The Emergence of Modern Shi'ism: Islamic Reform in Iraq and Iran
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The book specifically highlights the emergence of Usuli Shi‘ism in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The long-term impact of the Usuli revival was that Shi‘i clerics gained unprecedented social, political, and economic power in Iran and southern Iraq. Usuli clerics claimed authority to issue binding legal judgments, which, they argue, must be observed by all Shi‘is. By the early nineteenth century, Usulism emerged as a popular, fiercely independent, transnational Islamic movement. The Usuli clerics have often operated at the heart of social and political developments in modern Iraq and Iran and today dominate the politics of the region.
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The Emergence of Modern Shi'ism - Zackery M. Heern
Praise for
The Emergence of Modern Shi‘ism
"This is an absorbing account of the rise of modern Shi‘ism and of the rise of the Shi‘i clergy as authoritative interpreters (mujtahids) of theology, religious practice, and the law. Zackery Heern aptly situates the ‘triumph of Usuli Shi‘ism’ in Iraq and Iran, brought to fruition by Vahid Bihbihani and his disciples during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, within broader contemporary currents of Islamic religious revival and reform."
Peter Sluglett, Director,
Middle East Institute, National University of Singapore
A major achievement. This original new work explains not only the roots of modern Shiite thought but also places these roots into the context of Middle Eastern religious reformism since the second half of the 1700s. An excellent and timely introduction for students as well as general readers seeking to understand the beginnings of modern Islam.
Peter Von Sivers,
Associate Professor, History, University of Utah
Zackery Heern has produced a very important and deeply researched contribution to the history of Shi‘ism. At last there is a book that sets developments in Shi‘ism in the context of the larger Islamic world. Scholars of Islamic studies will greatly benefit from reading this book.
Roy P. Mottahedeh,
Gurney Professor of History, Harvard University
Heern not only provides the most thorough intellectual, social and organizational analysis of the rise of the rationalist Usuli school in Shi‘ism, but contextualizes it within the framework of local, regional and global changes of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Significantly, he posits these developments as an important manifestation of the global phenomenon of multiple modernities.
Meir Litvak, Associate Professor,
Department of Middle Eastern History, Tel Aviv University
52241.jpgA Oneworld Book
First published by Oneworld Publications, 2015
This ebook edition published 2015
Copyright © Zackery M. Heern 2015
The moral right of Zackery M. Heern to be identified as the Author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs, and Patents Act 1988
All rights reserved
Copyright under Berne Convention
A CIP record for this title is available from the British Library
ISBN 978-1-78074-496-4
ISBN 978-1-78074-497-1 (eBook)
Typesetting and eBook by Tetragon, London
Oneworld Publications
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imprint-page-advert.tifContents
Preface
Introduction
The Triumph of neo-Usulism
The Eighteenth-Century Moment
Contemporary Shi‘ism and its Roots
Shi‘i Knowledge and Authority
Summary of Chapters
Chapter 1
The Times and Places of Reform in the Modern World
Introduction
The Place of Modernity
The Time of Modernity
World Systems and Multiple Modernities
Creation of the Modern World
Tradition and Change: From Pre-Modern to Modern
Chapter 2
Shi‘ism and the Emergence of Modern Iran
Introduction
Safavid Centralization of Iran (1501–1722)
Decentralization of Iran (1722–85)
Qajar Recentralization of Iran (1785–1925)
Conclusion
Chapter 3
Shi‘ism and the Emergence of Modern Iraq
Introduction
Ottoman and Mamluk Rule in Iraq
Shi‘ism and Arab Tribes in Southern Iraq
Conclusion
Chapter 4
Wahid Bihbihani: Shi‘i Reviver and Reformer
Introduction
Reviver of the Eighteenth Century
Bihbihani’s Early Life
Bihbihani in Bihbihan
Usuli-Akhbari Dispute in Karbala’
The Historical and Mythical Bihbihani
Conclusion: Why Usulism Prevailed
Chapter 5
Wahid Bihbihani’s Usuli Network In Iraq And Iran
Introduction
Usuli-Qajar Alliance
Bihbihani’s Students in Iraq
Sayyid Muhammad Mahdi Tabataba’i Bahr al-’Ulum
(Najaf)
Shaykh Ja‘far al-Najafi Kashif al-Ghita’
(Najaf)
Mirza Muhammad Mahdi Shahristani (Karbala’)
Sayyid ‘Ali Tabataba’i (Karbala’)
Bihbihani’s Students in Iran
Mirza Abu al-Qasim Qummi (Qum)
Mulla Ahmad Naraqi (Kashan)
Muhammad Ibrahim Kalbasi (Isfahan)
Muhammad Baqir Shafti (Isfahan)
Additional Students of Bihbihani
Conclusion
Chapter 6
Wahid Bihbihani’s Conception of Islamic Law
Introduction
Bihbihani’s Legalistic Conception of Knowledge
Four or Five Sources of Usuli Shi‘i Law?
1. The Qur’an
2. Traditions (Hadith)
3. Consensus (ijma‘)
4. Reason (‘aql)
5. Transference (ta‘diyya) vs. Analogy (qiyas)
Language (lugha) and Custom (‘urf)
Conjecture of Mujtahids
Conclusion
Chapter 7
Founding Fathers of Modern Islam
Introduction
Ibn ‘Abd al-Wahhab and the Wahhabi Movement
Ibn Idris and Neo-Sufism
Political Influence of the Reformers
Knowledge and Authority
Opponents of the Reformers
Primary Concerns of the Reformers
Conclusion
Glossary
Notes
Bibliograph
y
For Mona, Liya, and Jamal
If you would understand anything, observe its beginning and its development.
ARISTOTLE
Preface
I initially began research for this book for my PhD dissertation. I had already written an MA thesis on the development of Shi‘ism in the nineteenth century, focusing on the figure of Murtada Ansari who, in many ways, brought the Usuli movement to a logical conclusion. For the PhD I decided to investigate the earlier developments of Usuli Shi‘ism. All roads initially led to Wahid Bihbihani, who remains the lead actor of this book. After completing the chapters on the emergence of the Usuli movement and the figure of Bihbihani, my advisor, Peter von Sivers, encouraged me to contextualize Usulism within the history of the Middle East. He continually asked me why and how the Usuli movement emerged at this particular time and place in history. We came to the conclusion that it was largely a response to the fall of the Safavid Empire and the decentralization of Ottoman rule. I then became interested in additional Islamic responses to the socio-historical conditions of the late eighteenth century, which prompted a comparison of the Usuli movement with the movements of Wahhabism and neo-Sufism, or the tariqa Muhammadiyya.
After completing the dissertation, I began teaching at Murray State University, where much of my teaching work focused on world history. As my understanding of global trends increased, I could not help but notice parallels between Usulism and seemingly unrelated movements throughout the world – including the Enlightenment and Neo-Confucianism. Prior to teaching world history, I was questioned in a job interview by a Europeanist whether Usulis borrowed the rationalist element of their movement from the Enlightenment. My response was definitively, No, the rationalist tradition in Islam predates the Enlightenment by a thousand years.
I still do not think that Usuli rationalism is a direct result of the Enlightenment, but the syncronicity and convergence of the two movements is certainly striking. Therefore, I focused much of the revision work for this book on situating Usulism in a global context. Additionally, I rewrote the entire book, partially in an attempt to make it accessible to a wider audience. In the process, I added and deleted entire chapters.
The book was made possible by the generosity and assistance of scholars, institutions, and my family. I owe a special debt of gratitude to Professors Peter von Sivers, Peter Sluglett, and Bernard Weiss. I will never be able to repay the countless hours they spent imparting knowledge, sharing wisdom, writing letters of recommendation, and of course guiding my dissertation project. I will be ever grateful to Novin Doostar and everyone at Oneworld Publications for publishing this book. I also thank Robert Gleave who included me in the Clerical Authority in Shi‘i Islam Project, lent me countless books, and was also on my PhD committee. I am also thankful to Moojan Momen, Meir Litvak, Sholeh Quinn, Marjorie Hilton, and William Schell for their comments on earlier drafts of my manuscript.
This book would not have been possible without the support of several universities and their libraries. I thank UCLA and the University of Utah, especially the History Department and the Middle East Center at the University of Utah, for providing institutional support for my studies. I am also grateful to Murray State University, particularly my colleagues in the History Department. An additional debt of gratitude is owed to the Aziz S. Atiya Middle East Library at the University of Utah and the University of Cologne for granting me unlimited access to its lithograph collection in the Schia-Bibliothek. Finally, Firestone Library at Princeton University, The Library of Congress in Washington, DC, the Young Research Library at UCLA, and Waterfield Library at Murray State were of great help.
My entire course of study would have remained a dream without generous fellowships and grants from multiple donors and institutions. At the University of Utah, I thank the History Department for the three-year Burton Teaching Assistant Fellowship, the Middle East Center for five Arabic and Persian FLAS Fellowships, and the Graduate School for the Marriner S. Eccles Graduate Fellowship in Political Economy and two University Teaching Assistantships. I also thank the University of Utah Middle East Center and the Graduate School for multiple conference travel grants. I am likewise thankful for the Reza Ali Khazeni Memorial Scholarship for Graduate Study Abroad. Further, I am grateful to the Institute of Ismaili Studies in London for its generous Dissertation Scholarship as well as the British Academy, the British Institute for Persian Studies, and the British Society for Middle East Studies for funding the Clerical Authority in Shi‘i Islam Project. Finally, thanks to Murray State University for two CISR grants and the History Department for research and travel grants.
My family and friends have been an immovable support system throughout the arduous process of writing this book. Thank you first and foremost to my wife, Mona Kashani Heern, for being a constant source of hope and encouragement, and to the lights of my life, Liya and Jamal Heern, for consistently bringing me joy. I hope to follow in the footsteps of my first teachers, Bobette and Jim Heern, who instilled within me a love for learning and taught me the value of hard work.
Introduction
The Triumph of neo-Usulism
In the late eighteenth century, a debate between Usuli and Akhbari Shi‘is gripped the scholarly community in the holy city of Karbala’ in southern Iraq. Akhbaris argued that the foundational Islamic texts (the Qur’an and Hadith) are the only living sources of knowledge, authority, and law in Islam. Because of their emphasis on scripture, especially the traditions (akhbar or Hadith) of the Prophet Muhammad and the Shi‘i Imams, Akhbaris are commonly referred to as scripturalists or traditionists.¹
While Akhbaris rejected the use of reason (‘aql) as a source of Islamic law, Usulis accepted it. Therefore, Usulis are often referred to as rationalists.
A century before the Usuli-Akhbari dispute came to blows, Akhbaris had consolidated their control over the complex of Shi‘i seminary colleges (hawzas) in Iraq. Shi‘i sources tell us that Usulis ran the risk of being beaten if Akhbaris caught them with Usuli books.²
Therefore, Usulis met in secret and hid their books in handkerchiefs. By the turn of the nineteenth century, Usulis overcame the Akhbari leadership and claimed their role as the guardians of Shi‘i Islam, or custodians of the saved sect
as Wahid Bihbihani, the founder of the modern Usuli movement, put it.³
Usulis violently expelled Akhbaris, Sufis, and other would-be challengers from Karbala’ and consolidated their control over the Shi‘i communities of southern Iraq, Iran, and the majority of the Shi‘i world.
This book is primarily concerned with the modern Usuli movement, which I argue is the single most dominant Shi‘i trend of the past several hundred years. The intellectual foundations of Usulism and Akhbarism are not new to the modern period. In fact, rationalism and traditionism represent two of the most prevalent currents that stretch back to the foundational period of Shi‘i intellectual history. However, in the late eighteenth century, Usulism emerged as something more than an intellectual trend. It became a powerful social movement, which has largely defined the course of modern Shi‘ism and has played a critical role in the social, economic, and political development of the modern Shi‘i world. Therefore, I refer to the Usuli movement that began in the eighteenth century as neo-Usulism or modern Usulism. In what follows, I will also use Usulism for shorthand, just as Shi‘ism will be shorthand for Twelver or Imami Shi‘ism. This is not to exclude the importance of Zaydism, Isma‘ilism, or other branches of Shi‘ism. However, Usuli Shi‘ism is a movement within the dominant branch of Shi‘ism often referred to as the Twelvers (or Imamis) because they accepted twelve Imams, whereas Zaydis accepted five Imams and the Isma‘ilis believe in seven.
More than one thousand years before the Usuli-Akhbari dispute took place, Karbala’ was the site where Husayn (the third Shi‘i Imam) and a small band of his followers were massacred by forces of the ‘Umayyad clan, who established the first dynasty in Islamic history from 661–750. The martyrdom of Husayn was a decisive moment in the transformation of the followers of the Imams from a political party to the full-blown sectarian movement that we now know as Shi‘ism. Similar to Christian commemorations of the crucifixion of Jesus, Shi‘i observances dedicated to Husayn still rouse passion among participants.⁴
Karbala’ eventually developed as a Shi‘i center of pilgrimage, learning, and leadership where Shi‘is pray at the shrine of Imam Husayn and learn at the feet of Shi‘i scholars. In addition to Karbala’, the Iraqi city of Najaf, as well as Qum in Iran, are the most influential Shi‘i cities. Najaf became the center of gravity for the global Shi‘i community in the nineteenth century and remains the most important Shi‘i center outside Iran. Prior to the rise of Qum in the twentieth century, aspiring clerics had to study in the shrine cities of southern Iraq (Najaf and Karbala’) if they wanted to be taken seriously in the rest of the Shi‘i world.⁵
Since the mid-twentieth century, Qum and Najaf have become relatively independent of each other, which is illustrative of the nationalization of Shi‘ism over the course of the past century.⁶
Relative to Sunnis, Shi‘i scholars played a limited role in the political development of Islam going all the way back to the foundational period of Islamic history.⁷
The term Shi‘i or Shi‘a originally referred to the party
of ‘Ali ibn Abi Talib (d. 661) – the son-in-law of the Prophet Muhammad. Shi‘is claim that ‘Ali was the rightful successor of Muhammad and the first Imam.⁸
According to Shi‘is, ‘Ali and subsequent Imams inherited a measure of Muhammad’s divine knowledge as his male heirs. Therefore, Shi‘is often refer to themselves as the People of the House
(ahl al-bayt) of Muhammad. Even though ‘Ali did have some political success and is considered by Sunnis as one of the four rightly guided
(rashidun) Caliphs, Shi‘is did not initially win the day politically. The first Islamic dynasties associated with Shi‘ism, the Fatimids (909–1171) and the Buyids (934–1055), did not appear until the tenth century – two and a half centuries after Imam ‘Ali. Shi‘is played a relatively limited role in mainstream politics after the fall of the Fatimids and Buyids. That is, until the Safavids came to power in 1501. This, of course, is not to say that Shi‘is were completely kept out of politics between the twelfth and sixteenth centuries. For example, Nasir al-Din al-Tusi (d. 1274) served as advisor to Hulugu Khan after the Mongol invasion of the Middle East. Additionally, local Shi‘i dynasties of this period include the Sarbardarids of Sabzivar.
For much of Islamic history, Shi‘i scholars associated the rejection of worldly affairs, including politics, with piety. Many Shi‘i scholars have claimed that all governments are illegitimate until the promised Mahdi (the Twelfth Imam, Muhammad al-Mahdi) returns to establish everlasting peace and justice on earth. This ideological position stemmed from the development of Shi‘ism as a minority movement, which was often divorced from the political establishment. As Said Amir Arjomand points out, the sixth Imam Ja‘far al-Sadiq (d. 765) transformed the early political Shi‘ism into an introverted and quietist religious movement. The Imams ceased to be anticaliphs … and became the spiritual guides of the Shi‘ite (Imami) sectarians.
⁹
Additionally, Hamid Algar argues that after the occultation of the Twelfth Imam, Shi‘ism became even more quietist in its attitude to worldly power.
¹⁰
Therefore, the rise in socio-political involvement of Shi‘i clerics in the modern period may seem surprising.
What accounts for the increase in the socio-political position of Shi‘i clerics in the modern period? The answer to this question begins with the adoption of Shi‘ism as the state religion of the Safavid dynasty (1501–1722) in Iran. As Henry Corbin argues, Safavid Shi‘ism gave rise to something like an official clergy, exclusively concerned with legality and jurisprudence, to such a point that original Shi‘ism, in its essence gnostic and theosophic, has, so to speak, to hide itself.
¹¹
The Shi‘i clerical establishment consisting of religious professionals came into existence during the Safavid period with firm roots among the people and therefore with a power base independent of the state.
¹²
By the time the Safavid dynasty fell, the majority of people within the empire had converted to Shi‘ism and clerics retained their strong base of popular support.
The Qajar (lit. marching quickly
) dynasty (1785–1925), which was superimposed on the ruins of the Safavid Empire, adopted Shi‘ism as the state religion in an attempt to legitimize their rule. The early Qajar shahs especially supported Usuli scholars (mujtahids), who began publicizing their claim to be the deputies of the Hidden Imam. Usulis proclaimed that the Qajar shah ruled on their behalf and made it clear that the Qajars were only authorized to enter the Russo-Persian war after they issued declarations of jihad. One Usuli mujtahid (Kashif al-Ghita’), in fact, equated the authority of Shi‘i scholars (‘ulama’) to the authority of God. In his declaration of jihad against Russia, Kashif al-Ghita’ states: "He who disobeys the most distinguished ‘ulama’, by God, disobeys the imam, and who disobeys the imam disobeys the prophet of God, the best of creation, and who disobeys the best of creation disobeys Almighty God."¹³
The Qajar central government was not particularly strong, partially because of the intrusion of Russian and British imperialists, who propped up the weak regime. Instead of colonizing Iran, Russia and Britain established spheres of influence in northern and southern Iran, respectively. Escaping formal colonization in the nineteenth century, modern Iran emerged with the potent mix of a strong transnational clerical establishment and a weak central government. In addition to the relationship between high-ranking clerics and the national government, the religio-political balance of power also played out on the local stage in which politicians and clerics competed for the upper hand.
In addition to political and popular support, the transformation of clerical status required an equally grand reinterpretation of clerical authority, a process that began with Usulis in the pre-modern period. The French traveller Jean Chardin famously reported that Usulis had already protested the Safavid political establishment in the following manner:
How can it be possible, say the clergy, that these impious kings – consumers of wine carried away by their passions – to be the vicars of God, communicate with heaven, and receive the necessary enlightenment to guide the faithful believers? How could they resolve a case of conscience and the doubts of faith, in the required manner of the lieutenant of God, they who can barely read? The supreme throne of the universe belongs only to a mujtahid, or to a man who possesses sanctity and the sciences, transcending the community of men. However, as the mujtahid is peaceable, he should have a king at his service to exercise his sword to the cause of justice as his minister.¹⁴
In other words, the political system should be in service of the Usuli establishment, not the opposite. In this way, Usuli clerics continued to justify their appropriation of the role played by the Imams. That is, they claimed the right to declare war (jihad), collect zakat and khums money, and issue binding legal judgments. Some Usulis also claimed to possess the spiritual authority of the Imams.
Such authority was revived and reformed by the founder of the modern Usuli movement, Muhammad Baqir Wahid
b. Muhammad Akmal Bihbihani, who is scarcely known in Western scholarship – even in Islamic studies. His life spanned most of the eighteenth century (1704–91) and his students were the most dominant Shi‘i figures during the foundational period of the Qajar regime. Although Wahid Bihbihani has received little scholarly attention, his importance is not lost in Shi‘i sources. Shi‘i biographers and historians unanimously cite him as the primary catalyst for the establishment of neo-Usulism. Authors writing in both Persian and Arabic call him the teacher of all
and the reviver
of the twelfth Islamic century (roughly eighteenth century CE). Bihbihani’s successors also describe him as the one who was inspired by God to overcome the Akhbari establishment. The leadership of Bihbihani was indeed largely responsible for the success of the initial phase of the neo-Usuli movement. But, we are getting ahead of ourselves. Before returning to the topic at hand, let us consider the broader context in which modern Usulism emerged.
The Eighteenth-Century Moment
This book specifically focuses on the origins and early development of the modern Usuli movement, a period that roughly spans the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. A central argument of the book is that the recent ascendancy of Shi‘ism is a culmination of the neo-Usuli movement. Therefore, I agree with Arjomand who states that the establishment of an Islamic theocracy ruled by the Shi‘ite ‘ulama [was] the last stage of the evolution of clerical authority in Shi‘ite Islam.
¹⁵
This book, therefore, examines the historical roots of the contemporary stage of the Shi‘i establishment.
Similar to the revival and reform of Islam in the past several decades, the foundational period of the modern Usuli movement was also an age of reform in the broader Islamic world. Put differently, neo-Usulism emerged as part of a wider trend of Islamic reform and revival that began in the eighteenth century. The most prominent examples of such movements are Sunni Wahhabism and neo-Sufism. The conservative Wahhabi movement started by Muhammad Ibn ‘Abd al-Wahhab (1703–92) remains to this day the ideological basis for Saudi Arabia, and the alliance between the Saudi clan and Wahhabi ideology has continued to the present day. In the past several decades, Wahhabism has spread throughout much of the world, partially as a result of Saudi oil revenue.¹⁶
Otherwise, it might have remained a fringe movement. The term neo-Sufism has been vigorously debated by scholars, but is generally associated with Ahmad Ibn Idris al-Fasi (1760–1837), who emphasized a close orientation toward the Prophet Muhammad. Mark Sedgwick and other scholars have rejected the concept of neo-Sufism in favor of "the tariqa Muhammadiyya movement, the movement of the Muhammadan way."¹⁷
Although Ibn Idris was less known for his political influence than Ibn ‘Abd al-Wahhab, Ibn Idris’s successors did involve themselves in politics.
I argue that these three networks (Usuli Shi‘ism, Wahhabi Sunnism, and Idrisi Sufism) are the most powerful Islamic movements that emerged in the modern period prior