Dehshat Gardi aur Fitna e Khawarij | by Sheikh ul Islam Dr. Muhammad Tahir ul Qadri | PDF eBook Free Download
The Khawarij (Arabic: الخوارج,
al-Khawārij, particular خارجي, khārijiyy) or the cinder Shurah
(Arabic: الشراة, translit. fiery remains Shurāh "the
Exchangers") are individuals from a gathering that showed up in the
principal century of Islam amid the First Fitna, the emergency of
administration after the passing of Muhammad. It broke into rebel against the
specialist of the Rashidun Caliph Ali after he consented to mediation with his
opponent, Muawiyah I, to choose the progression to the Caliphate taking after
the Battle of Siffin (657). A Khariji later killed Ali, and for many years, the
Khawarij were a wellspring of revolt against the Caliphate.
The Khawarij contradicted assertion as a way to pick another ruler
in light of the fact that "judgment has a place with God alone". They
thought about discretion as a methods for individuals to make decisions while
the victor in a fight was dictated by God. They trusted that any
Muslim—regardless of the possibility that not Quraysh or even an Arab—could be
the Imam, the pioneer of the group, on the off chance that he was ethically
faultless. On the off chance that the pioneer trespassed, it was the obligation
of Muslims to restrict and remove him.
Some Khawarij created outrageous regulations that set them apart
from both standard Sunni and Shiʿi Muslims. They were especially noted for
embracing a radical way to deal with takfir (announcing self-depicted Muslims
as non-Muslims). In current circumstances, the Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant and some other fanatic gatherings have been alluded to as
"Kharijites" for their eagerness to submit takfir and execute those
they esteem deficiently Muslim.
Etymology:
The term al-Khariji was utilized as an exonym by their rivals from
the way that they cleared out Ali's armed force. The name originates from the
Arabic root خ ر ج, which has
the essential signifying "to leave" or "to get out", as in
the fundamental word خرج "to go out", "to
exit", "to turn out", etc.
In any case, these gatherings called themselves slag Shurah
"the Exchangers", which they comprehended inside the setting of Islamic
sacred text (Quran 2:207) and theory to signify "the individuals who have
exchanged the mortal life (al-Dunya) for the other life [with God]
(al-Akhirah)".
History:
Origin:
The cause of Kharijism lies in the First Fitna, the battle for
political matchless quality over the Muslim people group in the years taking
after the demise of Muhammad. One source depicts Khawarij as "bedouin
travelers who hated the centralization of force in the new Islamic express that
shortened the flexibility of their tribal society."
After the demise of the third Rashidun Caliph, Uthman, a battle
for progression followed amongst Ali and Muawiyah I, the legislative head of
Syria and cousin of Uthman, allied with an assortment of different rivals.
The Khawarij at first were individuals from the "Gathering of
Ali". They later rejected his authority after he consented to mediation
with Muawiyah as opposed to battle to choose the progression to the Caliphate
taking after the Battle of Siffin. In 657, Ali's powers met Muawiyah's at the
Battle of Siffin. At first, the fight conflicted with Muawiyah yet on the very
edge of thrashing, Muawiyah guided his armed force to crane Qurans on their
lances. That started disunity among some of the individuals who were in Ali's
armed force. Muawiyah needed to put the debate between the two sides to
mediation as per the Qur'an. A gathering of Ali's armed force mutinied
requesting for Ali to consent to Muawiyah's proposition. Accordingly, Ali
reluctantly exhibited his own agent for intervention. The double-crossers,
nonetheless, set forward Abu Musa Ashaari, against Ali's desires.
Muawiyah set forward 'Amr ibn al-'As. Abu Musa al-Ashari was
persuaded by Amr to profess Ali's expulsion as caliph despite the fact that
Ali's caliphate was not intended to be the issue of worry in the mediation. The
rebels saw the unforeseen development as an essential disloyalty of standard,
particularly since they had started it; a substantial gathering of them denied
Ali.
Refering to the verse "No Command however God's" (Quran
6:57), a sign that a caliph is not an agent of God, this gathering turned on
both Ali and Muawiya, contradicting the resistance to one whom they thought to
be the legitimate caliph and Ali tolerating to subject his authentic expert to
intervention, along these lines giving ceaselessly what was not his but rather
the people's.
Alī's cousin and a famous Islamic law specialist, Abd Allah ibn
Abbas, brought up the grave religious blunders made by the Kharijites in citing
the Qur'an, and figured out how to influence various Khawarij to profit to Alī
based for their misinterpretations. ʻAlī crushed the rest of the renegades in
the Battle of Nahrawan in 658 yet some Kharijites survived.
One of the early gatherings were the Haruriyyah; it was striking
for some reasons, among which was its deciding that a Haruri, Abd-al-Rahman ibn
Muljam, was the professional killer of Caliph Ali.
For a long time the Khawarij kept on being a wellspring of revolt
against the Caliphate. and they excited judgment by standard researchers, for
example, fourteenth century Muslim Ismail ibn Kathir who composed, "In the
event that they ever picked up quality, they would without a doubt degenerate
the entire of the Earth, Iraq and Shaam – they would not leave a child, male or
female, neither a man or a lady, in light of the fact that to the extent they
are concerned the general population have brought about debasement, a
defilement that can't be amended aside from by mass killing." In a
comparative vein, the tenth century Islamic researcher Abu Bakr al-Ajurri
stated, "None of the researchers, in either past or late circumstances,
ever differ that the Khawarij are a malevolent gathering, insubordinate to
Allah Almighty and to His Messenger - Peace Be Upon Him. Regardless of the
possibility that they supplicate, quick, or endeavor in love, it doesn't profit
them, and regardless of the possibility that they straightforwardly charge
great and prohibit insidious it doesn't profit them, as they are a people who
translate the Quran as per their craving."
Hadiths:
Among the hadith that allude to the Khawarij (as indicated by a
few sources) include:
-A portrayal ascribed to Yusair receptacle Amr reports:
I asked Sahl receptacle Hunaif, "Did you hear the Prophet
saying anything in regards to Al-Khawarij?" He stated, "I heard him
saying while guiding his hand towards Iraq. "There will show up in it
(i.e, Iraq) a few people who will recount the Quran yet it won't go past their
throats, and they will go out from (leave) Islam as a bolt shoots through the
diversion's body.' "
-A portrayal ascribed to Abu Sa'id al-Khudri reports:
"There will come a people from the east who discuss the Quran
however it won't go past their throats. They will go through the religion
similarly as a bolt punctures its objective and they won't come back to it
similarly as the bolt does not come back to the bow."
-A portrayal ascribed to Abu Dharr reports:
"Allah's Messenger (saws) stated: Verily there would emerge
from my Ummah after me a gathering (of individuals) who might discuss the
Quran, yet it would not go past their throats, and they would go clean through
their religion similarly as the bolt goes through the prey, and they could
never return to it. They would be the most noticeably bad among the creation
and the animals.”
Beliefs and practices:
Assassination attempts:
Among the surviving Kharijites, three of them assembled in Mecca
to plot a tripartite death endeavor on Muawiyah I, 'Amr ibn al-'As and Ali. The
death endeavors were to happen all the while as the three pioneers came to lead
the morning supplication (Fajr) in their separate urban communities of
Damascus, Fustat and Kufa. The strategy was to leave the supplication positions
and hit the objectives with a sword plunged in poison.
Muawiya got away from the death endeavor with just minor wounds.
Amr was wiped out and the delegate driving the petitions in his stead was
martyred. Be that as it may, the strike on Ali by the professional killer,
Abdur-Rahmaan ibn-Muljim, ended up being deadly. Ali was gravely harmed with a
head wound and surrendered to his wounds a couple days later.
The conditions in which Ali was assaulted is liable to level headed
discussion; a few researchers keep up that he was assaulted outside the mosque,
others express that he was assaulted while starting the petition and still
others emphasize that ibn-Muljim struck him halfway through the supplication
while Ali was prostrating.
Every one of the professional killers were caught, attempted and
sentenced to death as per Islamic laws.
Like-minded groups:
The Ibadis, a kindred early order with comparable convictions,
frame most of the number of inhabitants in Oman (where they initially settled
in 686), and there are littler groupings of them in the M'zab of Algeria,
Djerba in Tunisia, the Nafusa Mountains in Libya, and Zanzibar.
In the present day period, various Muslim scholars and eyewitnesses
have thought about the convictions and activities of the Islamic State (IS),
al-Qaeda and similar gatherings to the Khawarij. specifically, the gatherings
share the Kharijites' radical approach whereby self-depicted Muslims are pronounced
unbelievers and in this way considered them deserving of death and their lack
of engagement in Quranic calls for moderation. However, IS ministers firmly
reject being contrasted with the Khawarij.
In the eighteenth century, Hanafi researcher Ibn Abidin proclaimed
the Wahhabi development of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab as present day Khawarij.
As indicated by a few Muslims, (for example, Abu Amina Elias),
Kharijites will "keep on causing strife" in the Muslim people group
until End Times, and refer to a hadith (# 7123) from Sahih al-Bukhari in
support of this.
Early Muslim governance:
The Khawarij considered the caliphate of Abu Bakr and Umar to be
appropriately guided yet trusted that Uthman had veered off from the way of
equity and truth in the most recent days of his caliphate and consequently was
at risk to be killed or uprooted. They likewise trusted that Ali conferred a
grave sin when he conceded to the mediation with Muawiyah.
The Kharijites in this way considered the judges (Abu Musa Ashaari
and 'Amr ibn al-'As), the pioneers who selected these authorities (Ali and
Muawiyah I) and every one of the individuals who conceded to the mediation (all
partners of Ali and Muawiyah]) as kuffar "skeptics", as they had
broken the principles of the Qur'an. They likewise trusted that all members in
the Battle of the Camel, including Talhah, Zubayr ibn al-Awam and Aisha had
conferred a noteworthy sin.
Doctrinal differences with other sects:
Kharijites contrast with both Sunni or potentially Shiʿa on a few
purposes of teaching:
Sunnis acknowledge Ali as the fourth properly guided Caliph and
furthermore acknowledge the three Caliphs before him, who were chosen by their
group. Shi'a trust that the imaamate was the privilege of Ali, and the control
of the initial three Rashidun caliphs was unlawful. Kharijites demand that the
caliph require not be from the Quraysh tribe, but rather any devout Muslim
assigned by different Muslims was qualified to be the caliph.
Not at all like Sunni and Shia, Kharijites trusted that Muslims
had the privilege and obligation to rebel against any ruler who veered off from
their understanding of Islam, or, as per different translations, neglected to
deal with Muslim's undertakings with equity and consultation or submitted a
noteworthy sin.
Kharijites dismiss the teaching of trustworthiness for the pioneer
of the Muslim people group as opposed to Shi'a yet in concurrence with Sunnis.
Not at all like the more extraordinary Kharijites, the Ibadis
dismiss the murder of Uthman and additionally the Kharijite conviction that all
Muslims holding contrasting perspectives were infidels.
Other doctrines:
Numerous Khawarij bunches trusted that the demonstration of erring
is undifferentiated from kufr "skepticism" and that each grave
delinquent was viewed as a kafir unless they apologize. They conjured the
regulation of unrestrained choice, contrary to that of fate in their resistance
to the Ummayad Caliphate, which held that Umayyad govern was appointed by God.
As per Islamic researcher and Islamist pioneer Abul A'la Maududi,
utilizing the contention of "heathens are unbelievers", Kharijites
impugned all the above Sahabah and even reviled and utilized harsh dialect
against them. Other non-Khawarij Muslims were proclaimed doubters since they
were not free of transgression but rather likewise in light of the fact that
they viewed the previously mentioned Sahabah as devotees and religious
pioneers, notwithstanding gathering fiqh from the hadith described by them.
The Khawarij considered the Qur'an as the hotspot for fiqh however
differ about the other two sources (hadith and ijma).
In view of Kharijite verse compositions, researcher Ihsan Abbas
discovers three classifications of center among them:
the powerful urge of Kharijites for affliction and kicking the
bucket for God
nitty gritty portrayals of how Kharijites characterized a fair and
devout ruler
their all inclusive propensity to accuse the self for neglecting
to set up the past two categories.
On the premise of ladies battling nearby Muhammad, Khārijīs have
seen battling jihad as a necessity for ladies. One popular illustration is the
warrior and artist Laylā bint Ṭarīf.
Principal groups:
Azariqa, the
followers of Abu Rasheed Nafi ibn al-Azraq
Najdat, the
followers of Najdah ibn 'Amir
Ajardites, the
followers of Abd al-Karim ibn Ajrad
Ibadis, the
followers of Abd Allah ibn Ibad
Sufris, the
followers of Ziyad ibn al-Asfar and Umran ibn Hattan
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