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	<Title><![CDATA[Ashura: A Lesson in Freedom]]></Title>
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	<Description><![CDATA[The month of Muharram brings with it the memory of a sacrifice the like of which is difficult to find in the history of Islam, indeed of mankind. Learn how the Imam thought us the Lessson in Freedom.]]></Description>
	<Keywords><![CDATA[Ashura: A Lesson in Freedom, Muharram, Husayn, Imam, Hussein, Husein, Hasan, Hasan, Hur b. Yazid, Hurr, Ibn Sad, Ibn Sa'd, Shimr]]></Keywords>
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	The month of Muharram brings with it the memory of a sacrifice the like of
	which is difficult to find in the history of Islam, indeed of mankind. Imam
	Husayn (AS) and his family and companions emerged victorious in a battle
	that they seemingly lost in material terms. The cost of this victory was
	immense, a period of great suffering which ended for the martyrs on the
	tenth day, the Ashura, but was to go on for much longer for the family
	members who were taken captive.
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	Imam Husayn was the grandson of the Prophet (PBUH). He and his brother
	Hasan (A.S) had been declared leaders of the youth of Paradise. So how
	could people calling themselves muslims turn to kill him? Their problem was
	the age old one of ignorance and greed. They were either not aware of his
	high merits and noble lineage or were more attracted to the worldly
	benefits that a successful battle against him would bring.
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	In order to remove any misconceptions in the minds of his opponents, the
	Imam addressed them on the day of Ashura before fighting commenced. The
	tone of his voice was so loud that most people heard, "People, listen to my
	words and do not hurry me so that I may remind you of the duties you have
	toward me and so that I may give you reasons for my coming to you. If you
	accept my reasons, believe my words and give me justice, you will become
	happier through that, and you will not have any cause against me. If you do
	not accept my reasons and give me justice of your own accord as
	individuals, 'Then agree upon your affair and call your associates. Let not
	your affair be in darkness to you.' [Cf. Quran 10:71] Indeed my guardian is
	God, Who sent down the Book. He takes care of the righteous.' [Cf. Quran
	7:196].(Note 1)
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	The Imam continued, "Trace back my lineage and consider who I am. Then,
	look back at yourselves and remonstrate with yourselves. Consider whether
	it is right for you to kill me and desecrate my inviolability. Am I not the
	son of the daughter of your Prophet, the son of the executor of his will
	and his cousin, the first of believers in God and the man who first
	believed in what His Apostle brought from his Lord? Was not Hamzah, the
	leader of the martyrs, my father's uncle and Ja'far at-Tayyar my own uncle?
	Have you not heard the Prophet of God's saying concerning myself and my
	brother: 'These are the two lords of the youths of the inhabitants of heaven'?
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	"If you believe what I am saying - and it is the truth for, by God, I have
	never told a lie since I learned that God hated people who told them and
	that those who opposed Him grieved Him ... If you still regard me as a
	liar, then there are still to be found people who would tell you the truth
	if you ask them. Ask  Jabir b. Abdullah al-Ansari, Abu Said al-Khudri, Sahl
	b. Sa'd, Zayd b. Arqam and Anas b. Malik to tell you what they have heard
	from the Apostle of God concerning myself and my brother. Is this not
	sufficient to prevent your shedding my blood? (Note 2)
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	"If you are in doubt about this, do you have the slightest doubt that I am
	the son of the daughter of your Prophet? By God! There is no son of a
	prophet other than me among you and among the other peoples from east to
	west. Tell me, are you seeking retribution from me for one of your dead
	whom I have killed, or for property of yours that I have expropriated, or
	for a wound that I have inflicted?"  Dead silence reigned over the whole
	army and nobody uttered a word.(Note 3)
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	The speech of the Imam had an effect on those hearts that still had some
	remnants of humanity left in them. The classic struggle between 'Ruh' and
	'Nafs' began. Where goodness won, the men found themselves in the ranks of
	the Imam, willing to fight the enemy to certain death.
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	The foremost of these men was Hurr b. Yazid. A commander in Ibn Sa'd's
	army, he had intercepted the Imam's contingent at Dhu Husum, where he
	addressed the Imam, "Husayn, I remind you of God with regard to your life,
	for I testify that if you fight, you will be fought, and if you are fought,
	you will be killed." He replied, "Do you think that you can frighten me
	with death? Could a worse disaster happen to you than killing me? I do not
	know what to say to you. I can only address you as the brother of al-Aws
	addressed his cousin when he met the latter as he was going to help the
	Apostle of God. His cousin said to him: 'Where are you going, for you will
	be killed?' He replied:
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	I will depart, for there is no shame in death for a young man
	whenever he intends right and strives as a Muslim,
	And has supported righteous men through the sacrifice of his life,
	abandoned the cursed and made alliance with the consecrated" (Note 4)
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	These words must have resonated in Hurr's mind. A decision had to be taken
	before commencement of hostilities. True to the meaning of his name, Hurr
	opted for true freedom. Little by little he began to approach the Imam's
	camp. One of his tribe Muhajir b. Aws asked him, "What do you want, Ibn
	Yazid? Do you want to attack?" He was silent but a great shudder came over
	him. Al-Muhajir said, "By God! Ibn Yazid, your behaviour is suspicious. By
	God! I have never seen you act like this before. If I was asked who was the
	bravest of the Kufans, I would not ignore you. What is this I see in you?"
	Hurr answered, "By God! I am giving my soul the choice between heaven and
	the fire of hell. By God! I will not choose anything before heaven, even
	though I am cut to pieces and burnt." (Note 5)
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	He whipped his horse and joined the Imam. He said, "May God accept my soul
	for you, son of the Apostle of God. I was the one who intercepted you and
	made you stop in this place... I have come repenting to my Lord for what I
	have done, and offering you my life as consolation so that I may die before
	you. Will you accept that as repentance from me?"
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	The Imam replied, "Yes, God will accept your repentance  and forgive you...
	You are the free man (al-hurr) as your mother named you. You are a free man
	in this world and the next." (Note 6)
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	The battle began. All who fought lost their lives, though what they won was
	worth much more. Not only did they secure a place in Paradise but they also
	set an everlasting example of justice and morality, of patience and
	sacrifice, and above all, of freedom for generations to come.
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	The story of Hurr is a story of this freedom - freedom from the
	other-than-God and from the ungodly. It is the story of hope for you and
	me, an opportunity to reexamine our lives to see where we stand in this
	world, where both the opportunity for piety and wretchedness exists. Do we
	obey the commandments of Islam and identify ourselves with Imam Husayn?
	For, as Sana'i said:
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	Religion is your Husayn,
	while desires and hopes are pigs and dogs -
	yet you kill the first through thirst and feed these two.
	How can you keep on cursing the wicked Yazid and Shimr?
	You are a Shimr and a Yazid for your own Husayn! (Note 7)
	
	
	<br/><br/>
	<b>References:</b>
	
	<br/><ol>
	<li>Tabari, Ta'rikh, II, 328
	<li>Tabari, Ta'rikh, II, 329
	<li>Tabari, Ta'rikh, II, 330
	<li>Tabari, Ta'rikh, II, 302
	<li>Tabari, Ta'rikh, II, 333
	<li>Tabari, Ta'rikh, II, 334
	<li>Sana'i, Diwan, 665
	</ol>
	
	
	<I>A posting on: ABDG Discussion Group
	<br/>By: Mahmood Merchant </I>
	</div>
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