
  59. ^ Madelung 1997, p. 312.
  60. ^ Tabatabai 1977, p. 35.
  61. ^ Donaldson 1933, p. XXV.
  62. ^ Sanders 1994, p. 122.
  63. ^ Pierce 2016, p. 75.
  64. ^ Tabatabai 1977, p. 155.
  65. ^ Mavani 2013, pp. 70–1.
  66. ^ Shah-Kazemi 2022, p. 65.
  67. ^ Amir-Moezzi 2020, pp. 237–9.
  68. ^ a b Nasr et al. 2015, p. 719.
  69. ^ a b Campo 2009, pp. 257–8.
  70. ^ a b Shaban 1976, p. 16.
  71. ^ Poonawala 1982.
  72. ^ Lewis 1968, p. 50.
  73. ^ Lalani 2000, p. 6.
  74. ^ Abbas 2021, p. 95.
  75. ^ Daftary 2014, p. 28.
  76. ^ Mavani 2013, pp. 2, 25.
  77. ^ Mavani 2013, p. 71.

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  • Lalani, Arzina R. (2000). Early Shi'i Thought: The Teachings of Imam Muhammad al-Baqir. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781860644344.
  • Shah-Kazemi, Reza (2022). Imam 'Ali: Concise History, Timeless Mystery. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 9781784539368.
  • Amir-Moezzi, Mohammad Ali (2020). The Spirituality of Shi'i Islam: Beliefs and Practices. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 9780755610273.
  • Haider, Najam (2014). Shi'i Islam: An Introduction. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107031432.
  • Daftary, Farhad (2014). A History of Shi'i Islam. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781780768410.

External links

  • Ghadir Khumm academic summary and reading list - from Oxford Bibliographies

Coordinates: 22°49′30″N 39°04′30″E / 22.82500°N 39.07500°E / 22.82500; 39.07500

ghadir, khumm, ghadīr, khumm, arabic, ير, refers, gathering, muslims, attend, sermon, delivered, islamic, prophet, muhammad, march, hijjah, gathering, said, have, taken, place, located, near, then, settlement, juhfa, path, between, mecca, medina, where, muhamm. The Ghadir Khumm Arabic غ د ير خ م refers to a gathering of Muslims to attend a sermon delivered by the Islamic prophet Muhammad on 16 March 632 CE 18 Dhu al Hijjah 10 AH The gathering is said to have taken place at the Ghadir Khumm located near the then settlement of al Juhfa on the path between Mecca and Medina where Muhammad halted the caravan of Muslims returning from the Farewell Pilgrimage Ghadir KhummDate10 16 March 632 18 Dhu al Hijjah LocationAl Juhfa Hejaz ArabiaTypeIslamic sermonThemeThe importance of the Qur an and ahl al bayt Muhammad s esteem for Ali ibn Abi Talib claimed by the Shia as evidence of the appointment of Ali as Muhammad s successor and as the completion of the message of IslamOutcomeThe commemorative Eid al Ghadir involving prayers gift giving festive meals recitation of the Du a NudbaIn the sermon made shortly before his death in June 632 CE 11 AH Muhammad made a declaration in favor of Ali ibn Abi Talib his cousin and son in law uttering the words He whose mawla I am Ali is his mawla Shia Muslims believe this to be a clear indication that Ali was designated to lead the Muslim community after Muhammad and celebrate the anniversary of the event as Eid al Ghadir The Sunni community meanwhile regards the declaration as a simple affirmation of Muhammad s esteem for Ali Contents 1 Etymology 2 Background 3 The sermon 4 Historical accounts 4 1 Links to the Qur an 4 2 Other literary references 5 Interpretation 5 1 Shia view 5 2 Sunni view 6 Eid al Ghadir 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Sources 9 External linksEtymology EditMain article Farewell Pilgrimage Ghadir Khumm refers both to the gathering of Muslims for Muhammad s sermon and its location which was a pond ghadir fed by a nearby spring in a wadi known as Khumm situated between Mecca and Medina 1 The valley is believed to have been located near the settlement of al Juhfa 2 a strategic trijunction where routes from Medina Egypt and Iraq intersected 3 Some sources give the etymology that Khumm means deceiver and the valley was so named because the water of the pond was saline and unfit for consumption 4 At the time of the event the original inhabitants of the region namely the Banu Khuza a and Banu Kinana tribes had already abandoned the area due to its poor pasturage and harsh climate 1 Before Muhammad s address the location was likely never used as a caravan stop 5 In Shia sources the harsh environment of Khumm may signify that Muhammad was tasked with an urgent announcement there or that he wanted to brand the moment in the memories or that he wanted many witnesses before the pilgrims parted their ways 6 Background EditTen years after Muhammad s migration to Medina and on the last days of Dhu al Qadah Muhammad performed the Hajj rituals in Mecca shortly before his death 7 This Hajj ceremony has become known as the Farewell Pilgrimage 7 In his sermon in Mecca at Arafat 8 and again later at the Ghadir Khumm by some accounts 1 9 10 Muhammad alerted Muslims about his impending death After the Hajj he set off on the return journey from Mecca to Medina accompanied by an entourage of Muslims The announcement at the Ghadir Khumm took place during the return journey among a congregation of these Muslims 2 possibly numbering in the tens of thousands 11 The sermon EditAt the Ghadir Khumm Muhammad called the Muslim caravan to a halt ahead of the noon congregational prayer before the pilgrims parted to go their separate ways 2 asking for a dais to be raised shaded by palm branches 1 After the prayer 12 Muhammad delivered a sermon to a large number of Muslims in which as related in the Hadith al Thaqalayn he emphasized the importance of two things the Qur an and his ahl al bayt lit people of the house his family 9 13 14 1 10 This hadith is widely reported by Sunni and Shia authorities The version that appears in Musnad Ibn Hanbal a canonical Sunni source is as follows I left among you two treasures which if you cling to them you shall not be led into error after me One of them is greater than the other The book of God which is a rope stretched from Heaven to Earth and my progeny my ahl al bayt These two shall not be parted until they return to the pool of paradise kawthar 13 Muhammad might have repeated this statement on multiple occasions 13 15 and there are several slightly different versions of this hadith in Sunni sources 13 For instance the version that appears in as Sunan al kubra another canonical Sunni source also includes the warning Be careful how you treat the two treasures after me 16 Then taking Ali by the hand Muhammad asked if he was not closer awla to the believers than they were to themselves 1 possibly a reference to verse 33 6 of the Qur an 17 18 When they affirmed 1 the prophet declared He whose mawla I am Ali is his mawla Arabic من كنت مولاه فعلي مولاه 2 19 12 1 which is known as the Hadith of Walaya in Shia 9 Muhammad might have repeated this sentence three or four more times as reported in Musnad Ibn Hanbal 14 16 He then continued O God befriend the friend of Ali and be the enemy of his enemy according to some sources 9 including the Sunni Shawahid al tanzil and the Shia Nahj al haqq 20 The Sunni Ibn Kathir d 774 1373 and also Ahmad ibn Hanbal d 241 855 in his musnad relate that Muhammad s companion Umar congratulated Ali after the sermon and told him You have now become mawla of every faithful man and woman 21 1 22 Historical accounts Edit The Investiture of Ali at Ghadir Khumm in the 14th century Ilkhanid copy of al Biruni s Chronology of Ancient Nations illustrated by Ibn al Kutbi The historicity of the Ghadir Khumm is rarely disputed within the Muslim community 1 23 24 25 as its recorded tradition is among the most extensively acknowledged and substantiated in classical Islamic sources even as the statements made at the event remain open to interpretation 2 Several variations exist in the classical sources 2 and there is a significant weight of different accounts 1 The narrative of the Ghadir Khumm is for instance preserved in Chronology of Ancient Nations by the Sunni al Biruni d c 1050 which survives in an early fourteenth century Ilkhanid copy by Ibn al Kutbi 26 The Shia inclinations of those responsible for this copy are evident from its illustrations of Ali including one entitled The Investiture of Ali at Ghadir Khumm 27 Accounts of the Ghadir Khumm appear elsewhere in both Sunni and Shia canonical works of hadith and these accounts have at times been used interchangeably without sectarian prejudice The Shia scholar Amini d 1970 for instance relied on Sunni sources to list over a hundred companions and eighty four tabi un who had recounted the event 28 most of whom are now counted as Sunnis 29 Similar efforts were made by the Shia authors Musavi d 1888 and Mahfouz d 2006 30 Some of the best accounts of the event include those by the historian Ya qubi d 284 897 8 a sympathizer to the Alid cause 1 and by the Sunni historian Ibn Asakir d 571 1176 9 1 and also the accounts preserved in the collections of hadith such as the canonical one by Ibn Hanbal 1 A great number of related hadiths about the Ghadir Khumm were also collected together with their isnad s by the Sunni Ibn Kathir 1 To this list of Sunni sources Jafri d 2019 adds the sunan s of al Tirmidhi d 892 al Nasa i d 915 Ibn Maja d 887 Abu Dawud d 889 and the works of Ibn al Athir d 1232 3 Ibn Abd al Barr d 1071 Ibn Abd Rabbih d 940 and Jahiz d 869 31 Some authors such as al Tabari d 310 923 Ibn Hisham d 218 833 and Ibn Sa d d 168 784 5 nevertheless made little or no mention of the Ghadir Khumm 1 perhaps because the story seem to justify the Shia claims 9 32 Alternatively it is probable that these writers abstained from commenting on the event to avoid angering their Sunni rulers by supporting the Shia claims about Ali s right to succession 1 9 33 Western authors whose works were based on these authors consequently make little reference to the Ghadir Khumm 1 Even though the Ghadir Khumm is absent from Tarikh al Tabari its Sunni author narrates that Muhammad publicly dismissed some complaints about the conduct of Ali in Yemen in the same chronological slot as the Ghadir Khumm and from an authority about the event Maria M Dakake suggests that the author deliberately replaced the Ghadir Khumm hadith with another one in praise of Ali but without any spiritual and legitimist implications in favor of Shia 34 Similarly as a senior employee of the Shia Buyids al Sharif al Radi d 406 1016 does not mention the Ghadir Khumm in his Nahj al Balagha possibly to avoid the ire of the Sunni Abbasids 9 Shah Kazemi writes that some among the Ahl al Hadith in the third century ninth century Baghdad denied the event 17 which al Tabari attempted to refute in his nonextant al Walaya 17 34 or his unfinished Kitab al Fada il 1 29 9 Links to the Qur an Edit In Shia and some Sunni sources 17 two verses of the Qur an are associated with the Ghadir Khumm verse 5 3 which announces the perfection of Islam and verse 5 67 which urges Muhammad to fulfill his divine instructions 35 9 The latter is sometimes known as the Verse of Tabligh linked to the Ghadir Khumm by the Sunni al Suyuti d 911 1505 and al Razi d 606 1210 36 and the Shia al Qumi d 328 939 37 among others 35 9 1 The verse warns Muhammad O Messenger Convey that which has been sent down unto thee from thy Lord and if thou dost not thou wilt not have conveyed His message And God will protect thee from mankind Surely God guides not disbelieving people 38 Verse 5 3 of the Qur an known as the Verse of Ikmal al Din is similarly linked to the Ghadir Khumm by the Sunni al Tabari d 310 923 and al Baghdadi d 463 1071 39 and the Shia al Tusi d 460 1067 40 among others 35 9 In contrast Ya qubi 41 and most Sunni commentators associate this verse with the Farewell Pilgrimage 42 This verse includes the passage This day those who disbelieve have despaired of your religion So fear them not but fear Me This day I have perfected for you your religion and completed My Blessing upon you and have approved for you as religion Submission Islam 42 Other literary references Edit The narrative of the Ghadir Khumm has also been preserved in the Arabic literature 1 43 9 The earliest instance according to Veccia Vaglieri d 1989 and Jafri is a disputed poem attributed to Hassan ibn Thabit d 674 1 29 who accompanied Muhammad during the pilgrimage 29 According to Jafri this poem has been preserved by Shia and some Sunni sources 43 It includes the verse Stand up O Ali for I find only you to be an Imam and a guide after I Muhammad depart 17 22 44 In regards to its authenticity Amir Moezzi does not find the attribution problematic 9 while Jafri considers it highly improbable that these events would have passed unrecorded by Ibn Thabit who was the official poet reporter of Muhammad 43 The Shia al Kumayt ibn Zayd d 126 743 is another early poet who composed verses on the same theme 9 Interpretation EditWhile the authenticity of the Ghadir Khumm is not contested its interpretation is a source of controversy between Sunni and Shia 45 Mawla is a polysemous Arabic word the meanings of which have varied in different periods and contexts 46 Before the Islamic era the term originally applied to any form of tribal association 47 Later the word was used in the Qur an and the hadith literature with different meanings including Lord trustee and helper 46 In the context of the Ghadir Khumm however the interpretation of the word mawla tends to be split along sectarian lines Shia sources interpret this word as meaning leader master and patron 29 while Sunni accounts of this sermon tend to offer little explanation 1 or interpret the walaya in the hadith as love or support 48 or substitute mawla with the word wali of God lit friend of God 1 9 49 As such Shias view the Ghadir Khumm as the investiture of Ali with Muhammad s religious and political authority 50 51 17 while Sunnis regard it as a statement about the rapport between the two men 52 9 53 or that Ali should execute Muhammad s will 52 On one occasion during his caliphate Ali is known to have asked Muslims to come forward with their testimonies about the Ghadir Khumm 54 55 56 In doing so McHugo suggests Ali publicly claimed to have been entrusted by Muhammad with a spiritual and political authority greater than others particularly his predecessors 54 The views of Madelung and Shah Kazemi are similar 56 57 According to Lesley Hazleton an author on religion and politics Muhammad s statement at the Ghadir Khumm O God befriend the friend of Ali and be the enemy of his enemy was the standard formula for pledging allegiance in the Middle East at that time 58 Ali and his son Hasan both demanded a similar pledge of their supporters during their caliphates 59 Shia view Edit Modern Shia artwork depicting Ghadir Khum and the appointment of Ali sourced from the website of Iran s leader Ayatollah Khamenei For Shia Muslims the Ghadir Khumm signifies the investiture of Ali with the guardianship walayat of the Muslim community after Muhammad 60 In particular for them this was his most public announcement about the succession of Ali 61 62 Shia accounts describe how Umar and other companions visited Ali after the sermon to congratulate and pledge their allegiance to him even addressing him as amir al mu minin lit leader of the believers 1 63 For Shias the dramatic announcement at the Ghadir Khumm to thousands of Muslims in the heat of day hardly support its Sunni interpretation of love muhabba and support nusra for Ali 48 These two are the obligations of every Muslim towards other Muslims not just Ali thus weakening the Sunni interpretation again 48 Alternatively the Sunni Ibn Kathir d 1373 considers the Ghadir Khumm a response to the complaints about Ali during his expedition to Yemen 1 while the Shia Ibn Shahrashub d 1192 counters that Muhammad had already dismissed those objections Do not complain about Ali for he is sternly scrupulous only for the sake of God 17 The standard practice in Shia theology is to eliminate possible meanings of mawla in the hadith one by one until only the meaning of authority remains 41 About the linked Qu ranic verses Tabatabai d 1981 the author of the seminal Shia exegesis al Mizan attempts to prove in his work that today in the Verse of Ikmal 5 3 is the day of the Ghadir Khumm Noting the despair of unbelievers and the enemies of Islam in this verse 64 he argues that this despair must have followed the appointment of Ali to rightly guide the nascent Muslim community after the prophet He adds that the perfection of religion in the verse is the guardianship wilaya of Ali and the fulfillment of an earlier divine promise in verse 24 55 of the Qur an 65 Similar views are given by other Shia theologians 66 67 Regarding the Verse of Tabligh 5 67 Shia exegeses suggest that Muhammad was concerned about implementing his divine instructions to announce Ali as his successor fearing the reaction of some of his companions It was only after the revelation of this verse that Muhammad gave his sermon at the Ghadir Khumm according to these sources 37 Hossein Nasr and his coauthors view as most plausible a link between the Verse of Tabligh and the events that followed the Farewell Pilgrimage including the Ghadir Khumm Their justification is that chapter sura five of the Qur an is often associated with Muhammad s final years in Medina 68 Sunni view Edit Among Sunni Muslims the Ghadir Khumm is not associated with the succession to Muhammad 69 Instead the event is often connected with Ali s campaign in Yemen from which he had just returned prior to the Farewell Pilgrimage Ali is said to have strictly imposed the Islamic guidelines for a fair distribution of booty which reportedly angered some soldiers The Sunni historian Ibn Kathir for instance sides with Ali in his account of the episode but also suggests that the Ghadir Khumm sermon was simply intended as a public declaration of Muhammad s love and esteem for Ali in light of the earlier events 1 Accepting this explanation as such that Muhammad equated Ali with himself in an extraordinary announcement at the Ghadir Khumm still provides a strong basis for the Shia claims suggests Jafri 53 For Sunnis it is also unimaginable that most companions would act wrongly and ignore a clear appointment of Ali at the Ghadir Khumm 50 Shaban and Poonawala suggest that the Muslim community did not act as if they had heard about it 70 71 and Shaban and Lewis d 2018 thus consider this designation improbable 70 72 In contrast Amir Moezzi writes that the Shia Amini has compiled volumes of Sunni and Shia historical evidence 9 in support of the Shia interpretation of the Ghadir Khumm 35 Noting that Abu Bakr r 632 634 designated Umar r 634 644 to succeed him Lalani also suggests that Muhammad did appoint a successor but his choice was ignored by the community 73 The view of Abbas is similar 74 and the Shia view is also that the community ignored the designation of Ali 75 They add that numerical strength cannot be a factor in a tribal community where decisions are made by tribal leaders 50 and that majority does not imply legitimacy in the Qur an 76 Some have instead argued that Muhammad would have made such an important announcement earlier at Hajj while Abbas views this as criticizing Muhammad s judgement 22 Sunni commentators also argue that the Verse of Ikmal 5 3 refers to either the establishment of the rites for Hajj during the Farewell Pilgrimage or the closure of Islamic legislation with the revelation of dietary instructions in the remainder of this verse A criticism of this view voiced by Tabatabai is that it ignores the additional injunctions about riba which were revealed after the Verse of Ikmal by some accounts 77 40 Most Sunni scholars meanwhile link the Verse of Tabligh 6 67 to Muhammad s precarious position in Mecca during the early years of Islam 37 or his interactions with the People of the Book adherents of earlier monotheistic faiths 38 while Nasr et al consider it more likely that this verse is associated with the Farewell Pilgrimage or the Ghadir Khumm 68 Eid al Ghadir EditMain article Eid al Ghadir While 18 Dhu al Hijjah is not a significant day on the Sunni calendar Shia Muslims celebrate this day as the Eid al Ghadir the day on which Islam was completed as a religion by the appointment of Ali as Muhammad s successor 1 9 Shias honor the holiday by making pilgrimages to Karbala 1 69 See also EditSuccession of Muhammad Verse of Ikmal al Din Verse of Tabligh Verse of Wilaya Hadith of the Twelve Successors Hadith of Mubahala Hadith of Fatima tablet Hadith of Warning Ahl al Kisa Portals Islam shia IslamReferences EditCitations Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Veccia Vaglieri 2022 a b c d e f Lalani 2011 Eliash 1966 p 144 Williams 1994 p 171 Donaldson 1933 p 5 Haider 2014 p 60 a b Stewart 2002 Abbas 2021 p 79 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Amir Moezzi 2022 a b Campo 2009 p 257 Shah Kazemi 2014 a b Mavani 2013 p 79 a b c d Momen 1985 p 16 a b Mavani 2013 p 80 Abbas 2021 pp 81 209 a b Abbas 2021 p 81 a b c d e f g Shah Kazemi 2015 Dakake 2008 p 34 Jafri 1979 p 18 Mavani 2013 pp 70 98n11 Momen 1985 p 15 a b c Abbas 2021 p 82 Jafri 1979 pp 18 20 Mavani 2013 p 20 Dakake 2008 p 35 Soucek 1975 p 156 Robinson 2000 p 129 146 Najafabadi 2010 a b c d e Jafri 1979 p 20 Jafri 1979 pp 20 231 Jafri 1979 pp 19 20 Dakake 2008 p 36 Dakake 2008 p 38 a b Dakake 2008 p 39 a b c d Mavani 2013 p 70 Abbas 2021 pp 80 209n27 a b c Nasr et al 2015 p 718 a b Nasr et al 2015 p 717 Abbas 2021 pp 83 210n38 a b Nasr et al 2015 p 650 a b Dakake 2008 p 46 a b Nasr et al 2015 p 648 a b c Jafri 1979 p 19 Haider 2014 p 61 Al Shahrastani Gimaret amp Monnot 1986 p 479 a b Wensinck amp Crone 2022 Goldziher 1889 p 105 a b c Dakake 2008 p 45 Afsaruddin 2006 a b c Mavani 2013 p 2 Dakake 2008 p 47 a b Afsaruddin amp Nasr 2022 a b Jafri 1979 p 21 a b McHugo 2018 2 IV Lalani 2006 p 590 a b Madelung 1997 p 253 Shah Kazemi 2022 p 79 Hazleton 2009 p 77 Madelung 1997 p 312 Tabatabai 1977 p 35 Donaldson 1933 p XXV Sanders 1994 p 122 Pierce 2016 p 75 Tabatabai 1977 p 155 Mavani 2013 pp 70 1 Shah Kazemi 2022 p 65 Amir Moezzi 2020 pp 237 9 a b Nasr et al 2015 p 719 a b Campo 2009 pp 257 8 a b Shaban 1976 p 16 Poonawala 1982 Lewis 1968 p 50 Lalani 2000 p 6 Abbas 2021 p 95 Daftary 2014 p 28 Mavani 2013 pp 2 25 Mavani 2013 p 71 Sources Edit Abbas Hassan 2021 The Prophet s Heir The Life of Ali ibn Abi Talib Yale University Press ISBN 9780300252057 Al Shahrastani Muhammad Gimaret Daniel Monnot Guy 1986 Livre des religions et des sects Vol 1 Peeters Publishers ISBN 9789068310658 Amir Moezzi Mohammad Ali 2022 Ghadir Khumm Encyclopaedia of Islam Third ed Brill Reference Online Campo Juan Eduardo 2009 Ghadir Khumm Encyclopedia of Islam Infobase Publishing pp 257 8 ISBN 9781438126968 Eliash Joseph 1966 Ali b Abi Talib in Ithna Ashari Shi I belief Thesis London School of Oriental and African Studies Donaldson Dwight M 1933 Luzac s Oriental Series Vol VI The Shi ite Religion Luzac amp Company Goldziher Ignac 1889 Muhammedanische Studien Halle Hazleton Lesley 2009 After the Prophet The Epic Story of the Shia Sunni Split in Islam Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 9780385532099 Robinson Basil 2000 Images of Muhammad in al Biruni s Chronology of Ancient Nations In Hillenbrand Robert ed Persian Painting from the Mongols to the Qajars Studies in Honour of Basil W Robinson Pembroke Persian Papers 3 London and New York I B Tauris in association with the Centre of Middle Eastern Studies University of Cambridge ISBN 9781850436591 Ibn Thabit Hassan 1971 ʿArafat Walid N ed Diwan of Hassan Ibn Thabit Gibb Memorial Trust ISBN 9780906094303 Lalani Arzina 2011 Ghadir Khumm Oxford Bibliographies Retrieved 9 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Majd Vahid 2005 The Sermon of Prophet Muhammad at Ghadir Khum PDF Naba Cultural Organization pp 152 154 ISBN 9789648323382 Mavani Hamid 2013 Religious Authority and Political Thought in Twelver Shi ism From Ali to Post Khomeini Routledge ISBN 9780415624404 Momen Moojan 1985 An introduction to Shi i Islam Yale University Press ISBN 9780300035315 Najafabadi S Adel Hashemi 2010 The Invention of Islamic History The International Journal of the Humanities 8 1 259 doi 10 18848 1447 9508 CGP v08i01 42810 Nasr Seyyed Hossein Dagli Caner K Dakake Maria Massi Lumbard Joseph E B Rustom Mohammed 2015 The Study Quran A New Translation and Commentary Harper Collins ISBN 9780062227621 Sanders Paula 1994 Ritual Politics and the City in Fatimid Cairo State University of New York Press ISBN 9781438418629 Stewart Devin J 2002 McAuliffe Jane Dammen ed Encyclopaedia of the Quran Vol 2 Brill ISBN 90 04 14743 8 Soucek Priscilla P 1975 An Illustrated Manuscript of al Biruni s Chronology of Ancient Nations In Chelkowski Peter J ed The Scholar and the Saint Studies in Commemoration of Abul Rayhan al Biruni and Jalal al Din al Rumi New York Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies New York University Press ISBN 9780814713600 OCLC 434241035 Veccia Vaglieri L 2022 Ghadir Khumm Encyclopaedia of Islam Second ed Brill Reference Online Wensinck A J Crone P 2022 Mawla Encyclopaedia of Islam Second ed Brill Reference Online Williams John Alden 1994 The Word of Islam University of Texas Press ISBN 9780292790759 Madelung Wilferd 1997 The Succession to Muhammad A Study of the Early Caliphate Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 64696 3 Jafri S H M 1979 Origins and Early Development of Shia Islam London Longman Pierce Matthew 2016 Twelve Infallible Men The Imams and the Making of Shi ism Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674737075 Tabatabai Sayyid Mohammad Hosayn 1977 Shi ite Islam Translated by Sayyid Hossein Nasr State University of New York Press ISBN 0 87395 390 8 Shaban M A 1976 Islamic History A New Interpretation Vol 1 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521291316 McHugo John 2018 A Concise History of Sunnis and Shi is Georgetown University Press ISBN 9781626165885 Lalani Arzina R 2006 SHI A In Leaman Oliver ed The Qurʼan an Encyclopedia Routledge pp 586 93 ISBN 9 78 0 415 32639 1 Afsaruddin Asma 2006 GHADIR KHUMM In Leaman Oliver ed The Qurʼan an Encyclopedia Routledge p 218 ISBN 9 78 0 415 32639 1 Afsaruddin Asma Nasr Seyyed Hossein 2022 ʿAli Encyclopedia Britannica Poonawala I K 1982 ʿALi B ABi ṬALEB I Life Encyclopaedia Iranica Online Edition Dakake Maria Massi 2008 The Charismatic Community Shi ite Identity in Early Islam SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 7033 6 Shah Kazemi Reza 2014 Ali ibn Abi Talib 599 661 In Fitzpatrick Coeli Walker Adam Hani eds Muhammad in History Thought and Culture An Encyclopedia of the Prophet of God ABC CLIO pp 20 24 ISBN 9781610691789 Shah Kazemi Reza 2015 ʿAli b Abi Ṭalib In Daftary Farhad ed Encyclopaedia Islamica Translated by Melvin Koushki Matthew Lewis Bernard 1968 The Arabs in History Hutchinson amp Co Lalani Arzina R 2000 Early Shi i Thought The Teachings of Imam Muhammad al Baqir Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 9781860644344 Shah Kazemi Reza 2022 Imam Ali Concise History Timeless Mystery I B Tauris ISBN 9781784539368 Amir Moezzi Mohammad Ali 2020 The Spirituality of Shi i Islam Beliefs and Practices I B Tauris ISBN 9780755610273 Haider Najam 2014 Shi i Islam An Introduction Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107031432 Daftary Farhad 2014 A History of Shi i Islam Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 9781780768410 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ghadir Khumm Ghadir Khumm academic summary and reading list from Oxford Bibliographies Coordinates 22 49 30 N 39 04 30 E 22 82500 N 39 07500 E 22 82500 39 07500 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ghadir Khumm amp oldid 1130346520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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